By Joseph Checkler 
 

Next week in New York, NII Holdings Inc. (NIHDQ) will continue pressing the case that its restructuring plan should be approved.

The proposal, which would cut $4.35 billion from the Latin American Nextel wireless carrier's balance sheet and put the company in the hands of senior creditors, is based on broad settlements with creditors as well as the recent sale of the company's Mexican assets to AT&T Inc. (T) for $1.88 billion.

An ad-hoc group of hedge funds and other investors say the plan unfairly benefits Mark Brodsky's Aurelius Capital Management LP by settling $285.1 million in claims that NII itself had called "without merit."

The underlying restructuring agreement is supported by Aurelius, Capital Research and Management Co. and bondholders of NII's Luxembourg subsidiaries, three major creditor groups in NII's chapter 11 case. Those three also teamed up to lend NII $350 million while the company awaited final regulatory approvals of the AT&T deal.

Capital Research, Aurelius and the Luxembourg bondholders, owed more than $4 billion, will get a mix of cash and equity in a reorganized NII if the plan is approved. Capital Research would pick three members of the board of directors, with Aurelius picking one and the Luxembourg subsidiaries selecting two. The seventh member would be NII's chief executive.

Reston, Va.-based NII Holdings and several affiliates filed for chapter 11 protection in New York last fall.

Monday in New York, a judge will decide whether to approve the liquidation of defunct TV-streaming service Aereo Inc.

In front of Judge Sean H. Lane of U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan is a proposal to pay the company's unsecured creditors, owed between $7 million and $8 million, 10.7% of what they are owed.

The company has used bankruptcy to sell off the pieces of its once-hyped service, which let users stream and record broadcast TV over the Internet.

Proceeds from the sales, which brought in much less than Aereo had hoped, are earmarked to pay a $950,000 settlement it had reached with broadcasters to put an end to litigation over the legality of Aereo's business model. Broadcasters say the company infringed their copyrights, and last year, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed.

Aereo's other creditors will be paid in full under its liquidation plan. Unlike many companies in bankruptcy, Aereo has no secured debt. Its other bankruptcy expenses include tax payments, professional fees and other administrative expenses.

Aereo, which allowed subscribers to stream local TV stations' signals through a cloud-based antenna, offered its services for as little as $8 a month. Eventually, the company was doomed by a Supreme Court decision that the business violated copyright laws, although it did continue to fight. In April, Aereo finalized sales to TiVo Inc. (TIVO), RPX Corp. (RPXC) and others that brought less than $2 million to the bankruptcy estate. Aereo sued the broadcasters after the April auction's "disappointing" results, accusing the companies of chilling the bidding by aggressively pursuing baseless litigation strategies. Aereo dropped the suit as part of a deal with broadcasters.

Tuesday in Grand Rapids, Mich., Judge John Gregg will decide on the sale of the Family Christian retailer to FCS Acquisition LLC.

The transaction is valued at roughly $43 million, largely because FCS would assume the retail chain's bank loan. FCS won an auction for the chain last month.

FCS said it plans to keep the 266-store chain alive, continuing to operate as a "nonprofit supporting charitable causes for widows, orphans and the needy," a Family Christian lawyer said earlier this month.

Court filings haven't identified the investors behind FCS Acquisition, though inquiries were directed to a health-care company led by Richard L. Jackson. Mr. Jackson is one of three Atlanta businessmen who purchased the retailer in 2012 and put it under the ownership of a nonprofit called Family Christian Ministries.

Family Christian filed for bankruptcy on Feb. 11, blaming a large amount of debt from that 2012 sale and falling sales since 2008.

Founded in 1931 as the Zondervan chain of stores, the Michigan-based retailer later became Family Bookstores before changing its name to Family Christian Stores in the 1990s.

--Tom Corrigan, Patrick Fitzgerald and Katy Stech contributed to this article.

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

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