First appeared in CNBC
The U.S. government has asked a court to dismiss a lawsuit
relating to its 2008 takeover of American International Group that was filed by
a company run by former AIG Chief Executive Maurice Greenberg, court documents
showed.
In November, Greenberg's company, Starr International Co,
sued the U.S. government for $25 billion, calling the 2008 federal takeover of
the insurer unconstitutional.
Starr sued the government in the U.S. Court of Federal
Claims in Washington, D.C., which handles lawsuits seeking money from the
government. It brought that lawsuit on behalf of itself and other AIG
shareholders.
The lawsuit marks an unusual effort to force the government
to pay shareholders, who have seen AIG's stock price tumble since the middle of
2007, when the insurer's risky bets on mortgage debt through credit default
swaps began to falter.
Greenberg had led AIG for nearly four decades prior to his
2005 ouster. Starr once owned 12 percent of AIG.
In a filing with the U.S. Court of Federal Claims in
Washington, D.C., on Thursday, the government said although Starr may disagree
with the terms to which AIG agreed, any loss resulting from that agreement
should be borne by AIG and its shareholders, and not the public.
"Starr demands that the court second guess AIG and
rewrite the rescue agreement by making American taxpayers pay an additional $25
billion, based upon a market valuation of AIG after the rescue," the
government said in the filing.
The U.S. government argued that AIG had asked and agreed to
be rescued, "electing to save itself from a failure of its own
making."
AIG [AIG 29.66 ^
0.21 (+0.71%) ], which was once the
world's largest insurer by market value, was rescued by the U.S. government
from the verge of collapse at the height of financial crisis in 2008. AIG's
bailouts eventually totaled $182.3 billion.
The $25 billion estimate reflects what Starr called the
value of the government's stake on January 14, 2011, when it swapped AIG
preferred stock for 562.9 million common shares.
The cases are Starr International Co v. U.S., U.S. Court of
Federal Claims, No. 11-00779.
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