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Pacific Coin: The Untold Story (Must read; no comfort for the Davis campaign).
Bill Simon Campaign | 08/06/2002

Posted on 08/06/2002 11:05:47 PM PDT by daviddennis

Quick summary of article: The Simon family runs a venture capital firm, which invested in Pacific Coin. Bill Simon opposed the venture, saying that it would suffer from competition with cellular phones, which is in fact what happened. Other family members thought differently, so the investment was made. A major clause in the agreement gave Ed Hindelang 23% of the company and effective veto power over any investments, mergers or public offerings. Hindelang did not use this power, and in fact enthusiastically participated in the deals that lead to the company's demise. He was fired as CEO when his felony convictions were uncovered; he had signed agreements stating that he had none, and this was a clear breach of his employment agreement. Despite this, Hindelang walked away with $26 million, while the other investors lost everything.

Pacific Coin: The Untold Story

In the wake of a jury’s recommendation against the Pacific Coin investors for compensatory and punitive damages, only one side of the story has been told.  News accounts of Paul Edward “Ed” Hindelang as a poor, innocent payphone company operator taken advantage of by corporate raiders are a far cry from the facts.  A careful review of the evidence introduced into trial and other information available shows that the facts and the law are on the side of the investors, and that Ed Hindelang is far from the sympathetic figure portrayed in the trial.

Why Pacific Coin Looked Like a Good Investment, and Why it Failed:

·        Reasons to Invest

1.      The Telecommunications Act of 1996 Created Two Significant Opportunities for Pay Phone Companies to Increase Their Profits. 
First, the new federal law allowed the newly deregulated industry to increase its rates above the long frozen rate of 25 cents per call.
Second, it allowed pay phone operators for the first time to charge “dial through fees”, (i.e, to receive a portion of the charges for long distance calls made on their phones using cards from other carriers).

2.      Cell phone usage flattening out – At the time, complaints about unreliable service, complex and expensive calling plans, and no foreseeable drops in rates, led many to believe that cell phone usage had reached maximum penetration for the time being.

3.      Ed Hindelang, a perceived industry leader, was bullish – Hindelang, a recognized industry leader, was bullish on the industry.  It was perceived to be an industry ripe for consolidation in the newly deregulated world.  As late as September 1998, Hindelang was still promoting the industry in internal company memos. 

·        Why the Investment Failed

1.      The elasticity of pay phone call costs proved higher than anticipated - People long accustomed to using one quarter to make calls proved more resistant that anticipated to paying more.

2.      Dial through revenues did not materialize quickly enough – Pay phone companies had difficulty collecting these fees because the established long distance carriers challenged the new regulations and the bills they received. 

3.      Prices plummeted, and cell phones exploded - Cell phone companies recognized their weaknesses and aggressively changed business practices (i.e. they marketed subscription that reduced the cost to consumers, gave away (or discounted the price of) cellular phones, and improved their service).

 

The role of William E. Simon Jr.:

At the time of the investment in Pacific Coin, Bill Simon was an Executive Director of William E. Simon & Sons and a Co-Chair of its Investment Committee.  In those roles, he oversaw the whole firm, participated in Investment Committee discussions, but did not direct the firm’s Private Equity Group or manage that group’s individual investments.  In fact, at this time, his primary focus was the creation of the firm’s new Special Situations Group, which invests in the debt and securities of distressed debt.

·        Testimony by numerous individuals showed that Simon was not actively involved in this investment:

1.      At the time the firm’s Private Equity Group presented the Pacific Coin investment opportunity the Investment Committee, Bill Simon was one of eight members of the committee. 

2.      According to Henry Brandon’s deposition testimony, Mr. Simon questioned the wisdom of investing in a pay phone company in light of competition from the cellular phone industry. 

3.      Simon’s handwritten notes on memos about Pacific Coin illustrate his concern about the lack of profitability of investment.

4.      Jurors interviewed after the trial said it was apparent to them that Bill Simon did not have a role in this investment.

5.      Judge ruled that Simon deposition testimony showed no new facts beyond what other witnesses had testified to.  Hindelang’s attorneys elected not to present Simon’s deposition testimony in the case.

