Commercial
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February 13, 2025
NC Biz Court Bulletin: Defaulted Notes, EB-5 Investor Fraud
The North Carolina Business Court has been handed in the first half of February a receivership case involving a defaulted $17.5 million promissory note, a fraud suit by Chinese EB-5 investors and a request to depose the chief legal officer of Smithfield Foods Inc.
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February 13, 2025
Ashford Closes $580M Mortgage Loan Secured By 16 Hotels
Dallas-based Ashford Hospitality Trust said it has secured $580 million in financing to pay off debt coming due this summer with a new loan secured by 16 properties, part of a nearly $1 billion portfolio in default after a 2018 deal.
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February 13, 2025
Profs Back Hotel Guests In 3rd Circ. Algorithmic Pricing Case
A group of academics has joined antimonopoly groups to support hotel guests accusing several Atlantic City casino hotels of using shared software to fix room rates in their Third Circuit fight to revive their suit.
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February 13, 2025
Brookfield Eyes Data Centers In Optimistic Market Outlook
Canadian asset manager Brookfield Corp. said Feb. 13 in its fourth-quarter earnings call it expects the real estate market to recover, and sees big investment opportunities at the intersection of infrastructure and renewable power for data centers.
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February 13, 2025
Buyer Seeks $3.5M Price Cut Over Bungled Conn. Mill Cleanup
A property developer has asked a Connecticut Superior Court judge to lower the purchase price of a polluted industrial site in Branford from $6 million to $2.5 million, saying the seller failed to develop legitimate remediation plans and breached a settlement agreement that ended prior litigation.
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February 13, 2025
Three Firms Guide $375M Data Center Bridge Financing
Applied Digital Corp. closed on a $375 million financing with SMBC in a deal guided by Milbank, Lowenstein Sandler and Paul Hastings, a loan that the company says will help it pay down a senior secured note and continue construction on a North Dakota campus.
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February 13, 2025
NYC Man Pleads Guilty To $62.8M Crowdfunded CRE Scheme
A New York City man who raised $62.8 million through commercial real estate platform CrowdStreet for sham developments in Atlanta, Georgia, and Miami Beach, Florida, has pled guilty to a federal wire fraud charge.
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February 13, 2025
SDNY US Atty Resigns, Alleging Trump-Adams 'Quid Pro Quo'
Danielle R. Sassoon, the interim U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, resigned Thursday after she refused an order by U.S. Department of Justice officials to drop the federal corruption charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams and expressed concern the move was part of an improper quid pro quo with President Donald Trump.
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February 13, 2025
Developer Starts $1B Fla. Mixed-Use Redevelopment Project
Terra started work on the first phase of its $1 billion redevelopment project that aims to turn the Dolphin Station Park-and-Ride Transit Terminal Facility in Miami-Dade County into a 47-acre, mixed-use community with transit options, homes and places to shop, the developer announced Feb 13.
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February 12, 2025
Avison Young CEO Urges Steadiness For Real Estate In 2025
The head of global commercial real estate services firm Avison Young on Wednesday encouraged keeping a focus on the cyclical nature of the industry and long-term principles in the face of numerous current uncertainties in the world.
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February 12, 2025
Rhodium Says Landlord Tried To 'Destroy' It In $300M Suit
Bankrupt Bitcoin mining company Rhodium Encore has filed a $300 million lawsuit in Texas bankruptcy court accusing competitor Riot Platforms and landlord and power provider Whinstone US Inc. of sabotaging its business and driving it into bankruptcy.
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February 12, 2025
Developer Trio Plans To Build 1,600-Foot Manhattan Tower
Vornado Realty Trust, Rudin Management and Citadel are aiming to put up a roughly 1,600-foot tower on Park Avenue in Manhattan, and Law360 has added that project to its Tall Buildings Tracker.
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February 12, 2025
4 Va. Bills That Data Center Industry Insiders Should Watch
Efforts to regulate data centers in Virginia, the home of the world's biggest data center market, have largely flamed out during this year's legislative session. But some bills proposing more rules for the fast-growing industry might cross the finish line.
