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To: Cactus Jack who wrote (162140)3/3/2009 11:11:00 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361688
 
Blockbuster Said to Hire Firm for Bankruptcy Advice

By Tiffany Kary

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- Blockbuster Inc., the world’s largest movie-rental chain, hired legal counsel to explore a possible bankruptcy filing, a person familiar with the situation said. Blockbuster fell as much as 86 percent before trading was halted.

Kirkland & Ellis LLP was asked to evaluate restructuring options for the company, which may include a “pre-packaged” or “pre-arranged bankruptcy,” in which much of the restructuring work is completed out of court, the person said. A pre-packaged filing is more advanced than a pre-arranged bankruptcy as it includes agreements from creditors about the outcome of the company’s reorganization.

“We’ve hired them for refinancing and capital raising initiatives,” said Karen Raskopf, a Blockbuster spokeswoman. “We do not intend to file for bankruptcy.”

Blockbuster is working with Kirkland and Ellis on refinancing, Raskopf said. The company previously announced plans to fund its own operations through the end of 2009 after two of its credit facilities expire this August, she said.

Blockbuster has also hired Rothschild Inc., an investment bank, to advise it on restructuring, a person familiar with the situation said.

Blockbuster, with more than 7,500 stores in North America, Europe, Asia and Australia, has faced increased competition from Netflix Inc., the largest U.S. mail-order movie service. Dallas-based Blockbuster has expanded its digital library of movies and made them available on mobile phones and Web- connected TVs. It plans to offer 90,000 DVD titles by mail, according to the company’s Web site. Netflix, by comparison, has 100,000 DVD titles, according to the company’s Web site.

Bankruptcy Specialists

“Balance sheet issues are easily solved with a prepackaged or prearranged bankruptcy,” said Paul Silverstein, a lawyer with Andrews & Kurth LLP, who has no connection to Blockbuster. Silverstein, speaking in a phone interview, said operational issues and business problems are less easily solved with such filings.

Kate Kortenkamp, a Kirkland spokeswoman, didn’t immediately return a call seeking comment. Kirkland has a specialty in restructuring and bankruptcy, and has represented Tronox Inc., Wellman Inc. and Solutia Inc., all chemicals companies, in bankruptcy filings. Kirkland has also been reported to have been retained by Charter Communications Inc., Paul Allen’s money-losing cable television carrier, and Visteon Corp., the auto-parts maker spun off by Ford Motor Co. in 2000.

Liquidity Challenge

“Blockbuster has been challenged liquidity-wise for a while now,” said Wedbush Morgan Securities analyst Edward Woo. “They acquired a whole bunch of debt when they had the spinoff away from Viacom.”

On Jan. 14, the company announced a partnership with Novato, California-based Sonic Solutions Inc., a digital video publishing company, to combine libraries and give customers immediate access to movies. It also recently released a media player the size of a cable box that downloads movies for viewing on television.

Blockbuster fell as much as 83 cents to 13 cents in New York Stock Exchange composite trading before trading was halted at 2:25 p.m. Netflix surged $2.01, or 5.9 percent, to $36.36 in Nasdaq Stock Market trading today.

New Products

Blockbuster’s top shareholders are Prentice Capital, which owns 10 percent of the outstanding stock, Icahn Capital, with 9 percent, and Barclays Global Investors, with 7 percent, according to Bloomberg data.

Blockbuster’s shift to new products hasn’t fully offset a declining video rental industry and a competitive home entertainment market, according to Standard & Poor’s. S&P analyst David Kuntz said in a Feb. 25 report that the company also has a “highly leveraged capital structure” and may face challenges to refinancing a revolving loan that expires Aug. 20.

S&P rates Blockbuster’s $1.1 billion senior secured credit facilities a “2,” indicating lenders would receive 70 to 90 percent recoveries in the event of a default. That debt is secured by Blockbuster’s U.S. assets as well stock in some international subsidiaries, according to S&P.

S&P rates Blockbuster’s $300 million in notes a ‘6,’ indicating they could get a “negligible” recovery of zero to 10 percent, according to the report.

$300 Million

Blockbuster’s $300 million in 9 percent notes due 2012 most recently traded at 52.25 cents on the dollar, down 39 percent from their 52-week high of 85.12 cents achieved June 9, according to Trace, the bond-price reporting system of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

In May, Blockbuster had made a preliminary offer to buy Circuit City Stores Inc., backed by Carl Icahn. Blockbuster backed out a few months later.

The company increased its borrowing capacity last October under a deal with former parent Viacom Inc., according to its quarterly filing Nov. 14 with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Blockbuster, spun off from Viacom Inc. in 2004, had an agreement from its initial public offering to reserve $150 million under its revolving credit facility to issue letters of credit for Viacom at Viacom’s expense. That agreement was amended last October to reduce the amount to $75 million, and give Blockbuster responsibility for expenses. In exchange, Blockbuster’s borrowing capacity increased by $75 million, according to the SEC filing.



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (162140)3/6/2009 12:20:55 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 361688
 
Can Ruth Madoff Keep the Penthouse?

By Peter J. Henning

dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com

March 5, 2009, 2:54 pm

[Peter J. Henning, a professor at Wayne State Law School, occasionally writes as a guest blogger for The Deal Professor. Mr. Henning specializes in issues related to white-collar crime and is a former editor of the White Collar Crime Law Prof Blog.]

Lawyers for Bernand L. Madoff, the alleged Ponzi scheme operator, have asked that assets worth almost $70 million be exempt from his case because they are actually owned by his wife, Ruth, and have no connection to the fraud. While numerous victims were destroyed financially by the multibillion-dollar scheme, if Mr. Madoff’s legal team gets their way, Ms. Madoff would be allowed to keep the apartment in New York’s Upper East Side, $45 million of municipal bonds, and $17 million in cash held at Wachovia bank.

