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New Batch of Dewey Dissenters Steps In to Challenge Partner Settlement

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Less than a week after a group of retired Dewey & LeBoeuf partners appeared to pave the way for the swift approval of the defunct firm's proposed chapter 11 liquidation plan by settling a dispute with the Dewey estate, fresh resistance to a key component of that plan has emerged in the form of objections raised by six former Dewey partners, the Am Law Daily reported today. In a series of filings made ahead of a deadline yesterday, the former partners in question—two individuals and a pair of two-person teams—argue that Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn should not approve the chapter 11 plan, which serves as a blueprint for how the Dewey estate expects to dispose of its assets in order to pay off creditors who say they are owed a combined total of some $600 million. Many of the objections raised in the filings focus on the partner contribution plan, which is in many ways the linchpin of the larger liquidation plan and offers those who have agreed to pay the estate a portion of their 2011 and 2012 Dewey earnings a waiver from future liability related to the firm. A majority of Dewey's former partners have signed on to the deal, which, according to court filings, is expected to raise at least $70 million in amounts ranging from $5,000 to $3.37 million.

U.S. Trustee Advisers Settle in GSC Bankruptcy Case

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Financial adviser Capstone Advisory Group LLC and Robert Manzo settled with the U.S. Justice Department, and agreed to forgo a part of their fees in the bankruptcy of investment management firm GSC Group Inc., Reuters reported yesterday. A U.S. Trustee was seeking to void the firm's fees due to the mischaracterization of Robert Manzo—a Capstone contractor who was presented to the bankruptcy court as a direct employee—that may have helped in inflating fees. Under the settlement agreement, Capstone admitted that it erroneously described Manzo as an employee of Capstone through RJM LLC and agreed to pay $1 million to the GSC estate by withdrawing its final fee application of $2.75 million, and giving up about $635,000 that it was paid as compensation.

San Bernardino Police Firefighters Seek to Sue Bankrupt City

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The police and firefighters unions of San Bernardino, Calif., will ask a judge later this week to let them sue the bankrupt city over pay and benefit cuts, arguing that officials have abused bankruptcy laws to impose concessions on safety workers, Reuters reported yesterday. A lawyer for the city's police union, Ron Oliner, yesterday told Bankruptcy Judge Meredith Jury that after recent cuts to police pay, pension benefits and staffing levels, morale in the force was at a "low ebb" and they had no alternative but to try to sue the city in state court. The large and growing burden of public pension debt, in addition to salaries and overtime—particularly for San Bernardino's safety workers—has become a prominent issue in the city's bankruptcy as it seeks to cut costs. Earlier this month arbitrated negotiations between the city and the unions for the police, firefighters and public employees broke down. The following day the city council voted to impose pay and benefit cuts on the workers.

Judge Rules Ex-Dewey Staffers Suit Against Defunct Firm Can Proceed

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The Dewey & LeBoeuf estate has failed in its effort to squelch a proposed class action that claims the firm gave 550 employees inadequate notice before terminating them weeks before filing for chapter 11 protection on May 28, 2012, Am Law Daily reported today. In a ruling issued on Monday, Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn denied the Dewey estate's motion to dismiss the suit, which seeks 60 days of wages and benefits for those affected by the layoffs. Vittoria Conn, a former Dewey staff member employed in the firm's documents department, filed the suit in New York federal court May 10, 2012—three days after she was terminated and about two weeks before the firm filed for bankruptcy. The suit, which is based on state and federal laws related to the federal Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (WARN) was transferred to bankruptcy court on May 29 as an adversary proceeding. In allowing the case to continue, Judge Glenn disagreed with the two primary arguments offered by lawyers for the Dewey estate: that the former employees' grievances should be brought as part of the regular bankruptcy claims process rather than as an adversary proceeding, and that there is no basis for a WARN suit to qualify as a class action.

Restructuring Experts Recession Did Not Improve Corporate Governance

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ABI Bankruptcy Brief | February 5 2013


 


  

February 12, 2013

 

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  NEWS AND ANALYSIS   

RESTRUCTURING EXPERTS: RECESSION DID NOT IMPROVE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE



The Great Recession taught businesses some valuable lessons, but a recent survey found that restructuring experts do not think companies learned enough about changing their corporate governance practices, the Wall Street Journal reported today. In its 2013 Outlook Survey of restructuring experts, advisory firm AlixPartners said that slightly less than half of the 98 professionals questioned believe corporate governance is better now than it was before the recession. Corporate governance breakdowns have indeed been a major factor in several bankruptcies of the past few years, including the collapse of MF Global Holdings Ltd. and the massive fraud at Peregrine Financial Group Inc. Despite those events, more than two-thirds of the restructuring professionals who think corporate governance is worse said that it was because of liquidity oversight. When asked which sectors might face increases in distressed situations, the restructuring gurus picked industries facing scrutiny in Washington, D.C. Forty-one percent of those surveyed picked health care, up from just 20 percent last year. The restructuring experts also expect an uptick in distressed situations at energy companies, along with aerospace and defense. Read more. (Subscription required.)

