The legal team winding down MF Global's bankruptcy estate, led by former FBI director Louis Freeh, estimates the fees charged by the team and other professionals have reached nearly $25 million since the bankruptcy was filed in October. Now a customer group is planning to ask that the case be streamlined so that those professionals -- especially Freeh -- receive less and customers receive more. On Friday, a coalition of former MF Global customers plans to argue in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan that the Chapter 11 liquidation of the MF parent entity should be converted to a so-called Chapter 7, coalition leader James Koutoulas said on Wednesday. In Chapter 11 cases, businesses or their court-appointed trustees try to restructure debt or sell assets to recover as much money as possible to pay off creditors, a process that can be drawn out. In Chapter 7, a trustee sells off assets as quickly as possible, with less involvement from professionals like lawyers, but sometimes at the expense of drawing top-shelf value. Under bankruptcy law, administrative fees are paid ahead of other creditor claims, so Freeh's mounting bills are siphoning money from creditors, said Koutoulas, a Chicago fund manager who had $55 million tied up in MF Global on behalf of his clients. Freeh has released estimated fee figures but not yet formally submitted compensation requests. The estimates consist of Freeh's fees and those of certain other professionals, including MF Global's creditors' committee, but do not break down who has accrued what. The effort to curb Freeh's work and convert the proceeding to a Chapter 7 could be a long shot. Judge Martin Glenn, presiding over the bankruptcy, denied an earlier attempt by another customer group to convert the case, citing potential costs to creditors and the disruption of federal investigations into MF Global's collapse. But Koutoulas said his group plans to use new legal theories based on information that was not available at the time Glenn made his previous ruling, including that MF Global executives knew at the time of the company's collapse that the company had no viable chance of restructuring. It is also unclear whether customers like Koutoulas are eligible to share in the proceeds of Freeh's recovery efforts. MF Global, once led by Jon Corzine, a former Goldman Sachs chief executive and New Jersey governor, filed for bankruptcy on October 31, 2011, after revealing exposure to risky European sovereign debt.
MF Global clients bash fat fees, seek quick wind-down
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So good of Reuter's reports to intentionally leave out references to Corzine's Political Party Affiliation and Campaign Fundraising Fame in all their reports on this. The fact that he is a Favorite of the Obama Administration (as is Goldman Sachs & J.P. Morgan) should raise all kinds of questions and red flags about DOJ's failure to find criminality in this debacle. A push for Theft by Fraud charges for the Illegal co-mingling of funds would surely raise the profile of this case and push Freeh & others to cease malingering and fee milking activities, yes? What about State AGs and charges?
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