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Country Hall of Fame will keep Bill Monroe’s Gibson F5

Category: Bluegrass News

By Travis Tackett
December 31, 2008

Bill Monroe's  Gibson Lloyd Loar F5 Mandolin

Bill Monroe's Gibson Lloyd Loar F5 Mandolin

Nashville, Tenn. — After more than a year of lengthy negotiations with Robert Waldschmidt, the Trustee for the Robert W. McLean Bankruptcy Estate, the Country Music Foundation, the not-for-profit 501(c)(3)educational organization that operates the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum, has reached a $750,000 settlement with the McLean estate.

A motion to approve the resolution and settlement of all claims of the Trustee was filed in United States Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Tennessee today. The settlement agreement is subject to Bankruptcy Court approval and requires the Museum to remit the full amount within 30 days after court approval of the compromise.

“Recovering gifts made to a non-profit organization poses a unique set of issues,” said Waldschmidt, “and everyone involved in this lawsuit was sensitive to the historical significance of the instruments involved. However, the interests of the creditors in this bankruptcy proceeding, many who lost their life savings, could not be ignored either. This resolution is a fair compromise, and will benefit the bankruptcy estate and its creditors, while preserving the Museum’s collection of instruments.”

“We are pleased to avoid a costly court battle and get this matter resolved,” said Museum Director Kyle Young.

Waldschmidt had sought to recover approximately $l.54 million from the Museum. The figure represents McLean’s total cash payments to the Museum plus the value of two Johnny Cash guitars that McLean had purchased outright and donated to the Museum’s permanent collection. As an alternative, Waldschmidt had asked the court to order the surrender of the instruments so they could be sold to satisfy the claims of McLean’s creditors.

McLean’s “philanthropy” allowed the Museum to enter into confidential purchase agreements and acquire Mother Maybelle Carter’s Gibson L-5 guitar and Bill Monroe’s Gibson F-5 Loar mandolin, two of the most significant instruments in popular music history. Since McLean’s involuntary bankruptcy and his death in 2007, the Museum has continued to honor all the terms of those agreements. As a part of the settlement agreement, the Museum has agreed to provide additional value to McLean’s creditors by subordinating its $870,850 proof of claim (the balance of all unfulfilled pledges made by McLean to the Museum).

McLean is accused of operating a “Ponzi scheme,” defrauding investors of more than $67 million over a period of several years.

“We are still not over the shock of this tragedy, which continues to reverberate in so many lives,” Young said.

“We did not have the money and, because we hold the instruments, like all of our collection, not for ourselves but in trust for the benefit of the public, we could not merely turn them over to the Trustee,” he said. The Museum’s unique collection, considered the largest and finest of its kind in the world, does not appear on the institution’s balance sheet and cannot be used as collateral.

Music industry leader Scott Siman has been joined by Museum Chairman Steve Turner to lead a fundraising campaign to assist the Museum in defraying all obligations incurred in connection with the acquisition of these historical instruments. Arrangements for a loan to supplement pledges not received before the settlement payment date are in place with the Music Row branch of SunTrust Bank. Persons interested in making a contribution may contact the Museum’s Vice President of Development Karen Fleming at 615/416-2024.

Accredited by the American Association of Museums, the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum is operated by the Country Music Foundation, a not-for-profit 501 (c)(3) educational organization chartered by the state of Tennessee in 1964. The Museum’s mission is the preservation of the history of country and related vernacular music rooted in southern culture. With the same educational mission, the Foundation also operates CMF Records, the Museum’s Frist Library and Archive, CMF Press, Historic RCA Studio B and Hatch Show Print.

More information about the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum is available at www.countrymusichalloffame.com.

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