PRIVATE EQUITY BRACING FOR BUYOUT-BOOM SHAKEOUT



The private-equity industry, comprised of nearly 4,500 firms with $3 trillion in assets, is bracing for a shakeout that has been brewing since the collapse of credit markets choked off a record leveraged-buyout binge, Bloomberg News reported today. Firms that attracted an unprecedented $702 billion from investors from 2006 to 2008 must replenish their coffers for future deals and avoid a reduction in fee income when the investment periods on those older funds run out, typically after five years. As many as 708 firms face such deadlines through 2015, according to London-based researcher Preqin Ltd. Many firms are suffering from below-average profits on their boom-period funds, and top executives from Carlyle Group LP co-founder David Rubenstein to Blackstone Group LP President Tony James say that future returns will be far more modest than those investors got used to in the past. As investors gravitate to the best-performing managers and cut loose others, 10 to 25 percent of the firms may find themselves without fresh money. Read more.

REPORT: SEC'S REVOLVING DOOR HURTS ITS EFFECTIVENESS



The Project on Government Oversight, a nonprofit watchdog group long critical of the SEC's revolving door, released a study yesterday highlighting a pattern of SEC alumni going to bat for Wall Street firms, the New York Times DealBook blog reported yesterday. The report, similarly skeptical of Wall Street lawyers joining the SEC, cites recent enforcement cases and scuttled money market regulations to underscore its concerns. "Former employees of the Securities and Exchange Commission routinely help corporations try to influence SEC rule-making, counter the agency's investigations of suspected wrongdoing, soften the blow of SEC enforcement actions, block shareholder proposals and win exemptions from federal law," the report says. Read more.

SPECULATIVE BETS PROVE RISKY AS SAVERS CHASE PAYOFF



Regulators across the country are confronting a wave of investor fraud that is saddling retirement savers with steep losses on complex products that until a few years ago were pitched only to the most sophisticated investors, the New York Times reported yesterday. The victims are among the millions of Americans whose mutual funds and stock portfolios plummeted in the wake of the financial crisis, and who started searching for ways to make better returns than those being offered by bank deposits and government bonds with minuscule interest rates. Tens of thousands of them put money into speculative bets promoted by aggressive financial advisers. The investments include private loans to young companies like television production firms and shares in bundles of commercial real estate properties. Those alternative investments have now had time to go sour in big numbers, state and federal securities regulators say, and are making up a majority of complaints and prosecutions. "Since the crisis, we've seen more and more people reaching out into different types of exotic investments that are a big concern to us," said William F. Galvin, the Massachusetts secretary of the commonwealth. Last Wednesday, Galvin's office ordered one of the nation's largest brokerage firms, LPL Financial, to pay $2.5 million for improperly selling the real estate bundles, known as nontraded REITs, or real estate investment trusts, to hundreds of state residents from 2006-09, in some cases overloading clients' accounts with them. Read more.

COMMENTARY: QUIETLY KILLING A CONSUMER WATCHDOG



Having failed to block the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) in the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, Senate Republicans are now trying to take away its power by filibuster, and they may well succeed, according to a New York Times editorial today. Under the Dodd-Frank law, most of the CFPB's regulatory powers -- particularly its authority over nonbanks like finance companies, debt collectors, payday lenders and credit agencies -- can be exercised only by a director. Knowing that, Republicans used a filibuster to prevent President Obama's nominee for director, Richard Cordray, from reaching a vote in 2011. Obama then gave Cordray a recess appointment, but a federal appeals court recently ruled in another case that the Senate was not in recess at that time because of the Republicans' tactics. That opinion, if upheld by the Supreme Court, is likely to apply to Cordray as well, which could invalidate the rules the bureau has already enacted. The president has renominated Cordray, but Republicans have made it clear that they will continue to filibuster to block his confirmation. Earlier this month, 43 Senate Republicans wrote a letter to the president vowing to block any nominee until "key structural changes" are made, including a bipartisan commission to run the bureau instead of one director, and congressional control of its appropriations. Other bank regulators, like the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, are not subject to the appropriations process, as a shield against political interference. Congress does, however, control the budgets of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and House Republicans have voted to strip those agencies of money needed to regulate derivatives and curb abuses. Read the full editorial.

