Attachment 2003TMI TerreStar-re

This document pretains to SAT-LOI-19970926-00161 for Letter of Intent on a Satellite Space Stations filing.

IBFS_SATLOI1997092600161_842892

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Sheryl Wilkerson, Legal Advisor to Chairman Michael K. Powell
Jennifer Manner, Legal Advisor to Commissioner Kathleen Q. Abernathy
Paul Margie, Legal Advisor to Commissioner Michael J. Copps          JAN 1 $ 2004
Sam Feder, Legal Advisor to Commissioner Kevin J. Martin               .
Barry Ohlson, Legal Advisor to Commissioner Jonathan S. Adelstein mt@mm Srangy 5:
Federal Communications Commission                                          Bureg(s=
445 Twelfth Street, S.W.                                                                    tz
Washington, D.C. 20554                                                                      ==
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          Re:   File No.     189—SAT—LOI—97                                                  m
                IBFS Nos.    SAT—LOI—19970926—00161                                          ~/
                             SAT—AMD—20001103—00158,                                          2
                             SAT—MOD—20021114—00237                                           f}_’
                             SAT—ASG—20021211—00238

Dear Legal Advisors:

                The Wireless Carriers‘ December 22, 2003, ex parte submission cites various
cases for language they contain that is at most dicta but whose holdings do not support and often
undercut the positions they advocate. Fortunately, the Commission has the opportunity on
review to redress the injustice that resulted from the reliance the International Bureau placed on
many of these cases when it canceled the TMI/TerreStar 2 GHz satellite authorization on
February 10, 2003.

                First, the threshold question is what standard of notice had to be met before the
Bureau could impose the death penalty on TM/TerreStar. TMI/TerreStar cited five appellate
cases that held that the agency‘s notice (usually the FCC‘s) was inadequate. Letter to Mr. Paul
Margie (Dec. 18, 2003). These cases explained that in these circumstances the Commission
must provide "full and explicit notice of all prerequisites," Salzer v. FCC, 778 F.2d 869, 871—72
(D.C. Cir. 1985), and must do so to an "ascertainable certainty," Trinity Broad. ofFla., Inc., v.
FCC, 211 F.3d 618, 628 (D.C. Cir. 2000). The Wireless Carriers‘ December 22, 2003, letter
cited two cases in response: Lakeshore Broad., Inc., v. FCC, 199 F.3d 468 (D.C. Cir. 1999);
McElroy Elecs. Corp. v. FCC, 990 F.2d 1351 (D.C. Cir. 1993). The holding in Lakeshore was
on a different issue: whether the applicant was entitled to personal notice of a required fee
payment; the court found that public notice sufficed. The holding in McElroy was that the
Commussion had not provided sufficient notice. Moreover, McElroy exactly tracked the
distinction TMI and TerreStar have drawn between whether the Bureau‘s reading of the first

                                                                              No. of Copies rec’défi,
                                                                              List ABCDE



DC: 1157938—1


Wilkerson; Manner; Margie; Feder; Ohlson
December 31, 2003
Page 2

milestone requirement was reasonable‘ and whether the Commission had given sufficiently clear
notice of the Bureau‘s interpretation so as to support the death penalty.

                Second, the next question is what notice was, in fact, provided. The statute and
the FCC regulations provide no indication that TMI itself had to enter directly into the
construction contract with Loral. The 2 GHz MSS Order, which is the most authoritative
statement of the milestone requirements absent notice in the Act or the FCC‘s rules, twice refers
to the obligations of "prospective operators," (not to the licensee‘s obligations), which TerreStar
clearly is. 2 GHz MSS Order, 15 FCC Red. 16,127, 16,179 (2000). Moreover, it articulatesthe
requirement as "the satellite system must enter into a construction contract," which clearly
occurred here. Id. at 16,177 (emphasis added). TMI‘s authorization, in turn, specifically
referenced the 2 GHz MSS Order. 16 FCC Red. 13,808 (2001).

              Third, a further place to look for guidance is the case law, although the language
of the 2 GHz MSS Order could well be regarded as determinative. TMI/TerreStar‘s
September 26, 2003, letter documented that the critical issue in the case law, on which each
holding turns, is whether a non—contingent construction contract, conforming to the license,
existed. Letter to Mr. Don Abelson (Sept. 26, 2003). In each of the eight cases where satellite
licenses have been canceled, the opinion makes clear that the absence of a contract was the >
pivotal fact. In five cases, milestones were extended or licenses maintained because the
Commussion held that other circumstances excused or counterbalanced the absence of a contract.
Since TMI had arranged for such a contract to be entered into through its agreement with
TerreStar, which the Wireless Carriers concede was binding, it had every reason to believe it had
complied with the milestone requirement. The letter to Mr. Abelson also demonstrated that none
of the cases cited by the Bureau Aheld that a satellite authorization would be canceled where a
conforming, non—contingent construction contract was in existence by the milestone deadline.

