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Technology Stocks : NEXTEL

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To: jimmyo who wrote (9543)12/22/1999 11:05:00 PM
From: Rono  Read Replies (1) of 10227
 
Ho ho ho Jimmyo

December 22, 1999
Court says communications law is supreme
in NextWave case

WASHINGTON?The long awaited decision from the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit was released on Wednesday saying that
communications?not bankruptcy?law is supreme and that a bankruptcy
court could not interfere with how the Federal Communications
Commission allocates licenses.

The Second Circuit?s order explains a decision released on Nov. 24
reversing a district court?s earlier ruling affirming that the FCC had erred
when it awarded NextWave its licenses in 1996. Both the bankruptcy
court and the district court had said the FCC had been fraudulent when it
awarded the licenses. The Second Circuit disagreed.

Meanwhile, NextWave Telecom Inc. returned to bankruptcy court to
defend against a hostile takeover from Nextel Communications Inc.
claiming the bid violated the bankruptcy rules calling for an exclusivity
period where only parties to a bankruptcy can discuss reorganization
plans.

This is not the first time NextWave and Nextel have fought in Bankruptcy
Judge Aldai Hardin?s court. In August, Nextel said it had reached an
agreement with the FCC and the Department of Justice that would allow it
to buy NextWave?s licenses or receive a termination fee if the FCC sold
them to someone else. Hardin slapped a temporary restraining order on
Nextel because it was not a party in the bankruptcy and could not
participate while the exclusivity period was in place. That TRO was lifted
by a district court on Dec. 15.

Nextel?s bid, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on
Tuesday, would pay $5.3 billion to the FCC and $500 million in cash to
other NextWave creditors. NextWave?s stockholders would receive
Nextel stock worth $2.5 billion or about $10 per NextWave share.

Also on Tuesday, Nextel filed a petition with the FCC regarding the status
of the NextWave licenses, which originally were set aside for small
businesses. The FCC has indicated a willingness to waive the designated
entity rules to allow Nextel to buy the NextWave licenses.
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