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ManitobaCBC Investigates

Nygard company signed $50M US loan security on Christmas Day

A Manitoba company linked to fashion mogul Peter Nygard put up four of its properties, including its Winnipeg and Toronto headquarters, as security to borrow millions last Christmas.

Peter Nygard also owes $1.6M to crisis-response firm; company wants Manitoba court to make him pay

A spokesperson for fashion mogul Peter Nygard says the money is part of a 'successor program' to enable 'key associates' to become owners of the company. It was announced last month that Nygard was stepping down from his company and starting to divest his ownership stake. The news came just hours after FBI investigators raided his offices in New York. (Annie I. Bang/The Associated Press)

A Manitoba company owned by fashion mogulPeter Nygard put up four of its properties, including its Winnipeg and Toronto headquarters, as security to borrow millions last Christmas.

In late 2019, Nygard Properties Ltd. arranged a debenture in the amount of $50 million US through a New York-based financial servicesfirm,White Oak Commercial Finance LLC.

The debentureis the security for a loan agreement between various lenders and Nygard companies in both Canada and the U.S., according to the debenture documents.

In an initial statement to CBC News, Ken Frydman, a spokesperson for Nygard International, saidthe debenture is part of succession planning for Peter Nygard.

"As a responsible owner of a company that just celebrated its 50th anniversary, Mr. Nygard of course has planned a successor program with the objective of enabling his key associates to end up as owners of the company," he said.

"To that end, a new banking arrangement was arranged. The debenture is a normal security component of any financing."

Nygard's Toronto headquarters is one of four buildings the company used to secure a multimillion dollar loan in late December 2019. (Paul Smith/CBC)

The debenture was signed on Christmas DayDec. 25, 2019 and lists four land titles as security. Three of the properties are in Winnipeg, on Inkster Boulevard, Notre Dame Avenueand Broadway. The fourth is in Toronto on Niagara Street.

In a subsequent email,Frydman explained that"Nygard International was simply replacing a line of credit with a new one" that happened tohave been signed on Christmas. "There is no significance to the date," he said.

The existing line of credit had not been used up, Frydman added, and the new loan needed to be in place by Jan. 3.

"This is a normal business practice. There was nothing out of the ordinary with respect to this debenture."

Frydman did not give particulars about the prior loan, but a Manitoba property registry searchshows in September 2019,Nygard Properties Ltd. got a $20 million Cdnmortgage and used the same three Winnipeg land titles as collateral.

That mortgage was discharged Jan.3, 2020.

"Lines of credit are often used by small and large companies for cash flow management. The early part of the year is usually a time when a fashion house is gearing up for the spring and a line of credit may be used," Frydman said.

While the debenture document says the interest rate is 25 per cent,Frydman said that's not the case.

"This was not the interest rate, but rather a placeholder," he said,explainingthe rate fluctuates.

Toronto-based forensic accountant Ken Froese said the high interest rate on the debenture, 25 per cent, could suggest financial difficulties or expected financial difficulties. (Froese Forensic Partners)

"It looks like they're needing a lot more financing than they did in prior years," said Ken Froese, a Toronto-based forensic accountant whoowns an independent financial investigative firm that has done work for courts, tribunalsand government agencies in Canada and elsewhere.

It's not unusual for companies to increase their loans, Froese says, butthe increasefrom $20 million Cdn in September 2019, to a $50-million US debenture in December 2019 is significant.

"The timing of it and the amount of the increase and the explanation they have given, it's not entirely consistent with the increased amount. Still raises questions for me," said Froese.

"It's pretty reasonable to conclude they wanted an extra cushion to deal with whatever the contingencies might be."

Nygard's Winnipeg headquarters, located at 1771 Inkster Blvd., was another property put up to secure the debenture. (Warren Kay/CBC)

Last month, 10 women filed a class-action lawsuit in New York againstNygard, accusing him of raping themat his seaside mansion in the Bahamasand operating what they described as a "sex trafficking ring."

The alleged rapes took place between 2008 and 2015;some of the alleged victimswere as young as 14.

The allegations have not been proven in court and no criminal charges have been laid against Nygard.

Last week, it was announced thatNygardwassteppingdown from his company and startingto divest his ownership stake. The news came in a statement just hours after FBI investigators raided Nygard'soffices in New York.

PR firm seeks court order to recoup money

CBC News has also learned that Nygard owes $1.6 million US to Sitrick and Company,an American public relations firm that has worked with hundreds of clients, including BlackBerry, MGM Studios, Exxon, the Church of Scientology and Harvey Weinstein.

The strategic communications firm is best known for its crisis work cleaning up celebrity scandalsand managing reputations.

Mike Sitrick, the firm's founder, chairman and CEO, says his company was hired in the fall of 2014 andresigned in 2017. The firm's work involved the lawsuits between Nygard and his neighbour in the Bahamas, Louis Bacon.

Mike Sitrick is the founder, chairman and CEO of PR and crisis-management firm Sitrick and Company. (Sitrick and Company)

In July 2019, Sitrick filed a notice of application in the Manitoba Court of Queen's Bench, asking a judge to recognize a 2018 arbitralawardin favour of his companyand to order Nygard to pay it.

Sitrick had taken Nygard to arbitration in California to recoup money the company said it was owed for public relations and consulting advice it providedyears earlier.

"The respondent failed to pay for all services performed and costs incurred by the applicant pursuant to the contract," said the court documents.

In October 2018, an arbitrator sided with the PR firm and ordered Nygard to pay nearly $800,000 US, plusinterest and legal fees. That money has not yet been paid, according to the court documents.

The case was in Manitoba Court of Queen's Bench in Winnipeg Tuesday.

A lawyer for Sitrick, Brett Steidl, asked the court to set firm deadlines for Nygard to file affidavit evidence because all the deadlines so far had been missed.

The court also set a timeline for both parties to file documents in the case. The next hearing date was not set but will happen after June 19.

Nygard's lawyer, Richard Good, said Nygard would be changing lawyers but didn't say why.

Frydmansaid he would not discuss any ongoing litigation.

WATCH | Caroline Barghout's report:

Nygard company signed $50M US loan security on Christmas Day

5 years ago
Duration 1:21
A Manitoba company owned by fashion mogul Peter Nygard put up four of its properties, including its Winnipeg and Toronto headquarters, as security to borrow millions last Christmas.


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