6.      Simon was not on member of the management or board of directors of Pacific Coin, nor was he a partner in Coinable Simon.

 

Ed Hindelang’s Criminal Past:

·        Hindelang Concealed His Criminal Past - Although unknown to his contemporaries at the time of his involvement with Pacific Coin, Ed Hindelang, by his own admissions, was a major drug kingpin who was involved in the marijuana trade for much of his adult life.  He was first arrested in 1970. 

·        Hindelang Smuggled Two Million Pounds of Marijuana into the U.S. - Hindelang pioneered the “mother ship” concept, considered a major advance in drug smuggling techniques at the time.  Hindelang has estimated that he helped smuggle over two million pounds of marijuana into the United States. 

·        Hindelang Associated with Columbian Drug Lords and Manuel Noreiga - Smuggling earned him close associations with major Columbian drug lords.  Investigators have also uncovered potential money laundering ties between Hindelang and Manuel Noreiga. 

·        Hindelang Served Three Years in Prison for Drug Trafficking - Eventually, Hindelang was caught again.  Facing a potential of up to sixty-five years in prison, he plea-bargained, agreeing to testify against his drug partners and to turning over his drug profits.  He turned over $640,000 of drug profits – claiming that’s all there was – and received a sentence of 10 years.  He served 3 of those 10 in Lompoc federal penitentiary. 

·        Drug Money Financed Hindelang’s Early Payphone Business - Upon his early release, Hindelang entered the payphone business.  It is clear that people who had helped him launder drug money did participate in the early financing of the company. 

·        In 1998, Hindelang Forfeited $50 million in Drug Assets to the Federal Government - By the late 1990’s, even as Hindelang negotiated with the federal government, he hid his past from the new investors.  Only when the government finally announced that it had negotiated the forfeiture of $50 million from Ed Hindelang – far more than the original claim of “only $640,000” – was the extent of his duplicity to both his business partners and to the government and the taxpayers revealed.  News accounts and testimony from the trial reveal the extent of his efforts to conceal assets from the government.

·        Fed’s Believe Some of Hindelang’s Drug Assets Remain Free From Forfeiture Today - The federal government believes some of Hindelang’s drug assets remain free from forfeiture today.  Four In Rem actions against assets tied to Ed Hindelang are pending in the Southern District of Florida today. 

Ed Hindelang and the Payphone Business:

·        Neighbors, Business Partners Shocked by 1998 Seizure of $50 Million – By all appearances, Hindelang was a model citizen and leader in the payphone industry.  Everyone was fooled.  Wall Street Journal interviews with neighbors and business partners at the time of the 1998 seizure of $50 million from Hindelang showed close associates and friends who were shocked by his past.

·        Ed Hindelang Grew His Business, No One Knew of His Criminal Past - By the mid to late 1990’s, Ed Hindelang had grown his payphone business into one of the largest private payphone companies in the country.  And again, it is important to note that he was a recognized industry leader, and no one in the industry knew of his past.

·        Hindelang Was To Be CEO of the New Company, Until His Past Was Revealed - The proposed new firm was always presented as Mr. Hindelang’s company, and one in which he would continue to run.  He was always intended to be the CEO of the company, and indeed he remained the CEO and “key man” in the firm from the beginning of the merger/acquisition talks until the day the his past was revealed and he was fired.

·        Hindelang Pocketed Nearly $26 Million Upon the Completion of the Merger - The deal by which three regional payphone companies were merged into the new Pacific Coin was completed in February 1998.  At this point, Ed Hindelang pocketed nearly $26 million, while retaining 23% ownership in the new firm (the largest individual ownership) and remained as CEO, guiding the company and its subsequent acquisition strategy. 

·        Hindelang Motivated By $26 Million to Conceal Past - By concealing his drug past, Hindelang received $26 million in cash into his bank account, retained his company, and retained his vision for consolidating and growing his company. 

The Background Check

·        Deloitte and Touche Conducted Background Search on Hindelang - A typical corporate background check was conducted by Deloitte Touche, a major accounting firm used by Simon & Sons.  The search went back 10 years and focused on Mr. Hindelang’s professional reputation.  By all accounts, he was a recognized leader in the industry.  His drug past was beyond the ten-year window typical of these investigations (documentation available upon request).

