After two months of legal wrangling, Doug Kelley was confirmed Thursday as trustee for much of the bankrupt corporate estate of Wayzata businessman Tom Petters.
An Illinois creditor had argued that Kelley would have a conflict of interest because he's also the receiver for the companies, a judicial appointment that would require him to favor the government in criminal forfeiture proceedings that might ensue if Petters is convicted of charges that he ran a massive Ponzi scheme.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Gregory Kishel wrote in a 35-page order Thursday that the issue presented novel legal arguments regarding the authority of two different federal courts. But he ruled that Kelley has demonstrated through his actions that no actual conflict exists, and he noted that Kelley has stated his intention to protect the bankruptcy claims of creditors.
"There is no indication in the record ... that Kelley has ever taken any action that was self-interested, contrary to the interests of the bankruptcy estates, or in any way inconsistent with the obligations of a fiduciary steward of the estates," Kishel wrote.
Kelley's appointment was opposed by Richie Capital Management of Lisle, Ill. It claimed that the Petters organization consists of two divisions: Petters Group Worldwide (PGW), the holding company for valuable assets such as Polaroid, and Petters Company Inc., a financing entity with few recoverable assets.
The fund's attorneys said Richie's investment was with PGW, and they didn't want Kelley representing both corporate entities. Earlier in the case, Richie got its own receiver appointed over both entities by a state judge in Illinois. That appointment was overruled by a federal judge in Minneapolis who appointed Kelley receiver in October.
Kishel said appointing another receiver would be an unreasonable expense for the estate.
"Kelley has gone up an immensely steep learning curve in the last five months; he has had to amass knowledge, and analyze it with his professional persons; he is making use of that to regain assets, via legal proceedings and otherwise," Kishel said.