By Joseph Checkler 

LightSquared wants to alter a proposed bonus package for its top executives by removing the regulatory hurdles tied to the payments.

In a Tuesday filing with U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan, LightSquared said it wants to pay Chief Executive Doug Smith, Chief Financial Officer Marc Montagner, Executive Vice President Jeffrey Carlisle and General Counsel Curtis Lu bonuses of 75% of their annual salaries once the company pays off a bankruptcy loan and the hedge funds that hold its bank debt. It wants to pay another 75% for a "successful completion of a change of control."

A prior bonus package, proposed late last year, tied the bonuses to three things: clearing certain regulatory hurdles, getting its restructuring approved by a judge, and emerging from Chapter 11. Since LightSquared's latest restructuring proposal doesn't include any extra regulatory approvals, neither does the new bonus package.

Next week, LightSquared will begin making the case for approval of its restructuring plan, which is led by Fortress Investment Group LLC and calls for a $1.65 billion loan while the company is in bankruptcy proceedings, and then a fresh $1 billion loan to finance the company once it exits Chapter 11.

"LightSquared anticipates that it will be required to heavily rely on the Key Employees throughout March 2014 and into April 2014, as LightSquared embarks upon what may be a highly contentious confirmation hearing and related process," the company said in a filing.

In late 2012, Judge Shelley C. Chapman approved a LightSquared bonus proposal, which called for as much as two times the executives' salary if full regulatory approval was received, with lower amounts for lower levels of approvals.

Incentive bonuses are nearly always an issue in bankruptcy cases, including LightSquared's. Judge Chapman's 2012 approval came only after creditors and the federal bankruptcy watchdog argued that the milestones tied to the bonuses were too easy to reach, causing LightSquared to set more difficult goals. Top management and executives aren't eligible for bonuses designed simply to keep them at a company, while lower-level employees are.

The LightSquared restructuring proposal is scaled down from a $4 billion Fortress-led reorganization that LightSquared abandoned earlier.

Because the new plan isn't tied to regulatory approval, it requires less funding because LightSquared would emerge from bankruptcy proceedings much sooner than under the prior one.

Phil Falcone's Harbinger Capital Partners, which currently controls LightSquared, would participate in the new financing and retain an equity stake. Harbinger would own about 36% of LightSquared's equity if this proposal gets approved, a person familiar with the matter has said.

LightSquared's main adversaries in the case are Dish Network Corp. and Chairman Charlie Ergen.

LightSquared and Mr. Ergen have been fighting ever since he began buying debt and Dish separately made a $2.2 billion offer for the company's wireless spectrum assets last year. Dish has since abandoned that bid, but LightSquared continues to fight Mr. Ergen on the purchases of debt, saying he acquired it improperly on behalf of Dish, a competitor that was prohibited from buying it.

If LightSquared wins the case against Mr. Ergen, his claims could be disallowed or pushed behind those of other creditors. Closing arguments in the trial are set for next week, as is a multiday hearing on whether LightSquared's restructuring plan should be approved.

Mr. Ergen owns $850 million of the bank debt, making him the company's largest secured lender.

Theoretically, the restructuring proposal would pay Mr. Ergen in full for his holdings but would give him a "third-lien" note that would be repaid over seven years rather than cash. A group of hedge funds that own a large chunk of that same bank debt would get cash under the plan.

LightSquared filed for protection from creditors in May 2012 after federal regulators refused to clear its plans to launch a wireless network, which they said could interfere with global-positioning systems. Its previous proposals all were contingent on the Federal Communications Commission approving modifications to LightSquared's network, which the agency has said isn't imminent.

Write to Joseph Checkler at joseph.checkler@wsj.com

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