The Philadelphia Inquirer
At 9:30 Tuesday morning, owners of The Philadelphia Inquirer, the Philadelphia Daily News and Philly.com will bid for control of the properties and their parent company in an auction, David Sell wrote Tuesday in The Inquirer. (UPDATE: They were sold for $88 million to Lewis Katz’s group.)
The two groups in that auction, which is closed to both the public and the press, are George E. Norcross III, William Hankowsky and Joseph Buckelew, Sell reported, and Katz and H.F. “Gerry” Lenfest.
The dispute erupted and litigation began in October, when publisher Robert F. Hall fired Inquirer editor William K. Marimow over the objection of Katz. A Philadelphia judge reinstated Marimow, but denied Katz’s request to have Hall removed.
The dispute prompted the two groups to seek to dissolve the company, with the auction used to decide who gains control.
Who wants to buy The Inquirer today? It's for sale at any Wawa for $1.
— Brian Leighton (@phillyleighton) May 27, 2014
Norcross already submitted $77 million as the opening bid, Sell reported. On Sunday, Sell wrote about how we’ve gotten to this point and what it could mean to the media in Philadelphia.
What happens that morning is likely to have a lasting impact – and not just on the 1,800 employees who work for The Inquirer, Philadelphia Daily News, philly.com, and at a plant IGM owns outside Conshohocken. Through hearings in Philadelphia and Delaware, court filings, and public statements, both men have made clear they have different visions for the company, long a dominant local news source for hundreds of thousands in the region.
Angelo Fichera, a reporter at The Inquirer, is tweeting the auction.
I'm at the Cira Centre, where the Interstate General Media auction is to begin shortly. Will live tweet what I'm able pic.twitter.com/w78rh91qys
— Angelo Fichera (@AJFichera) May 27, 2014
Lewis Katz, H.F. 'Gerry' Lenfest have arrived. Followed by Drew Katz and attorney Richard Sprague. pic.twitter.com/wo14I8h7nM
— Angelo Fichera (@AJFichera) May 27, 2014
Dan Gross, Dan Fee (spokesman for George Norcross) are now here as well. pic.twitter.com/z92I5CeARd
— Angelo Fichera (@AJFichera) May 27, 2014
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