Square 1 Burgers files bankruptcy, blames over-saturated restaurant market – Orlando Sentinel

Cowboy-themed restaurant Square 1 Burgers and Bar filed for reorganization bankruptcy for all its locations, including the recently closed spot in Winter Park.

Tampa-based Square 1, known for its buffalo burgers and cow-print decor, filed 12 separate bankruptcy petitions in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Florida Friday, including its parent company, a property company and two recently closed locations.

In its bankruptcy filing, Square 1 blamed the financial troubles on an over-saturated restaurant market.

Unfortunately, between 2014 and 2016, a number of restaurant franchises flooded the market saturating the areas around Square Ones restaurant with a litany of dining options, court documents said. When the competition settled in, Square One struggled to breakeven and quickly fell behind with its creditors.

Square 1 closed in Winter Park in May after being ordered to leave after allegedly owing about $21,000 in back rent, according to court documents.

Winter Park landlord Andre Raab said the burger restaurant left in the dark of night.

Square 1 also recently closed a location in Sarasota, according to the Sarasota Herald-Tribune.

Square 1 Burgers kicked out of Winter Park restaurant space

Square 1 has eight locations left and the company filed for bankruptcy on all eight individually.

For the Winter Park bankruptcy, Square 1 listed assets of $1 to $10 million and debts of $1 to $10 million. The itemized list of liabilities adds up to about $70,000, but most of the money is owed to the landlord, food provider Sysco and meat company Master Purveyors in Tampa.

A representative for Square 1 Burgers did not return a phone call or email Monday afternoon. The company s lawyer, Scott Shuker, said there are separate filings because each restaurant is an individual limited liability corporation.

Square 1 was founded by Tampa restaurateur Bill Shumate and partner Joanie Corneil, along with Ray Leich. Schumate and Corneil also own Bellas Italian Cafe in Tampas Hyde Park.

Got a news tip? karnold@orlandosentinel.com or 407-420-5664; Twitter, @kylelarnold or facebook.com/bykylearnold

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Square 1 Burgers files bankruptcy, blames over-saturated restaurant market - Orlando Sentinel

Esperanza Unida bankruptcy delays city redevelopment efforts – BizTimes.com (Milwaukee)

Esperanza Unidas chapter 11 bankruptcy filing will delay the city of Milwaukees efforts to find a new use for the organizations building on National Avenue.

The bankruptcy proceeding puts a hurdle in front of us in our plans to acquire the site, said Jeff Fleming, Department of City Development spokesman. For the time being we will no longer be advertising the site for development and await the bankruptcy proceeding to conclude.

The city issued a request for proposals in March in anticipation of acquiring the properties at 1313 and 1329-1331 W. National Ave. through foreclosure. Fleming said the city did receive some interest in the property, but declined to say if any or how many proposals were submitted, adding the process is now on hold.

Esperanza Unida, an organization that focuses on workforce and economic development, filed for chapter 11 last week. The organization said it has $1 million to $10 million in liabilities. Those debts included more than $400,000 in unpaid taxes owed to the IRS, nearly $150,000 owed to the state workers compensation fund and nearly $150,000 owed to the city of Milwaukee, including $72,000 in unpaid property taxes.

Esperanza Undia executive director Manny Perez, a former Department of Workforce Development secretary, said he is hoping to have the building generate revenue again in the future to help the organization pay down its debts.

The idea is to re-position the building for its mission, which is to accelerate economic development and create jobs, pay creditors, at least in a standard manner and accelerate entrepreneurship on the Milwaukee south side which is the mission of that building, Perez said.

He said he previously had found a buyer for the properties, but that deal fell through at the end of 2016. Perez said he then approached city officials to ask if they would acquire the site through a foreclosure under state brownfield statutes. He said the city agreed, but required him to find a buyer and declined to cover any attorney or realtor fees.

Perez said he couldnt find a buyer again and opted to find potential occupants for the facility instead. He said hes been able to secure three rental contracts for various portions of the building and hopes to find one more.

But he added the presence of the citys foreclosure and RFP actions have made prospective tenants nervous about moving forward with building repairs and occupancy.

Perez said his goal for the building is to get it rehabilitated as soon as possible and get it producing revenue, but those efforts are also complicated by the $1.5 million to $2 million in liens still on the building, he said.

