BOISE - Alfredo Miguel, founder and former board chairman of the failed  Tamarack Resort in Idaho, and Tim Blixseth, founder and former manager  and developer of the Yellowstone Club in Montana, have filed to  intervene in a pending lawsuit against Credit Suisse, charging the Swiss  bank with fraud, conspiracy and more, in a scheme they charge directly  contributed to the financial failure of both resorts.
The  existing lawsuit, originally filed in January of 2010 by a group of  property owners from four failed luxury resorts, charged the  second-largest bank in Switzerland with engaging in a “predatory”  lending scheme designed to force all four resorts into foreclosure, and  acquire the pricey properties for pennies on the dollar while raking in  “enormous” fees. In addition to Tamarack and the Yellowstone Club, the  2010 federal lawsuit covers two other failed luxury resorts: Lake Las  Vegas in Nevada, and Ginn Sur Mer resort in the Bahamas.
The  filings from Miguel and Blixseth charge that the two resorts suffered  “defaults and foreclosures caused directly by shoddy, deceitful,  misleading and fraudulent appraisals deliberately inflated by appraisers  and lenders resulting in catastrophe for lending institutions, innocent  borrowers and other parties collaterally affected by defaulting loans  secured by property such as vendors, contractors, subcontractors,  material suppliers, title insurance companies and purchasers of real  estate.”
The scheme, according to the legal filings, involved a  “new and exotic real estate loan product” that Credit Suisse developed  in 2004, targeting owners of high-end real real estate resort  developments with the pitch that they could enjoy all the future profits  and equity from their developments, just as, at the time, homeowners  were tapping into their fast-rising home equities through loans. There  were differences, though: Little to no risk to Credit Suisse, potential  huge profits for the bank when the loans failed, and the bigger the  loans, the higher fees the bank made.
Plus, appraisal values for  the properties were vastly inflated using a new methodology. As a  result, the Yellowstone Club was appraised at $420 million in September  of 2004, but in July of 2005, it was appraised at $1.165 billion.  Tamarack was  appraised at $284 million in December of 2005, but one  month later Credit Suisse told Miguel it was worth $1.5 billion.
The Swiss bank ran the huge loans through its Cayman Islands branch,  which the new filings charge “consisted of a lonely PO box and no office  personnel whatsoever,” stating, “The Cayman Island Branch of CSFB was  an outright sham and subterfuge.”
Steven Vames, vice president  for corporate communications for the bank, said, “Credit Suisse rejects  Mr. Blixseth’s and Mr. Miguel’s entirely meritless allegations and their  attempt to latch onto an existing suit which has already seen many of  the plaintiffs’ claims dismissed. For Mr. Blixseth in particular, this  is simply the latest attempt to shift blame to others and away from his  own conduct.” 
The lawsuit’s racketeering claim under the federal  RICO Act, or Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, was  dismissed in March as not applicable to the case. Other claims, however,  including charges of fraud, conspiracy, tortious interference and  breach of fiduciary duty, were allowed to proceed.
The original  lawsuit seeks $8 billion in actual damages and $16 billion in punitive  damages, including $150 million each for the four communities impacted  by the failed resort projects. 
The new filings include an  allegation that Credit Suisse and Highland Capital called Miguel to a  meeting in Dallas in March of 2010, told him not to bring his lawyers,  and leaned on him for $1.2 million saying that Highland Capital had a  party who was “close to the FBI and was prepared to use ‘unorthodox  methods’ to collect on the guaranty.”
Monday, July 25, 2011
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