PHILADELPHIA The partnership behind the failed Foxwoods
Casino project in South Philadelphia filed Monday for bankruptcy court
protection, citing claims of $23.6 million from 14 creditors.
In addition, Citizens Bank, the largest creditor, is owed an
unspecified amount, according to the court petition. People familiar with the
situation say the bank lent the project about $75 million.
The partnership last week sold its largest asset, a vacant
16.5-acre lot on South Columbus Boulevard between Tasker and Reed Streets. The
property was transferred to developer Bart Blatstein for $13 million.
Of the proceeds, $8 million went to the City of Philadelphia
to settle a tax bill.
The land sale came more than seven years after the Foxwoods
Casino project was awarded a license to open a slot-machine parlor in
Philadelphia.
Philadelphia Entertainment and Development Partners (PEDP),
which included 13 local investors and the Mashantucket Pequot tribe of
Connecticut, spent $50 million for the license.
But after repeated delays and problems with financing, the
state's Gaming Control Board revoked the license in 2010 - and the state kept
the $50 million license fee. The partnership tried unsuccessfully to retrieve
the money through state courts.
Brian Ford, a PEDP representative, said that if the
bankruptcy petition is accepted, the group will try to recover the licensing
fee through action in federal court.
Ford, a casino-industry consultant who worked on the
Foxwoods project, said the licensing fee was the partnership's only
"contingent asset."
The creditors include five law firms: Cozen O'Connor, $6.46
million; Klehr Harrison Harvey Branzburg, $1.27 million; Obermayer Rebmann
Maxwell & Hippel, $940,757; Blank Rome, $812,231; and Eckert Seamans Cherin
& Mellott, $677,930.
Others with claims are Ford, $4 million; Washington
Philadelphia Investors, the partnership for local investors in the Foxwoods
deal, $5.7 million; and Foxwoods Development Co., the development arm of the
Mashantucket Pequot tribe, $2.64 million.
The main local investors in the Foxwoods deal included
Comcast-Spectacor chairman Ed Snider, and family charitable trusts for
developer Ron Rubin and the daughter of Lewis Katz. Katz is one of the owners
of Interstate General Media, owner of The Inquirer.
Source: Philly.com
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