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February 12, 2025
Texas Real Estate Firm Closes $58M Self-Storage Fund
HPI closed its latest self-storage fund after raising more than $58 million worth of capital commitments from old and new investors, the Texas-based real estate investment firm announced Wednesday.
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February 12, 2025
Investors Returned To Capital Markets In 2024, Colliers Says
Capital markets activity built momentum throughout 2024 after property buyers and sellers began adjusting pricing following a recent turbulence, with commercial broker Colliers projecting further growth in 2025.
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February 12, 2025
Yellow Corp. Seeks OK For $15M Real Estate Sale
An investment banking advisory firm for bankrupt trucking company Yellow Corp. asked a Delaware bankruptcy court to approve three asset purchase agreements for properties owned by the trucking company that are worth $15.1 million.
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February 12, 2025
Dentons Adds Indianapolis Attorney To Energy Practice
Dentons bolstered its energy practice in Indianapolis with the hire of Matthew Neumann, an attorney advising developers, investors and other parties on energy project development in Indiana and the Midwest.
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February 12, 2025
Mass. Justices Nix Tax Break For Cargo Biz On Massport Land
A site leased by the Massachusetts Port Authority to a for-profit cargo management business is not exempt from local property taxes, the state's Supreme Judicial Court ruled Wednesday, affirming a $22 million property valuation.
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February 12, 2025
Real Estate Group Of The Year: Simpson Thacher
Attorneys from Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP advised Blackstone, a longtime client of the firm, on a $7 billion data center campus joint venture with Digital Realty, as well as the investment giant's $725 million sale of a Hawaii resort, earning the firm a spot among the 2024 Law360 Real Estate Groups of the Year.
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February 12, 2025
Construction Group Of The Year: Troutman
Providing counsel on the design and construction of a new Terminal One at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport and the Big Apple's first soccer-specific stadium, as well as handling litigation over a $2 billion hydroelectric project in Chile, earned Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP its selection as one of the 2024 Law360 Construction Groups of the Year.
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February 12, 2025
Duane Morris Leader Sees A Looming Tariff 'Tax' Debate
With price increases for certain construction materials likely coming as a result of new tariffs from the White House, contractors may start to make a tax argument in efforts to avoid shelling out additional money for projects, one of Duane Morris LLP's construction leaders told Law360 Real Estate Authority in a recent interview.
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February 12, 2025
Emerging Hot Spots In Real Estate Practices
New real estate practice areas are emerging as the commercial real estate lending landscape shifts, office landlords look to repurpose their buildings, distress plays out and a race to build data centers shows no sign of slowing.
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February 11, 2025
Calif.'s Insurance Safety Net Gets $1B Infusion For Fire Claims
California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara has signed off on $1 billion in additional funding for California's FAIR Plan, the state's insurer of last resort, to ensure the plan can keep paying consumer claims to survivors of the Southern California wildfires, according to an order issued Tuesday.
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February 11, 2025
Split 6th Circ. Backs Ex-Cincinnati Politician's Conviction
A split Sixth Circuit ruled Tuesday that, although a close case, there was enough evidence to convict a former Cincinnati council member of bribery and attempted extortion in connection with a sports betting development project spearheaded by a former Cincinnati Bengals player.
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February 11, 2025
NY Judge Sides With Attorney In Golf Malpractice Row
A New York federal magistrate judge has recommended summary judgment in favor of an attorney in a legal malpractice lawsuit in which he is accused of causing the plaintiffs to lose an Arizona golf course property because he failed to file the proper bankruptcy paperwork.
Expert Analysis
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EB-5 Reform Continues To Weigh Heavily On Participants
Recent U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services guidance helps clarify aspects of the 2022 EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act, which increased oversight of EB-5 regional centers, but does not end the industry's continuing state of uncertainty, says Robert Divine at Baker Donelson.