ANALYSIS: S&P'S TOXIC AAA RATINGS OF MORTGAGE DEBT HAD FAR-REACHING EFFECTS



Institutions throughout the financial services industry felt the effects of the damages inflicted when S&P allegedly inflated rankings of mortgage debt that contributed to the biggest financial crisis since the Great Depression, according to a Bloomberg News analysis yesterday. As a result, the Justice Department sued New York-based S&P and parent McGraw-Hill Cos. last week. The world's leading financial institutions suffered more than $2.1 trillion of writedowns and losses after soaring U.S. mortgage defaults caused the credit crunch. Some of the biggest losers were banks, including Citigroup and Bank of America Corp., which created and purchased collateralized debt obligations. Many of these investments -- created by packaging mortgage-backed bonds, derivatives and other CDOs and dividing them into new securities with varying degrees of risk -- imploded within a year after they were sold, even though they had pristine credit ratings. Smaller financial institutions were also ruined by mortgage-backed debt. Western Federal Corporate Credit Union failed after its executives employed an improperly "aggressive investment strategy" that had no limits on highly rated mortgage bonds, according to a regulatory report on its collapse. Read more.

ABI LIVE WEBINAR: REVISITING RADLAX AND HALL – NEW LEGAL AND PRACTICAL IMPACT OF THE DECISIONS



See why this was the top-rated panel at the ABI Winter Leadership Conference last month! Join the expert panel on Feb. 19 from 12:00-1:15pm EST as they summarize and discuss the legal impact and practical implications of the Supreme Court’s 2012 decisions in Radlax and Hall. Participants include:

Susan M. Freeman of Lewis and Roca LLP (Phoenix)

Adam A. Lewis of Morrison & Foerster LLP (San Francisco)

• Prof. Charles J. Tabb of the University of Illinois College of Law (Champaign, Ill.)

Eric E. Walker of Perkins Coie LLP (Chicago)

Click here to register!

POWER TO VETO BANKRUPTCY SALES AMONG ISSUES TO BE EXAMINED AT ABI'S 31ST ANNUAL SPRING MEETING



The 2013 Annual Spring Meeting, to be held April 18-21, 2013, at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in National Harbor, Md., features a roster of the best national speakers, while the depth and scope of topics offer something for everyone. Specifically, four concurrent workshops will cover various “tracks,” including programs for attorneys in commercial cases, a track for restructuring professionals, a track of professional development programming and a track dealing solely with consumer issues. More than 16 hours of CLE/CPE is offered in some states, along with ethics credit totaling 3 hours, making the cost only about $50 per credit. In addition, committee sessions will drill down on other topics to provide you with the most practical and varied CLE/CPE experience ever. Sessions include:

- 17th Annual Great Debates

- Mediation: An Irrational Approach to a Rational Result

- Creditors' Committees and the Role of Indenture Trustees and Related Issues

- Current Issues for Financial Advisors in Bankruptcy Cases

- The Individual Conundrum: Chapter 7, 11 or 13?

- Real Estate Issues in Health Care Restructurings

- Law Firm Bankruptcies

- How to Be a Successful Expert

- The Ethical Compass: Multiple Ethical Schemes Applicable to Financial Advisors

- Chapter 9s, Nonprofits and Other Nontraditional Restructuring Processes

- And much more!

The Spring Meeting will also feature a field hearing of the ABI Commission to Study the Reform of Chapter 11, a report from the ABI Ethics Task Force, a luncheon panel discussion moderated by Bill Rochelle of Bloomberg News, and a Final Night Gala Dinner featuring a concert by Joan Jett and the Blackhearts!

Enter code "LOVEASM50" at checkout to save $50 on a new registration this week! Click here to register today!

ABI IN-DEPTH

DON'T MISS THE 9TH ANNUAL WHARTON RESTRUCTURING AND DISTRESSED INVESTING CONFERENCE ON FEB. 22!



The University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business will be holding the 9th Annual Wharton Restructuring and Distressed Investing Conference on Feb. 22 at the Hyatt at The Bellevue in Philadelphia. The theme of this year's conference is “Health of Nations: Distress, Recovery or Revival?” It will offer a unique opportunity to hear from a distinguished gathering of keynote speakers and panelists in their discussion of the current economic climate and issues of debt, investing, and restructuring across the globe. To register, please click here.

