R2 Complaint Against Carl Icahn
R2 Complaint Against Carl Icahn
R2 Complaint Against Carl Icahn
Gresser LLP, as and for its own complaint and also derivatively for its complaint on behalf of
XO Holdings, Inc. (“XO or the “Company”) against Carl C. Icahn, Carl J. Grivner, Vincent
Intrieri, Adam Dell, Keith Meister, Fredrik Gradin, Robert Knauss, Peter Shea, Arnos
Corporation, High River Limited Partnership, ACF Industries Holding Corporation, Starfire
Holding Corporation, and Nominal Defendant XO (collectively, “Defendants”) states and alleges
upon personal belief with respect to its own acts and upon information and belief with respect to
1. This case concerns a third attempt by Carl Icahn, the Chairman and majority
shareholder of XO Communications (“XO” or the “Company”), to take XO’s $3.5 billion in net
operating losses (NOLs) for his own use in exchange for grossly inadequate consideration.
Companies accrue net operating losses when their tax deductions in a given year exceed their
taxable income. The companies can use the NOLs to offset income in a different tax year.
Under the tax laws, a shareholder who owns 80% or more of a company may use its NOLs to
reduce the tax burden of other, profitable, companies in which the shareholder holds more than
an 80% interest. Icahn has long sought the Company’s NOLs to reduce the overall taxes in his
business empire. Twice before he attempted to engineer transactions to acquire the NOLs – and
twice before the filing of litigation was necessary to stop him. This time, Icahn avoided the
possibility of a court enjoining his scheme by announcing it to minority shareholders and the
public only after his self-dealing transaction was consummated, so it is now up to this Court to
2. Icahn’s most recent scheme involved three egregious breaches of fiduciary duty.
First, the Icahn-controlled Board of Directors gave Icahn approximately $2 billion of value in
stock and NOLs in exchange for less than $1 billion in value in return. Second, in doing so,
Icahn and his hand-picked Board breached their fiduciary duties by improperly diluting minority
shareholders, offering them collectively one share for every twenty that the Icahn-controlled XO
Board of Directors offered Icahn. Third, Icahn and the Board breached their fiduciary duties by
rejecting offers to purchase the Company or its assets that, according to financial advisers to the
Company and its Special Committee, would have offered shareholders far greater value than
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3. Icahn and his controlled Board committed these breaches of fiduciary duty so that
Icahn could obtain over a billion dollars worth of tax benefits from XO in exchange for paying
XO only approximately $100 million. Under the grossly unfair transaction approved by the
Icahn-controlled Board, Icahn is required to pay XO only 30 cents on the dollar for the first $900
million in NOLs he uses and to pay XO absolutely nothing for any additional NOLs he uses
unless he falls below 80% control of XO, an event Icahn could single-handedly prevent. This
arrangement was so ridiculously unfair that the financial advisor to the Company’s sham special
committee explicitly stated that its fairness opinion did not apply to the NOL part of the
transaction.
4. The events at issue here were not Icahn’s first attempt to increase his control over
the Company and obtain access to the Company’s NOLs. When XO first emerged from
bankruptcy, Icahn owned more than 80% of the Company’s equity. Icahn used approximately
$450 million of XO’s NOLs in 2003 and 2004 to reduce the tax liability of other Icahn-
controlled companies. However, Icahn fell below the 80% threshold when he failed to
would not be interested in the offering. Icahn then began his efforts to get back his golden prize.
In 2005, Icahn proposed to buy XO’s sole valuable operating asset, its fiber optic network (the
“Wireline Assets” or “Wireline Business”) and take the Company’s only other substantial asset,
its NOLs, for grossly insufficient consideration. Plaintiff R2 and other minority shareholders
filed a lawsuit in Delaware to prevent this breach of fiduciary duty. After a preliminary court
hearing, Icahn and his controlled board backed down and abandoned the proposed deal.
5. A few months later, Icahn put language into the Company’s preliminary proxy for
its 2006 annual meeting of stockholders that would permit the Company to sell the Wireline
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Assets to Icahn without obtaining shareholder approval – in effect, to complete the transaction
that had just been stopped. The proxy statement misleadingly described the proposed
agreement “for administrative purposes.” Once again, Plaintiff R2 and other minority
shareholders caught Icahn and commenced injunctive proceedings. Again, Icahn backed down.
6. Icahn’s current attempt to take XO’s NOLs began in or about September 2007.
During the preceding months and years, XO’s Icahn-controlled Board had failed to take
advantage of an extraordinarily liquid credit market to refinance its long-term debt, the majority
of which Icahn owned. Instead, the Board had approved an aggressive capital expenditure
program but failed to identify the financing for that program. Icahn’s strategy of having the
Company incur substantial additional expenditures while leaving in place its sizeable debt (owed
largely to Icahn) would force the Company into dire financial straits – and provide an excuse for
the self-dealing transaction Icahn would offer to save the Company in exchange for its NOLs. In
September 2007, the Board created a Special Committee to consider its financing alternatives.
Although a special committee in theory should be independent and free to determine the best
course for the Company and all its shareholders, this Special Committee was not. Instead, as
subsequent events proved, XO’s Special Committee was free only insofar as it approved Icahn’s
dictates. Indeed, the three directors on the Special Committee were the same three directors who
had approved the scheme that resulted in the earlier breach of fiduciary duty lawsuit, which the
7. The Special Committee and Icahn knew that an equity financing proposal could
give Icahn further control of the Company’s assets, as well as control of the Company’s NOLs
for the benefit of his own affiliates, if the Special Committee did not put protections into place to
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safeguard the Company’s interests. Nevertheless, as the financing proposal developed, the
Special Committee took step after step to ensure that Icahn would get control over the NOLs
without providing fair compensation. The Special Committee rejected concerns from advisors
about the size of the offering, the type of stock offered, the type of transaction, and the
involvement of minority shareholders. The result was a transaction that guaranteed Icahn’s
8. The Special Committee and the Company had their own financial advisors. Both
sets of financial advisors recommended that any equity financing be conducted through an equity
rights offering and that it be open to as many participants as possible, not just current investors
such as Icahn. The Special Committee also initially recommended that “a rights offering be
conducted only if Mr. Icahn agrees to a standstill agreement (or other comparable arrangement)
that would limit his equity ownership, after any offering, to not greater than 75%.” This
agreement would have served the specific purpose of keeping Icahn below the 80% threshold so
that he could not take the Company’s NOLs for his own use.
9. Icahn agreed with the rights offering plan, but not on the terms recommended by
the financial advisors. He first insisted that it be a preferred rights offering of a size that would
dwarf any similar rights offering in recent years – and that was multiples beyond the size
recommended by the financial advisors. A preferred rights offering of this size would serve
Icahn’s strategic purpose: it would so dilute minority shareholders as to dampen any interest in
participation and actually exclude participation by some minority shareholders, thus nearly
guaranteeing that Icahn would exceed the critical 80% threshold. Although the financial
advisors cautioned against Icahn’s proposal, the Special Committee ultimately capitulated to his
demand. Disregarding the financial advisors’ advice, the Special Committee also ignored three
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different prospective investors who made unsolicited approaches to the Company to provide
funding that could have kept Icahn below the 80% threshold (without acquiring any Company
10. Another alternative available to the Company was the sale of all or part of the
Company. The Company’s financial advisor endorsed an active exploration of this alternative.
Despite this recommendation, the Special Committee made no effort to solicit interest from
potential acquirers. Nevertheless, at least four bidders expressed serious – and unsolicited –
interest in acquiring all or part of the Company at prices that represented a substantial premium
above the market price of XO shares. One potential acquirer, Bidder 1, made an offer of $1.0
billion for the entire Company. The Special Committee rejected this offer out of hand.
11. Another potential acquirer, Bidder 2, approached the Special Committee on June
6, 2008 with an offer of $900 million to $1 billion for the Company’s Wireline Assets. After an
expedited due diligence process, on June 23, 2008, Bidder 2 made a revised offer of $940 million
for the Wireline Business. Bidder 2’s proposal would pay shareholders approximately three
times the Company’s current stock price while allowing the Company to keep the rest of its
assets, including its billions of dollars in NOLs. In addition, Bidder 2 was prepared to sign
transaction documents quickly. The financial advisor to the Special Committee, Cowen &
Company (“Cowen”), made clear that the Special Committee should give Bidder 2’s offer very
serious consideration. This proposed sale, however, would block Icahn’s effort to obtain further
12. The very next day, June 24, 2008, at a meeting of the full XO Board convened at
the offices of Icahn Associates, Icahn and the conflicted board rejected Bidder 2’s offer. The
Special Committee expressed concern about its fiduciary duties, noting that it was required to
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consider the sale option. Icahn rejected those concerns. He recommended that the full Board
vote to put “on hold” the pursuit of any alternatives to Icahn’s proposed transaction until the
preferred stock deal was completed. The Board acceded to Icahn’s request. In short, when faced
with the reality of an attractive sale alternative that would maximize shareholder value, the
Icahn-dominated full Board simply limited the Special Committee’s mandate, precluding it from
pursuing a potential sale and limiting the Special Committee to negotiating the transaction with
Icahn.
13. Apparently recognizing the egregious breach of fiduciary duty behind the
restriction on the Special Committee’s authority, Cowen tried to resurrect discussions with
Bidder 2, which remained seriously interested and promised to make a material increase in the
amount of its offer. Without Board support, however, these discussions proved fruitless.
