In reply papers filed in Manhattan Supreme Court, Hock claimed that Casiraghi, art dealer Vladimir Restoin Roitfeld and banker Diego Marroquin were the aggressors in the violence in a VIP area in the early hours of February 18, 2012.Īccording to the New York Post, Hock said in the paper the three young men were helping themselves to his vodka and were jealous because they were with women the young men were interested in.
Hock initially blamed Casiraghi and company as the aggressors but eventually pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct When Casiraghi and his two friends filed a lawsuit against the Double Seven Club and Hock, both parties responded by blaming the prince and his entourage for starting the fight in February of that year.īattle Royale: Prince Pierre Casiraghi (pictured here with Beatrice Borromeo in March) accused Hock in 2012 of drunkenly punching him in Manhattan's trendy Double Seven Club. ' had to take his belongings off the yacht, which remained in Monaco, while Adam went on to Ibiza,' said the source.Īdam Hock agreed to plead guilty to disorderly conduct in the year-long legal saga that began at Manhattan's Double Seven Club in 2012. Hock would not be allowed back into Monaco, 'on the orders of Prince Albert,' reports Page Six, despite the pleas his wealthy friends would make on his behalf. 'The incident was the talk of Naomi Campbell’s birthday at the Billionaire Club in Monte Carlo, which Adam was supposed to attend, on May 23,' revealed the Page Six source.Īdam reportedly arrived in Monaco from Cannes with his friend, Cirque du Soleil CEO Guy LaLiberte. Page Six said the ban immediately became the hot topic of the ritzy riviera town. Royal pain: New York businessman Adam Hock arrived in Monaco with friends in late May and was told that Prince Albert himself had banned him from the tiny kingdom because of his infamous 2012 dust up with Princess Grace's son-and Monaco prince-Pierre Casiraghi