Hutcheson, an independent fiduciary who once offered $40 million for Tamarack, faces charges he raided retirement funds of some $5 million to fix up his home and help finance his now-failed resort acquisition.
Eagle-based lawyer Dennis Charney filed paperwork late Thursday in U.S. District Court in Boise, asking a judge to relieve him of his duties representing Matthew Hutcheson.
The plaintiffs claim Credit Suisse set up an offshore branch to skirt U.S. rules, appraised resorts at inflated prices and then provided loans based on those appraisals, with the aim to foreclose on the properties when the owners couldn't repay the loans.
Credit Suisse Group, whose lender group is owed some $300 million, declined to comment Monday. But a Tamarack Municipal Association lawyer says a sheriff's sale could be concluded in about 60 days.
U.S. District Judge Edward Lodge wrote in an order on Wednesday that Matthew Hutcheson has demonstrated the type of immediate and irreparable injury necessitating an injunction blocking him from acting as a fiduciary over the Retirement Security Plan and Trust.
Bank of America's leasing division is paying Johnston, president of Highlander Ski Lift Services & Construction, to dismantle the lift after being stiffed by Jean-Pierre Boespflug, Tamarack's majority owner, when his money ran out in 2008.
A federal judge Friday tightened restrictions on an indicted former Tamarack Resort suitor, to prevent him or anybody else from trying to unload disputed assets central to the government's criminal case against him.
Boise Police says at about 1:13 a.m., officers were called to the 2700 block of Tamarack for a report of shots fired. When they arrived, police say they saw a vehicle leaving the area.
Tamarack Municipal Association director Tim Flaharty said Friday that Brad Mason, father-in-law of Matthew Hutcheson, asked resort security to allow him into areas of the resort.