This has to be a better joke than any ever told by Henny Youngman.

The assets appear to be in Ms. Madoff’s name, and in a legal filing, Mr. Madoff’s lawyers claim that the money is distinct from the Ponzi scheme that prosecutors say he operated for years before confessing in December 2008.

However, simply putting assets into another person’s name, or giving them as a gift, does not necessarily shield them when they are the proceeds of criminal activity.

The government has not yet filed a complete set of criminal charges against Mr. Madoff, and the current deadline for seeking an indictment is March 11. Federal prosecutors can pursue criminal asset forfeiture under a range of statutes that could authorize the seizure of the assets claimed by Ms. Madoff if they are considered to be the product of his crimes.

Criminal asset forfeiture is a fairly recent phenomenon, first adopted as part of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations statute, known as RICO, which was enacted in 1970. While that law was designed to reach criminal organizations like the Mafia, its terms are much broader and can be used in a wide variety of cases. For example, former Illinois Gov. George Ryan was convicted under RICO for taking bribes.

One provision of RICO, Section 1963(a)(3), allows prosecutors to seek the forfeiture of “any property constituting, or derived from, any proceeds which the person obtained, directly or indirectly, from racketeering activity” engaged in by the defendant. Among the crimes that can constitute the “racketeering activity” in violation of RICO is mail and wire fraud.

It would be fairly easy to charge Mr. Madoff with a RICO violation under Section 1962(c), which requires proof that he conducted an enterprise, like his investment advisory business, through a pattern of mail and wire fraud. The mailing of falsified account statements and the receipt of customer wire transfers over the years that he operated the Ponzi scheme would establish a RICO violation in fairly short order.

If he were convicted under RICO, the government could then seek the forfeiture of all proceeds of his criminal activity. One might think that giving the property away or putting it in his wife’s name might insulate Mr. Madoff from the forfeiture provision, but that is not necessarily the case.

The power of the criminal asset forfeiture provision is through the “relation back” doctrine. Under Section 1963(c), all “right, title, and interest” in property that is traceable to the RICO violation “vests in the United States upon the commission of the act giving rise to forfeiture under this section.” In other words, when the crime took place, the government immediately became the owner of any property that was the product of the mail and wire fraud scheme. It appears that Mr. Madoff’s entire investment advisory business was a scam, so any money derived from that operation would be subject to forfeiture.

The “relation back” doctrine prevents a defendant from simply transferring legal ownership of property acquired through the criminal activity. Thus, if the Upper East Side apartment where he currently resides came from money generated by the Ponzi scheme, then it belongs to the government as of the moment the crime occurred.

The key issue is tracing the proceeds of the fraud to determine what is subject to the “relation back” principle. Mr. Madoff operated two firms, one the investment advisory business that defrauded so many investors, the other a brokerage business that, to all outward appearances, was legitimate. But to the extent proceeds from the Ponzi scheme were used to fund or expand the brokerage business, then that operation would itself be subject to forfeiture because the government owns the proceeds from the crime, including any business acquired or expanded with tainted money.

To argue that the assets in Ms. Madoff’s name are in fact separate, it will be necessary for her to show they were acquired by untainted money. That may be difficult to prove because the records from Mr. Madoff’s investment advisory business do not appear to be very clear. If the government is able to show the brokerage operation was supported by the Ponzi scheme, then money taken from that business may not be immune to forfeiture.

The fact that Ms. Madoff did not know the money she received from him was the proceeds of unlawful activity — a point the government may well contest — would not insulate the property and accounts in her name. Under the asset forfeiture laws, ignorance of the source of the tainted money is not a defense. Instead, the only basis to resist a criminal asset forfeiture claim to property traceable to the crime is if the purported owner acquired the interest before any criminal activity generated the proceeds, or if the person is a bona fide purchaser for value of the property.

Given that the government believes Mr. Madoff operated his Ponzi scheme for a number of years, perhaps as far back as the 1970s, it will be difficult for Ms. Madoff to show she acquired the assets before the fraud began. To qualify as a “purchaser,” a gift from one spouse to another, or even the sharing of marital assets, would not be sufficient to insulate the assets: One must furnish actual value in an arm’s-length exchange.

Even if Ms. Madoff amassed her fortune by using the household money provided by Mr. Madoff, if that money is traceable to his fraud, then it would not be shielded from an asset forfeiture order.

Another weapon in the government’s forfeiture arsenal is the power to take what are known as “substitute assets.” If there is a forfeiture order but the government cannot find enough money or assets traceable to the crime, then it can take other assets owned by the defendant even if they are unconnected to the criminal activity. The assets could be perfectly legitimate, but criminal asset forfeiture is a punishment so anything else held by a defendant can be used to comply with a forfeiture order.

The courts are divided on whether the “relation back” doctrine applies to substitute assets. If the government were to acquire title to substitute assets at the time of the crime, then any untainted money given by Mr. Madoff could still be reached. That is a bit of a stretch, to be sure, but may be a means to get to the $70 million in Ms. Madoff’s name if the assets in her name cannot be traced to his fraud.

Putting assets in a spouse’s name sounds like a convenient way to hide money if you are engaged in criminal conduct. Mr. Madoff’s fraud was of astounding proportions, and it may be that part of his plan was to ensure his wife was taken care of if he were ever caught. The criminal asset forfeiture laws may well cut him off at the pass, however, if the government can show that the assets in her name were the proceeds of his criminal activity.

Henny Youngman once said, “Someone stole all my credit cards, but I won’t be reporting it. The thief spends less than my wife did.” In this case, Mr. Madoff is the alleged swindler, and it remains to be seen who — his wife or the government — ends up with the goods.