By Joseph Checkler 

NEW YORK--Philip Falcone said Monday he constantly tried to squeeze Dish Network Corp. Chairman Charlie Ergen out of LightSquared's restructuring plans, believing Mr. Ergen should never have been allowed to buy the wireless venture's debt in the first place.

Testifying at a hearing over whether LightSquared's $2.65 billion reorganization proposal should be approved, Mr. Falcone was read his own emails referring to "jamming Charlie" out of LightSquared's capital structure. In another email exchange, he and an investor discussed offering Mr. Ergen a settlement for less than his claims in the case, with a suggestion that "we go for the jugular" if it wasn't accepted.

"I didn't think Charlie should be there to begin with," said Mr. Falcone when questioned by a Dish lawyer in a New York bankruptcy court. Mr. Falcone runs the Harbinger Capital Partners hedge fund firm, which owns a majority of LightSquared's equity.

The Dish lawyer, James C. Dugan, read an email Mr. Falcone sent to a reporter about a previous LightSquared proposal that treated all parties in the case well "except Ergen. He got stuffed."

Later, Mr. Falcone's own lawyer asked questions about the final outcome of the restructuring negotiations and whether Harbinger got everything it wanted. Mr. Falcone said, "Absolutely not." Harbinger wouldn't have a board seat in a reorganized LightSquared, and its 80% equity stake in the company would drop dramatically. Harbinger would maintain about a 30% equity stake in the reorganized company, but on Monday, Mr. Falcone said that number could grow to as much as 45% if Harbinger contributes more money in the financing package.

Mr. Ergen testified last week that the restructuring proposal treats him unfairly. His $850 million in bank debt would be repaid over seven years in the form of a note, while a group of hedge funds owning the same type of debt would be paid in full, in cash.

On Monday, Mr. Falcone said that if he had his way, Mr. Ergen's claims would be treated even worse by the plan. He said Mr. Ergen's claims in the case are "more than covered" by the proposal.

While LightSquared is trying to get its restructuring plan approved, the company and those hedge funds also are trying to prove that Mr. Ergen only bought the company's debt as part of a plan to acquire a "blocking position" that would ease LightSquared into the hands of Dish. Earlier in the case, Dish offered $2.2 billion for LightSquared's wireless spectrum but later dropped the bid.

If LightSquared and the hedge funds win, Mr. Ergen's debt holdings could be disallowed or placed below other creditors in the order to be paid, making his treatment under the restructuring moot. The lawsuit over Mr. Ergen's purchases of the debt accuses him of improperly buying it on behalf of Dish, a LightSquared competitor prohibited from investing in the wireless venture. Mr. Ergen says he bought the debt as a personal investment.

Judge Shelley C. Chapman of U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York on Monday again closed portions of the hearing to the public, citing the "technical" issue that Dish says forced it to drop its bid earlier this year.

LightSquared's main asset is spectrum, the limited pockets of airwaves that mobile-phone and Internet companies use.

At a recent hearing, a lawyer for Mr. Ergen said the restructuring plan wouldn't work if LightSquared loses the case against Mr. Ergen. LightSquared said it would, and said that if it is forced to pay Mr. Ergen back, the seven-year note is the equivalent of being paid in full.

Now, Judge Chapman must make two related decisions: Whether to approve the reorganization proposal--a $2.65 billion plan led by Fortress Investment Group LLC that includes a $1.65 billion bankruptcy loan from a group led by Melody Capital Partners LLC--and how to treat Mr. Ergen's claims.

Her decision on whether to disallow or lower the priority of Mr. Ergen's debt purchases will most likely have an impact on whether the restructuring can proceed. Mr. Ergen is LightSquared's largest secured creditor, and the Bankruptcy Code is clear that any restructuring proposal would have to give him equal treatment to those owning the same type of debt.

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 FCC approving modifications to LightSquared's network, which the agency has said isn't imminent. The newest Fortress proposal isn't contingent on such stringent regulatory conditions.

(Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review covers news about distressed companies and those under bankruptcy protection. Go to http://dbr.dowjones.com)

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

Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires

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