·        Hindelang Lied on Legal Document Regarding Felony Conviction - Hindelang was considered the important player in the new company, so important that a separate “Key Man” insurance policy was taken on Mr. Hindelang.  On that form, Mr. Hindelang was asked if he had ever been convicted of a felony.  He checked “No” and signed the legal document.

Hindelang Lied on Additional Legal Document to Help Start His Company - When forming his company in 1987, Hindelang assured his investors, under penalty of perjury, that he had never been convicted of a felony.  This document allowed Hindelang to obtain the financing at the start of Pacific Coin in the 1980’s.  Hindelang’s Fraud Allegations All Refuted by Evidence:

The jury has recommended findings against the investors for fraud and interference with contract.  All of these allegations are directly refuted by evidence introduced in trial.

·        “Undisclosed Fees”

Hindelang alleged that William E. Simon & Sons did not disclose to Hindelang that it would be charging a fee for its work on the February 1998 transaction. 

1.      Hindelang himself testified at trial that the $1.5 million fee was negotiated in advance of the February 1998 transaction, and that as part of that negotiation, he was successful in bargaining for $1 million to be paid directly to him. 

2.      Hindelang signed documents agreeing to and acknowledging the fees before the transaction closed.

3.      Testimony showed that the competing investment bank (Seidler Haas) proposed $4 million in bank fees.  Simon & Sons charged $1.5 million. 

·        “Secret IPO Plan”

Hindelang alleged that the investors set about to make a “quick killing” by undergoing a secret plan to expand the company with debt, then take the company public through an IPO. 

1.      Judge Chalfant agreed with William E. Simon & Sons and the other cross defendants before trial that there was no basis for this fraud allegation in his summary judgment decision.  The trial testimony confirmed this. 

2.      The possibility and procedures by which the company could be taken public was revealed to Hindelang in documents he admitted to receiving in his testimony at trial.

3.      Any IPO required 80% supermajority to undertake, and Hindelang retained 23% ownership of the company.  As Mr. Hindelang himself testified, he was told in advance of the deal that an IPO was a possibility, and he knew that he had “complete control” to stop any such IPO.  As Mr. Hindelang testified, he “had the vote to stop it.” 

 

·        “Golden-Tel Acquisition”

Hindelang alleged that Simon & Sons concealed their desire for rapid expansion through acquisition.  He claims they promised to abide by his “grow slow” philosophy.  Hindelang identified Pac Coin’s acquisition of GoldenTel, the largest independent pay phone company in Nevada, as evidence of an acquisition he opposed. 

1.      Like Hindelang’s fraud claims about the IPO, Judge Chalfant also found before trial that Hindelang could not sustain this claim for fraud.  The testimony at trial only confirmed Judge Chalfant’s finding.

2.      Ed Hindelang’s entire career in the payphone industry had been dominated by growth by acquisition. 

3.      Even before he entered into business with the Simon, Hindelang sought to purchase Golden Tel on his own. 

4.      In January 1999, Hindelang signed a letter of intent, sent to Golden Tel, specifically agreeing to the $41 million acquisition price that he later claimed was inappropriate and fraudulent.

5.      Hindelang voted his 23% ownership in favor of the acquisition.  Without his votes, the 80% required for major acquisitions would not have passed.

6.      The new Pacific Coin had made eight prior acquisitions before the Golden-Tel acquisition, and two more acquisitions after the Golden-Tel deal.  Hindelang supported all of these and did not exercise his right to stop them. 

 

Hindelang’s Allegation of Intentional Interference is Legally Weak:

·        Hindelang’s claim of interference with contract is legally flawed - The law says that a person cannot be legally found to have interfered with his own contract, and that a person’s agent also can’t be held to have interfered.  Here, all of the parties whom Hindelang says interfered with contracts were parties or agents of parties to those very contracts.  The judge has already indicated that this is not a valid basis for an interference claim.  He has reaffirmed this indication since the trial.  

Ed Hindelang Only Player to Profit:

·        Ed Hindelang is the only person in this deal who profited - Hindelang immediately received $26 million upon the Simon investment in his company.  When the banks seized the company, the investors lost their investment.  Coinable Simon as a partnership owned the largest stake and stood to lose the most.  There is no rational reason to believe that they wanted to “run the company into the ground.”