Those liens were transferred over from Esperanza Unidasformer building at 611 W. National Ave. The city seized that property in 2014, after the then non-profit failed to pay property taxes. Esperanza Unida, which is currently run from offices at 2825 N. Mayfair Road in Wauwatosa, converted to a for-profit entity two years ago, Perez said.

If somebody wants to buy (the building in the 1300 block of National Avenue) for $2 million, Ill sell it, he said. If nobody is there for $2 million, we have to create a system where we restructure the debt and we make partial payments and the first thing that must occur is increased revenue. Im only doing what any good business person would do in the absence of a buyer.

Fleming said there has already been a lot of public discussion about the building and the city has an interest in seeing it return to providing tax revenue but more importantly to become an asset neighborhood.

Perez also said he has a longer term strategic plan for the organization, but declined to provide specifics.

Id rather report on what has been accomplished, not what hopefully will be accomplished, he said.

Esperanza Unidas chapter 11 bankruptcy filing will delay the city of Milwaukees efforts to find a new use for the organizations building on National Avenue.

The bankruptcy proceeding puts a hurdle in front of us in our plans to acquire the site, said Jeff Fleming, Department of City Development spokesman. For the time being we will no longer be advertising the site for development and await the bankruptcy proceeding to conclude.

The city issued a request for proposals in March in anticipation of acquiring the properties at 1313 and 1329-1331 W. National Ave. through foreclosure. Fleming said the city did receive some interest in the property, but declined to say if any or how many proposals were submitted, adding the process is now on hold.

Esperanza Unida, an organization that focuses on workforce and economic development, filed for chapter 11 last week. The organization said it has $1 million to $10 million in liabilities. Those debts included more than $400,000 in unpaid taxes owed to the IRS, nearly $150,000 owed to the state workers compensation fund and nearly $150,000 owed to the city of Milwaukee, including $72,000 in unpaid property taxes.

Esperanza Undia executive director Manny Perez, a former Department of Workforce Development secretary, said he is hoping to have the building generate revenue again in the future to help the organization pay down its debts.

The idea is to re-position the building for its mission, which is to accelerate economic development and create jobs, pay creditors, at least in a standard manner and accelerate entrepreneurship on the Milwaukee south side which is the mission of that building, Perez said.

He said he previously had found a buyer for the properties, but that deal fell through at the end of 2016. Perez said he then approached city officials to ask if they would acquire the site through a foreclosure under state brownfield statutes. He said the city agreed, but required him to find a buyer and declined to cover any attorney or realtor fees.

Perez said he couldnt find a buyer again and opted to find potential occupants for the facility instead. He said hes been able to secure three rental contracts for various portions of the building and hopes to find one more.

But he added the presence of the citys foreclosure and RFP actions have made prospective tenants nervous about moving forward with building repairs and occupancy.

Perez said his goal for the building is to get it rehabilitated as soon as possible and get it producing revenue, but those efforts are also complicated by the $1.5 million to $2 million in liens still on the building, he said.

Those liens were transferred over from Esperanza Unidasformer building at 611 W. National Ave. The city seized that property in 2014, after the then non-profit failed to pay property taxes. Esperanza Unida, which is currently run from offices at 2825 N. Mayfair Road in Wauwatosa, converted to a for-profit entity two years ago, Perez said.

If somebody wants to buy (the building in the 1300 block of National Avenue) for $2 million, Ill sell it, he said. If nobody is there for $2 million, we have to create a system where we restructure the debt and we make partial payments and the first thing that must occur is increased revenue. Im only doing what any good business person would do in the absence of a buyer.

Fleming said there has already been a lot of public discussion about the building and the city has an interest in seeing it return to providing tax revenue but more importantly to become an asset neighborhood.

Perez also said he has a longer term strategic plan for the organization, but declined to provide specifics.

Id rather report on what has been accomplished, not what hopefully will be accomplished, he said.

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Esperanza Unida bankruptcy delays city redevelopment efforts - BizTimes.com (Milwaukee)

Another retailer has filed for bankruptcy – mySanAntonio.com

Photo: Damian Dovarganes/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Click ahead to view 34 companies that could be the next to announce mass store closures. less

Click ahead to view 34 companies that could be the next to announce mass ... more

34 companies that could be the next to announce mass store closures

34 companies that could be the next to announce mass store closures

Forever 21

Forever 21

Neiman Marcus

Neiman Marcus

Toys R Us

Toys R Us

J. Crew

J. Crew

Ruby Tuesday

Ruby Tuesday

Tailored Brands

Tailored Brands

Ascena

Ascena

Bloomin Brands

Bloomin Brands

Fresh Market

Fresh Market

Guitar Center

Guitar Center

GNC

GNC

99-Cents Only

99-Cents Only

Gymboree

Gymboree

Charming Charlie

Charming Charlie

Tuesday Morning

Tuesday Morning

Rite Aid

Rite Aid

Conn's

Conn's

Trans World

Trans World

Fred's

Fred's

Noodles & Co.