14. After the Board eliminated any alternatives to Icahn’s proposal of issuing
preferred shares, Icahn steamrolled the Special Committee in the ensuing negotiations. Icahn got
the Special Committee to agree to new transaction terms. Among those terms was an increase in
the size of his preferred placement that made it many times larger than any comparable
transaction. In addition, a last-minute change drastically cut the number of shares offered to
minority shareholders so that instead of collectively obtaining one share for every two shares
acquired by Icahn, the minority shareholders were collectively offered one share for every twenty
shares Icahn would receive. These changes guaranteed that Icahn would exceed the 80%
threshold he needed to get his hands on the Company’s NOLs even if minority shareholders
15. In addition, as part of the overall transaction, the Company signed a new tax
allocation agreement with Icahn (the “Amended Tax Allocation Agreement”). The old
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agreement required that Icahn pay the Company dollar-for-dollar for the tax benefits Icahn
received from XO. The Amended Tax Allocation Agreement allowed Icahn to pay only 30 cents
on the dollar for the first $900 million in Company NOLs he used for his own entities. In
addition, Icahn would pay the Company nothing for additional approximately $2.5 billion in
NOLs he used until such time as he could no longer file a consolidated tax return with the
Company, if that ever happened. This contingency is an event entirely within Icahn’s control,
and one he will no doubt prevent from occurring. These terms are so unfair to the Company and
its minority shareholders that they could not have resulted from a fair or even minimally diligent
process. Indeed, they did not. The Special Committee apparently neither sought nor received
16. On July 25, 2008, the transaction with Icahn (the “Icahn Transaction”) was
consummated. The Company issued hundreds of millions of dollars in new preferred stock that
Icahn purchased in exchange for cash and retirement of the Company’s Icahn-owned debt.
Icahn’s stake in XO went up from just over 50% of the equity to approximately 85% (on a fully-
diluted basis). Icahn obtained the Company’s NOLs subject to the Amended Tax Allocation
Agreement. The Icahn Transaction has the additional benefit – to Icahn – of allowing him to get
near the 90% ownership of XO he would need to squeeze out minority shareholders in a short-
form merger.
17. This blatant looting of Company assets was too much for Cowen, the Special
Committee’s financial advisor. Cowen refused to issue an opinion on the fairness of the
arrangement regarding the NOLs. The limited fairness opinions it gave also did not consider the
proposed Bidder 2 transaction and specifically excluded any analysis of fairness to minority
shareholders.
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18. Plaintiff R2 has been a minority shareholder of XO since 2003. The economic
value and voting rights of R2 shares have been substantially diminished as a result of
Defendants’ self-dealing, breaches of their fiduciary duties, and corporate waste. R2 obtained
corporate records from XO underlying this Complaint only by bringing a successful books and
records action after XO refused to comply with its corporate obligations to provide R2 with those
records. R2 brings this lawsuit both on its own behalf and derivatively on behalf of XO to seek
(i) rescission of the self-dealing Icahn Transaction described in detail below; (ii) compensatory
damages; and (iii) the fees and costs incurred to obtain these remedies.
PARTIES
from January 2003 to the present date. R2 owned more than 5% of the voting power of the
Delaware corporation with its principal place of business located at 1111 Sunset Hills Road,
Reston, Virginia 20190. During the period covered in this Complaint, XO had approximately
182 million shares of common stock outstanding. The common stock has one vote per share.
21. Defendants Carl C. Icahn, Carl J. Grivner, Vincent J. Intrieri, Peter Shea, Keith
Meister, Robert Knauss, Fredrik Gradin, and Adam Dell (collectively, the “Individual
22. Defendant Icahn owns and controls XO. Defendant Icahn is, and at all times
relevant hereto has been, Chairman of the XO Board of Directors. Through entities that he owns
and controls, Icahn owns the majority of XO’s common and preferred stock and held 90% of the
Company’s long-term debt until that debt was repaid in the Icahn Transaction. Defendant Icahn
has the power to appoint every member of the XO Board of Directors. Defendant Icahn is also
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the owner of Defendants Arnos Corporation, High River Limited Partnership, ACF Industries
Holding Corporation, and Starfire Holding Corporation (“Starfire”) (collectively, the “Icahn
Entities”).
23. Defendants Arnos Corporation, High River Limited Partnership, and ACF
Industries Holding Corporation are affiliates of Defendant Icahn that purchased XO preferred
24. Defendant Starfire is an affiliate of Defendant Icahn that entered into a tax
25. Defendant Carl Grivner has served as XO’s Chief Executive Officer and President
and as a member of the XO Board since May 2003. Because Icahn controls the majority of XO’s
outstanding common stock, Defendant Grivner owes his position as an executive and director of
XO to Defendant Icahn.
26. Defendant Adam Dell has been a member of the XO Board since January 2003.
In May 2008, Icahn included Defendant Dell in Icahn’s slate of proposed directors of Yahoo!
Inc. Defendant Dell was a member of the Wireline Special Committee, described below, that
was responsible for overseeing and approving the sale of XO’s Wireline Assets in 2005 before
that sale was stopped by a shareholder lawsuit. Dell was also a member of the Special
Committee that ignored the best interests of the Company and its shareholders as well as the
Transaction. Because Icahn controls the majority of XO’s outstanding common stock,
27. Defendant Fredrik Gradin has been a member of the XO Board since August
2004. He was a member of the Wireline Special Committee, described below, that was
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responsible for overseeing and approving the sale of XO’s Wireline Assets in 2005 before that
sale was stopped by a shareholder lawsuit. Gradin was also a member of the Special Committee
that ignored the best interests of the Company and its shareholders as well as the
Transaction. Because Icahn controls the majority of XO’s outstanding common stock,
28. Defendant Vincent Intrieri has been a member of the XO Board since January
2003. Intrieri is a Senior Managing Director of Icahn Partners LP and Icahn Partners Master
Fund LP, private investment funds controlled by Defendant Icahn. Intrieri is also the Senior
Managing Director of Icahn Associates Corp. and High River LP, both of which are controlled
by Defendant Icahn. Because of his employment relationship with Icahn, and because Icahn
controls the majority of XO’s outstanding common stock, Defendant Intrieri is beholden to Icahn
29. Defendant Robert Knauss has been a member of the XO Board since August
2004. Like many of the other members of XO’s Board of Directors, Defendant Knauss has a
long history with Defendant Icahn and considers Icahn to be a “friend.” XO’s website does not
identify any current full-time employment for Defendant Knauss. Defendant Knauss has been
involved with Icahn in connection with WestPoint International, Inc., Philip Services
Inc., another entity controlled by Icahn. Defendant Knauss served on the board of directors of
Philip Services Corporation from August 1997 through May 2001 and from April 2002 through
2003. He was the Chairman of the Board of Philip Services Corporation from April 2000 to May
2001 and was again elected Chairman in April 2002 and served in that capacity until 2003.
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Philip Services Corporation is a metal recycling and industrial services company controlled by
Defendant Icahn. In 2003, Philip Services Corporation voluntarily sought bankruptcy protection
Icahn then gained control of Philip Services Corporation through the bankruptcy process – all
while defendant Knauss was Chairman of Philip Services Corporation’s Board of Directors. In
November 2000, Defendant Icahn initiated a proxy challenge to gain control of VISX
Defendant Icahn included Defendant Knauss as part of his slate of proposed directors.
Defendant Icahn again included Defendant Knauss on the slate of proposed directors in his
renewed attempt to gain control of VISX Technologies in November 2001. Defendant Knauss
was appointed Chairman of the Wireline Special Committee that was responsible for overseeing
and approving the sale of XO’s Wireline Assets in 2005 before that sale was stopped by a
shareholder lawsuit. Knauss was also a member of the Icahn-Knauss Special Committee –
consisting of himself and Defendant Icahn – that reviewed strategic alternatives and
recommended that the Board pursue the strategy that resulted in the Wireline Sale. Defendant
Knauss was also a member of the Special Committee that ignored the best interests of the
Company and its shareholders as well as the recommendations of financial advisors, described
below, by recommending the Icahn Transaction. Because of his long-standing relationship with
Icahn, and because Icahn controls the majority of XO’s outstanding common stock, Defendant
30. Defendant Keith Meister has been a member of the XO Board since January 2003.
Since June 2002, he has been a Senior Investment Analyst of High River LP, which, as noted
above, is owned and controlled by Defendant Icahn. Meister is also a Senior Investment Analyst
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of Icahn Partners LP and Icahn Partners Master Fund LP. He is also a director of Icahn Fund,
Ltd., which is the feeder fund of Icahn Partners LP and Icahn Partners Master Fund LP. Icahn
Partners LP and Icahn Partners Master Fund LP are private investment funds controlled by
Defendant Icahn. Since August 2003, Defendant Meister has served as the President and Chief
Executive Officer of American Property Investors, Inc., which is the general partner of American
Real Estate Partners LP, a public limited partnership controlled by Defendant Icahn. Defendant
Meister is also a director of Trans Texas Gas Corp., an oil and gas exploration company
Properties Corp. and American Casino & Entertainment Properties Finance Corp., which are
gaming companies, and Scientia Corp., a private health care venture company, all of which are
companies controlled by American Real Estate Partners LP, which is controlled by Defendant
Icahn. In May 2008, Icahn included Defendant Meister in Icahn’s slate of proposed directors of
Yahoo! Inc. Because of his employment relationship with Icahn, and because Icahn controls the
majority of XO’s outstanding common stock, Defendant Meister is beholden to Icahn and owes
31. Defendant Peter Shea has been a member of the XO Board since December 2006.
Since December 2006 he has also been head of portfolio company operations at American Real
Estate Holdings Limited Partnership, an entity controlled by Defendant Icahn, and also president
of American Property Investors, Inc., which is the general partner of American Real Estate
Partners LP, a diversified holding company whose majority owner is Defendant Icahn. Since
December 2006, Defendant Shea has also served as a director of American Railcar Industries,
Inc., a company in which Defendant Icahn is the principal beneficial stockholder and chairman
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American Real Estate Partners LP. Since November 2006, Mr. Shea has been a director of
Viskase Companies, Inc., a company in which Defendant has a controlling interest. Because of
his employment relationship with Icahn, and because Icahn controls the majority of XO’s
outstanding common stock, Defendant Shea is beholden to Icahn and owes his position as a
director of XO to Icahn.