NEW BANKRUPTCY PROFESSIONALS: DON'T MISS THE NUTS AND BOLTS PROGRAM AT ABI'S ANNUAL SPRING MEETING! SPECIAL PRICING IF YOU ARE AN ASM REGISTRANT!



An outstanding faculty of judges and practitioners explains the fundamentals of bankruptcy in a one-day Nuts and Bolts program on April 18 being held in conjunction with ABI's Annual Spring Meeting. Ideal training for junior professionals or those new to this practice area!

The morning session covers concepts all bankruptcy practitioners need to know, and the afternoon session splits into concurrent tracks, focusing on consumer and business issues. The session will include written materials, practice tip sessions with bankruptcy judges, continental breakfast and a reception after the program. Click here to register!

LATEST CASE SUMMARY ON VOLO: LEAVITT V. FINNEY (IN RE FINNEY; 9TH CIR.)



Summarized by David Hercher of Miller Nash LLP

The Ninth Circuit ruled that because the chapter 13 debtor received a chapter 7 discharge in a prior case commenced during the four-year period before the current petition date, she was not entitled to a discharge in the current chapter 13 case, even though the first case was commenced under chapter 13 and converted to chapter 7 before discharge.

There are more than 750 appellate opinions summarized on Volo, and summaries typically appear within 24 hours of the ruling. Click here regularly to view the latest case summaries on ABI’s Volo website.

NEW ON ABI’S BANKRUPTCY BLOG EXCHANGE: CASE FOCUSES ON A COMMERCIAL LANDLORD'S CLAIM FOR INDEMNIFICATION



The Bankruptcy Blog Exchange is a free ABI service that tracks 35 bankruptcy-related blogs. A recent post examines the case of In re Mervyn's Holdings, LLC, in which the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware held that a claim arising from an indemnification provision, in a non-residential commercial lease, which was rejected post-petition, was entitled to administrative priority pursuant to § 365(d)(3) of the Bankruptcy Code.

Be sure to check the site several times each day; any time a contributing blog posts a new story, a link to the story will appear on the top. If you have a blog that deals with bankruptcy, or know of a good blog that should be part of the Bankruptcy Exchange, please contact the ABI Web team.

ABI Quick Poll

After Stern, bankruptcy courts do not have the constitutional authority to enter final judgments on fraudulent conveyance claims.

Click here to vote on this week's Quick Poll. Click here to view the results of previous Quick Polls.

INSOL INTERNATIONAL



INSOL International is a worldwide federation of national associations for accountants and lawyers who specialize in turnaround and insolvency. There are currently 37 member associations worldwide with more than 9,000 professionals participating as members of INSOL International. As a member association of INSOL, ABI's members receive a discounted subscription rate. See ABI's enrollment page for details.

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NEXT EVENT:

 

 

 

ABI Live Webinar: Revisiting RadLAX and Hall- New Legal and Practical Impact of the Decisions

Feb. 19, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

COMING UP:

 

 

 

ACBPIKC 2013

Feb. 20-22, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

9th Annual Wharton Restructuring and Distressed Investing Conference

Feb. 22, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

 

Paskay 2013

March 7-9, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

 

BBW 2013

March 22, 2013

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"Nuts and Bolts" Program at ASM- A Must for Junior Professionals or Those New to Bankruptcy Practice

April 18, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

 

ASM 2013

April 18-21, 2013

Enter code "LOVEASM50" at checkout to save $50 on a new registration this week!

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

 

ASM 2013

May 16, 2013

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ASM 2013

May 21-24, 2013

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ASM 2013

June 7, 2013

Register Today!



 

   
  CALENDAR OF EVENTS
 

2013

February

- ABI Live Webinar: Revisiting RadLAX and Hall- New Legal and Practical Impact of the Decisions

     February 19, 2013

- VALCON 2013

     February 20-22, 2013 | Las Vegas, Nev.

- 9th Annual Wharton

Restructuring and Distressed Investing Conference


     February 22, 2013 | Philadelphia, Pa.

March

- 37th Annual Alexander L. Paskay Seminar on Bankruptcy Law and Practice

     March 7-9, 2013 | St. Petersburg, Fla.

- Bankruptcy Battleground West

     March 22, 2013 | Los Angeles, Calif.