Noodles & Co.

Lumber Liquidators

Lumber Liquidators

Charlotte Russe

Charlotte Russe

Tops Markets

Tops Markets

Claire's

Claire's

Sears Holdings

Sears Holdings

Ignite

Ignite

Perfumania

Perfumania

National Stores

National Stores

Shopko

Shopko

Rent-A-Center

Rent-A-Center

Bravo Brio

Bravo Brio

Le Chateau

Le Chateau

Another retailer has filed for bankruptcy

The children's clothing retailer Gymboree filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection late Sunday.

Themall-based chain says it plans to remain in business during its restructuring, but willclose 375 to 450 stores out of its fleet of its 1,281 locations.

The company employs more than 11,000 workers.

Gymboree says the restructuring will reduce its debt by more than $900 million and position the company for "long-term success."

"We expect to move through this process quickly and emerge as a stronger organization that is better positioned in todays evolving retail landscape, with the right size store footprint and greater financial flexibility to invest in Gymborees long-term growth," Gymboree CEO Daniel Griesemer said in a statement.

With the filing, Gymboreejoins a long list of other retailers that have filed for bankruptcy this year, including Rue21, Payless ShoeSource, Hhgregg, The Limited, RadioShack, BCBG, Wet Seal, Gormans, Eastern Outfitters, and Gander Mountain.

Already, more retailers have filed for bankruptcy this year than throughout all of last year.

If Gymboree closes 375 stores, it would bring the number of retailclosures this yearto more than 5,460.

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Another retailer has filed for bankruptcy - mySanAntonio.com

Winter Haven attorney gets prison for concealing assets in … – News Chief

Josiah E. Hutton also was ordered to pay $93,255 in restitution to the victim by U.S. District Judge James D. Whittemore.

TAMPA A 60-year-old former attorney from Winter Haven has been sentenced to six months in federal prison followed by six months of home confinementfor concealing assets from a bankruptcy estate.

Josiah E. Huttonalso was ordered to pay $93,255 in restitution to the victim by U.S. District Judge James D. Whittemore.

Hutton pled guilty in March and had faced amaximum sentence of five years in prison.

According to the plea agreement, Hutton was retained to represent a debtor who was planning to file for bankruptcy. In anticipation of filing a bankruptcy petition, Hutton received a settlement check, which was property of the debtors bankruptcy estate, and deposited it into his attorney escrow account.

Hutton later prepared and certified the debtors bankruptcy petition, yet he failed to list the settlement check as an asset, thereby concealing the asset from creditors and the Bankruptcy Court.

The Florida Bar shows he had been practicing law since 1989, most recently in Fort Myers, but the Polk County Property Appraisers Office website shows he has owned a house on Lake Otis in Winter Haven since 1991 and claims homestead exemptions on that property.

He has been disbarred, according to the Florida Bar website.

The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.

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Winter Haven attorney gets prison for concealing assets in ... - News Chief

Children’s retailer Gymboree files bankruptcy, closing up to 450 stores – USA TODAY

The Gymboree store in Ridgewood, shown in 2007, has been closed. Now the chain may be filing for bankruptcy protection.(Photo: NorthJersey.com file photo)

Children's clothing chain Gymboree filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection late Sunday, aiming to slash its debts and close hundreds of stores amid crushing pressure on retailers.

Gymboree said it plans to remain in business, hoping to regain its financial footing despite considerable challenges for physical retailers.

The company plans to close 375 to 450of its 1,281 stores, according to a court filing, putting many workers at risk of losing their jobs. Gymboree employs more than 11,000 people, including 10,500 hourly workers.

The bankruptcy was widely expected after Gymboree refused to pay certain bills in recent months, placing the retailer on a collision course with creditors. The retailer said it hopes to slash $1 billion of its $1.4 billion in debt and to win approval for its plan by Sept. 24.