FACTS
32. The appendix attached to this Complaint provides a timeline of Icahn’s effort to
XO’s Business
large enterprises, and telecommunications companies. XO uses two technologies to connect its
customers to its national network. The vast majority of its business customers are connected
with fiber-optic cables. A handful of other customers are served by what is called “fixed
34. In June 2002, XO filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the United States
Bankruptcy Code. XO’s Plan of Reorganization was confirmed in November 2002. As a result
of that plan, Icahn converted XO debt he had acquired into 83% of XO’s new equity securities
and 85% of XO’s debt. In January 2003, when XO emerged from bankruptcy, Icahn used his
control over XO to select all of the members of XO’s new Board of Directors and elected
35. Also, in January 2003, the Company entered into a tax allocation agreement (the
“Old Tax Allocation Agreement”) with Starfire (an Icahn company). Under the Internal
Revenue Code, entities under common ownership (defined to mean entities sharing a common
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stockholder with 80% or greater ownership interest) are permitted to file consolidated tax
returns.
36. The Old Tax Allocation Agreement permitted Icahn (via Starfire) to use the
substantial NOLs incurred by the Company to offset income generated by other Icahn-controlled
entities. Neither Icahn nor Starfire was required to compensate XO for the use of the net
operating losses consumed by them unless XO could have used those losses in future tax years.
Even then, Starfire and Icahn were only required to reimburse the Company to the extent the
37. Icahn used approximately $450 million of XO’s NOLs in 2003 and 2004 to
38. In or about January 2004, the Company conducted a rights offering pursuant to its
plan of reorganization when it emerged from bankruptcy. Icahn miscalculated the interest other
unsecured creditors would have in the rights offering and chose not to participate. To Icahn’s
surprise, the rights offering was oversubscribed and the Company was forced to sell substantial
additional shares to participating investors. As a result, Icahn’s share of the Company’s equity
fell from approximately 83% to approximately 61% – rendering Icahn unable to continue using
the Company’s NOLs to reduce the tax liability of his other controlled entities.
39. Realizing his mistake, Icahn offered to buy shares from Plaintiff R2, one of the
rights offering participants. Icahn explained to R2 that XO would not be a profitable investment
and that Icahn hoped to make money from XO not as an investment entity but as a source of
NOLs to offset profits from his other investments. Icahn even explained that the Company’s
press releases had been designed to discourage minority shareholders from participating in the
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40. Despite his efforts, Icahn was unable to restore his XO ownership above the 80%
below, Icahn turned to concocting self-dealing transactions with XO itself to get back above the
80% threshold.
Icahn Begins His Efforts to Get His Hands Back on XO’s NOLs
ostensibly to evaluate financing proposals and explore long-term strategic alternatives for XO.
In fact, the real goal of the committee was to develop a plan by which Icahn could again use
XO’s NOLs. Just a few weeks later, Icahn and Knauss presented their recommendations, which
included the sale of XO’s only profitable operation, its fiber-optic network.
42. Icahn immediately expressed an interest in buying this valuable asset. The Board
then appointed a new special committee (the “Wireline Special Committee”) consisting of
Defendants Knauss, Dell, and Gradin to consider and negotiate the terms of any potential
transaction. The Board appointed Knauss as chairman of the Wireline Special Committee
43. The Wireline Special Committee failed completely in its responsibilities. The
rejected all proposals, including one from the Company’s own financial advisor, to refinance the
long-term debt the Company owed Icahn, which would have eliminated the need for any sale or
other financing transaction at all. It shared its information with Icahn despite the advice of the
rejected financial advisors that giving Icahn inside information would taint the bidding process.
It also rejected their advice that it require Icahn to top a third-party bid by a minimum amount
and rejected a “majority of the minority” voting requirement that would have required that a
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majority of non-interested shareholders approve the proposed transaction with Icahn. Finally, it
permitted the Company’s management, counsel, and financial advisor to run the auction process
rather than doing so itself. In short, the Wireline Special Committee established its dependence
44. Not surprisingly, the result of the auction process was that Icahn got what he
wanted. The Company and Icahn signed an equity purchase agreement in November 2005 that
would have resulted in the sale of the Wireline Business to Icahn for an inadequate $700 million
and would have allowed Icahn to once again use the Company’s NOLs for Icahn’s other
businesses. In addition, Starfire’s obligation to repay XO for the value of the NOLs under the
Old Tax Allocation Agreement would have been cancelled. Icahn, through Starfire, would have
45. Icahn’s self-dealing met with a swift and negative reaction. Within a week of the
announcement of Icahn’s sweetheart deal, XO’s stock dropped 23%. Shareholders, including R2,
filed a lawsuit in Delaware to prevent the consummation of Icahn’s deal, which was a blatant
breach of fiduciary duty. After a preliminary court hearing in March 2006, Icahn and his
controlled Board backed down and abandoned the proposed deal. On January 14, 2008, XO,
Icahn and the plaintiffs filed a settlement agreement with the Court of Chancery in Delaware that
resolved this litigation. As part of the settlement, the Company agreed to pay millions of dollars.
Icahn also agreed to reduce the interest rate on the bank debt of XO that Icahn owned by 1.50%
46. In May 2006, Icahn tried to put language into the Company’s preliminary proxy
for its 2006 annual meeting of stockholders that would permit Icahn to consummate the
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described the proposed amendments as removing “superfluous” provisions and as designed to
“simplify” the relevant agreement “for administrative purposes.” After R2 and other
shareholders caught him and commenced injunctive proceedings, Icahn backed off again.
47. Icahn remained undeterred. From 2006 onward, the Icahn-led Board created a
path that would leave the Company with no option but to let Icahn get his hands on the
Company’s NOLs. Despite what was at the time the best credit market in history and the
upcoming payments on its debts, the Company did not refinance its debt even though it could
easily have done so at little cost. Indeed, the Board rejected numerous refinancing proposals,
including one from the Company’s own financial advisor. Instead, the Company enacted plans
to increase its capital expenditures significantly – without a plan for raising the capital needed to
cover the increased expenditures. As a result, the Company was burning through cash at a rate
of approximately $10 million per month without any meaningful way to pay for these
expenditures. In short, the Company was incurring additional liabilities without taking care of
the existing ones. Upon information and belief, this was a deliberate strategy that would allow
Icahn to “rescue” the Company from its self-created peril – and allow Icahn to receive the
needed to finance the Company’s capital expansion plans. The Board formed a Special
Committee comprised of Knauss, Gradin, and Dell – the same directors whose work as members
of the Wireline Special Committee resulted in a breach of fiduciary duty claim against the
Company that the Company was forced to pay millions of dollars to settle. Rather than empower
the Special Committee to seek out the best proposal for the Company, Icahn and his controlled
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full Board limited the Special Committee’s authority to considering and negotiating “proposals
received by the Company” from Icahn and others. The Board also did not give the Special
Committee the power to approve any transactions; instead, the Special Committee could at most
recommend a transaction to the full, conflicted, Board. Moreover, even though potential suitors
had expressed interest in acquiring XO even before the formation of the Special Committee, the
Board did not include exploring a sale in the Special Committee’s mandate.
49. The Special Committee knew who was dictating its efforts. Soon after it was
constituted, the Special Committee “determined that a process would be implemented [to discuss
financing alternatives], but that the Committee would first approach Mr. Icahn to determine
whether he would support and cooperate with the refinancing process.” As a result of that
meeting with Icahn, the Special Committee changed its focus from simply paying for the capital
expansion program. Instead, the Special Committee now sought to raise substantially more
funds than would be needed for the capital plan and proposed to use some of the excess funds to
replace the debt the Company owed to Icahn. The Special Committee considered raising funds
through a rights offering that would give Icahn yet another opportunity to go over the 80%
50. In November 2007, the Special Committee solicited bids from five investment
banks on how to raise funds for XO. One bank recommended against a rights offering entirely.
Three other banks recommended rights offerings that would raise from $200 million to $350
million, with Icahn “backstopping” the offering by agreeing to buy whatever rights remained
unsold to other investors. The final bank suggested an offering of up to $500 million. The larger
the offering, the less likely minority shareholders would participate and the more likely Icahn
would reach the 80% threshold. (Ultimately, Icahn rendered minority shareholder participation a
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moot point by committing the Company to offer Icahn enough shares, and minority shareholders
so few shares, that Icahn guaranteed he would exceed the 80% threshold.)
51. In February 2008, the Special Committee proposed a rights offering of up to $200
million, which meant that Icahn’s holdings would not exceed 80% of the Company after the
offering. The Special Committee then dropped all the long-range financing proposals for months
XO Receives Multiple Unsolicited Offers Of Interest From Third Parties That Are
Superior To a Self-Dealing Transaction With Icahn
52. Meanwhile, although the Special Committee had put the long-term financing of
the Company on hold, unsolicited offers to buy the Company began coming in.
unsolicited offer to purchase the entire Company for $1 billion. Bidder 1 and the Company had
engaged in unsuccessful negotiations the year before. Knowing that the Company needed to
move quickly, Bidder 1 noted that it had received strong preliminary support for the proposed
transaction from a number of investment banks and informed XO it could sign a definitive
54. Two weeks later, on March 21, the Special Committee finally responded that it
55. Also on about March 21, 2008, Bidder 3, another telecommunications company,
contacted the Company about potentially acquiring part or all of the Company.
56. On April 1, 2008, the Special Committee met to discuss the two expressions of
interest. The Special Committee decided to flatly reject the Bidder 1 offer without any
negotiations whatsoever. The Special Committee offered the rationalizations that it did not want
to negotiate again with Bidder 1 after the failed process a year earlier and that Bidder 1’s initial
20
expression of interest contained a proviso that XO share the risk that financing might not be
obtained. The Special Committee decided to forward the Bidder 3 inquiry to the full Board. A
month and a half passed before Bidder 3 finally was invited to conduct due diligence.
