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U.S. judge tosses Paramount movie financing fraud case after trial

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(Reuters) — Paramount Pictures won the dismissal Thursday of a lawsuit by investors in a slate of mid-2000s movies including “Mean Girls” who said the studio concealed a risky business strategy in obtaining $40 million in financing.

Following trial proceedings that began Oct. 21, U.S. District Judge Katherine Forrest in Manhattan ruled that the evidence failed to support the investors’ claims and dismissed the case.

The judge said the investors failed to present any false statements or actionable omissions by Paramount, and that its alleged misstatements were not material.

“I don’t think this is, frankly, a close call,” she said, according to a transcript.

The ruling came after the investors, including a unit of Allianz S.E., finished submitting evidence of Paramount’ s liability in the non-jury trial in the case, which had been pending since 2008.

“We are gratified by the decision,” said Robert Lawson, a Paramount spokesman.

The investors had been seeking $16 million to $24 million in damages from Paramount, which is owned by Viacom Inc., said James Janowitz, a lawyer for the investors.

Asked about the possibility of an appeal, Mr. Janowitz said: “We’re certainly considering our options.”

The dispute centered on around $40 million of the $231 million that Paramount raised through a private placement for a slate of 25 films that included “Mean Girls,” “The Manchurian Candidate” and “Mission Impossible 3.”

Released from 2004 to 2006, the films as a group performed poorly at the box office, both sides agreed.

Institutional investors sued in 2008, saying the studio misrepresented its planned use of certain risk-mitigation techniques.

The investors said Paramount failed to disclose that it had reduced its plans to sell international distribution rights, favoring instead increased self-distribution.

The distribution decision meant there was less revenue to offset losses when the movies failed to deliver financially, according to the lawsuit.

The plaintiffs included Allianz Risk Transfer, Marathon Structured Finance Fund, Newstar Financial and Munich Re Capital Markets.

They were junior investors in Melrose Investors L.L.C., a special-purpose vehicle that in turn invested in the film slate.

At trial, Paramount’s lawyer, Richard Kendall, called the investors’ theory an “after-the-fact concoction.” The studio made no promises about its use of so-called pre-sales, he said.

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