"We expect to move through this process quickly and emerge as a stronger organization that is better positioned in todays evolving retail landscape, with the right size store footprint and greater financial flexibility to invest in Gymborees long-term growth," Gymboree CEO Daniel Griesemer said in a statement.

Like other retailers, Gymboree buckled amid declining mall traffic, fixed rental costs and online competition. Online sales represent only 21% of its revenue, and its web systems are "dated and unsupported," recently appointed Chief Restructuring Officer James Mesterharm said in a court filing.

Mesterharm also said Gymboree had"struggled against other established brick-and-mortar retailers," including Children's Place and GapKids.

Among other shortcomings, Gymboree failed to innovate quickly, having only recently introduced store email, analytics and tablet computers to help employees do their jobs.

The bankruptcy represents a bitter outcome for Gymboree owner Bain Capital Private Equity, which acquired the retailer for $1.8 billion in 2010 and launched a major global expansion.

Still, the company posted a profit before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization of $71 million in 2016, down from $94 million in 2015.

Founded in San Francisco in 1976 as a program devoted to nurturing child learning through playtime with parents, Gymboree started its first store in 1986 and now operates stores worldwide under three brands: Gymboree, upscale chain Janie & Jack and value-focused Crazy 8.

The company's fiscal distress is particularly problematic for mall owners Simon Property Group and GGP, formerly General Growth Properties, which collectively control 35% of Gymboree's U.S. real estate space.

Moody's: Number of distressed retailers tops total during financial crisis

Investor concern over Gymboree's future rose when the company disclosed that it had missed a June 1 payment on senior notes due in 2018.

Gymboree also was among 22 companies that a June 7 report by rating giant Moody's Investors Service characterized as distressed retailers. The Ca rating that Moody's assigned to Gymboree's debt is far below investment grade.

"When you're down there in C-a land, bankruptcy is a real possibility," Charles O'Shea, Moody's senior retail analyst, told USA TODAY last week.

Similarly, a previous Moody's report on distressed retailers issued in March attributed Gymboree's low rating to "the company's high debt burden and weak credit metrics stemming from the 2010 acquisition of the company by affiliates of Bain Capital and subsequent weak operating performance."

Noting that Gymboree faced approaching maturities of an asset-based revolving loan in December 2017 and a secured term loan in February 2018, the report said refinancing the debts "could be challenging."

"Thus, the risk of default, including the potential for a distressed exchange-type restructuring, is very high," the March report said.

Contributing: Kevin McCoy

Follow USA TODAY reporter Nathan Bomey on Twitter @NathanBomey.

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Children's retailer Gymboree files bankruptcy, closing up to 450 stores - USA TODAY

Tax trouble firms’ most likely road to bankruptcy – Albuquerque Journal

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Bankruptcy is a specialized area of law with its own elaborate code, procedures, vocabulary and even its own judges. In every city theres a small group of attorneys who have mastered the arcana. They see each other repeatedly because every bankruptcy case involves as many parties as a debtor has creditors.

The insiders tend to treat each other with respect if only to avoid being retaliated against in next weeks case. But since their job is to divvy up a finite amount of money, they have every incentive to take advantage of outsiders. Non-specialists who blunder into bankruptcy court can cost their clients a lot of money through sheer cluelessness. They may never know what theyve done.

I asked Albuquerque bankruptcy lawyer Gerald Velarde what are the most common mistakes small-business owners make that land them in bankruptcy. Without hesitation he said, Taxes.

Especially federal payroll taxes. Any business that withholds taxes from its employees paychecks but then fails to pay the money into the Treasury is, in effect, borrowing from the IRS. Your local loanshark is more likely to be forgiving. Cheating on state gross receipts taxes is another classic spin in a companys death spiral.

Any business owner who is even tempted to hold back on taxes in order to pay current expenses needs to see a bankruptcy attorney before things get out of control. The filing of bankruptcy automatically puts a stop to most collection efforts. But, Velarde emphasized, it provides no solution to a deficient business model. If a business suffers from a lack of customers, the best course may be to wind it up.

Chapter 7 of the bankruptcy code offers straightforward liquidation. Most personal debts, including personal guarantees of corporate debt, can be discharged in Chapter 7. Discharge means the creditor has to accept whats available and cannot afterward pursue the individual for the balance. Chapter 7 wipes the slate clean, allowing society to benefit from an entrepreneurs determination to start afresh.