57. On April 4, 2008, three days after the Special Committee nixed Bidder 1’s
potential bid, the Company finally began receiving advice from its financial advisors on how to
value potential acquisitions. Notably, the evaluation of strategic alternatives by Morgan Stanley,
the Company’s financial advisor, practically invited the Board to open discussions with Bidder 1.
Morgan Stanley identified Bidder 1 as one of a number of strategic buyers who might be
interested in acquiring the Company. Morgan Stanley explained that a cash offer of $1.0 billion,
the exact size of the Bidder 1 offer, translated to a value per share of approximately $2.25
compared to the then-current price per share of $1.27. Morgan Stanley’s analysis showed that
minority shareholders would receive a substantial premium from a $1.0 billion sale – and that the
premium from a sale would increase along with any increase in size of a proposed equity
58. Morgan Stanley recommended using a competitive process to get the best
available bona fide offer. The Board and the Special Committee disregarded this
recommendation.
59. Morgan Stanley made a subsequent presentation on April 16, 2008, when the
Company’s share price had dropped to 79 cents. Morgan Stanley again compared a $1.0 billion
offer to various alternative scenarios that assumed the Company eliminated its senior secured
debt and added different amounts of equity up to $577 million (well below the amount actually
raised in the Icahn Transaction). Morgan Stanley’s calculations showed that the Company would
21
have to trade at prices far above the historic or current price of the Company’s stock to achieve
the same value for minority shareholders as a $1.0 billion sale price.
60. The Special Committee’s financial advisor, Cowen, also provided an analysis to
the Special Committee on April 16, 2008 on how to value a $1.0 billion offer, such as Bidder 1’s,
for the Company. Cowen concluded that a $1.0 billion offer as of March 31, 2008 (when XO’s
stock had closed at $1.30 per share) provided minority shareholders with $206.3 million of
value. Cowen’s analysis showed that the Company’s value would need to increase by more than
double the amount of equity added in a rights offering to create the same value for minority
shareholders as a $1.0 billion sale. As with Morgan Stanley’s analysis, the greater the size of the
rights offering, the more remote the possibility that a rights offering could achieve the same
61. On April 16, 2008, another potential investor, Potential Investor 1, approached the
exchange for preferred stock in the Wireline Business. Potential Investor 1’s proposal was based
on selling the wireless business and the NOLs to Icahn in exchange for reduction of the debt of
the Wireline Business, replacing the debt the Wireline Business owed to Icahn with public debt,
and creating a path to Icahn selling down his equity position in the Wireline Business. This
proposal, had it been given serious consideration, would have been a great boon to minority
investors by getting value for the NOLs, eliminating the nonperforming wireless business, and
improving the equity structure of the Company. But it would force Icahn to pay a reasonable
22
62. Not surprisingly, the same day Potential Investor 1 made its approach, the Special
Committee rejected it out of hand under the pretext that it would be “very difficult to
consummate.”
63. On May 12, 2008, another company, Potential Investor 2, approached the
Company to express its interest in becoming a minority investor. Potential Investor 2 offered to
provide up to $50 million of equity that could be used to reduce debt. The Special Committee
64. During the week of May 12, 2008, a managing director at Jefferies & Company
called CEO Grivner to inform him that a group of private equity firms were interested in backing
yet another company, Bidder 2, in a bid to acquire part or all of the Company.
The Financial Advisers Caution That The Large Rights Offering Icahn is Pushing is
Unusual And Would Not Likely Get Minority Shareholder Participation
65. While the Special Committee was receiving significant and unsolicited
expressions of interest from third parties in the spring of 2008, the Special Committee was also
hearing from its own financial advisors and the Company’s financial advisors about the pitfalls
of the financing alternative, a large rights offering, it was pursuing at Icahn’s direction.
66. On April 4, 2008, Morgan Stanley, the Company’s financial adviser, gave a
presentation to XO’s Board. Morgan Stanley separately reviewed financing alternatives and
strategic alternatives. Morgan Stanley identified the two primary financing alternatives as a
$100-$125 million rights offering or a $200 million rights offering. Morgan Stanley did not
67. On April 16, 2008, both the Company’s advisor, Morgan Stanley, and the Special
committee’s advisor, Cowen, explained to the Special Committee that few, if any, minority
investors would be willing to participate in a rights offering without an extension of the maturity
23
date of the senior debt owed to Icahn and the preferred equity already outstanding. Cowen
advised the Special Committee that Icahn would have nearly 80% of the equity of the Company
if no minority shareholders participated in a rights offering of $175 to $200 million. The next
day, April 17, 2008, the Special Committee met with Icahn and asked if he would consider
While a Sale Would Maximize Shareholder Value, a Financing Could Hand the Company’s
Valuable NOLs to Icahn
68. In light of the numerous unsolicited offers it was receiving, the Special
Committee requested that the full Board permit the Special Committee to consider both equity
financing and strategic opportunities (i.e., sale options) that might result in a sale of the
Company. The Board met on April 21, 2008 and gave the Special Committee the authority it
requested. Despite this grant of authority, the numerous unsolicited expressions of interest the
Company had received, and Morgan Stanley’s recommendation that the Company employ a
competitive bidding process, the Special Committee did not create a formal process. It did not
ask its financial advisor to solicit potential acquirers (even though Morgan Stanley had provided
a list), nor did it create a timeline for a process. Instead, in disregard of its fiduciary duties, the
Special Committee simply found reasons not to go forward on the unsolicited offers that were
coming in.
69. On May 15, 2008, a month and a half after rejecting Bidder 1, the Special
Committee had its financial advisor return to Bidder 1 and ask for more details on its financing.
Bidder 1 responded that it needed more information on the Company’s 2008 plans before it
could secure financing and that, presumably because of the Special Committee’s long delay in
responding, Bidder 1 needed assurance that the Special Committee would support a transaction
24
with Bidder 1 if it made an acceptable offer. The Special Committee never provided Bidder 1
70. The Special Committee finally arranged for Bidder 3, a potential acquirer that had
expressed interest in the Company in March, to begin its due diligence in early June. As Cowen
explained to the Company’s management, Bidder 3 took this diligence “very seriously.”
71. On June 6, 2008, Bidder 2, another potential buyer that had recently approached
the Company, made an offer of $900 million to $1 billion in cash to purchase the Wireline
Business. The offer presented a low financing risk as both of Bidder 2’s lead financial advisors
provided letters confirming their high confidence that financing could be obtained. In addition,
the offer fit within the Company’s timing needs, as Bidder 2 said it could achieve a definitive
agreement within six weeks. Indeed, Bidder 2 had a demonstrated track record of rapid
negotiations and acquisitions, having acquired seven entities in the prior eighteen months.
72. On May 15, 2008, in the midst of XO receiving unsolicited interest in purchases
from Bidder 1, Bidder 3, and Bidder 2, Cowen provided the Special Committee with two
alternative proposals for an equity rights offering. One proposal involved a rights offering
backstopped by Icahn but limiting Icahn to a maximum ownership of 79%. Icahn would receive
a backstop fee in cash of 1% of the proposed offering (or about $5 million). The second
proposal was to find a third party to backstop an offering and limiting Icahn to a 50.5%
participation. Both proposals had a serious flaw from Icahn’s view: Icahn would be limited to
less than 80% ownership of the Company following the offering and thus would not be able to
25
73. The Special Committee did not accept either of the two equity financing proposals
recommended by its financial advisor. Instead, the purportedly independent Special Committee
came up with its own proposals for giving the NOLs to Icahn. Defendant Gradin proposed that
the Company could give the NOLs to Icahn in exchange for his “equity commitment” and ask
Icahn to backstop the entire offering. Defendant Dell agreed. Dell demonstrated his failure to
understand the Special Committee’s role by noting “that he wanted to minimize risk relating to
the rights offering since the Committee’s charge was to refinance the Company.” In fact, the
Special Committee was technically empowered to consider either a refinancing or a sale, but
everybody involved in the process recognized that the ultimate result would be a refinancing that
74. Later in May 2008, the Special Committee met on its own. Special Committee
members identified the leverage they had over Icahn: Icahn would not likely want to put the
Company in bankruptcy (particularly since Icahn held approximately $185 million in equity and
$77.6 million in unsecured debt and would face a serious risk of losing control of the Company
in a bankruptcy through equitable subordination) and Icahn would get no advantage over other
shareholders in any of the strategic alternatives. In addition, the Special Committee discussed
that usual backstop fees were 1 to 3%; they recognized that giving away the value of the NOLs
to Icahn would far exceed any reasonable backstop fee. Despite identifying their leverage, the
75. On or about May 22, 2008, the Special Committee met with Icahn and gave him
their rights offering proposal. The Special Committee proposed a $568 million offering – almost
three times the size of the offering the Special Committee had initially proposed in February
2008. The new proposal had a key change from the two proposals Cowen made on May 15, one
26
week earlier: Icahn would provide a full backstop and be permitted to increase his share of the
Company’s equity beyond 80%, thereby getting his hands on the NOLs (if, as expected, minority
shareholders and third parties did not participate in sufficient numbers). If only Icahn
participated, as expected, Icahn would receive payment on his $450 million debt that the
Company could not otherwise pay (including $77.6 million in unsecured debt) and would get the
right to use the Company’s billions of dollars of NOLs. According to Cowen’s calculations,
minority shareholders would gain only $39 million in value under the proposal, far less than they
would receive under any of the sale proposals the Company was receiving. The Special
Committee also explained that it would want Icahn to enter into a new tax sharing agreement to
address the possibility that he might acquire more than 80% of the Company’s equity in the
rights offering. The Special Committee did not say what terms it wanted in the new tax
allocation agreement.
