Providence Equity May Lose Hundreds of Millions as Altegrity Faces Seizure in Snowden Fallout

GoLocalProv News Team

Providence Equity May Lose Hundreds of Millions as Altegrity Faces Seizure in Snowden Fallout

Jonathan Nelson, Founder of Providence Equity
Altegrity, the embattled firm owned by Providence Equity which has been at the forefront of a federal lawsuit, is facing seizure from creditors, according to reports. 

On Wednesday, the New York Post reported, "Oaktree Capital Management and other lenders are a few weeks from a deal to grab control of Altegrity from private equity powerhouse Providence Equity Partners -- only six months after Providence had refinanced the company's $1.75 billion in loans."

In 2007, Providence Equity bought Altegrity, the parent firm to US Investigative Services, LLC, from two other firms for $1.5 billion, including $780 million in equity.  

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The Justice Department filed a lawsuit in January against USIS in the wake of the Edward Snowden scandal, for improperly vetting Snowden and other candidates handling classified information.  

Major Implications for Providence Equity

In January, GoLocal's Dean Starkman reported on the precarious situation Providence Equity -- founded by Brown grad Jonathan Nelson -- has found itself in, in the wake of the Snowden fallout.

As GoLocal previously reported:

A blockbuster federal fraud suit filed yesterday against the Virginia security contractor charged with vetting Edward Snowden is having massive reverberations – and nowhere more so than in Providence, where it threatens the legacy of one of Rhode Island’s top financiers and favorite sons.

The Snowden case, the biggest U.S. security leak since the Pentagon Papers, may seem like a remote affair, involving a lone security analyst based in Hawaii who leaked National Security Agency files in Hong Kong, now lives in limbo in Moscow, and has President Obama and the Washington policy establishment grappling with the fallout.

The Post's Josh Kosman reported Wednesday of this week that since the refinancing, there was a cyber-attack on USIS, and "then Washington in September decided not to renew its roughly $300 million annual contract."

USIS conducts 40% of all of the federal government’s background checks totalling 21,000 a month.

According to Kosman, Altegrity is facing $70 million in debt payments in the first quarter, most of it due in January, and "most likely doesn't have the cash to make the payment."


Brown Grads Leading in US Business

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