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EV Chargers Can Bring Benefits For Calif. Property Owners
California property developers and owners face growing pressure to provide electric vehicle charging infrastructure — but this can be a unique opportunity to add value to real estate assets, and can be accomplished in multiple ways, say Riley Cutner-Orrantia and Eurie Hwang at Crosbie Gliner.
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Brownfield Renewables Guidance Leaves Site Eligibility Murky
Recent IRS guidance sheds some light on the Inflation Reduction Act's incentives for renewable energy development on contaminated sites — but the eligibility of certain sites for brownfield status remains uncertain, say Megan Caldwell and Jon Micah Goeller at Husch Blackwell.
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Pending Legislation Holds Promise For SF Buildings
Recently introduced state and local legislation could make it easier for office-to-residential conversion projects in San Francisco to secure approval and funding sources, although financial incentives similar to those implemented by other states may be necessary to ensure the feasibility of such projects, say Caroline Chase and Nick DuBroff at Allen Matkins.
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SVB Collapse Underscores Policy And Regulatory Pitfalls
The recent failures of three American banks reveal hidden vulnerabilities, raise concerns about moral hazard, and highlight the need for tighter regulation and closer monitoring of unrealized investment-portfolio losses in the U.S. banking system, says attorney Patrick Meson.
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NY Bankruptcy Court Pivots On Commercial Rent Damage Cap
A New York bankruptcy court departed from its prior precedent in the recent Cortlandt Liquidating case, effectively lowering the commercial rent damages cap, and making the court a little less friendly for landlords but potentially an attractive venue for debtors planning to reject significant commercial leases, say attorneys at MoFo.
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Bankruptcy Sales Uncertain After Justices' Section 363 Ruling
The U.S. Supreme Court's holding in MOAC v. Transform that Section 363(m) of the Bankruptcy Code is not a jurisdictional provision means parties to 363 sales are now at the mercy of courts that may have differing perspectives on the issue, creating uncertainty for trustees, third parties and purchasers, say Thomas Loeb and Carrie Brosius at Vorys.
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Commercial Real Estate Lending Checkup Amid Market Unrest
Given the sustained volatility of current lending markets, now may be a good time for financing institutions to dust off their commercial real estate agreements and update them if necessary, say Emil Petrossian and Alexander Miller at Glaser Weil.
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La. Suit Could Set New Enviro Justice Litigation Paradigm
Inclusive Louisiana v. St. James Parish, a lawsuit filed recently in Louisiana federal court that makes wide-ranging and novel constitutional and statutory claims of environmental racism based on centuries of local history, could become a new template for environmental justice litigation against governments and businesses, say attorneys at King & Spalding.
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Policyholder Lessons From Sandy No-Coverage Decision
A New York federal court recently decided that in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, Madelaine Chocolate knew Great Northern Insurance’s all-risk policy offered no coverage for storm surge — an important reminder that policyholders should review policy language for ambiguities or anti-concurrent causation clauses, say Dennis Artese and Joshua Zelen at Anderson Kill.
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5th Circ. Offers Expert Opinion Guidance For Insurance Cases
A recent Fifth Circuit decision in Majestic Oil v. Lloyd's of London provides insight into how Texas' concurrent causation doctrine could affect insurance cases where the cause of damage is at issue, and raises considerations for litigants faced with new or revised expert reports after the deadline has passed, say Brian Scarbrough and Cianan Lesley at Jenner & Block.
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FTC Proposal Greatly Widens Auto-Renewal Regulation
The Federal Trade Commission's proposed rule on automatic renewal subscriptions would impose significant new obligations on sellers of negative option plans and expand the agency's enforcement powers, likely requiring companies to examine and change their practices, say attorneys at Squire Patton.
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Now Is The Time For Independent Industry Self-Regulation
The high level of trust in business, coupled with the current political and legal landscape, provides an opportunity for companies to play a meaningful role in finding solutions to public policy issues through the exploration of independent industry self-regulation models, says Eric Reicin at BBB National Programs.