76. The Special Committee’s proposal was not enough for Icahn. He rejected a rights
offering of common stock and insisted on an offering of convertible preferred stock instead. He
said he would be willing to go as high as $1.25 for a conversion price and $750 million for the
size of an offering. Of course, the larger the offering and the higher the conversion price, the
more likely Icahn would get his hands on the NOLs because minority shareholders would have
no interest (or, in many cases, resources) to pay such a large premium over the current share
price without getting something in return. Minority investors did not have the same interests as
Icahn because they were interested in the profitability of the Company, not grabbing its NOLs.
77. On May 30, 2008, the Special Committee met again and discussed Icahn’s
proposal of a convertible preferred stock offering. The Special Committee had already been told
by Morgan Stanley and Cowen that minority holders likely would not participate in a common
27
stock offering. Cowen explained that some of the minority investors would not even be able to
hold convertible securities and would therefore be prevented from taking part. Moreover, the
relative size of convertible offerings in the recent past were substantially below the 800% of
current market cap that the Special Committee was considering. The obvious consequence of
these warnings was that the Special Committee would be handing the NOLs to Icahn if it
adopted Icahn’s proposed convertible stock. Disregarding these concerns, the Special
78. The Special Committee met again on June 6, 2008. Its financial advisor, Cowen,
again explained the numerous problems with Icahn’s proposed convertible preferred rights
offering: they are rare in the United States; certain shareholders could not hold convertible
preferred stock; they would not be marketable; and they can create a cap on stock price by
creating a perception of a ceiling on the price. After this presentation, Defendant Gradin
admitted he was not comfortable with a convertible preferred instrument. Defendant Knauss, for
his part, said the Company should retain 100% of any tax savings on the NOLs enjoyed by Icahn
and that he would like to eliminate the backstop fee entirely. A truly independent Special
Committee would have taken these concerns to heart and followed a different path than Icahn’s
proposed preferred rights offering. But Icahn had picked the Special Committee members to be
Bidder 2 Makes An Offer Well Above the Company’s Stock Price and Far More Attractive
To Minority Shareholders Than Icahn’s Proposed Preferred Stock Offering
Bidder 2 Makes a Very Attractive Offer Far Above the Company’s Stock
Price
79. On June 6, 2008 the Company sent Bidder 2 a non-disclosure agreement to pursue
a sale. Bidder 2 acted quickly, signing and returning the agreement within hours of receiving it.
28
Bidder 2 also arranged for 20 people to attend a due diligence session at the Company on
Tuesday, June 10, 2008. The next day, Bidder 2 informed the Special Committee that by July 3,
2008 it would provide a bona fide, fully-financed offer without financing contingencies. Bidder
2 requested a draft contract so that the parties could agree to terms as quickly as possible.
80. On June 17 and 18, 2008, Bidder 2’s financial advisors attended meetings held by
81. On June 21, 2008 Bidder 2 wrote to Cowen about the nearly-completed due
diligence process. Bidder 2 confirmed that it would make a revised offer based on its findings
and be ready to finalize documents by July 3, 2008 or whatever date the Special Committee
wanted. Cowen forwarded this message to the Special Committee members and added its own
The email below speaks for itself in terms of the seriousness of the
prospective buyer, the expertise that has been brought to bear on
their analysis of XO and this process, the amount of work done by
all, and the fact that whatever indication Bidder 2 makes [to] the
Special Committee after their diligence is complete will reflect a
“market” value data point from an independent third party that
should be helpful to the Special Committee in determining what
course to consider.
In other words, Bidder 2’s offer would be a serious offer to which the Special Committee should
82. On June 23, 2008, Bidder 2 presented its revised proposal to the Special
Committee. Bidder 2 offered $940 million cash for the Wireline Business alone, leaving the
Company with the wireless business and the billions of dollars in NOLs. There was no financing
contingency, and Bidder 2 would be able to sign final transaction documents by early July 2008.
Bidder 2 was also prepared to make an offer for the entire Company if the Special Committee
indicated it would entertain the proposal, but the Special Committee had requested that Bidder 2
29
make an offer only for the Wireline Business. Bidder 2’s offer would provide far greater value
83. Meanwhile, another potential buyer, Bidder 3, deferred making a bid on June 23,
2008. Having been thwarted by an incoherent process thus far, Bidder 3’s main reason for
declining to bid was that it needed clarification on the Company’s process, including the role of
the Special Committee and of Icahn. Notwithstanding what the Special Committee would later
say, Bidder 3 did not cite the Company’s timing needs as a reason for declining to bid at that
time.
84. While Bidder 2 was doing its due diligence, the Special Committee was doing
what Icahn wanted by focusing on the proposed rights offering. On June 12, 2008, the Special
Committee sent Icahn a revised draft of a tax allocation agreement that still provided for the
85. On June 16, 2008 the Special Committee met. Defendant Knauss advocated
doing a private placement with Icahn rather than a rights offering to get a deal done quickly. In a
private placement, XO would sell shares directly to Icahn in a private transaction, thereby
guaranteeing that Icahn received the shares in the private placement. According to the minutes,
this was the first time the Special Committee considered a private placement, and the Special
Committee’s counsel expressed concerns with this approach. Nevertheless, the Special
Committee decided to move forward with a private placement. The Special Committee then sent
Icahn a one-page term sheet for a private placement of preferred stock. The term sheet identified
the size of the offering as $500 million to $750 million based on the Company’s purported needs.
The Special Committee’s decision to send a term sheet to Icahn without narrowing this wide
30
range demonstrates that a self-dealing transaction with Icahn was a foregone conclusion and the
86. On June 20, 2008 a fund called Potential Investor 3 spoke with Grivner about
participating in financing of the Company. Upon information and belief, the Company did not
In the Face of Bidder 2’s Generous Offer, The Icahn-Controlled Board Strips the Special
Committee of Authority to Do Anything But Capitulate to Icahn
87. On June 24, 2008 the full Board held a meeting at the offices of Icahn Associates
in New York. The Company’s stock was trading at about 50 cents per share at the time.
88. As of the meeting, the Special Committee had not met or exchanged any written
correspondence with its financial advisors or Icahn regarding an agreement on terms for a private
placement other than the initial term sheet for $500 million to $750 million. Nonetheless, with
an almost-completed sales process as the alternative, the Special Committee reported to the
Board that it had reached an agreement in principle with Icahn that a private equity placement
could be rolled out within a couple of weeks consisting of $680 million in preferred stock. This
prediction of a couple of weeks was fanciful at best and did not come to pass.
89. The Special Committee also reported on Bidder 2’s firm offer for just the
Committee said the offer had a value of approximately $1.52 per share, about three times the
Company’s current share price for all its assets. The Special Committee mischaracterized
several aspects of the acquisition process, reporting that Bidder 2 anticipated it would need an
additional couple of weeks of due diligence. In fact, the Special Committee knew that Bidder 2
was ready to sign a definitive agreement within nine days, if not sooner. The Special Committee
31
also falsely reported that Bidder 3 dropped out due to the “timing needs of the Company,” which
was not among the reasons Bidder 3 cited for not making an offer.
90. Immediately after the presentation on the sale process, “Icahn expressed concern
about the effect on the Company’s operations of continuing a dual process [of exploring both
financing and a sale] while implementing the proposed financing” proposal with Icahn himself.
He also said he would consider matching any offer made to acquire the Company. The Special
Committee protested that it had a fiduciary duty to explore all options. Disregarding these
fiduciary duties, the Board then voted at Icahn’s direction to put the pursuit of the sale process
“on hold” while the Company negotiated Icahn’s sweetheart private placement deal.
91. The full Board’s vote to strip the Special Committee of authority to continue
invocation of its fiduciary duties – demonstrates that the Special Committee had no real authority
to take any action that Icahn did not approve. The Special Committee existed only to create the
appearance of an independent process, but Icahn was dictating the Company’s path at all times.
Bidder 2 Offers To Raise Its Bid While Icahn Continues to Dictate the Terms of a Rights
Offering
Bidder 2 Continues to Press Its Offer and Agrees To Raise its Bid
92. As per the instructions of the Board, on June 25, 2008, the Company cut off
Bidder 2 and Bidder 3 from access to the data room through which they were doing their due
diligence.
Wireline Assets, writing multiple times to the Special Committee and its advisor, Cowen, to
emphasize the value it offered to minority shareholders and to explain that its bid was losing
momentum due to the Company’s actions. Pursuant to instructions, Cowen informed Bidder 2
32
on June 27, 2008 that the Special Committee had decided to terminate the M&A process. In
reality, the full Board, not the Special Committee, had taken that action.
94. Later on June 27, 2008, Bidder 2 made a new proposal that would provide
additional tax benefits to the Company. Bidder 2 calculated the total potential incremental value
to shareholders from the tax benefits as $8.24 per share in addition to the cash Bidder 2 was
offering shareholders.
95. On June 30, 2008, Bidder 2 wrote again, noting that the Company’s stock price
had plummeted another 20% and was down to 41 cents per share. Bidder 2 questioned why the
Special Committee was acting completely counter to its purpose of maximizing shareholder
value by leaving Bidder 2 in suspension. Bidder 2 made clear that the Special Committee’s
actions were harming the possibility that Bidder 2 might ever reach a deal with the Company.
Bidder 2 asked that the Special Committee get the process back on track.
96. On July 1, 2008, still another potential buyer, Bidder 4, made an unsolicited call
to Cowen to express interest in purchasing the Company. Cowen discouraged this interest.
Bidder 2 also wrote again that evening to reiterate the value it was offering the Company’s
shareholders.
97. Upon information and belief, Cowen recognized that the Bidder 2 offer presented
far greater value to the Company’s shareholders than a self-dealing transaction with Icahn.
