Last man sentenced for killing antiques dealer

FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) – The last of three men who acknowledged killing a Fairbanks antiques dealer received a 40-year sentence.

Brian Towndrow, 24, was sentenced for the 2008 murder of Daniel Frederick, 62, the longtime owner of Blondie’s Antiques and Military Supply. The sentence is double that of the other two men involved _ Raymond Jones, 31, and Michael Moore, 26, according to the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner.

All three pleaded guilty to second-degree murder.

They killed Frederick to delay a military investigation into thousands of dollars of Army equipment stolen from Fort Wainwright and later sold to Frederick, authorities said.

At the time of the murder, Moore and Jones were active-duty soldiers in the 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry. Towndrow was discharged from the Army in late 2008 after pleading guilty to sexually assaulting a 15-year-old girl.

The three men stole mostly Meals, Ready To Eat, the rations used by soldiers during field training and deployment, according to case documents. Jones and Moore’s commander discovered the missing MREs and ordered those responsible to return them immediately or face punishment. The three men then broke into Frederick’s storage unit and anonymously returned the rations by placing them in the commander’s parking space.

The three killed Frederick on Dec. 11, 2008, at his downtown home. Moore told police he struck Frederick in the head and Towndrow strangled him. Towndrow claimed he remained outside in a truck while Moore and Jones killed the store owner.

The men hid Frederick’s body in a wooded area.

Police apprehended the three when Jones used one of Frederick’s credit cards to purchase a big-screen TV and an iPhone.

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Information from: Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, http://www.newsminer.com

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-04-05-11 1841GMT

 

$200,000 in antiques stolen from Ala. warehouse

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) – Items worth about $200,000 were reported missing after someone broke into a warehouse full of imported furniture, antiques, collectibles and fine wines.

Police made no immediate arrests, but the owner of the items, Sam Kamash, believes the thieves are former employees who knew both the location and what was inside the building. Someone broke through walls and metal security barricades to get into the warehouse over the weekend.

“It’s a business. I export furniture and I had a collection of antiques,” Kamash said. The merchandise “was picked up for twenty years from all over a world. It was priceless. You could not replace it.”

Thieves vandalized the location, breaking into a room that held china, chandeliers and other valuable furniture items.

Kamash was storing those items to be used for a future housing plan.

“He was going to build a home for him and my mom but she passed away and he just had it stored,” said Tamer Kamash, Kamash’s son.

The warehouse also held a large collection of wine which was raided. An opened bottle of 1997 California Merlot was found near the store that had been part of Kamash’s extensive wine collection.

Police believe more than one person was involved in the burglary.

Furniture was removed and carried to a truck under a nearby overpass where a spotlight with a 50-foot extension cord was found. Kamash said he wonders why no one saw anything since the warehouse is near a neighborhood, a school and a YMCA.

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-04-05-11 2029GMT

 

New Orleans Auction Galleries in recovery plan to reorganize debts

NEW ORLEANS (ACNI) – The business & commerce landscape may be littered with the remains of companies that succumbed to the economic recession, but New Orleans Auction Galleries, which has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, is assuring consignors they are not one of them.

On April 1, 2011, attorneys representing the revered Louisiana auction house petitioned the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana to allow New Orleans Auction Galleries (NOAG) protection against creditors under the provisions of Chapter 11 Bankruptcy law. Chapter 11 Bankruptcy enables a company to restructure its debt under the strict guidance of the court. Only the court can issue approval of outgoing payments or further incurrence of debt by the petitioner, once Chapter 11 has been filed.

Auction Central News spoke with Attorney Stewart F. Peck of Lugenbuhl, Wheaton, Peck, Rankin & Hubbard, the law firm representing NOAG in its bankruptcy proceedings. Attorney Peck said the proposed plan for the restructuring of NOAG’s debt would allow for all consignors, including those still owed from past auctions, to be paid in full.

“Everything is subject to court approval, but the prognosis is good,” Peck said. “There are a couple of really major friends out there who want to support us. A very well known local man, Eric Aschaffenburg, has stepped in and offered to be a ‘dip lender.’ He has formed a business, Aschaffenburg Assets LLC, that is prepared to make a $300,000 loan to New Orleans Auction Galleries. The loan will provide a cash injection to give us liquidity.” Peck said the loan is expected to receive final approval at a court hearing on April 28.

