To: Dennis Roth who wrote (344 ) 3/13/2001 9:03:39 AM From: Jon Koplik Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1088 WSJ article -- NextWave Asks FCC to Delay Transferring Spectrum Licenses March 13, 2001 Tech Center NextWave Asks FCC to Delay Transferring Spectrum Licenses By YOCHI J. DREAZEN Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL WASHINGTON -- Wireless-services provider NextWave Personal Communications Inc. asked the Federal Communications Commission to delay transferring its reclaimed spectrum licenses to new buyers to give a federal court time to rule on the matter. In a letter Friday, NextWave said the FCC shouldn't transfer the licenses until the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit decides whether a January spectrum auction was legal. Bidders paid more than $17 billion for the licenses, most of them reclaimed from NextWave for nonpayment. The company has asked the court to cancel the auction and force the FCC to return the licenses. Oral arguments are set to begin Thursday. "The FCC already told the court that NextWave will get the licenses back if we win the appeal, so awarding the licenses before the case is decided could mean lots of unnecessary expenditures of time and money for us, the FCC and the companies themselves," said Michael Wack, NextWave's deputy general counsel. "Why not avoid all of that damage by waiting until the court rules?" An FCC spokeswoman declined to comment, noting that companies have another two weeks to file petitions about the auction. The FCC is unlikely to formally respond to NextWave's petition until the comment period ends later this month. FCC officials said the agency would begin awarding the licenses soon after. The maneuvering represents the latest escalation in the long-running legal fight between NextWave, Hawthorne, N.Y., and the FCC. As demonstrated by the auction bidding, the licenses are enormously valuable to wireless companies hoping to fill gaps in their coverage areas or to roll out advanced telecommunications services. The company has also mounted a sophisticated lobbying campaign -- despite its financial woes -- to regain the licenses. NextWave and its creditors have hired political heavyweights such as former Republican National Chairman Haley Barbour and former House Appropriations Committee Chairman Bob Livingston (R., La.) to press its case. In court, the company will be represented by another big gun: Solicitor General-designate Theodore Olson, who won the Supreme Court appeal that sealed the 2000 election for President George Bush. In 1996, NextWave submitted a total of $4.7 billion in winning bids for 63 wireless licenses, but the company soon ran into financial troubles and in 1998 filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. In total, it only paid the FCC $500 million for the licenses, which the agency reclaimed and began reauctioning last year. NextWave has spent years battling the agency in bankruptcy and federal court, arguing that the FCC didn't have the statutory authority to reclaim the licenses. A bankruptcy court in New York ruled in the company's favor in 1999, but a federal appeals court there overturned the decision later that year. The company then sued the FCC in federal court here, setting the stage for this week's oral arguments. Write to Yochi J. Dreazen at yochi.dreazen@wsj.com *************************************************************** NextWave's Battle Continues 1996: NextWave bids $4.7 billion for 63 Federal Communications Commission wireless spectrum licenses, winning the auction. June 1998: NextWave files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection after only paying the FCC $500 million. December 1999: NextWave offers to pay the remaining $4.2 billion as part of a broad reorganization of the company. January 2000: NextWave offers to pay the remaining amount in cash, with interest. The next day, the FCC formally cancels the company's licenses and makes plans to resell them. November 2000: Supreme Court refuses to hear a NextWave case that would have helped the company reclaim the licenses. December 2000: The FCC begins taking bids for the reclaimed licenses. January 2001: The auction ends, having raised more than $17 billion for the government. March 15, 2001: The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia begins hearing oral arguments on NextWave's petition to cancel the spectrum auction and force the FCC to return the licenses. Copyright © 2001 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.