               In contrast, the Wireless Carriers‘ December 22 letter cites six cases, not because
of their holdings, none of which supports the Wireless Carriers‘ position, but because they
contain language that refers to licensees‘ obligations. Attachment A shows that this language is
not integral to the holdings of any of those cases. In fact, the holdings of those cases often rebut
the inferences the Wireless Carriers seek to draw from them. Also, the language relied upon by
the Wireless Carriers does not address whether the licensee can meet the requirements by
obligating the prospective operator to take those steps, as is shown to be permissible by the
2 GHz MSS Order, a careful reading of the language of the TMI authorization, and the
Commission‘s acceptance of third—party arrangements in other cases. In fact, the cases cited by
the Wireless Carriers use the term "licensee" to reference actions the Commission knows that



‘ We continue to believe that the Bureau‘s interpretation was unreasonable because it was
inconsistent with the August 25, 2000, 2 GHz MSS Order, prior satellite cases, practice in other
services regulated by the FCC, and sound policy whose objective is to expedite service
implementation and prevent spectrum warehousing.


Wilkerson; Manner; Margie; Feder; Ohlson
December 31, 2003
Page 3

some other entity will have to undertake." Instead, these and other cases emphasize that the
critical fact is whether the construction contract arrangements prevent warehousing, avoid delay,
and assure that progress is being made toward system implementation® —— all of which objectives
were satisfied in this instance.                                                          ‘

                Fourth, the Wireless Carriers‘ December 22, 2003, letter refers to differences
between the third—party relationships at issue in USSB, A4MSC, and VZT4 and the TMI/TerreStar
relationship here (they ignore KaStarCom, which in all significant respects is similar to
TMUTerreStar). Yet those cases are completely silent, and give no guidance, as to why those
third—party relationships were deemed sufficient to achieve milestone compliance. Indeed, none
of those three cases even addressed the third—party nature of the relationships. The holdings of
those cases were on entirely different issues. USSB and 4MSC were extension—of—milestone
cases (no extension was sought or needed here). And VZT4 was a defacto control case (TMI
retained control here). The reason those cases are significant —— and the reason that the decisive
paragraph 10 of the Bureau‘s February 10, 2003, Order is not supported by any citations —— is
that the Commission has not treated third—party contract cases differently. In all cases —— first—
party or third—party contracts —— the critical question has been whether there was a construction
contract, whether it was non-contingent,4 and whether it conformed to the authorization —— all
conditions that were met here.

               Fifth, the Wireless Carriers‘ December 11, 2003, submission (at n.20) and their
presentation at the "moot court" on December 17 dwelled pejoratively on the amount of money
that has been expended under the Loral contract. But the $850,000 paid to Loral was what Loral
contracted for in arms‘ length negotiations, and TMI and TerreStar have expended seven times
that much on the 2 GHz project to date. In any event, the holdings of the two cases cited by the
Wireless Carriers are completely beside the point at issue here. Advanced Communications
Corp., 10 FCC Red. 13,337 (1995), was an extension—of—deadline case, and Mobile
Communications Holdings, Inc., 18 FCC Red. 1094 (2003), was a non—conforming contract case.
Additionally, in the first case the 1% payment made by the licensee was on a nine—year—old
contract, and in the second case the 0.5% payment was combined with a provision for no future


2 E.g., Morning Star Satellite Co., 16 FCC Red. 11,550, 11,553 (2001) ("licensees are building
their systems"); Columbia Communications Corp., 16 FCC Red. 10,867, 10,872 (2001)
("licensees have built and launched").
* E.g., Morning Star Satellite Co., 15 FCC Red. 11,350, 11,352 (2000) ("Requiring licensees to
adhere strictly to a milestone schedule prevents orbital locations from being ‘warehoused‘ by
licensees to the exclusion of qualified entities that are prepared to implement systems
immediately."); accord PanAmSat Licensee Corp., 16 FCC Red. 11,534, 11,538 (2001);
Columbia Communications Corp., 15 FCC Red. 16,496, 16,497 (2000).
* "[N]either significant delays . . . nor conditions precedent to construction." Pand4mSat Licensee
Corp., 16 FCC Red. 11,534, 11,539 (2001); accord Mobile Communications Holdings, Inc.,
18 FCC Red. 1094, 1099 (2003).


Wilkerson; Manner; Margie; Feder; Ohlson
December 31, 2003
Page 4

payments until 30 days after the satellite was to be launched and capacity made available. Here,
TMI/TerreStar had paid $850,000 within six months after the Loral contract was entered into,
and they are obligated to pay a total of $380 million in installments by the time of the satellite
launch. Here too, reading the holdings of the cases leads to the opposite result from the one
urged by the Wireless Carriers.