Cowen took the extraordinary step of trying to resurrect the Bidder 2 sale process even though
98. On July 7, 2008, Cowen suggested Bidder 2 make a revised bid for the Wireline
Business of $1.3 billion, a 50% increase over Bidder 2’s previous offer. The next day – July 8,
33
2008 – Bidder 2 responded that it was prepared to increase its offer and requested a face-to-face
meeting.
Bidder 2 later explained, it was left “perplexed.” Cowen said it “had heard back from two of the
three members” of the Special Committee, that the Special Committee had not responded
formally to Cowen and that Bidder 2 should not expect to hear a formal reply from either Cowen
or the Special Committee. Cowen also told Bidder 2 that the Company would meet with Bidder
2 only if it resubmitted its mark-up of the purchase agreement Bidder 2 had previously submitted
(to which the Company had never responded) with a $1.3 billion purchase price and a $25
million reverse break-up fee under which Bidder 2 would pay the Company $25 million if
100. On July 10, 2008, Bidder 2 responded to Cowen. Bidder 2 volunteered to propose
a purchase price “materially higher” than its prior $940 million offer – notwithstanding that the
Special Committee described the value of its prior offer as $1.52 per share, a substantial
premium over the Company’s July 10, 2008 stock price of 35 cents per share. In addition,
Bidder 2 said it did not object to a reverse break-up fee but wanted to see the Company’s mark-
up of the draft purchase agreement Bidder 2 had provided weeks earlier. Bidder 2 again
102. On June 26, 2008, two days after the Board cut off the sale process, Cowen
presented its first summary of the newly-proposed private placement. Cowen’s projections
showed that the implied stock price of Company shares as of June 30, 2008 (assuming the
34
proposed rights offering went ahead) would be 55 cents per share – or approximately one-third
of what shareholders would receive in 2008 from Bidder 2 while still retaining the wireless
business and the NOLs, which Bidder 2 valued at approximately $8.24 per share.
103. On June 30, 2008, the Special Committee met again. With the sale process off the
table, Icahn was steamrolling the Special Committee in “negotiations” that were taking place
even though there purportedly had already been an agreement in principle prior to the June 24,
2008 Board meeting. Icahn demanded the private placement be increased to $780 million,
comprised of two new classes of preferred stock, one convertible and the other non-convertible,
or perpetual. Icahn also “agreed to a placement with minority holders” to close at the same time
as his transaction. Icahn also insisted that minority holders purchase only their pro rata interest
or nothing at all. This proposal for an unnecessarily large offering would disadvantage minority
104. Raising $780 million would not only cover the Company’s capital expenditures
and debt payments, but it would also provide the Company with idle cash going forward for
years. This excessive cash demonstrates that the size of the offering exceeded the Company’s
needs and also belies any claim that the Company would need additional cash on top of the rights
offering. The only purpose that the oversized rights offering would serve was to ensure that
Icahn could acquire enough shares to hit the 80% threshold and thereby get access to the coveted
NOLs.
105. On July 13, 2008, counsel to the Special Committee circulated draft transaction
documents. The Special Committee’s counsel amended prior drafts to allow for minority
shareholders to collectively obtain one share of each of the new classes of preferred stock for
every two shares obtained by Icahn. Thus, Icahn would get $555 million in convertible preferred
35
shares, while minority shareholders could get up to an additional $277.5 million, and Icahn
would get $225 million in perpetual preferred shares while minority shareholders would get up to
despite all expectations, Icahn would be held below the 80% threshold.
106. On July 14, 2008, the Special Committee circulated a new draft tax sharing
agreement. This draft contained two major give-aways to Icahn. First, instead of repaying the
Company dollar-for-dollar for any NOLs Icahn used, Icahn would pay the Company for only
30% of the tax benefits, capped at the first $900 million of tax benefits Icahn received. Second,
any benefits Icahn received from NOLs above $900 million (and the Company had over $3
billion in NOLs) would be payable back to the Company only if Icahn no longer filed
consolidated tax returns with the Company. This outcome was completely within Icahn’s control
and therefore not remotely likely. Simply put, Icahn would receive approximately $1 billion in
benefits from the NOLs above $900 million while minority shareholders of the Company were
107. As a shareholder with over 85% of the Company’s equity, Icahn effectively
would be paying himself 85% of the money he gave the Company. Assuming Icahn’s controlled
entities paid at a 40% tax rate, XO’s minority shareholders would get only $16.2 million in
value, or approximately 18 cents per share, for the Company’s billions of dollars in NOLs. By
comparison, Bidder 2 calculated a value of $8.24 per share for the NOLs, also using a tax rate of
approximately 40%.
108. The only purported benefit to the Company from this scheme would be that the
Company could convert some of the NOLs into cash sooner than would otherwise have been
possible. Even this purported benefit is illusory, as the oversized rights offering needed for
36
Icahn to pass the 80% threshold gave the Company a substantial amount of idle cash even
without current payments on a small portion of the NOLs. Moreover, according to the
Company’s own projections, in a mere three years the Company could finally begin using for
itself the NOLs it had been accumulating. Of course, the Company would be able to use the
109. The Company did not provide a single document in its books and records
production to R2 that reflects any consideration by anybody at all as to whether 30% was an
appropriate ratio for paying back the first $900 million that the Company could begin to use
soon. Likewise, the Company did not produce a single document addressing the $900 million
cap. In addition, the Company did not produce a single document that reflected any review of
the finances of Icahn’s entities that would be useful in understanding Icahn’s future use of the
NOLs. This conspicuous absence of documents can exist only because the Special Committee
did not ask Cowen or any other financial advisor to consider the terms of the new tax allocation
agreement.
110. Also on July 14, 2008, Cowen made a presentation to the Special Committee on
the proposed deal with Icahn. Cowen found no comparable prior deals or even anything
remotely similar.
111. Cowen was able to identify only 27 perpetual convertible preferred stock
offerings greater than $100 million since the beginning of 2007. The deal value as a percentage
of market value typically was no greater than 40%, and there were only two offerings that even
exceeded 51%. The Company’s proposed convertible stock placement would be 897% of the
37
112. With regard to the non-convertible preferred stock portion of the transaction,
Cowen found eleven such offerings since the beginning of 2007. The typical deal value was up
to 10% of market value. The highest percentage of deal value going back to 2005 was 40%. The
Company’s proposal, by contrast, was 363% of its market value. The Company’s proposed yield
on its perpetual preferred stock also was out of line with precedents. Cowen identified 8.5% as
the top of the illustrative range for annual yields on cumulative preferred offerings like the
Company’s, with 7.25% as the average yield on prior offerings. The Company was giving Icahn
113. The degree to which the Company was diluting its existing minority stockholders
is magnified even further because the Company was offering both convertible and non-
convertible preferred stock at deal values substantially in excess of precedent transactions. Not
one of the prior offerings on Cowen’s lists involved both a convertible and non-convertible
Icahn’s Sweetheart Deal Is Signed Without A Fairness Opinion for a Key Part of the
Transaction, the Gift of NOLs
114. On July 17, 2008, the Special Committee met again to discuss its one remaining
option – the sweetheart deal with Icahn. The basic terms for Icahn remained the ones Icahn had
price of $1.50, $225 million Class C 9.5% perpetual preferred stock, and a new tax allocation
agreement that handed over the Company’s NOLs to Icahn for 30% current payment on the first
$900 million in NOLs and no payment on the remaining NOLs unless and until XO was
115. The terms for minority shareholders, however, had changed significantly in the
last three days. Perhaps remembering his failure to anticipate demand for the 2004 offering,
38
Icahn no longer left to chance that minority shareholders would fail to buy the preferred shares
XO was offering. Instead, rather than offering minority shareholders one share for every two
shares Icahn received, as previously proposed, on July 16, 2008 Icahn edited the transaction
documents so that minority shareholders would get one share for every twenty Icahn received.
Now, minority shareholders could receive up to $27.75 million of the convertible preferred stock
(instead of $277.5 million) and up to $11.25 million of the perpetual preferred stock (instead of
$112.5 million). As a result, Icahn guaranteed that he would dilute minority shareholders. More
importantly for Icahn, he guaranteed himself over 80% of the total voting power of the Company
116. Cowen made a presentation to the Special Committee on the proposed stock
offerings. Notably, Cowen’s presentation did not address the tax allocation agreement. Cowen’s
presentation identified the Company’s current total enterprise value (absent the NOLs) as $635.9
million – or nearly $300 million less than Bidder 2’s firm offer for only the Wireline Business
117. In connection with the July 17, 2008 meeting, Cowen presented the Special
Committee with separate fairness opinions for the convertible preferred stock and the perpetual
preferred stock. Cowen did not identify the Bidder 2 offer as a factor in its fairness opinion, and
it specifically limited its opinion to the fairness to the Company of the financial consideration the
Company was receiving for the preferred stock. It did not address the fairness to minority
shareholders of the preferred stock placements, nor did it address the size of the offering.
118. Cowen did not provide a fairness opinion on the Tax Allocation Agreement.
Instead, Cowen offered the following prominent disclaimers in its two fairness opinions:
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entered into in connection with the Transaction or otherwise.
Furthermore, we express no view on that certain Tax Allocation
Agreement by and among Starfire Holding Corporation and the
Company nor are we expressing any opinion or making any
judgment, evaluation or determination with respect to the value,
characteristics, ability of any party to utilize or other attributes of
the Company’s tax position or of any net operating losses. In
addition, you have not asked us to address, and our Opinion does
not address, the fairness to the holders of any class of securities,
creditors or other constituencies of the Company.