 

Simon Message:

I am confident we will win the case. The facts are clearly on our side that this person misled the investors. He lied on corporate documents that he was a convicted drug trafficker. 

As the facts become public, I believe the people of California will understand our side of the story in a way that the jury did not.

Remember this fact:

Judge Chalfant agreed with William E. Simon & Sons and the other cross defendants before trial that there was no basis for this fraud allegation in his summary judgment decision.  The trial testimony confirmed this. 



TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: California
KEYWORDS: calgov2002; fraud; hindelang; pacificcoin; scandal; simon
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The Simon Campaign was kind enough to pass this very interesting article to me. In brief, it was exactly as I had expected.

I would refer you specifically to Hindelang's veto power over any merger or public offering, and his signed agreement to the takeover of Golden-Tel.

It would appear that the plantiff's attorneys took full advantage of the present political climate and anger against businesspeople. But it doesn't look like they paid much attention to the facts in the case, which are extremely clear cut and obvious. Just as I had suspected.

1 posted on 08/06/2002 11:05:47 PM PDT by daviddennis
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To: daviddennis; *calgov2002; Carry_Okie; SierraWasp; Gophack; eureka!; ElkGroveDan; ...
Very good !

calgov2002:

calgov2002: for old calgov2002 articles. 

calgov2002: for new calgov2002 articles. 

Other Bump Lists at: Free Republic Bump List Register



2 posted on 08/06/2002 11:14:36 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: daviddennis
Looks like they'll be calling him Ed Hindenburg before too long...

3 posted on 08/06/2002 11:15:51 PM PDT by Tony in Hawaii
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To: Dog Gone; randita; snopercod; Robert357; Gritty; Jim Robinson; seenenuf; WillaJohns
ping!
4 posted on 08/06/2002 11:16:34 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: daviddennis
When is this case to be heard? And when would the judgement be overturned (at the same time or later)?
5 posted on 08/06/2002 11:44:30 PM PDT by gubamyster
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To: daviddennis
Oy! I can't stand Davis, but this is awful.

This thing does not bode well for Simon for an important reason: he should have thoroughly checked out Hindelang before investing. It highlights that he used poor judgement in not doing so. His use of "other family members pressured me" as an excuse looks weak as a defence. He has enough money that he could have at least followed his intuition and had a more thorough, personal investigation done.

I would never get into bed, literally or businesswise with anyone whose background I hadn't investigated using PIs, or private investigators. (This knowledge was acquired the hard way - experience!) Nowadays you have to look into people's private lives. Going back 10 years is insufficient, it is necessary to go back to the teen years. Deloitte and Touche just skimmed the surface.

6 posted on 08/07/2002 12:47:45 AM PDT by goody2shooz
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To: goody2shooz
Yup. You would go and look back further. I'm surprised Simon's firm didn't check as far back as records allowed. The federal government investigates any one for a high level federal positively exhaustively before that person is hired. One woulda thunk the Simon firm was as rigorous in their running a background check on Paul Hindelang. No wonder they got hit with a $78 million judgment. It shows what can happen in the business world when you don't dot and cross all your I's and T's before entering business with someone you don't know.
7 posted on 08/07/2002 1:41:41 AM PDT by goldstategop
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To: daviddennis
Unfortunately, the facts of the case exceed the attention span of 90% of Californians. What will stick in their TV-conditioned little minds is:

Businessman=Thief

8 posted on 08/07/2002 2:44:13 AM PDT by snopercod
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To: snopercod
What will also cross their minds is Davis = incompetent thief.
9 posted on 08/07/2002 5:31:28 AM PDT by Coop
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To: snopercod
A question for you: I saw yesterday where PG & E's bond rating has just been lowered to "junk" status by Moody's. Have you heard what the rating for CA's bonds is? I think that info should be out, if not now--then soon.
10 posted on 08/07/2002 5:37:03 AM PDT by randita
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To: goody2shooz
What you have to realize is the SIMON WASN'T A PARTY TO THE LAWSUIT!!!! It wasn't his deal. That's what REALLY gets me, is that the press keep talking about this, and Simon wasn't even named as a defendent!!!!!!
11 posted on 08/07/2002 6:38:40 AM PDT by Gophack
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To: goody2shooz
he should have thoroughly checked out Hindelang before investing.

