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Article Courtesy of The Daily
Business Review
By Samantha Joseph
Published May 21, 2016
Friday the 13th brought bad news for Becker & Poliakoff,
which was named in a multimillion-dollar malpractice suit by a powerful Chinese
conglomerate.
The firm and attorney Pamela Anselmo, who left the law firm in 2014, are being
sued by Tangshan Ganglu Iron & Steel Co. Ltd., which claims sloppy legal work by
Becker & Poliakoff helped cost it at least $140 million on its failed
redevelopment of Plantation's shuttered Fashion Mall property.
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Becker & Poliakoff "flatly denies it ever
represented Tangshan Ganglu" and claimed it met with the
company's chief executive "on at most a handful of occasions."
The firm claims the lawsuit assigned to U.S. District Judge
William P. Dimitrouleas is a baseless attempt to recover
millions after Tangshan Ganglu emerged on the losing side of a
bankruptcy battle.
The complaint contends the firm represented the Chinese investor
as well as an accused swindler who, instead of guiding its U.S.
investments, diverted millions from the project. |
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The plaintiff is one of China's largest companies — a
conglomerate with more than 10,000 employees engaged in mining, steelmaking and
related businesses. Founder Zhen Zeng Du alleges Becker & Poliakoff had
conflicting interests when it represented him, his company and several others
created by minority partner Wei Chen.
Chen formed and managed three companies, Mapuche LLC, U.S. Capital Holdings LLC
and U.S. Capital/Fashion Mall LLC, which were supposed to transform the mall
into 321 North, a sprawling mixed-used development with retail, housing, dining
and entertainment.
The project failed after hurricane damage, foreclosure and a fight between Du
and Chen for control of the three development companies. That dispute ended when
Chen put all three companies into Chapter 7 bankruptcy over Du's objections. Du
argued he invested more than $100 million in the project, and the move would
cost him millions.
The property sold for $38 million to Encore Housing Opportunity Fund at a
bankruptcy auction in March 2015, but news later emerged that Chen appeared on a
Chinese government list of alleged economic fugitives for reportedly embezzling
$120,000 from a former employer before moving to the U.S.
Du claimed he started investing in the beleaguered Broward County project in
2004 as part of an entry strategy into U.S. and Latin American markets. His suit
alleges Becker & Poliakoff represented Chen and the three companies starting in
2005 as well as Du. In 2005, for instance, the firm represented Du and all other
parties when it drafted an operating agreement that laid out the ownership
structure for 321 North, the suit claims.
For years, corporate documents described Du's company as the majority
shareholder with a 99 percent stake until the law firm reportedly filed a
"secret third amended" document with a forged signature giving Chen control of
the project. After a nasty legal battle, Broward Circuit Judge Jack Tuter ruled
Du's signature had been forged on a corporate document giving Chen control of
the project.
No Representation
"Inexplicably ... in or around April of 2010 B&P and Anselmo
drafted corporate documents which completely destroyed plaintiff's control over
the 321 North Project. In particular, B&P and Anselmo created a new operating
agreement for Mapuche, which removed essentially all the protections and control
over management of the project provided for in the second operating agreement,"
according to the suit filed by Lawrence Kellogg of Levine Kellogg Lehman
Schneider + Grossman in Miami. "They did so without discussing the change with
Mr. Du or Tangshan Ganglu, without showing the proposed amended operating
agreement to them and without even providing a signature line for Tangshan
Ganglu, the 99 percent member, or Mr. Du, the co-manager."
Kellogg declined comment.
Anselmo, who is no longer with Becker & Poliakoff, did not respond to a request
for comment by deadline. She left the firm in 2014 to join Hinshaw & Culbertson
in Fort Lauderdale.
Becker & Poliakoff, meanwhile retained Bob Critton of Critton Luttier Coleman in
West Palm Beach to handle the litigation.
"Ganglu never requested that Becker & Poliakoff represent it," Critton said in a
statement.
He said Tangshan Ganglu never signed a representation agreement with Becker &
Poliakoff, never received any legal bills or invoices from the firm and didn't
pay for any services. Instead, he said the firm worked with in-house counsel to
represent the three related companies managed by Chen.
"In-house counsel not only provided the assignments but reviewed the work, which
was requested," Critton said. "The meritless lawsuit against Becker & Poliakoff
seeks the very same damages that Ganglu claims as a creditor in the consolidated
Chapter 7 bankruptcies. The Fashion Mall redevelopment project was an ongoing
disaster from almost the beginning of the mid-2000s. It suffered through
mismanagement, foreclosures, hurricanes, lawsuits and judgments. Ganglu is
looking for a deep pocket to blame, rather than itself, for its claimed losses."
Boca Raton-based Encore Housing is mulling a high-end, mixed-use project with
luxury housing, retail, restaurants and offices on the 33-acre property
northwest of University Drive and Broward Boulevard.
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