Patrick Shea (California lawyer)

(Redirected from Patrick C. Shea)

Patrick C. Shea is an attorney in California. He was the federal court-appointed attorney that represented 170-plus municipal entities[1] with investments of over $5 billion in the Orange County, California Chapter 9 bankruptcy.[2] On December 6, 1994, the County of Orange declared Chapter 9 bankruptcy, from which it emerged in June 1995. The Orange County bankruptcy was the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history. Following a tumultuous several year period of financial disclosures by the City of San Diego relating to its massively underfunded pension and retiree health care system,[3] in 2005 Shea ran for mayor of San Diego on a platform of filing a Chapter 9 bankruptcy for the city in order to restructure its troubled financial condition.[4]

Career edit

Shea is a lawyer and businessman,[5] as well as a strategic adviser in financial structures,[6] capital structures, capital projects, and private/public sector [7] He has represented or advised many of the nation's largest financial institutions, their boards of directors, individual officers and board members. He has been appointed to represent large classes of financial interests in difficult capital and finance-related restructures. He has managed large law firms and corporate entities and served as outside counsel to various trusts. He was president and chief executive officer of Brown Field Aviation Park LLC, a company formed to convert a little-used municipal airport (San Diego Brown Field Airport) into a regional airport cargo facility.[8] The City of San Diego elected not to complete the cargo airport conversion.[9] Before that, Shea served as Partner in the San Diego office of Pillsbury Winthrop LLP, where he specialized in commercial finance, litigation and financial reorganization.[4]

In 2005, Shea ran unsuccessfully for mayor[10] of San Diego, California[11] advocating that the city should file for Chapter 9 bankruptcy [12] to address its financial problems.[13]

He has served as chairman of the board of directors of the San Diego Convention Center Corporation and chairman of the San Diego Ballpark Task Force which led to the development and construction of the city's downtown professional baseball venue known as Petco Park.[14] He was general counsel and corporate secretary to the San Diego Host Committee for the 1996 Republican National Convention in San Diego. He is a cofounder and director of a regional bank with branches in California and Washington.[15] He has authored and edited commercial, legal, and business publications.[16] He is a national speaker on matters related to corporate and municipal debt, restructuring and reorganizations.[17]

Education edit

Shea received an undergraduate degree in philosophy from Stanford and holds both an MBA and Juris Doctor degree from Harvard University.[4]

Personal edit

He is married to financial advisor Diann Shipione, the former City of San Diego, California pension-board member, who in 2002 was the first to say San Diego's finances were vulnerable because the city was raising public employee retirement benefits without making the necessary pension fund contributions to pay for them.[18]

References edit

  1. ^ Wilgoren, Jodi (1995-06-01). "Orange County In Bankruptcy: Investors Panel Backs Measure R". Los Angeles Times.
  2. ^ "Should Orange county Have Declared Bankruptcy?". Orange County Business Journal. 1999-11-29.
  3. ^ "SEC Charges Five Former San Diego Officials with Securities Fraud". SEC. 2008-04-07.
  4. ^ a b c Hall, Matthew (2005-06-30). "Lawyer's Cure Is A Bitter Pill". San Diego Union-Tribune.
  5. ^ Dotinga, Randy (2005-03-10). "Fiscal Crunch Time In San Diego". USA Today.
  6. ^ Lashinsky, Adam (2005-11-28). "Stay Classy, San Diego!". Fortune Magazine.
  7. ^ Hall, Matthew (2010-11-05). "O.C. Sales Tax Was Rejected by the Same Margin". San Diego Union-Tribune.
  8. ^ "Executive Profile". Bloomberg.com. 2011-03-20.
  9. ^ "San Diego Cargo Airport Plan Hits Local Turbulence=2000-07-07". California Planning & Development Report.
  10. ^ Pollack, Andrew (2005-07-25). "Upheaval Continues in San Diego as 11 Vie for Mayor". The New York Times.
  11. ^ Christensen, Kevin (2005-06-08). "Shea Touts Bankruptcy Plan for City's Financial Recovery". San Diego Daily Transcript.
  12. ^ Gustafson, Craig (2010-11-28). "San Diego's Bankruptcy Debate Mirrored In South". San Diego Union-Tribune.
  13. ^ Quach, Hoa; Bartholow, Steven (2009-10-08). "Is Bankruptcy An Option For San Diego?". San Diego News Network.
  14. ^ LaVelle, Philip (2006-06-18). "A Major-League Player". San Diego Union-Tribune.
  15. ^ Acello, Richard (2007-10-10). "Regents Bank Details". Metropolitan Magazine & Daily Business Report. Archived from the original on 2011-07-24.
  16. ^ Shea, Patrick (2005-02-18). "The Case For Municipal Bankruptcy". San Diego Union-Tribune.
  17. ^ "Municipal Debt: Learning from Municipal Financial Crises". American Enterprise Institute For Public Policy Research. 2011-03-16.
  18. ^ Selway, William (2005-07-26). "San Diego Pension Gap Brings Bankruptcy Talk to Race". Bloomberg.