By Patrick Fitzgerald 
 

The fight over who will conduct the bankruptcy auction of LightSquared is heating up as companies tied to hedge fund manager Phil Falcone and Dish Network's Charlie Ergen vie over the fate of the troubled wireless venture.

In a flurry of court filings Tuesday night and Wednesday morning, LightSquared's potential bidders--two groups of lenders--squared off with LightSquared and its owner, Mr. Falcone's Harbinger Capital, over their competing auction proposals, each side claiming the other's proposal would put their rivals in position to take control of the company.

A subsidiary of Dish has already bid $2.2 billion for LightSquared's wireless spectrum assets. Creditors U.S. Bancorp (USB) and MAST Capital Management have also teamed and plan to "credit bid"--or to use some of the company's debt it controls-to purchase another spectrum controlled by LightSquared.

The two lender groups have agreed that Dish's $2.2 billion offer should serve as the stalking horse, or lead bid, for one set of wireless spectrum assets. Dish would $66 million break-up fee if its offer is topped by a rival bidder. The U.S. Bank-MAST lenders, owed some $322.3 million, would serve as the stalking horse for the other spectrum assets.

LightSquared, which is controlled by Phil Falcone and his Harbinger Capital Partners hedge fund firm, says those procedures are "self-serving" and designed to ensure that only one bidder, namely Dish, will emerge victorious at the auction.

Lawyers for the wireless company said "the bid procedures are structured to minimize--rather than maximize--the value of its assets and are further designed to ensure that LightSquared's assets are available solely for the benefit of the lender parties and their affiliated stalking horse bidders at as cheap a price as possible," LightSquared said in court papers.

LightSquared hasn't warmed to the Dish bid and wants to retain control of the auction process so it can decide what constitutes the "highest and best" bid. The two bidders, however say Harbinger is adamantly opposed to the sale, and the LightSquared auction procedures are designed to keep Mr. Falcone in control.

LightSquared has denied those allegations and to that end the company is proposing setting up an independent special committee to oversee LightSquared's sale.

The proposed panel--investment banker Donna P. Alderman, former Skadden lawyer Alan J. Carr, and hedge fund founder Neal P. Goldman--to make binding decisions with respect to the sale and the restructuring process, according to court papers. Two other members including a Harbinger director and LightSquared's chief executive, would also serve on the committee in a non-voting capacity.

Tom Lauria, a lawyer for the lenders, said his clients "haven't completed their homework yet" on the independence of the proposed panel members but welcomed the formation of a truly independent committee to run the auction.

"We're glad they seem to have gotten part of the message," said Mr. Lauria, a lawyer at White & Case, in an interview Wednesday. "But they're still not there. Putting a Harbinger guy and the CEO on the committee isn't independent."

Judge Shelley C. Chapman has scheduled a hearing on the competing bid rules for Sept. 24 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York.

Dish Chairman Mr. Ergen has bought up LightSquared debt through an investment vehicle he controls, while a subsidiary of Dish has made the $2.2 billion for the assets. The sale would pay off the $1.7 billion in bank debt owned by the lenders and Mr. Ergen's investment vehicle. Harbinger has sued Mr. Ergen over the debt purchases.

LightSquared, the holding company 96%-owned by Mr. Falcone and Harbinger, had plans to build a nationwide, low-cost wireless-telephone network that would serve hundreds of millions of Americans.

The wireless venture filed for bankruptcy in May of last year after the government said the company's network could interfere with global-positioning systems, causing the Federal Communications Commission to revoke LightSquared's license to use the wireless spectrum.

That wireless spectrum remains valuable, and Mr. Falcone, who has been building a nationwide, high-speed network for years, is committed to holding on to it.

The FCC is considering whether to approve the company's application to share some of the government's spectrum and modify its licenses. Such an approval would allow LightSquared to deploy some of its network quickly while it waits for approval on other parts of it.

But time is running out for LightSquared and the lengthy approval process has forced the company to explore the sale.

Mr. Falcone's legal woes have further complicated his efforts to stay in control. The SEC last year charged him with, among other things, taking a $113 million loan from a Harbinger fund to pay his personal taxes as other investors were prevented from withdrawing money.

After his initial settlement with the SEC was deemed too lenient, the two sides earlier this summer reached a new deal that called for Mr. Falcone to pay about $18 million in financial penalties and agree to a five-year ban from the securities industry. Mr. Falcone also admitted wrongdoing, a first-time occurrence in SEC settlements not related to people who had previously pleaded guilty in a criminal proceeding or been criminally convicted.

(Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review covers news about distressed companies and those under bankruptcy protection. Go to http://dbr.dowjones.com)

-Joseph Checkler contributed to this article.

Write to Patrick Fitzgerald at patrick.fitzgerald@wsj.com

Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires

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