Features
How to Avert or Survive a Software Audit
<i>Ed. Note: One would expect law firms to consider it beneath them to deliberately have staff members ' or those of an ancillary business ' use illegal software copies. But the potentially high cost and embarrassment that can result from even tacitly permitting violations of software licenses should merit proactive attention by firm management.</i>
Don't Pay Old Equity That Is Truly 'Under Water'!
As discussed last month, the law clearly shows that parties structuring cash-out mergers with distressed debtors must focus on two things: 1) timing the debt-for-equity exchange (and the resultant debt cancellation) so not to occur prior to the merger's effective time, and 2) demonstrating that the debtor was at 'the brink of bankruptcy' at the merger's effective time. A clear record should be built and maintained on these points, and the structure should accommodate the technical legal requirements.
Exceptions to Dischargeability
For many years, financial or securities executives knew that if they had not committed a fraud or had not been fined by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), they could get a discharge in bankruptcy by filing for Chapter 7 or 11. Negligently committing a securities violation would not preclude a bankruptcy discharge for the civil liability flowing therefrom.
Insurance Assurance
The insurance market is undergoing turmoil as a result of recent trends, including terrorism, corporate scandals and skyrocketing healthcare costs. Premiums are soaring, causing firms to cut back on coverage or to cut into their profits ' choices that could have a profoundly adverse impact on the firm's future success.
Features
Measurable Results Through Profit Centers
Profitability pressures are leading firms of all sizes to create and implement strategic plans. These strategic plans often call for expansion and growth of practice areas, growth through lateral hires, or creation of entirely new practice groups. Concurrently, partner compensation methodologies are being revised to hold individual attorneys accountable for their own results.
Standing on the Edge
The fact pattern is all too common: A company with an extremely over-leveraged balance sheet is hemorrhaging cash and may already be in disrepute with its trade creditors (of whom there may be thousands). The business is beyond repair. A bank group that has liens on nearly all of the company's assets wants to use Chapter 11 to liquidate those assets to recover as much as it can. The liquidation may be piecemeal (as is common with failed retailers) or it may be as a going concern (as is more common in the industrial sector), but either way the debtors are heading toward a Chapter 11 liquidation.
Features
How to Defend Officers and Directors in a Management-Hostile Environment
As noted last month in Part One of this article, it is less common, but not unheard of, for the debtor itself to directly provide funds to defend and indemnify its D&Os, in addition to, or in lieu of, maintaining D&O insurance or to address a situation where the D&O has refused coverage (which is <i>not</i> that uncommon of an development).
Features
The Bankruptcy Hotline
The latest cases of interest to your practice.
Features
FCC: Phone Companies Have Limited Protection
When companies like AT&T, MCI, WorldCom and Sprint provide long-distance services, they almost always use the telephone networks of local exchange carriers, or 'LECs' (<i>eg</i>, Verizon, BellSouth, Qwest, and SBC) to originate and terminate those calls. This use of local networks is a service generally referred to as exchange access, which is subject to regulation by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
Features
NextWave Ruling Spells Victory and Defeat
When the government is a creditor, it cannot exercise self-help remedies that may be consistent with regulatory policies but are in violation of the specific provisions of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. '' 101 <i>et seq</i>. In <i>Federal Communications Comm'n v. NextWave Personal Communications, Inc.</i>, No. 01-653, 2003 U.S. LEXIS 1059, at *7-8, 71 U.S.L.W. 4085 (Jan. 27, 2003), the Supreme Court held that Bankruptcy Code Section 525, which prohibits a governmental unit from revoking a license to a debtor in bankruptcy, prevents the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) from revoking spectrum licenses that were bought on credit, but not paid for when due by NextWave Personal Communications, Inc.
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