Ashaffenburg, NOAG’s angel lender, is from a prominent New Orleans family that owns The Ponchartrain, an independent living facility for well-heeled retirees that, in its earlier incarnation, was a hotel favored by celebrities such as Truman Capote, Frank Sinatra and Tennessee Williams.

Peck explained that, under the terms of the bankruptcy, consignors and vendors are to be classified separately. “Subject to court approval, consignors, including unpaid consignors from January auction, would be paid 100% of what they are owed. That’s what our goal is. Those who have consigned to the Major Estates Auction coming up this weekend (April 9-10) will be paid from monies kept segregated for that purpose only.”

As for its other vendors, Peck said all stand to benefit under the terms of the plan being proposed to the court. “There are around 200 vendors involved, and although it’s too early to say whether all of them will be paid 100% of what they are owed or not – since that is left entirely up to the court – our plan is for everyone to be paid.”

Although there would be a temptation to assume that Hurricane Katrina – which decimated Louisiana’s economy – set the stage for NOAG’s current financial challenges, Peck said that was not the case at all. “After Katrina, the gallery had big sales that generated a lot of revenue. The problems began with the collapse of Lehmann Brothers. The recession that followed hurt us a lot. People stopped buying luxury goods and fine things,” Peck said. “When you have fixed expenses and revenues drop, it hurts you. Now people are buying again. The auction gallery’s revenues have turned around.”

Peck said NOAG’s precarious financial situation came to a head when the company’s president, Jean Vidos, became seriously ill and was hospitalized for six weeks. In her absence, the attorney said, “the train went off the track. Money went out the door that shouldn’t have, and the bank froze our accounts, including one account that should not have been frozen.”

Fortunately, Vidos made a full recovery and returned to her executive post at the gallery two weeks ago. But upon her return Vidos realized a tough decision had to be made in order to return her company to solvency. She instructed her legal counsel to file a petition for voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Peck said that with the legal option of Chapter 11 in place, consignors would also be protected, since an outside party could then be brought in to assume and pay “those prior consignment contracts existing before and rising out of the January auction.”

“New Orleans Auction Galleries has a lot of friends out there,” Peck said. “Some consignors have said, ‘You don’t have to pay us right away.’ This has been very helpful to the business.”

Peck continued: “Reputation is everything, and there are many who believe New Orleans Auction Galleries is the finest auction house in the South. We will be around as a going concern, with financing and liquidity. We are expecting a robust auction this weekend, followed by another one after that…Any reports of our death are greatly exaggerated.”

Copyright 2011 Auction Central News International. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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UPDATE – 4/6/2011:

Auction Central News spoke with NOAG’s president, Jean Vidos, who provided additional details about the reorganization of her company.

“In this particular situation, consignors should feel very confident. We went to the mat to make sure they would get paid in full, subject to court approval. To me, that was the most critical issue.” Vidos said.

Vidos said she had spent eight days conferring with attorneys and other counselors prior to filing for Chapter 11 protection and that some had cautioned her about the repercussions of following a course that put consignors first. Vidos said she told them: “This isn’t about me – this is about the company. We have a good name and we fill a void. We’ve done too much and we’re too good a company to just give up, lock the doors and be done with it.”

Vidos was adamant that there would have been no benefit in waiting to file for Chapter 11. “Sometimes people wait too long, then it becomes a horrible situation and people don’t get all of their money,” Vidos said. “This has been a really long recession – too long. I think that because of the plan we have in place, very few people will be impacted, if the court approves.”

“In any business, three months is a long time to be away. In the auction business it’s an eternity,” Vidos said. “I’ve been doing my job for 20 years. When I became ill, I had to leave our team in the lurch. Now I’m back. I feel great, I feel rested and I have a handle on the business. I think in three months we’ll be in and out of it, and it will seem as though it was just a bump in the road.”

Copyright 2011 Auction Central News International. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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