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NLJ Home > News > Alum says Georgetown Law reneged on naming agreement

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Alum says Georgetown Law reneged on naming agreement

By Karen Sloan Contact All Articles 

The National Law Journal

March 7, 2013

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DG FastChannel CEO and chairman Scott K. Ginsburg

DG FastChannel CEO and chairman Scott K. Ginsburg

Correction: This article has been corrected to clarify that Ginsburg was found civilly liable for insider trading.

A Texas millionaire has sued Georgetown University Law Center, his alma mater, in an attempt to recover $7.5 million in donations after the school balked at naming a fitness center after he was found civilly liable for insider trading.

Scott Ginsburg filed suit on March 4 in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, alleging that the law school reneged on a naming rights agreement reached in 2000.

A Georgetown spokeswoman declined to respond to his allegation, saying the university would not comment on pending litigation.

Ginsburg, who made his fortune in the radio business during the 1990s, originally pledged $5 million to build the athletic facility and the law school publicized the gift, according to the lawsuit. He later pledged an additional $11 million to the school, at least $2.5 million of which he says he paid.

As Georgetown officials were traveling to Texas to woo Ginsburg, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission had opened an insider-trading investigation against him. Ginsburg was found civilly liable in 2004 and ordered to pay a $1 million civil penalty for telling his family members that a Virginia radio operation was up for sale (his company was a bidder). His brother and father profited by purchasing shares in the soon-to-be sold company.

Georgetown officials expressed no qualms about the investigation while discussing the donation, the suit claims. "Indeed, Georgetown never expressed any concern about Ginsburg's issue with the SEC during their initial pursuit of him and during the preparation of the Agreement," the complaint reads.

In 2002, after a jury found against Ginsburg (he lost his appeal in 2004), then-Georgetown law dean Judith Areen asked him to relinquish the naming rights with the understanding that the fitness center would be named for him should his conviction be overturned, according to the suit. She allegedly cited the potential for bad publicity. Ginsburg did not agree, and Georgetown officials continued to visit him in Texas to solicit donations, the suit claims. Ginsburg alleges that Georgetown continued to lead him to believe the fitness center would be named after him.

"The possibility of Georgetown finally honoring its obligations was hinted at, implied, suggested, and postponed by its representatives' comments, but always kept alive," the compliant reads.

The project opened in 2004 and is called the Georgetown University Law Center Sports & Fitness Facility. Ginsburg claims breach of contract and fraudulent inducement.

Georgetown is not the first law school to get tripped up by accepting money from donors who ran afoul of the law. The University of California at Los Angeles School of Law suffered some backlash in 2011 when it accepted $10 million from Lowell Milken to establish an institute for business law and policy. Milken and his brother, Michael, came under investigation during the 1980s for their role in the junk bond market when they worked for now-defunct investment bank Drexel Burnham Lambert. In 1989, Michael Milken took a plea bargain and served time in prison for securities and reporting violations. As part of that deal, prosecutors dropped numerous charges against Lowell Milken.

Contact Karen Sloan at ksloan@alm.com. For more of The National Law Journal's law school coverage, visit: http://www.facebook.com/NLJLawSchools.



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  • Avon

    March 12, 2013 03:21 PM

    Hey, what's this stuff about "would be named for him should his conviction be overturned"?
    I thought he was found civilly liable (by a jury?) and no crime was involved.

    What I'm more interested in is whether the finding of liability for insider trading is going to get the man disbarred on character & fitness grounds (if indeed he's admitted in the first place).
    The irony of naming a fitness center after an unfit alumnus is too much to ignore!

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