Credit Suisse In Court Over Loans To Resorts
Topics: From the Wires, News
FILE - This undated file photo shows the Yellowstone Club near Big Sky, Mont. Attorneys for Credit Suisse are due in court Jan. 12, 2012 to defend accusations that the banking giant arranged hundreds of millions of dollars in predatory loans with the goal of taking over luxury resorts in Montana, Idaho, Nevada and the Bahamas. (AP Photo/Bozeman Daily Chronicle, Erik Petersen, File)(Credit: AP)BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — Attorneys for Credit Suisse are due in federal court Thursday over accusations that the international banking giant arranged hundreds of millions of dollars in predatory loans with the goal of taking over luxury resorts in Montana, Idaho, Nevada and the Bahamas.
Plaintiffs backed by the founder of Montana’s ultra-exclusive Yellowstone Club, Tim Blixseth, are seeking billions of dollars in damages.
They claim Credit Suisse set up an offshore branch to skirt U.S. lending rules as part of a “loan to own” scheme, in which resorts were appraised at inflated prices then given loans they could not repay to force them into foreclosure.
Credit Suisse contends the lawsuits are baseless — and motivated in part by Blixseth’s attempt to escape blame for the Yellowstone Club’s financial problems.
Blixseth, who lives in Washington state, pocketed more than $200 million out of a $375 million loan Credit Suisse lined up for the club in 2005.
“Blixseth’s claims have moved from the implausible to the absurd,” attorneys for Credit Suisse wrote in a motion to have him blocked from participation in the case. “Blixseth now seeks to blame Credit Suisse for lending him too much money, which he then frittered away for his own personal benefit.”
The lawsuit also targets real estate consulting firm Cushman & Wakefield. The New York-based firm provided Credit Suisse with the disputed property appraisals.
As with Credit Suisse, Cushman & Wakefield is expected to argue for the case to be dismissed in a Thursday hearing before Magistrate Judge Ronald Bush in U.S. District Court in Boise, Idaho.
The other properties named in the suit are Idaho’s Tamarack Resort, Nevada’s Lake Las Vegas and Ginn Sur Mer in the Bahamas. All four went bankrupt after they received a combined $1.8 billion in loans through Credit Suisse.
The lawsuit was first filed in 2010 on behalf of a group of resort homeowners, including Blixseth’s son, Beau. Tim Blixseth was not among the original plaintiffs but has acknowledged he is behind the litigation. The case is being fought by a team of his attorneys.
“Nobody was standing up for the 3,000 homeowners in the four resorts,” Blixseth said. “They were severely damaged by Credit Suisse and Cushman Wakefield. The least I could do as one of the developers was stand up for those people.”




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