The Anatomy of Public Corruption

Showing posts with label Mountain Lakes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mountain Lakes. Show all posts

Tying the deaths of Dale Ratliff (1979) suicide of Matt Ratliff (2009) former CEO of Playtex KKR, Beatrice Foods to Blum Capital to Bennett v. Southern Pacific

Connecting Success Factors to Bennett and tying the deaths of Dale Ratliff (1979) suicide of Matt Ratliff (2009)  former CEO of Playtex KKR, Beatrice Foods to Blum Capital to Bennett v. Southern Pacific 

The Bennett's and Ratliff's once shared backyards along side of the ten acre wood filled with antique glass, can and debris which was your basis early 1900s dump.  Over time buried in the muck deeper and deeper each year.  Great place to hide from your parents.  
The folks at TPG will have to answer to my Whistleblower Complaints on the truly odd collection of RFPs emanating from companies connected to Richard Blum, William McGlashan, CBRE, Regency Centers, Trammel Crow, Lennar, Catellus.

My story is about witness murders, private equity, mergers and acquisitions linked back to the Matter of Bennett v. Southern Pacific lost in 1989.  It was a winnable case as long the witnesses testified.  

Beatrice to Be Acquired by Kohlberg : $6-Billion Leveraged Buy-Out Accord Is Biggest in History


November 15, 1985|NANCY YOSHIHARA | Times Staff Writer
Beatrice Cos. agreed on Thursday to be acquired by the investment firm of Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. in a deal valued at $6 billion--the largest leveraged buy-out in history.
The Chicago-based food and consumer products company entered a definitive agreement after New York-based KKR sweetened its offer, raising it to $50 a share--$43 in cash and $7 in preferred stock--from its previous offer of $47 a share in cash and securities.
The offer, based on Beatrice's 109 million shares outstanding, is worth $5.45 billion. However, if KKR purchased all outstanding Beatrice preferred stock, warrants and options--the equivalent of 11 million shares--it would push the price up to $6 billion.
The deal included so-called lock-up options designed to discourage competing offers for the company. The options give the investment firm the right to buy the "crown jewels" of Beatrice's diverse operations in case the deal is not consummated.
No Suitor Expected
Analysts doubted, however, that after so long a time another bidder would surface to jeopardize the buy-out.
"The chances are very good that this deal will go through," said Marvin B. Roffman, an analyst with Janney Montgomery Scott in Philadelphia. "Shareholders will be happy with the price . . . and management also has put its kiss of approval on it."
William W. Granger Jr., chairman and chief executive of Beatrice, said in a statement: "I believe this is an excellent transaction for our shareholders. At the same time, we are mindful of KKR's intentions to keep Beatrice as a major and growing enterprise headquartered in Chicago."
Beatrice's current management, however, will be changed. Henry Kravis, managing partner of KKR, told the Associated Press in a telephone interview that Donald P. Kelly, former chairman of Esmark (which was acquired by Beatrice last year), would be named chairman and chief executive.
Kelly, in his first public statement since being identified with the KKR group, told AP that he intended to keep Beatrice in its present form. He also said his management team would include three former Esmark managers: Frederick B. Rentschler, who will run the general food and beverage divisions; Joel Smilow, head of general non-food operations, and Roger T. Briggs, in charge of finances.
Beatrice observers, however, believe the new KKR company that will own Beatrice will begin selling off such major non-food businesses as Playtex to help reduce its high debt level.
Since Beatrice acquired Esmark for $2.7 billion in August, 1984, it has been shedding some of its less profitable non-food operations. In early October, it disclosed plans to put four more on the block, including it Avis and Danskin units.
The leveraged buy-out, in which investors purchase a company by borrowing heavily against the target company's assets as collateral, adds yet another layer of debt to the company's structure.
Observers have believed it was unlikely that Beatrice could remain independent once takeover rumors began inflating its stock. KKR first made a $45-a-share offer in mid-October that Beatrice's board rejected as "inadequate." Since July, Beatrice's stock has risen about 50%, and KKR's initial offer, although spurned, put pressure on Beatrice management to obtain a more attractive alternative.
Beatrice stock closed Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange at $46.25 a share, up 75 cents, and was the most active issue with a volume of 3.9 million shares.
KKR's lock-up options would allow it, under certain conditions, to purchase either Beatrice's grocery group and Tropicana subsidiary for $2.391 billion or Beatrice's Tropicana, meat, soft-drink and bottled water subsidiaries for $2.412 billion.
These businesses, which are considered among Beatrice's most desirable, include Hunt-Wesson Foods, Swift meats, Tropicana fruit juices, La Choy Chinese foods, Coca-Cola bottlers and Arrowhead bottled water.
The lock-up options, however, are clouded by the Delaware Supreme Court's recent ruling against Revlon's use of a similar defensive tactic to thwart a takeover by Pantry Pride.
Revlon had granted the investment firm of Forstmann, Little & Co. an option to buy two major Revlon divisions if an unwelcome suitor acquired 40% of Revlon's stock. The option, which Pantry Pride challenged, was designed to protect Forstmann's agreement to acquire all of Revlon's stock. After the court ruling, Revlon succumbed to the Pantry Pride takeover.
But analysts said KKR isn't likely to have competition for Beatrice, which has had only one other nibble, that from Dart Group Corp. of Landover, Md.