119. The Special Committee recommended the sweetheart deal with Icahn to the full
The Company Approves Icahn’s Sweetheart Deal – Then Realizes Weeks Later That The
Deal Opened The Company Up to Substantial Potential Liabilities
120. On July 24, 2008, after amendments to the transaction documents not relevant
here, the Board approved final agreements with Icahn. The Special Committee requested that
Cowen provide new fairness opinions to take into account the additional changes to the
transaction documents since July 17, 2008. Cowen once again provided fairness opinions that
did not take into account the Bidder 2 offer, the size of the offering, the fairness to minority
shareholders, or the Amended Tax Allocation Agreement. The final transaction documents are
122. Upon information and belief, the Special Committee did not realize that in its
liabilities incurred by Icahn’s other controlled entities under ERISA and the Internal Revenue
Code as a result of the impending consolidation of XO with those other entities. In late August
2008, the Company and Icahn entered into an undertaking ostensibly to indemnify XO for any
such liabilities. But the Company received an indemnification only from Defendant Starfire –
but not from Icahn or any of his other Icahn affiliates. As a result, the Company would receive
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no indemnification if Starfire were unable to pay, even if Icahn or his other controlled entities
could have made XO whole. Upon information and belief, the Special Committee did not do any
investigation into Starfire’s finances before accepting an undertaking only from Starfire. As with
the Amended Tax Allocation Agreement, the Special Committee did not obtain a fairness
Derivative Allegations
123. R2 repeats and realleges each and every allegation made in paragraphs 1 through
124. R2 asserts its derivative claims in the right of and for the benefit of the Company.
R2 will fairly and adequately represent the interests of the Company and has retained competent
Demand is Excused
125. R2 repeats and realleges each and every allegation made in paragraphs 1 through
126. R2 has not made a demand on the Board of Directors to institute the derivative
claims alleged herein because such demand would be a futile and useless act for the following
reasons.
127. Because of Icahn’s domination and control of the XO Board, Icahn is in a position
to prevent, and has prevented, the other members of the XO Board from acting independently of
Icahn in determining the appropriate course of action with respect to the Icahn Transaction and
the Company’s future. Indeed, despite the expressed concerns of Special Committee members
about their fiduciary duties, Icahn compelled the Board to put “on hold” any sales discussions
until his self-dealing transaction was completed. This bad faith action resulted from the Board’s
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128. The Icahn Transaction was proposed by and for the benefit of Icahn and the Icahn
129. The Individual Defendants have ties to Icahn and the Icahn Entities that would
transaction between and among the Company and the Icahn Entities. Defendants Grivner,
Intrieri, Meister, and Shea are longtime employees of entities controlled by Icahn and therefore
are financially and professionally beholden to him. Defendant Knauss is a friend of Icahn’s, has
a lengthy history of business dealings that make him beholden to Icahn, including receiving
Icahn’s support for service on three other boards of directors, was elected to the Board by Icahn,
and demonstrated his inability to act independently of Icahn in connection with Icahn’s prior
self-dealing efforts to obtain the Company’s NOLs. Icahn included Defendant Dell on Icahn’s
proposed slate of directors for Yahoo! Inc. All the Directors were elected by Icahn and maintain
130. All of the Individual Defendants participated in, acquiesced in, and/or approved
the wrongs alleged herein and did so in affirmative violation of their duties to the Company.
There is a substantial likelihood that the Individual Defendants will be held personally liable for
131. All of the purportedly independent directors sat on the Special Committee that
negotiated and recommended this deal and also voted in favor of it. The Special Committee
failed to inform itself fully, failed to follow advice received from independent advisors, failed to
consider strategic alternatives available to the Company, failed to ascertain key consequences of
the Icahn Transaction before its completion, and ultimately proceeded with a transaction that its
financial advisor did not conclude was fair to the Company. Accordingly, many of the claims in
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this action are expressly predicated on the conduct of Knauss, Dell, and Gradin and these
directors cannot be expected to act in an unbiased fashion to investigate their own conduct or
pursue the claims alleged herein. To bring an action for violations of law, these directors would
be required to sue themselves and/or their fellow directors with whom they have entangled
financial alliances, interests, and dependencies. In addition, these very same directors served on
the Wireline Special Committee that was so beholden to Icahn that it did not even defend its
process in court after shareholders challenged Icahn’s prior efforts to get his hands on the
Company’s NOLs and that resulted in the Company paying millions of dollars to settle a
132. Additionally, the Individual Defendants received personal benefits from the Icahn
Transaction, namely Icahn’s commitment to help them keep their board seats.
133. The Individual Defendants knew they were failing to act in good faith by
restricting the mandate of the Special Committee to consider only the Icahn Transaction and by
approving the Icahn Transaction despite a fairness opinion that refused to address the Amended
134. Demand is excused because the costs to the Company resulting from Defendants’
course of conduct amounted to a waste of corporate assets. Under applicable law, actions
amounting to waste do not receive the protection of the business judgment rule and cannot be
135. Demand is excused because the benefits to Icahn of the amendments to the Old
Tax Allocation Agreement that are in the Amended Tax Allocation Agreement amounted to a
gift of corporate assets without shareholder approval. Under applicable law, a gift of corporate
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assets in violation of 8 Del. C. § 122 does not receive the protection of the business judgment
136. In sum, the Individual Defendants, who constituted the entire Board of the
Company when this action was filed, intentionally or recklessly failed to protect the interests and
assets of the Company, which could not have been the product of a valid exercise of business
judgment, and thus are incapable of making a disinterested decision about whether to pursue the
claims asserted herein. Accordingly, pre-suit demand on defendants is either not required or is
137. R2 repeats and realleges each and every allegation made in paragraphs 1 through
138. As directors, the Individual Defendants owe the Company and its shareholders the
fiduciary duties of care and loyalty and the obligation to act in good faith in their conduct of the
Company’s business.
manner alleged above, the Defendants breached their fiduciary duties to the Company and its
shareholders.
140. There is no justifiable reason for the Icahn-controlled Board to have given Icahn
the Company’s NOLs for pennies on the dollar. There were many alternatives, recommended by
141. The Board itself created the Company’s cash needs by failing to refinance the
Company’s long-term debt during the best credit market in history. Rather than take advantage
of this market while it remained open, the Board approved a substantial increase in capital
44
expenditures without a corresponding plan to pay for those expenditures. The only person
served by this gross failure to account for future liabilities was Icahn, the holder of the debt that
142. The Special Committee and the Board quashed expressions of interest by
potential acquirers like Bidder 1, Bidder 3, Bidder 4, and Bidder 2 even though the analyses of
both Cowen and Morgan Stanley showed that the offers from Bidder 1 and Bidder 2 would give
the shareholders better value than a rights offering. The Special Committee even imposed false
deadlines on the potential acquirers that it did not impose on Icahn in an effort to dampen their
interest. When Bidder 2 nonetheless met the interim deadlines and made a firm offer that was
three times the trading price of the Company’s shares and would allow the shareholders to
realize over $8 per share in NOL value, the Board withdrew the Special Committee’s authority
even to consider this offer. The Board’s decision was so transparently motivated by the interests
of Icahn rather than the Company that Cowen tried to resurrect the Bidder 2 discussions. The
Board’s rejection of the possibility of a sale was necessary, however, for Icahn to get his hands
143. Financial advisors to the Company and the Special Committee advised the
Company to raise capital through a modest offering of common stock in the range of $200 to
$250 million if the Company adopted the rights offering option. The advisors further suggested
144. The Special Committee and the Board ignored the advice to conduct a rights
offering of common stock. Instead, the Board accepted Icahn’s plan for a private placement of
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145. The Special Committee and the Board also ignored the recommended size of an
offering of $200 to $250 million and the ranges of benchmark offerings that suggested a $200
million offering of preferred stock was the largest figure that would be comparable to the
benchmarks. Instead, the Special Committee and the Board accepted Icahn’s demand for a $780
million private placement that was far larger than comparable benchmarks and provided the
Company with an about $350 million of unnecessary, idle cash. This needlessly large
refinancing served the interests not of the Company but of Icahn by permitting Icahn to achieve
the 80% threshold necessary for him to get his hands on the Company’s NOLs.
146. The Special Committee and the Board further ignored the recommendations to
open any offering to as many potential investors as possible and to seek an outside investor as a
backstop. Indeed, the Special Committee and the Board ignored the unsolicited interest in
minority investments made by Potential Investor 2, Potential Investor 3, and Potential Investor 1.
Instead, the Special Committee and the Board approved a preferred rights offering on terms
proposed by Icahn that prevented many shareholders from participating and were unlikely to
obtain a single subscriber other than Icahn. These warnings proved true. Only Icahn acquired
147. The Special Committee ignored its own misgivings about handing over the
Company’s NOLs to Icahn. The Special Committee and the Board failed to implement any of
the available and recommended alternatives to Icahn obtaining 80% of the voting power of the
Company: a competitive sale process; a standstill agreement with Icahn limiting his ownership;
an offering that would meet the Company’s financial needs without putting a large enough bloc
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148. The Special Committee and the Board agreed to an Amended Tax Allocation
Agreement that gave Icahn hundreds of millions of dollars of tax benefits at 30 cents on the
dollar even though the Company’s projections showed that it could begin using those tax benefits
– at 100 cents on the dollar – in just three years and that the oversized transaction gave the Board
hundreds of millions of dollars of idle cash that would carry them through that time. The Special
Committee and the Board gave additional billions in NOLs to Icahn with no legitimate prospect
149. The Company’s books and records show that the Special Committee and the
Board handed Icahn these tax benefits with minimal, if any, negotiations and without any
financial advisor conducting any analysis or offering any advice whatsoever on the terms of the
150. The Special Committee and the Board proceeded with Icahn’s self-dealing tax
151. The Special Committee and the Board received an undertaking only from Starfire
– not even guaranteed by Icahn or any of his corporate affiliates – for any tax and ERISA
liabilities that XO could incur as a result of filing consolidated tax returns with Icahn’s other
controlled companies. This undertaking is worthless to XO if Icahn moves assets from Starfire
152. In sum, the Special Committee and the Board acted in the best interests of Carl
Icahn, not the Company and the shareholders to whom they owed fiduciary duties. The Board
did not dare put the Icahn Transaction to a “majority of the minority” vote that undoubtedly
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153. The Icahn Entities, as controlling shareholders of the Company, owe the
Company and its other shareholders the fiduciary duties of care and loyalty and the obligation to
154. Despite their fiduciary duties, the Icahn Entities participated in the Icahn
Transaction knowing that it was designed to enrich Icahn at the expense of the Company and its
minority shareholders. The Icahn Entities participated in the Icahn Transaction even though the
rights offering far exceeded any legitimate corporate purpose and the Icahn Transaction gave
Icahn excessive consideration. In addition, the Icahn Entities share in Icahn’s benefits from the
Icahn Transaction because they are among the potential beneficiaries of the Amended Tax
Allocation Agreement.
