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U.S. Congress Staff Report Recommends That FDIC and OTS Drop Lawsuits Against MAXXAM and Charles Hurwitz.


Business Editors

HOUSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--June 15, 2001

The United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  House of Representatives Committee on Resources has issued a Staff Report that calls on the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), an independent U.S. federal executive agency designed to promote public confidence in banks and to provide insurance coverage for bank deposits up to $100,000.  and Office of Thrift Supervision The Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) was established as a bureau of the Treasury Department in August 1989 as part of a major Reorganization Plan of the thrift regulatory structure mandated by the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA) (12 U.S.C.A.  to drop their politically motivated litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute.

When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation.
 against MAXXAM (AMEX AMEX

See: American Stock Exchange
:MXM MXM Media Xchange Manager (VCON Inc.)
MXM Mobile PCI Express Module (NVIDIA) 
) and its Chairman and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  Charles Hurwitz.

The report, Redwoods Debt-for-Nature Agenda of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Office of Thrift Supervision to Acquire the Headwaters Forest, concludes that: "...FDIC FDIC

See: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation


FDIC

See Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
 polluted its and OTS' claim by prompting and paying for OTS See Office of Thrift Supervision.  to pursue them in the first place as part of the redwoods scheme. OTS also attended several meetings in which details of the redwood swap scheme were discussed well before their claims were noticed or filed ... The OTS is equally responsible for improper involvement in the redwoods scheme, and the pollution of its claims with a political agenda ...

"If anyone bears responsibility for corrupting the bank regulatory system -- it is the FDIC and OTS legal staff who caved to the redwood desires of the DOI (Digital Object Identifier) A method of applying a persistent name to documents, publications and other resources on the Internet rather than using a URL, which can change over time.  (Department of Interior) and the (Clinton) Administration. The Directors of the FDIC and OTS should take corrective action and withdraw the authorization for the FDIC lawsuit and the OTS administrative action against Mr. Hurwitz for matters involving USAT USAT USA Today (newspaper)
USAT USA Triathlon
USAT Ultra Small Aperture Terminal
USAT United States Army Transport
USAT United States Archery Team
USAT Universal SIM Application Toolkit
USAT United Savings Association of Texas
. Integrity of the bank regulatory system demands nothing less."

Other key portions of the report include:
-- The finding that: "The bank regulators knew that their actions would be the
leverage for such a debt-for-nature transaction. Between late 1993 and when the
actions were initiated, the bank regulators became more and more enmeshed with
the environmental groups, the Department of the Interior, and the White House
in the redwoods debt-for-nature scheme. In the end, they ignored every prior
internal analysis indicating that they would lose the USAT suit, so they teamed
up and brought it administratively and in the courts."

-- The release of previously unreleased notes of a Feb. 3, 1995 meeting between
FDIC attorneys Jack Smith and John Thomas with Rep. Dan Hamburg to discuss
potential agency claims against Mr. Hurwitz. According to the notes, Rep.
Hamburg had an "immediate interest in the case" because of a bill he had
pending to acquire Headwaters forest owned by MAXXAM's Pacific Lumber
subsidiary. The FDIC inappropriately provided detailed information about its
investigation to Rep. Hamburg and acknowledged that the agency had a weak case.
However, the FDIC also told the Congressman that "If we can convince the other
side (hurwitz) that we have claim(s) worth $400 million & they want to settle,
could be a hook into the holding company." According to the Staff Report this
meeting reflects "the willful manner in which FDIC volunteered to get involved
in a political issue and mix potential claims with the redwoods issue."

-- The disclosure that on Feb. 4, 1995 -- one day following the meeting with
Rep. Hamburg -- the FDIC wrote to the OTS in an effort to interest the OTS to
pursue duplicative litigation against MAXXAM and Mr. Hurwitz and create the
"hook" into the holding company necessary to force a debt-for-nature swap. This
effort quickly led the FDIC to hire the OTS toward that end. The Staff Report
also unearthed a 1994 FDIC memo in which the FDIC outlines the purpose of its
relationship with OTS: "Tactically, combining FDIC and OTS' claims -- if they
all stand scrutiny -- is more likely to produce a large recovery/the trees than
is a piecemeal approach."

-- The disclosure that if "ordinary" procedures had been followed in July 1995,
the potential Hurwitz lawsuit would not have been filed. Indeed, the FDIC legal
division was preparing such a recommendation for its board of directors.
However, this recommendation changed after FDIC attorneys met on July 21, 1995
with Mr. Allen McReynolds, Special Assistant to the Secretary of the Interior.
According to notes of that meeting, the "Adm(inistration) want to do deal" and
that "If we drop suit, will undercut everything." The Staff Report notes that
as a result of this meeting the FDIC realized that "(1) the Clinton
Administration and the DOI had adopted and embraced the redwoods
debt-for-nature scheme and they wanted the scheme to be successful, and (2) the
FDIC's potential claims were critical to pulling off that redwoods
debt-for-nature scheme. The potential banking claims ... were the leverage that
were critical to making the redwoods debt-for-nature scheme work."


Commenting on the Staff Report, MAXXAM General Counsel J. Kent Friedman said, "The FDIC and OTS should be embarrassed by the revelations in the report. It is imperative that banking agencies never be allowed to ignore their mandated responsibilities and pursue litigation for purely political reasons. Such abusive behavior abusive behavior Public health Any of various behaviors–aggressive, coercive or controlling, destructive, harassing, intimidating, isolating, threatening–which a batterer may use to control a domestic partner/victim. See Domestic violence.  must never occur again. MAXXAM encourages Congress to continue what it has started and pursue additional oversight of our matter as well as the very real problem of abusive litigation brought against many others by the FDIC and OTS."

Copies of the Staff Report are available in the June 14, 2001 Congressional Record A daily publication of the federal government that details the legislative proceedings of Congress.

The Congressional Record began in 1873 and, in 1947, a feature called The Daily Digest was added to briefly highlight the daily legislative activities of each House,
 or on www.bureaucraticshellgame.com, MAXXAM's Web site relating to information about the litigation of the FDIC and OTS.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Date:Jun 15, 2001
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