Billionaire Ira Rennert On Trial For Allegedly Looting Company To Build Sagaponack Estate - 27 East

Real Estate News

Real Estate News / 1412108

Billionaire Ira Rennert On Trial For Allegedly Looting Company To Build Sagaponack Estate

icon 2 Photos
The gardens at the home on Ocean Road in Bridgehampton.   DANA SHAW

The gardens at the home on Ocean Road in Bridgehampton. DANA SHAW

The Rennert estate in Sagaponack. PRESS FILE

The Rennert estate in Sagaponack. PRESS FILE

author on Feb 4, 2015

Billionaire Ira Rennert, famous in the Hamptons for his 63-acre estate in Sagaponack, is on trial in federal court in Manhattan, accused of pilfering almost $120 million from his ailing company to help fund construction of the estate in the late 1990s, which was at one point considered the largest occupied home in the country.

Lawyers for creditors of Utah-based MagCorp, a mining outfit that failed, contend that Mr. Rennert drove the company into bankruptcy by having MagCorp and Renco Metals pay more than $100 million in unlawful dividends and stock redemptions to parent company Renco Group, a holding company founded in 1975 by Mr. Rennert, between 1995 and 1998.

Mr. Rennert, they contend, was “unjustly enriched” by taking $150 million from MagCorp and using it to build his oceanfront mansion in Sagaponack, while ignoring the company’s increasing environmental, technological and competitive problems. In a civil lawsuit filed in 2003, MagCorp’s lawyers are seeking more than $600 million, including punitive damages.

“They didn’t set aside any money for that $150 million—not one penny,” Leo Beus, attorney for the bankruptcy trustee, said in his opening remarks in court this week. “No rainy day fund at all. They think they are going to refinance.”

“The financial projections used to justify some of the … payments were fanciful and unrealistic,” the trustees’ attorneys state in court documents. “Rennert personally approved and knowingly provided substantial assistance to cause each of the fraudulent conveyances, and caused damage to the debtors.”

Mr. Rennert’s attorneys, however, assert that there is no proof that money taken from MagCorp was for personal use, or that in doing so Mr. Rennert rendered the company insolvent. Rather, they contend, MagCorp’s failure was caused by difficult market conditions.

“This is a case about a strong company and a healthy company that performed well and did so until the time of bankruptcy,” said Peter Haveles, one of Mr. Rennert’s attorneys, in his opening remarks on Tuesday. The failure of the company, he said, was “all about global economy … The plaintiff attempts to make this case an indictment of Ira Rennert. That attack is unfair and false. Mr. Rennert is a hard-working and smart businessman. He grew up in the heart of Brooklyn, and he is emblematic of the American success story. He got there because of his hard work and diligence.”

Mr. Rennert paid $11 million for the land in Sagaponack and built his compound in the late 1990s, naming it “Fair Field.” The buildings on the Daniels Lane property, Mediterranean in design and reminiscent of old Italian villas, total more than 110,000 square feet and include a 57,700-square-foot main house with 29 bedrooms. A 10,000-square-foot “playhouse” sits adjacent to the main house and contains a squash court, two bowling alleys, an exercise room, lounge, billiards room, playroom, game room and outdoor terrace.

You May Also Like:

Waterview Water Mill Shingle-Style Homes Sells for $11.38 Million

A Water Mill home with a view of Burnett Creek and a dock for access ... 17 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

Sagaponack New Construction Designed by McDonough & Conroy Sells for $6 Million

A new 8,000-square-foot home in Sagaponack has sold for $6 million preconstruction. On 3.13 acres ... 9 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

New Book Shows Long Island’s Past With Glimpses of Future

“Making Long Island: A History of Growth and the American Dream,” by Lawrence R. Samuel ... 5 Apr 2024 by Joseph Finora

Good Things Come in Small Packages

While large houses offer more space to spread out in, a new home in East ... 3 Apr 2024 by Brendan J. O’Reilly

Culloden Point Waterfront Home Sells for $12.5 Million

On Montauk’s Culloden Point and fronting Fort Pond Bay, the home at 8 Captain Balfour ... by Staff Writer

Sands Motel in Montauk Sells to Hospitality Group

Montauk’s Sands Motel at 71 South Emerson Avenue has sold to a prominent hospitality group, ... 29 Mar 2024 by Staff Writer

L’Hommedieu Descendants Tour House He Designed in East Hampton

The 1892 Brooklyn Daily Eagle obituary for architect James H. L’Hommedieu referred to him as ... 26 Mar 2024 by Brendan J. O’Reilly

Old Montauk Highway Estate Once Seeking $55 Million Sells for $18.5 Million

A Montauk estate spanning 35 acres with 485 feet of private beachfront has sold for ... by Staff Writer

Coopers Farm Road Home Sells for $4.15 Million

A 5,600-square-foot shingle-style home in Southampton Village built in 1989 recently sold for $4.15 million. ... by Staff Writer

National Association of Realtors Settlement Will Reverberate Throughout Real Estate Industry

New rules — and a monster settlement — could start saving homebuyers and sellers thousands ... 19 Mar 2024 by Joseph Finora