Our Tampa colleague, Wayne Garcia, is closely following Creative Loafing's court appearance today in Florida, during which the company's CEO is arguing to maintain ownership of his six newspapers. Here's Garcia's first post of the day:
The Creative Loafing chain is in a Tampa bankruptcy court hearing today as owner Ben Eason tries to fend off his biggest creditor, which wants to take ownership of the chain and says it has lost confidence in Easons management.
Atalaya Capital Management LP, an investment fund that is owed $31 million from financing CLs 2007 pay-down of debt and purchase of the Chicago Reader and Washington City Paper, said in court this morning that it would continue to operate the newspaper chain as a going concern and put more dollars into it rather than get rid of it in a fire sale.
Atalaya partner Michael Bogdan testified that the firm has hired another investment banking firm with media experience, Bulkley Capital of Dallas, Texas (with an office in Atlanta, the home of CLs largest newspaper) to advise it and provide management assistance in running the CL papers if it is successful in court today. That firms founder, Brad Bulkley, has strong media experience, Bodgan said. Bulkleys website describes it this way:
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