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Edgewell Personal Care, Playtex and former CEO Dale Ratliff

The Ratliff family lived in Mountain Lakes NJ on Melrose Dr. just behind The Bennett family on Kenilworth Road

Back around 2009 Matt Ratliff reached out via the Class Reunion list.  By 2010 I was on the run from cronies connected to Contra Costa District Attorney Mark Peterson and criminal narcotics officers.  Peterson was indicted in 2017, his team of goons stealing drugs and evidence while setting up divorcees were arrested the early months of 2011.  

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Morris County officials close case on Mountain Lakes shooting

Morris County officials close case on Mountain Lakes shooting

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witness-mountain-lakes-shooter-not-himself.JPG 


Family and colleagues still don't know why Leonardo Parera shot and killed his co-worker before dying in a police shooting.


MOUNTAIN LAKES — After a nearly four-month investigation, the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office has ended its investigation into Leonardo Parera, the man who murdered his co-worker at the Exit Realty Gold office in Mountain Lakes and died in what authorities said was likely a "suicide by cop."
But what possessed Parera to walk into the real estate office on Route 46 on Oct. 14 with a 9mm semi-automatic pistol, stand behind Chris Capone King and fire 15 shots as she sat at her desk may never be known, Morris County Prosecutor Robert Bianchi said Thursday.
During a press conference in Morristown, Bianchi also said there was no evidence King and Parera had anything more than a professional relationship.
"The investigation involved an extensive forensic examination of Christine King’s computer and phone records, both of which revealed no contacts from her to him," Bianchi said. "The computer of Mr. Parera did not reveal any contact with Christine King."
After shooting King, Parera left the office and walked toward his car.
He then made a chilling call to 911 in which he told the police dispatcher he had just killed someone.
During the call, the 39-year-old Kearny man falsely claimed to have a long gun, Bianchi said. Before hanging up, Parera also told the dispatcher he had to make another call.
That call, the prosecutor said, was to his mother and sister.
Then, he made one final plea to the dispatcher: Send the police. But, he warned he would shoot officers when they arrived.
"You know what? I’m armed. I’m dangerous. Send the cops out," Parera said. "I can see from every angle. I will shoot at anyone who approaches the car."
Parera made good on his threat, firing at least eight shots at police while sitting in his white Honda Civic, Bianchi said.

"One came very close," to hitting an officer, the prosecutor said.
Police ordered Parera to surrender but he refused and continued to fire, Bianchi said.
Police returned fire; 10 officers fired 65 shots in 23 seconds, Bianchi said. Parera was shot 11 times, while another 53 shots hit his car, he said.
A grand jury Thursday morning determined the police shooting was justified, Bianchi said.
"No officer, even when use of force was justified as is the case here, enjoys being responsible for taking another person’s life," Bianchi said. "The actions of these officers were nothing short of heroic."
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OBIT: Matthew Miller Ratliff '80 - Pete's best friend commits suicide -- no warning?

The Playtex Connected Suicide

Pete Bennett's relocated to Mountain Lakes NJ. Back in 1968 the Vietnam war was developing into a national issue. My next door neighbor Matt Ratliff became my best friend along with his family we all got along.



