• If you are having problems logging in please use the Contact Us in the lower right hand corner of the forum page for assistance.

Eastern Livestock -recover 20-30 cents on dollar

Help Support Ranchers.net:

A

Anonymous

Guest
This could bankrupt a lot of small producers...Gibson and his crew should be locked up until about the turn of the century as examples.... But they won't be..

USDA Chops Eastern Liability

Hundreds in Line to Collect From Eastern Livestock



Katie Micik DTN Staff Reporter

DTN/The Progressive Farmer - Mon Aug 15, 2011 10:52 AM CDT



KISSIMMEE, Fla. (DTN) -- The trustee overseeing Eastern Livestock Company's Chapter 11 bankruptcy told cattlemen at NCBA's summer conference that he thinks creditors will recover 20 to 30 cents on the dollar.



Jim Knauer also said USDA reduced the amount of claims that qualify for reimbursement from Eastern's bond, qualifying $18.7 million out of $37 million in claims. Producers will likely receive 4 to 5 cents on the dollar, better than the penny on the dollar he had predicted. Knauer will disburse the bond payments, but stressed these payments are separate from the bankruptcy case.



The case is still in collection phase as Knauer pursues parties that still owe money to Eastern and reconstructs records. He's cooperating with an FBI criminal investigation into Thomas Gibson, who owned the cattle brokerage.



USDA estimated in November that Eastern Livestock sent up to $130 million of bad checks to more than 700 producers across the U.S. The company's primary bank, Fifth Third Bank, froze Eastern Livestock's accounts after uncovering an alleged check-kiting scheme.



Eastern Livestock sold $1.7 billion worth of cattle in 2009. The company's 2010 statements show sales of more than $3 billion. Knauer explained the increase was mostly from sales of cattle that only existed on paper between Gibson and affiliated entities.




For the most part, Knauer said Eastern did business with "very fine people," who were cooperative with efforts and were paying debts to Eastern despite missing records.



The trustee explained to NCBA's Live Cattle Marketing Committee meeting that he expects to recover about $45 million.



Eastern Livestock's accounts receivable, once all collected, should be about $15 million. He has collected $10 million to $11 million so far.



In the days before the scandal made major headlines, Gibson assigned contracts to some of his biggest customers to help cover some of their losses. Bankruptcy courts consider this unlawful preferential treatment of creditors. Gibson assigned more than 500 contracts to Superior Livestock, the online auction service. As a result, USDA reduced the amount of Superior's claim on Eastern from $19 million to $1.4 million.



Knauer expects to get $8 million from a handful of interpleader cases, where feedlots, having sold livestock with now disputed ownership, deposited money with the courts asking them to decide who should be paid.



Eastern owns about $2.5 million of assets, including its headquarters building.



There also is $4.7 million the FBI seized from Thomas Gibson's personal bank account. The government doesn't have to return that money if it is linked to a crime. However, Knauer said the FBI wants that money to go to Eastern Livestock's creditors, not the bureau's coffers. He said they're negotiating a way to disburse the money in accordance with FBI's wishes.



Knauer told the committee that claims made against Eastern Livestock by its creditors are artificially high because it's the lawyers' job to try to gain preferred status for payment and to optimize their client's chances of being paid.



He filed a $30 million claim on behalf of the 378 ranchers who filed a claim against Eastern Livestock's surety bond, but may not have filed on the bankruptcy case. It's now known many ranchers did file in both situations, so some of that $30 million claim is double counted.



"The total dollar amount of the claims that have been filed is a ridiculous high amount, probably by about 50%," he said.



Fifth Third Bank holds the primary lien against $32 million of Eastern Livestock's assets because the cattle brokerage defaulted on its operating loan. Knauer hired an independent law firm to review the bank's lien paperwork, which was all in order, and to investigate whether any of the bank's actions were responsible for the wave of bad checks. That investigation is not complete, but Knauer told the crowd that Fifth Third is considering releasing some of its lien. He has yet to decide on filing a suit against the bank.



He hopes creditors will receive 20 to 30 cents on the dollar for their claims. That's a much more optimistic outlook than he gave at the first meeting of creditors this spring.



"They wouldn't be ecstatic about it, but based on where I started that would be -- if it made it to 40 cents on the dollar I'd think it was one of the most successful cases I've had -- but its way too soon to tell yet where we'll end up," he said.



Knauer disclosed that Development Specialists Inc., the firm of the original receiver appointed by an Ohio court before creditors forced Eastern into bankruptcy, has so far been paid $700,000 to $800,000 for its ongoing forensic accounting services...
 
Oldtimer said:
This could bankrupt a lot of small producers...Gibson and his crew should be locked up until about the turn of the century as examples.... But they won't be..

