Judge OKs KOCE sale
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Marisa O’Neil
The Coast Community College District did not violate state law when
it chose to sell PBS channel KOCE-TV to the station’s fundraising
wing rather than accepting an all-cash bid from a religious
broadcaster, a judge ruled Monday.
The ruling denied Daystar Television’s claim that it, not the
KOCE-TV Foundation, should be allowed to buy the station from the
district. Foundation and district officials expressed relief at Judge
Corey Cramin’s decision, but Daystar officials vowed to appeal the
case.
“We’re going forward,” foundation President Bob Brown said outside
the courtroom. “We haven’t stopped going forward and we’ll continue
to go forward.”
Daystar’s attorneys claim that the network’s $25.1-million cash
bid should have been named the highest responsible bid by district
trustees in October. Attorney Richard Lloyd Sherman argued that
Daystar’s bid had a higher value than the foundation’s bid of $32
million on a long-term note, since revised to $28 million.
The state education code says that community college districts may
sell property “for cash” to the “highest responsible bidder.
While attorneys haggled over the definition of the words “cash”
and “responsible,” Cramin found another word in the code that made
those points moot.
“The operative statutory word in [the code] is ‘may’ sell for
cash,” he wrote in his opinion. “‘May’ is permissive, not mandatory.
Therefore, the court finds the acceptance of bids was not confined to
only cash bids.”
The Coast Community College District, he wrote, did not violate
the law by considering all factors of the sale.
“I think the main point is that the board had the discretion and,
indeed, duty to consider all factors of what’s responsible,” said
Milford Dahl, the attorney representing the district.
According to a survey taken last year, Orange County residents
supported preserving KOCE-TV’s PBS format, something the foundation
has promised to do. But that comes at the cost of the students,
Sherman said, who would benefit from the instant infusion of $25.1
million from his client.
“This is based on what [the judge] feels is best for the
community, not what’s best for the school district,” Sherman said of
the decision. “It’s not the proper basis for the code section. It’s
supposed to be what will pump the most money in.”
Daystar argued that the foundation was not financially solvent
enough to complete the deal, but the judge referred to its long track
record of fundraising.
The KOCE-TV Foundation filed a license transfer application with
the FCC last Monday, Brown said, and the process will likely take 60
to 90 days. He said they will “absolutely” have the $8 million due at
that time.
Now that the case is over, at least for the time being, he expects
donations from people who were waiting for the outcome.
“This has been a black cloud hanging over our heads,” he said of
the lawsuit. “We’ll make some calls this afternoon.”
Marcus Lamb, president of the Dallas-based Christian broadcaster,
said in a written statement that he was disappointed by the ruling
but plans to pursue and appeal.
“It will be up to the appellate court to re-look at this entire
situation,” Lamb said. “If they follow the law, I’m confident Daystar
will ultimately win, and in turn, so will the students and their
teachers.”
* MARISA O’NEIL is a reporter for the Times Community News. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4268 or by e-mail at marisa.oneil@
latimes.com.
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