KOCE sale up in air again
Marisa O’Neil
The fate of a local public broadcasting channel up for sale still
hangs in the balance after the start of a court hearing to decide
who, if anyone, can rightfully buy it.
Attorneys for Daystar Television Network, a spurned bidder for
KOCE-TV, asked Judge Corey Cramin on Monday to stop Coast Community
College District from selling the station to its fundraising arm and
name Daystar the highest responsible bidder. But because it’s unclear
if the district gave proper notice of the sale, the judge postponed
the rest of the hearing until next Monday.
Cramin could rule that the KOCE-TV Foundation should remain the
lawful buyer, that Daystar can purchase it or he could rule to rebid
the station, said Milford Dahl, attorney for the college district. If
that happens, the district may try to hold on to the station.
According to the state education code, community college districts
may sell property “for cash” to the “highest responsible bidder,”
language which Daystar’s attorney, Richard Sherman, has argued the
district ignored when it chose to sell to the KOCE-TV Foundation.
Daystar bid $25.1 million in cash and the district’s current deal
comes to $28 million with the majority financed over 30 years with no
interest.
The education code also states that districts must post notice of
the sale in three places in the district for the two weeks prior to
the sale or publish an advertisement at least once a week two weeks
before the sale.
Cramin asked attorneys for both sides if that had been done and if
they had any evidence to show it had. Notice was given when the
district initially bid out the station in 2002, Dahl said, but not
when that fell through and the process began again in 2003.
“That doesn’t come as a surprise,” he said of Cramin’s concern. “I
knew [Sherman] wouldn’t push it because it would reopen the bid
process.”
Until attorneys present the actual notice to Cramin, it’s unclear
if the notice was continual or if it was necessary to reissue it.
Dahl said he believes that notice was not given in 2003. His law
firm, Rutan & Tucker, was not representing the district at that time
because another client, Chapman University, was involved in the
bidding process.
“We put up notices all over the place [in 2002],” said district
trustee George Brown. “I think those things continue or you don’t
need new ones.”
If the station is rebid, Daystar’s hopes of being declared the
highest bidder will go back to square one.
“Notice is important, but we are attacking them on other grounds,
as well,” Sherman said.
Pointing to depositions given by district trustees and the deal’s
broker, Sherman argued in court that the district’s main agenda was
selling the station to someone who would keep its PBS format. In a
poll taken last year, Orange County residents voted overwhelmingly in
favor of keeping the PBS format, even if the district had to take
less money.
That, Sherman said, would violate the education code and
short-change students. His client’s bid, he said, would provide
instant relief to a cash-strapped district.
“[Trustees] felt they were the guardians of the community and had
to keep it PBS,” Sherman.
Dallas-based Daystar, the nation’s second-largest religious
broadcaster, has promised to preserve some educational programming
but not the PBS format. The district and KOCE-TV Foundation have
argued that the Corporation for Public Broadcasting will demand a
return of $22 million in grants and equipment if the format changes.
John Casoria, attorney for early bidder Community Educational
Television, was also present at the hearing and argued that Daystar’s
bid tied its own $25.1-million bid as the highest. Community
Educational Television is an educational broadcasting affiliate of
Costa Mesa-based Trinity Broadcasting Network, the nation’s largest
religious broadcaster.
Community Educational Television withdrew its bid before the Oct.
8 deadline.
Casoria told Cramin that he felt the bidding process had been fair
and that the station should go to the KOCE-TV Foundation. If the
station is rebid, however, he said his client would take part.
“We would be willing to go into the process,” he said.
* MARISA O’NEIL is a reporter with Times Community News. She may
be reached at (949) 574-4268 or by e-mail at
marisa.oneil@latimes.com.
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