USDA Chops Eastern Liability

Hundreds in Line to Collect From Eastern Livestock



Katie Micik DTN Staff Reporter

DTN/The Progressive Farmer - Mon Aug 15, 2011 10:52 AM CDT



KISSIMMEE, Fla. (DTN) -- The trustee overseeing Eastern Livestock Company's Chapter 11 bankruptcy told cattlemen at NCBA's summer conference that he thinks creditors will recover 20 to 30 cents on the dollar.



Jim Knauer also said USDA reduced the amount of claims that qualify for reimbursement from Eastern's bond, qualifying $18.7 million out of $37 million in claims. Producers will likely receive 4 to 5 cents on the dollar, better than the penny on the dollar he had predicted. Knauer will disburse the bond payments, but stressed these payments are separate from the bankruptcy case.



The case is still in collection phase as Knauer pursues parties that still owe money to Eastern and reconstructs records. He's cooperating with an FBI criminal investigation into Thomas Gibson, who owned the cattle brokerage.



USDA estimated in November that Eastern Livestock sent up to $130 million of bad checks to more than 700 producers across the U.S. The company's primary bank, Fifth Third Bank, froze Eastern Livestock's accounts after uncovering an alleged check-kiting scheme.



Eastern Livestock sold $1.7 billion worth of cattle in 2009. The company's 2010 statements show sales of more than $3 billion. Knauer explained the increase was mostly from sales of cattle that only existed on paper between Gibson and affiliated entities.




For the most part, Knauer said Eastern did business with "very fine people," who were cooperative with efforts and were paying debts to Eastern despite missing records.



The trustee explained to NCBA's Live Cattle Marketing Committee meeting that he expects to recover about $45 million.



Eastern Livestock's accounts receivable, once all collected, should be about $15 million. He has collected $10 million to $11 million so far.



In the days before the scandal made major headlines, Gibson assigned contracts to some of his biggest customers to help cover some of their losses. Bankruptcy courts consider this unlawful preferential treatment of creditors. Gibson assigned more than 500 contracts to Superior Livestock, the online auction service. As a result, USDA reduced the amount of Superior's claim on Eastern from $19 million to $1.4 million.



Knauer expects to get $8 million from a handful of interpleader cases, where feedlots, having sold livestock with now disputed ownership, deposited money with the courts asking them to decide who should be paid.



Eastern owns about $2.5 million of assets, including its headquarters building.



There also is $4.7 million the FBI seized from Thomas Gibson's personal bank account. The government doesn't have to return that money if it is linked to a crime. However, Knauer said the FBI wants that money to go to Eastern Livestock's creditors, not the bureau's coffers. He said they're negotiating a way to disburse the money in accordance with FBI's wishes.



Knauer told the committee that claims made against Eastern Livestock by its creditors are artificially high because it's the lawyers' job to try to gain preferred status for payment and to optimize their client's chances of being paid.



He filed a $30 million claim on behalf of the 378 ranchers who filed a claim against Eastern Livestock's surety bond, but may not have filed on the bankruptcy case. It's now known many ranchers did file in both situations, so some of that $30 million claim is double counted.



"The total dollar amount of the claims that have been filed is a ridiculous high amount, probably by about 50%," he said.



Fifth Third Bank holds the primary lien against $32 million of Eastern Livestock's assets because the cattle brokerage defaulted on its operating loan. Knauer hired an independent law firm to review the bank's lien paperwork, which was all in order, and to investigate whether any of the bank's actions were responsible for the wave of bad checks. That investigation is not complete, but Knauer told the crowd that Fifth Third is considering releasing some of its lien. He has yet to decide on filing a suit against the bank.



He hopes creditors will receive 20 to 30 cents on the dollar for their claims. That's a much more optimistic outlook than he gave at the first meeting of creditors this spring.



"They wouldn't be ecstatic about it, but based on where I started that would be -- if it made it to 40 cents on the dollar I'd think it was one of the most successful cases I've had -- but its way too soon to tell yet where we'll end up," he said.



Knauer disclosed that Development Specialists Inc., the firm of the original receiver appointed by an Ohio court before creditors forced Eastern into bankruptcy, has so far been paid $700,000 to $800,000 for its ongoing forensic accounting services...


There has to be more to this story than what is here. We need deeper stories on what happened and what went wrong. Did someone on Gibson's selling side mess up? Did they not cover their purchases either on the futures or with pre purchase agreements when they were buying? Were they just using their cattle buying biz to play the market or did they just get caught short? Did any of the big players pull the rug out from under his feet or the people he sold to and he was the last domino to fall or was he just a crook?

These are the kind of questions that should be asked answered and written about. After that, the accountability needs to be metered accordingly. We do need to wait and see if Fifth Third started the dominoes to fall and whether they are culpable. I don't want to see another whitewash of a bank's bad biz practices in my lifetime.

Tex
 

Latest posts

Top