- Money was wired to 40 different funds, Brigade tells court
- Lenders were “lawfully owed every penny that was transferred”
The order followed a hearing Tuesday in which the bank and the hedge fund faced off over Citigroup’s expensive blunder. The two will be back in court on Wednesday as the judge determines the next steps in their legal battle, including whether to hold a hearing on the bank’s request for a preliminary injunction forcing Brigade to give the money back while the case proceeds. Citigroup
Brigade, which says it isn’t a Revlon lender itself, told U.S. District Judge
A lawyer for the bank told Furman it’s exactly in that capacity that Brigade is acting “in concert” with the funds, leading the charge against returning the money.
“It was Brigade, the largest lender here, who has flat out refused to return the funds on the grounds that they weren’t made in error,” attorney
Representatives of both Citigroup and Brigade declined to comment on Tuesday’s ruling.
Citigroup has recouped less than half of the money, whose transfer it blamed on a clerical error. Some lenders are balking at the bank’s demand because Revlon was in default on a loan and should have repaid them anyway, according to people with knowledge of the matter. Some of the lenders are themselves locked in a bitter fight with the struggling cosmetics company.
The bank had been acting as an agent on Revlon’s loan, collecting payments from the company to distribute to the creditors, but the accidental payments came from its own funds. Under the judge’s order, Brigade has no access to the $175 million it received last week. Furman, who has presided over his share of creditor brawls, oversaw the case of
Citigroup -- which on Tuesday
“You need a pretty big eraser on your pencil for a $900 million mistake,” said
Brigade was supposed to receive $1.5 million in interest on loan principal of $174.7 million, according to Citigroup’s lawsuit. Instead it got $176.2 million and has refused to repay the funds “despite crystal-clear evidence that the payments were made in error,” Citigroup said.
If Brigade chooses to “ignore the math,” the firm “should have at least wondered why the interest was paid,” Ingber told the judge at Tuesday’s hearing.
Brigade said the lenders were “lawfully owed every penny” that was transferred by Citigroup in Revlon’s name and couldn’t have known the payments were a mistake. The bank is taking aim at Brigade “for strategic reasons,” but the money at issue has already been distributed to the actual lenders,
Revlon, controlled by
The
(Updates with Citigroup’s resignation in CLO deal in second section)
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Peter Jeffrey
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