
Lehman Brothers' Bankruptcy Petition
On Sept. 15, Lehman Bros. Holdings petitioned the U.S. Bankruptcy Court to allow the company to work out a plan under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code to repay $613 billion in debt (excerpts below and on the following 10 pages; full petition here). Lehman, until this week one of America's most admired businesses, owes "over 100,000" unsecured creditors (below). The financial services company's "30 largest unsecured claims" (Pages 3-10) include $156 billion in investment bonds (Pages 3-4); nearly $17 billion in loans from Japanese banks; unpaid notes from lenders in Australia, Taiwan, Singapore, Korea, and Norway; and loans from a handful of American institutions.
Under supervision of the court, the investment bank has begun to sell off assets that were worth $639 billion as recently as May 31 (Page 11). They are worth far less now.
Send Hot Document ideas to .

The Tiger-Obama Cover Golf Digest Wishes It Could Unprint
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed's Trial Will Be Fair Enough
AOL's Plan To Flood the Web With Idiotic Celebrity Content
Amazing Photos of Obama's Secret Service Agents at Work
If You Want To Fix Darfur, Fix Chad First
A Close Reading of the Victoria's Secret Christmas Catalog











