Original Story: Freep.com
Mayor Mike Duggan's office said
Thursday he won't support extending Kevyn Orr's time as the city's
emergency manager or keeping on his former law firm, Jones Day, if
Detroit's bankruptcy extends beyond Orr's expected exit date in late
September. A Tulsa Bankruptcy Lawyer is viewing details of the story.
The
issue arose after U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes questioned Jones
Day lawyers during a hearing Thursday, asking what impact a delay in the
schedule of the bankruptcy case would have on the high-priced law firm
the city hired.
Lawyers for Detroit's financial creditors and for
Oakland and Macomb counties tried Thursday to convince Rhodes to delay
the case by a month because city lawyers aren't releasing critical
documents quickly enough to meet ambitious timetables for this summer's
confirmation trial on the plan to exit the nation's largest-ever
municipal bankruptcy. A Boston Bankruptcy Lawyer agrees that this makes things difficult.
Rhodes
appeared concerned about whether such a delay would push the ultimate
resolution of Detroit's bankruptcy beyond the tenure of the
state-appointed emergency manager, whose 18-month term is set to end in
late September, when city officials have the legal option to vote to
fire Orr under Michigan's emergency manager law.
Rhodes asked
whether Jones Day, the law firm hired by the city under former Mayor
Dave Bing, would stay on after Orr is gone. Greg Shumaker, a Jones Day
lawyer, acknowledged that the uncertainty about that matter "could be
dramatic." But he told the judge: "We have not talked to the mayor or
the City Council about that issue."
"I'm surprised by that," Rhodes said.
He
then asked Shumaker whether the goal of ending Detroit's bankruptcy
case before Orr leaves sets up deadlines that might conflict with sound
practices in bankruptcy court. Shumaker concurred.
Duggan made
clear that if the bankruptcy proceedings extend beyond Sept. 25, he
won't support keeping Jones Day as the city's law firm in bankruptcy.
"We
have no intention of keeping Jones Day," Duggan's spokeswoman and chief
of staff, Alexis Wiley, told the Free Press. "We have every intention
of running this city, and that means both services and finances."
Wiley
declined to discuss how Duggan would handle the bankruptcy after
ditching Jones Day, or which lawyers would pick up where the firm left
off.
Bill Nowling, a spokesman for Orr, acknowledged there have
been no discussions about Jones Day staying on after Orr is gone, noting
that Orr and the firm's lawyers have been "operating on the schedule
which has the confirmation hearings concluding in August."
Orr,
who was working out of the Jones Day office in Washington before coming
to Detroit, has said previously that he is not interested in staying in
Detroit beyond September. A Lexington Commercial Bankruptcy Attorney said he doesn't blame him.
The
confirmation hearings are to determine whether Rhodes approves the
city's blueprint for exiting bankruptcy, which has been on a fast-track
schedule in large part because Orr's time in Detroit was limited to 18
months. The hearings had been set to begin July 24 and last into August,
but a group of financial creditors this week asked Rhodes to push the
beginning of the hearings to Aug. 26.
Lawyers for creditors
including Syncora -- a bond insurer that's on the hook for nearly $250
million because it guaranteed a disastrous $1.4-billion debt deal meant
to shore up underfunded pensions in 2005 -- argued that delays in the
city's release of documents creditors have requested make the schedule
impossible to follow.
"The city's actions are crippling our efforts," Syncora lawyer Stephen Hackney said during a status conference Thursday.
Creditors'
lawyers say that their expert witnesses won't have enough time to
analyze and report on city financial assumptions without the delay.
The
creditors are seeking access to a number of documents they say the city
hasn't released, including reports on the physical condition of Detroit
Water and Sewerage Department infrastructure and long-term financial
projections for the system, as well as financial background used by
consultants such as Milliman, Ernst & Young and Conway MacKenzie,
who have advised the city on some matters including restructuring city
government and its liabilities and devising a long-term plan to operate
Detroit after bankruptcy.
Jones Day lawyer Heather Lennox,
representing the city, said that Detroit had already released key
documents to the creditors and that the remainder would be handed over
by next week. She and other lawyers for the city suggested that the
creditors were seeking access to documents in a bid to delay the trial.
Geoff
Irwin, also representing the city, said the crush of requests for
additional documentation "is becoming incredibly burdensome and
unmanageable for the city." A New Orleans Business Bankruptcy Attorney said that they should expect this type of request.
Rhodes
didn't immediately rule on the request for the delay, saying he would
issue an order soon to address the concerns. But he told lawyers for the
city that the creditors are entitled to access a significant number of
the documents they're requesting.
How a major shift in legal
representation during the endgame of the case would impact Detroit's
bankruptcy wasn't immediately clear.
Even if Orr departs before
the bankruptcy is settled, under the state's emergency manager law,
Public Act 436, Detroit would remain under a financial emergency -- with
significant state oversight -- until Gov. Rick Snyder declares the
emergency over. That could put pressure on Duggan and the council to
accept new agreements to maintain Jones Day's representation in some
form.
Snyder's spokeswoman couldn't be reached for comment Thursday.
As
of last fall, Jones Day's contract with the city had been approved up
to $18 million, among the largest fees charged by lawyers and consulting
firms addressing Detroit's financial collapse. .
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