You have to understand the SCOPE of the investments of a company as large as Simon and Sons. This was one of hundreds of business investments they were involved in at the time.

A typical corporate background check was conducted by Deloitte Touche, a major accounting firm used by Simon & Sons. The search went back 10 years and focused on Mr. Hindelang’s professional reputation. By all accounts, he was a recognized leader in the industry. His drug past was beyond the ten-year window typical of these investigations

A professional background check is certainly reasonable and prudent. That's why you hire those kinds of businesses. That Bill himself should have been looking into the guy's background is sort of like suggesting The President go investigate potential postal employees.

12 posted on 08/07/2002 7:04:31 AM PDT by ElkGroveDan
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To: goody2shooz
But his intuition was not with the guy, who fooled just about everybody he did business with, but rather with the deal. So when he couldn't convince his partners not to take the deal as a deal, that was the end of it.

I really can't hold Simon's family to any higher standards than a reasonable man would have at the time. I'm sure Delotte was following current best practices in following him back for ten years, and I would think this is as far back as public records go in any event. It would have coat a boatload of money to go any further, and there was no indication that they'd find anything.

I think most people would find your cautious attitude just a shade extreme. Most people who stay clean for 10 years are going to stay clean for the rest of their lives. This is a very rare incident where this guy's past came back to haunt him.

I think it's important to bear in mind the following, and close this one out for good:

That closes it all, far as I'm concerned.

D

13 posted on 08/07/2002 7:06:14 AM PDT by daviddennis
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To: daviddennis

B * I * A * S

The media are anti-American Socialist trash.

14 posted on 08/07/2002 7:21:44 AM PDT by Stallone
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To: daviddennis
BUMP!!!!!
15 posted on 08/07/2002 9:00:31 AM PDT by Gophack
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To: .38sw; 1 FELLOW FREEPER; 101viking; 1lawlady; 2Fro; 357 SIG; 3_if_by_Treason; 45Auto; 4aardvarks; ..
CA-WIDE PING
16 posted on 08/07/2002 9:11:24 AM PDT by ElkGroveDan
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To: daviddennis
Interesting, yes, but do California voters have the patience to wade through this information? As unfair as it may be, I didn't see this article splashed across the front of the Sacramento Bee or the LA Times today. What I DID see splashed across the front pages of those esteemed purveyors of news was the article last week that Bill Simon's family firm was found guilt of corporate fraud.

The more Simon has to explain about all of this, the more it's a dead weight around his neck. I didn't hear the interview, but Simon was on KSFO this morning. He spent most if not all of the time talking about this litigation. It's very deadly to spend all this free radio time trying to explain some arcane business deal when he should be blasting away at Gray Davis. I hate to say it, but he is showing himself to be an incompetent campaigner, and that's the one thing that was suppose to be a Simon plus: his competence in contrast to Gray's incompetence.

17 posted on 08/07/2002 9:56:18 AM PDT by My2Cents
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To: Gophack
All true (about Bill not being party to the litigation). But who out there really cares to make the distinction? All the public knows is that Bill Simon's family company has been found guilty of fraud.

The fact that we, here on FR, spend so much time disecting this litigation battle is an indication of how troubling this case is, and how much bad news it is to the hopes for unseating Davis. Just read the post again. It smacks of defensiveness. That's deadly in a campaign.

18 posted on 08/07/2002 10:01:35 AM PDT by My2Cents
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To: ElkGroveDan; abigail2; abner; adanaC; advocate10; afraidfortherepublic; agitator; alisasny; ...
This story need to get some wings.
19 posted on 08/07/2002 10:03:08 AM PDT by editor-surveyor
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To: Gophack
What you have to realize is the SIMON WASN'T A PARTY TO THE LAWSUIT!!!!

What difference does it make? The Democrats have already won the Headline Wars on this one. Simon's only salvation is that no one is really paying attention right now.

20 posted on 08/07/2002 10:05:10 AM PDT by Mr. Jeeves
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