By Joseph Checkler 

LightSquared lost $68.1 million during November, bringing the wireless venture's total losses since its 2012 bankruptcy filing to $1.8 billion.

In a monthly operating report filed with U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan, the company again attributed a bulk of the loss to interest paid on its debt. During the month, that expense was $40.8 million. It is $1.06 billion since the start of the bankruptcy case.

The company, controlled for years by Philip Falcone through his Harbinger Capital Partners hedge-fund firm, is pursuing a reorganization plan that would take control of the company away from Harbinger and give it to Dish Network Corp. Chairman Charlie Ergen. However, as The Wall Street Journal reported last month, Mr. Falcone has been in talks with investors on an alternative restructuring proposal--one in which Mr. Falcone would still own part of LightSquared. Any rival plan would surely delay LightSquared's emergence from bankruptcy even more, sending the already high pile of bills higher.

For instance, LightSquared paid $4.6 million in professional fees during November, bringing that total to $125.7 million since the beginning of the case.

Other expenses include $1.1 million paid toward salaries, commissions and fees, which total $135.2 million since the beginning of the case. The company also paid a $6 million spectrum reuse fee and has put $61.6 million toward such fees since the May 2012 Chapter 11 filing.

LightSquared has scheduled a Thursday hearing to update its bankruptcy judge, Shelley C. Chapman, on its case. A rival plan, by Mr. Falcone or others, hasn't been filed with the court.

The only plan up for consideration is the one that would give control to Mr. Ergen, LightSquared's largest lender. The deal would pay off a group of bank lenders, whose roughly $1 billion in debt would be satisfied in debt. Their loans are the ones subject to the whopping interest payments LightSquared has shelled out in the case.

LightSquared filed for Chapter 11 in May 2012, shortly after federal regulators refused to clear LightSquared's plans to launch its wireless network. Those regulators heeded warnings from the global positioning systems industry that the network could interfere with GPS.

LightSquared isn't able to fully use spectrum--limited pockets of airwaves that mobile-phone and Internet companies use--that it owns without support from the Federal Communications Commission. The FCC has so far refused to grant such approval.

Meanwhile, LightSquared's case has gone through many machinations, some involving Mr. Falcone and some not. He and other Harbinger officials have resigned from the company's board of directors, although Harbinger still owns some debt in a smaller piece of the company.

As Mr. Falcone's grip on LightSquared loosened, he sued the entities he feels are responsible for his $2 billion or so in losses on the investment. Those parties include Dish, Mr. Ergen, the U.S. government and the global-positioning systems companies that have warned LightSquared's network--which Mr. Falcone hoped would someday provide low-cost mobile services to hundreds of millions of Americans--could interfere with GPS.

All of those parties have denied any wrongdoing.

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

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