  

April

- "Nuts and Bolts" Program at ASM

     April 18, 2013 | National Harbor, Md.

- Annual Spring Meeting

     April 18-21, 2013 | National Harbor, Md.

May

- "Nuts and Bolts" Program at NYCBC

     May 15, 2013 | New York, N.Y.

- New York City Bankruptcy Conference

     May 16, 2013 | New York, N.Y.

- Litigation Skills Symposium

     May 21-24, 2013 | Dallas, Texas

June

- Memphis Consumer Bankruptcy Conference

     June 7, 2013 | Memphis, Tenn.


 
 

ABI BookstoreABI Endowment Fund ABI Endowment Fund
 


Maloofs Give Bankruptcy Trustee Sacramento Kings Sale Documents

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The Maloofs have given a bankruptcy trustee some of the documents regarding the sale of the Sacramento Kings to a Seattle group, the Sacramento Bee reported yesterday. The documents could figure in the trustee's assertion that the Maloofs may be improperly denying the team's limited partners a chance to match the Seattle group's offer for the team. David Flemmer, the bankruptcy trustee overseeing limited partner Bob Cook's 7 percent share of the team, has been negotiating with the Maloofs for weeks to get documents related to the Seattle deal. Flemmer's attorney, Don Fitzgerald, said in bankruptcy court yesterday that the Kings relinquished some of the documents Friday and were expected to release more records this week.

BankUnited Wants Universal Health Bankruptcy Tossed

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BankUnited N.A., a secured creditor in Universal Health Care Group Inc.'s chapter 11 case, is asking the court to throw the case out, saying that if it cannot proceed with a foreclosure sale, the company's value will "vaporize," Dow Jones DBR Small Cap reported today. BankUnited, which is representing secured noteholders owed $36.5 million, says that as a result of Universal's chapter 11 filing, the foreclosure sale was halted, but the state's authority to appoint a receiver who, it says, will liquidate Universal, is not affected.

For more information about health care insolvencies, be sure to pick up a copy of the ABI Health Care Insolvency Manual, Third Edition.

Nortel Units Seek Showdown on 2.67 Billion Retiree Claim

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The U.S. unit of Nortel Networks Corp., the defunct telecommunications company, asked a judge to schedule a November trial on whether to throw out $2.67 billion in claims filed on behalf of 38,000 U.K. retirees, Bloomberg News reported on Saturday. The request came after a mediator gave up on settlement talks last month, saying that bondholders, retirees and other creditors failed to agree on how to split $9 billion in cash. Nortel Networks Inc. asked the judge overseeing its slice of the multi-country bankruptcy to first decide whether the U.K. retirees have a legitimate claim to the money before deciding how best to divide it. Retiree representatives asked the judge to focus instead on how to split cash among Nortel’s units in the U.S., Europe and Canada.

JPMorgan Says MF Global Plan Obscures Possible Recoveries

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A proposed liquidation plan for MF Global Holdings Ltd. fails to take into account that its finance unit is being hit twice for the same debt, undercutting what some creditors might recover, JPMorgan Chase & Co said in a court filing, Reuters reported on Friday. Creditors of the finance unit could get up to 47.7 percent of their money if the double liability were voided, according to the filing by JPMorgan, which is an agent and lender under the unit's $1.2 billion liquidity facility. That is more than the maximum 33.6 percent that those creditors would receive under the plan proposed earlier this month by Silver Point Capital, Knighthead Capital and Cyrus Capital Partners in conjunction with trustee Louis Freeh.

Dewey Retirees End Fight with Firms Estate

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A group of retired Dewey & LeBoeuf partners whose objections threatened to drag out or even derail the defunct firm's bankruptcy proceedings have reached a settlement that Dewey lawyers say should clear the way for the speedy approval of a pending chapter 11 plan, Am Law Daily reported today. The settlement, detailed in Thursday court filings, has been offered to 125 retired Dewey partners—most of them tied to legacy firm LeBoeuf, Lamb, Green & MacRae—who are being asked to repay the bankruptcy estate a portion of money they received from the firm in 2011 and 2012, including tax advances, payments from non-qualified retirement plans, and Of counsel and special counsel compensation. The retired partners also agreed to forsake future claims against the Dewey estate; abandon some $80 million in proofs of claim filed in the bankruptcy; assign any claims against former Dewey partners, employees, or firm leaders to the estate; and drop their appeal of a $70 million partner contribution plan signed on to by a majority of the firm's former partners. The settlement requires the approval of Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn, who has already approved the partner contribution plan.