155. R2 repeats and realleges each and every allegation made in paragraphs 1 through
156. If it is determined that any of the Icahn Entities do not independently owe
fiduciary duties to the Company and its shareholders, the Icahn Entities aided and abetted the
breaches of fiduciary duties of each and every one of the Individual Defendants by knowingly
157. R2 repeats and realleges each and every allegation made in paragraphs 1 through
approved conduct, that has caused the Company to waste valuable corporate assets.
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159. The Individual Defendants agreed to an Amended Tax Allocation Agreement that
gave Icahn hundreds of millions of dollars of tax benefits at 30 cents on the dollar even though
the Company’s projections showed that it would be sitting on a pile of unused cash and could
begin using those tax benefits in just three years. The Individual Defendants gave additional
billions in NOLs to Icahn with no legitimate prospect of ever receiving anything in return for this
giveaway.
160. The Company’s books and records show that the Individual Defendants handed
Icahn these tax benefits with minimal, if any, negotiations and without any financial advisor
conducting any analysis or offering any advice whatsoever on the terms of the Amended Tax
Allocation Agreement.
161. The Individual Defendants proceeded with Icahn’s self-dealing tax allocation
162. Defendants’ acts of waste have damaged XO and its minority shareholders in the
amounts of professional fees and expenses and Special Committee compensation and expenses
incurred in connection with the Icahn Transaction and in an amount in excess of $1 billion
reflecting the difference between the value of XO assets given to Icahn and the substantially
163. R2 repeats and realleges each and every allegation made in paragraphs 1 through
164. As controlling shareholders of the Company, the Icahn Entities and Icahn, as the
beneficial owner of their shares, owe to R2 as a shareholder the fiduciary duties of care and
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165. By engaging in the Icahn Transaction in the manner alleged above the Icahn
Entities and Icahn have breached their fiduciary duties to R2. Icahn and the Icahn Entities
obtained vastly excessive compensation in the form of Company stock and NOLs in exchange
for cash and extinguishing debt owed by the Company. Icahn and the Icahn Entities in effect
obtained Company stock in addition to making a transaction of NOLs for cash and extinguishing
debt on which the Icahn Entities will also make a profit. Through the Icahn Transaction, Icahn
and the Icahn Entities extracted and appropriated the voting power and economic power of R2 by
diluting R2’s interest in XO and deprived R2 of the benefits of the Company’s NOLs as a
shareholder.
166. R2 repeats and realleges each and every allegation made in paragraphs 1 through
167. Under Section 122 of the Delaware General Corporation Law, a Delaware
corporation may make corporate gifts for public welfare, charitable, scientific or educational
purposes or in aid of the country in time of war or other national emergency. A Delaware
corporation must receive unanimous shareholder approval to make a gift for any other purpose.
The Defendants violated Section 122 of the Delaware General Corporation Law by providing a
168. In exchange for billions of dollars gifted to Icahn, the Company received only a
token 30 cents on the dollar for the first $900 million in NOLs Icahn uses and a potential future
payment for the remaining billions of dollars in NOLs based on a contingency entirely in Icahn’s
control that is unlikely ever to occur. The consideration the Company received is so grossly
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inadequate that the Amended Tax Allocation agreement constitutes a gift of corporate assets to
Icahn.
169. By approving in, engaging in, and closing the Icahn Transaction, the Individual
170. Defendants’ gift of NOLs to Icahn damaged XO and its minority shareholders in
the amounts of professional fees and expenses and Special Committee compensation and
expenses incurred in connection with the Icahn Transaction and in an amount in excess of $1
billion reflecting the difference between the value of XO assets given to Icahn and the
WHEREFORE, R2 asks the Court for the following relief in its favor and in favor of the
fees;
conduct; and
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(6) Awarding such other relief as might be just and proper under
the circumstances.
_______________________________
Mark S. Cohen
Sandra C. McCallion
Daniel H. Tabak
100 Park Avenue, 23rd Floor
New York, NY 10017
Phone: (212) 957-7600
Fax: (212) 957-4514
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APPENDIX
January 2003 XO emerges from bankruptcy; Icahn holds more than 80% of XO’s equity
January 2003- Icahn uses approximately $450 million of XO’s NOLs to reduce tax
January 2004 liability of Icahn-controlled companies; under Old Tax Allocation
Agreement, Icahn to repay XO when and if it could use NOLs itself
January 2004 Icahn fails to participate in oversubscribed rights offering and falls below
80% threshold; Icahn fails to restore 80% equity ownership through arm’s-
length negotiations with third parties
November 2005 Wireline Special Committee (Knauss, Dell & Gradin) agrees to sell Icahn
the Wireline Business for $700 million; XO stock plummets
March 2006 XO abandons Wireline Business sale to Icahn after preliminary court
hearing
May 2006 Icahn tries to add language to 2006 proxy enabling him to undertake
Wireline Business sale without shareholder approval; XO backs down after
shareholders commence injunctive proceedings
January 2003- Despite best credit market in history, XO Board makes no effort to
August 2007 refinance debt; instead, XO enacts capital plan that will cost hundreds of
millions of dollars with no financing
September 2007 XO Board appoints Special Committee comprised of Knauss, Dell and
Gradin to consider proposals received by Company from Icahn and others
on financing
November 2007 Five investment banks bid to conduct XO financing rights offering; one
recommends against rights offering; three recommend offerings of $200-
$350 million; one recommends offering of up to $500 million
March 7, 2008 Bidder 1 makes unsolicited offer of $1.0 billion to purchase entire Company
April 1, 2008 Special Committee rejects Bidder 1 offer without negotiations and decides
to forward Bidder 3 offer to full Board
April 4, 2008 Morgan Stanley recommends using competitive process to get best
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available bona fide offer and includes Bidder 1 on list of potential strategic
buyers; Morgan Stanley explains that $1.0 billion offer translates to
$2.25/share vs. current price of $1.27/share
April 16, 2008 Morgan Stanley advises Company that $1.0 billion offer far exceeds current
($0.79/share) share price or historical share prices
May 15, 2008 Special Committee reinstates contact with Bidder 1 but fails to give Bidder
1 information it requests to continue process
Cowen provides two alternatives for equity rights offering, neither of which
permits Icahn to achieve 80% threshold: (1) $508 million offering with
Icahn backstop of 85% or (2) $338 million offering with third-party
backstop and Icahn participating at 50.5%
May 22, 2008 Special Committee proposes $568 million offering – fully backstopped by
Icahn and permitting Icahn to exceed 80% threshold; Icahn insists on
convertible preferred stock offering
May 30, 2008 Despite Cowen explanation that many shareholders could not participate in
convertible preferred stock offering, Special Committee capitulates to
Icahn’s request for preferred stock offering
June 6, 2008 Cowen advises Special Committee of many pitfalls of extremely large
convertible preferred stock offering exceeding all benchmarks
June 16, 2008 Special Committee sends Icahn term sheet for preferred stock offering;
Special Committee identifies size of offering as $500 million to $750
million but cannot narrow range without more information
June 21, 2008 Following extensive due diligence by Bidder 2, Cowen explains to Special
Committee that Bidder 2’s interest is very serious and an offer would reflect
market value
June 23, 2008 Bidder 2 offers $940 million cash for Wireline Business with no financing
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contingency and expectation of signing in early July
June 24, 2008 XO Board meets at Icahn’s offices; Special Committee announces
agreement with Icahn on private equity placement that could be rolled out
in two weeks; at Icahn’s direction, and over Special Committee’s protests
that it had fiduciary duties, Icahn-controlled Board votes to put pursuit of
sale on hold
June 25, 2008- Bidder 2 tries to resurrect deal and Cowen – ignoring June 24, 2008 Board
July 10, 2008 vote – tries to obtain better offer from Bidder 2, but their efforts collapse
when Bidder 2 seeks to meet with an actual decision-maker
June 30, 2008 Special Committee yields to Icahn’s demand for $780 million placement
comprised of two classes, one convertible
July 13, 2008 Special committee circulates transaction documents reflecting that minority
shareholders collectively have right to purchase 1 share for every 2 Icahn
receives
July 14, 2008 Special Committee circulates new tax sharing agreement that changes Icahn
repayment requirement: Icahn to repay only 30% of first $900 million in
NOLs used in current payments and to repay any additional NOLs used
only if Icahn deconsolidates XO
July 16, 2008 Icahn edits transaction documents: minority shareholders collectively to
receive right to purchase 1 share for every 20 Icahn receives
July 17, 2008 Cowen presents fairness opinions on the preferred offerings limited to the
fairness to the Company of the price, interest rate and form of payment;
Cowen explicitly carves out amended tax allocation agreement and fairness
to minority shareholders from its fairness opinions
Cowen revised fairness opinions are still limited to the fairness to the
Company of the price, interest rate and form of payment; Cowen still
explicitly carves out amended tax allocation agreement and fairness to
minority shareholders from its fairness opinions
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ERISA and tax liabilities Company incurred through consolidation
56