               Sixth, at the December 17 "moot court," the Wireless Carriers dismissed as
irrelevant the Commission‘s routine practice in other services of allowing third—party contracts
for required construction of licensed facilities. (Yet, the 2 GHz MSS Order expressly stated that
the Commission would administer its satellite milestone requirements "{[cJonsistent with our
practice in other services." 2 GHz MSS Order, 15 FCC Red. at 16,178.) The Wireless Carriers
did so on two grounds. (1) They said that these other services were different because the
authorizations were obtained in auctions while satellite authorizations are obtained for free. But
TerreStar and TMI cited seven services —— ITFS, MMDS, MDS, SMRS, cellular, PCS, and
broadcast —— the majority of which did not use auctions toselect licensees, and in all of which
third—party construction contracts are routine. (2) The Wireless Carriers also said that the
Commission‘s practice in these other services did not provide guidance because the cases
concerned questions of defacto control —— clearly not an issue in our case because of the explicit
protections in the TerreStar/TMI contract. But that is exactly the point. For the Commission to
even consider whether a third—party contract delegated too much control away from the licensee,
it must be true that third—party contracts are acceptable if the licensee retains sufficient control.
In none of the other licensed services has the Commission challenged or even raised an issue
with the third—party nature of the construction contracts.
                               *                  *#                 *



                We are grateful for the attention that you and the Commissioners have given to
this matter. The licensing authority here, Industry Canada, had approved the satellite design, it
had held that the relevant milestone requirement had been met, design and construction were
moving forward in a timely manner and consistent with the specifications of the authorization,
the strong joint venture entity in which TMI has a substantial continuing interest was
conscientiously prosecuting the construction contract, and needed new competitive satellite
services were to be provided. The Wireless Carriers successfully obscured these facts below.


Wilkerson; Manner; Margie; Feder; Ohlson
December 31, 2003
Page 5

But these are the facts that should control and call for the Commission, on review, promptly to
reinstate the authorization.

                              Respectfully submitted,


         Pu F1hay                                    Loh doul.
   Gregory C.Staple                               gfathan D. Blake
   R. Edward Price                                 rian D. Smith
   VINSON & ELKINS, L.L.P.                      _ CoOVINGTON & BURLING
   1445 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.                 1201 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
   Washington, D.C. 20004                         Washington, D.C. 20004
   Telephone: (202) 639—6500                      Telephone: (202) 662—6000

   Counselfor TMI                                 Counselfor TerreStar



                                                 iiges
                                                 mt
                                                 BROWNSTEIN HYATT & FARBER, P.C.
                                                 1615 L Street, NW.
                                                 Washington, D.C. 20036
                                                 Telephone: (202) 296—7353

                                                 Counselfor Mobile Satellite Ventures

Attachment

ce: File No. 189—SAT—LOI—97
    IBFS Nos. SAT—LOI—19970926—00161, SAT—AMD—20001103—00158,
     SAT—MOD—20021114—00237, SAT—ASG—20021211—00238
    Chairman Michael K. Powell
    Commissioner Kathleen Q. Abernathy
    Commissioner Michael J. Copps
    Commissioner Kevin J. Martin
    Commissioner Jonathan S. Adelstein
    Bryan Tramont, Esq.
    John Rogovin, Esq.
    Neil Dellar, Esq.
    David Horowitz, Esq.
    Kathryn A. Zachem, L. Andrew Tollin, Craig E. Gilmore, Wilkinson Barker Knauer, LLP
    Douglas I. Brandon, AT&T Wireless Services, Inc.
    John T. Scott, III, Charla M. Rath, Cellco Partnership (d/b/a Verizon Wireless)
    J.R. Carbonell, Carol L. Tacker, David G. Richards, Cingular Wireless LLC


                                                                                 ATTACHMENT A



                             CASES CITED IN WIRELESS CARRIERS‘
                             Drc. 22, 2003, EX PARTE SUBMISSION

                                                                                    Was there a
                                                                                    Conforming
                                                                    Was the       Non—Contingent
     Case Name                     Holding of Case               Authorization     Construction
                                                                    Upheld           Contract
PanAmSat Licensee         Pendency of merger held not to              No               No
Corp., 16 FCC Red.        excuse failure to enter into a
11534 (2001)              construction contract.

Columbia                  Pendency of transfer held not to            No               No
Communications            excuse failure to enter into a
Corp., 15 FCC Red.        construction contract.
16496 (IB 2000)

Tempo Satellite Inc., 7   Construction contract held to be           Yes               Yes
FCC Red. 6597 (1992)      sufficiently specific to conform to
                          authorization.

Columbia                  Construction contract held to be           Yes               Yes
Communications            sufficiently specific to conform to
Corp., 16 FCC Red.        authorization.
10867 (IB 2001)

Morning Star Satellite    Construction contract held to be           No                No
Company, L.L.C., 16       insufficiently specific to meet
FCC Red. 11550            requirements of non—contingent
(2001)                    contract.

DirectSat Corporation,    Licensee held to be able to sell its       Yes               Yes
10 FCC Red. 88            satellite authorization for a profit
(1995)                    during the course of construction
                          because construction is proceeding
                          in timely fashion.



Document Created: 2019-04-21 09:53:25
Document Modified: 2019-04-21 09:53:25

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