Then the goodfellows at the AFL-CIO a division Contra Costa Politics


Matthew M. Ratliff

Matthew Miller Ratliff '80, a longtime resident of Vero Beach, FL, was born on February 14, 1958. The youngest son of Dale Ratliff, a corporation executive vice president, and the former Bettie C. Messer, an antiques dealer, Matt Ratliff grew up in Mountain Lakes, NJ, where he was graduated from Mountain Lakes High School in 1975. He entered Hamilton that year and, interested in radio broadcasting, became a disc jockey for campus radio station WHCL. He also served as a staff photographer for The Spectator and was an ultimate-frisbee enthusiast. His interest in filmmaking led him to take several courses in that field. Having majored in sociology, he was awarded his diploma in 1980.

Matt Ratliff returned to New Jersey but later settled in Vero Beach, where he held a series of property caretaking jobs. He also conducted an antiques and collectibles resale business on the side. He was a dedicated sports fisherman and scuba diver, and an avid beachcomber.

Matthew M. Ratliff, who had returned to New Jersey just last year, died on March 20, 2008, in Montclair. Unmarried, he is survived by two brothers, Mitch and Mark Ratliff, and a sister, Lynn Hove, as well as nieces and nephews.

My best friend, my nephews, Girl Friend and Daughter, my former employee and his wife, a neighbor in Danville CA, my Roommate, My Attorneys Son, City Clerk from San Ramon and local Contra Costa Board of Realtors and the band played.

The Max Factor Connection

Max Factor & Company, the cosmetics concern, has turned to Revlon, its high‐class competitor, for its new president and chief executive officer. It named Dale Ratliff, one of Revlon's ranking sales executives, to succeed Sam Kalish, who resigned as Max Factor's top executive last July 1.
Mr. Ratliff, 47, executive vice president of sales for the Revlon domestic cosmetics and fragrances division, will assume his new title at the $350 million company on Jan. 1 and will report to Timm Crull, president and chief operating officer at Norton Simon Inc., Max Factor's parent company.
Max Factor has seen its operating profits decline dramatically over the last year. Its cosmetics and fashion division (which includes Halston fashions and the McCall Pattern Company) had pretax profits of $34.1 million for the year ended June 30, 1977. Just 12 months later that figure had slipped to $12.6 million.
A sore spot has been Its domestic cosmetics division, greatly weakened by last year's disastrous introduction of the fragrance “Just Call Me Maxi.” David Mahoney, chairman of Norton Simon, said at the annual meeting this month that the company had withdrawn funds from its basic cosmetics lines to support the “Just Call Me Maxi” introduction and found these regular lines suffered in the process.
“Ratliff is a good choice,” said one industry expert. “He knows sales and he knows the domestic cosmetics market. But he has little marketing background.” (Mr. Ratliff has been a group president at the B.V.D. Company and senior vice president and general manager of the apparel division at International Playtex.)
Just last week a cosmetics marketing executive was named to a senior post at Norton Simon. Robert Kamerschen will resign his position as president of Chanel Inc. to become senior vice president and assistant to Mr. Crull in December. Mr. Ratliff and Mr. Kamerschen worked together at Revlon.
Meanwhile, Sam Kalish, whose resignation was announced last May 30, remains on the Norton Simon payroll as a consultant. His annual salary as president of Max Factor was $190.000.

Then the goodfellows at the AFL-CIO a division Contra Costa Politics

Memorial services will be held Saturday in Mountain Lake, N.J., for Dale Ratliff, president of Max Factor & Company, who died last Saturday in Los Angeles of a heart attack.
Mr. Ratliff, 47 years old, joined Max Factor in January following six years as executive vice president of the domestic cosmetics and fragrances division of Revlon Inc. Previously, he had been group vice president with the BVD Company Inc. and had also served as senior vice president and general manager of the apparel division at International Playtex Inc.
Born in Hinton, W. Va., Mr. Ratliff was a graduate of Duke University. He served in the Marine Corps, attaining the rank of captain.
Mr. Ratliff is survived by his wife, the former Bettie Messer; three sons, Mitchell, Mark and Matthew; a daughter, Lynn, and his mother, Augusta J. Ratliff. The memorial services will be held at P.M. at the Community Church in Mountain Lake.
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