But if a business is a solid one suffering through a temporary slump, bankruptcy can also offer the promise of reorganization. Chapter 11 is famous because the big boys use it, from General Motors on down, but its expensive and complex. The filing fee alone is an astronomical $1,717. Any competent bankruptcy practitioner will ask for an up-front retainer in the tens of thousands of dollars. And only about half of Chapter 11 reorganization plans ever get approved, anyway. For the rest, Chapter 11 is just a toll road to liquidation. (Remember Borders?)

Small businesses can often pursue an alternative form of reorganization through Chapter 13, a much-less-cumbersome and expensive procedure. The filing fee is $310 and the typical retainer is proportionately lower, too. Chapter 13 comes with many restrictions including debt limits its not available to those in really deep but for those who qualify, it buys time to cash out illiquid assets such as real property. Also, tax debt can often be paid off over a period of years without penalty or interest. If the bankruptcy court approves a Chapter 13 reorganization plan, a sole proprietorship can continue stronger than before.

On the other side of the ledger are creditors. Banks and other moneylenders know what theyre getting into, but its common enough for small-business owners and ordinary homeowners to make an advance payment to a contractor, say, only to have the contractor declare bankruptcy. In such circumstances, the ordinary business person can unexpectedly find him or herself cast in the role of creditor, dragged willy-nilly into bankruptcy court.

If you ever receive one of those daunting bankruptcy court notices, the single most important thing is to move quickly. Bankruptcy deadlines are tight and unforgiving. You need to file a claim and pay close attention to every notice you receive from the court or the lawyers. In the end you may receive only pennies on the dollar, but the alternative is zilch. If your claim is for a sizable sum, youre almost certainly better off hiring a lawyer to steer you through the maze. Just be sure the lawyer you pick is a member of the club.

Joel Jacobsen is an author and has recently retired from a 29-year legal career. If there are topics you would like to see covered in future columns, please write him at legal.column.tips@gmail.com

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Tax trouble firms' most likely road to bankruptcy - Albuquerque Journal

Darius Miles’ Bankruptcy Sale Includes Signed LeBron James, Larry … – Bleacher Report

Rocky Widner/Getty Images

Autographed jerseys of Cleveland Cavaliers superstar LeBron James and Boston Celtics legend Larry Bird were among the items auctioned off during bankruptcy proceedings involving former NBA small forward Darius Miles.

On Sunday, TMZ Sports reported Miles received $12,780 from the sale of basketball memorabilia and other personal items. Additional basketball-related pieces included signed shoes from the Dallas Mavericks' Dirk Nowitzki and two-time NBA champion Lamar Odom.

Last September,Beth Hundsdorfer and George Pawlaczykof theBelleville News-Democratreported the third overall pick in the 2000 NBA draft listed less than $500,000 in assets and $1.57 million in liabilities on his bankruptcy paperwork.

Among his debts included $282,041 owed to the Internal Revenue Service and $20,000 in unpaid child support, according to theBelleville News-Democrat.

Miles received $1,500 for the James jersey, $100 for the Bird jersey, $375 for the Nowitzki shoe and $225 for the Odom shoe during the sale, per TMZ Sports. He also earned $900 from the sale of two guns and two bucks for his toaster, among other items.

The 35-year-old Illinois native played seven seasons in the NBA with the Los Angeles Clippers, Cleveland Cavaliers, Portland Trail Blazers and Memphis Grizzlies. He averaged 10.1 points, 4.9 rebounds and 1.9 assists across 446 appearances.

He most recently played during the 2003-04 season, appearing in 34 games with the Grizzlies.

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Darius Miles' Bankruptcy Sale Includes Signed LeBron James, Larry ... - Bleacher Report

Why test for bankruptcy law is a larger test for India – The Indian Express

Written by Shaji Vikraman | Updated: June 12, 2017 12:38 am There is heightened attention on the new process because existing laws and mechanisms such as corporate debt restructuring, which were meant to address the issue of bad debt, havent quite worked.

Indias new bankruptcy law which came into force at the end of last year, about 18 months after it was formally proposed in early 2015 will face its first test later this month when the resolution plan for Kolkata-based Nicco Industries is adjudicated. The adjudication process will signal whether the sick company can be restructured or shut down swiftly within 180 days of the case being registered.

Over 1,000 applications for resolution have been filed, more than 100 of which have been admitted by the arbiter, the National Company Law Tribunal or NCLT, which is expected to decide on the fate of many non-financial firms within 180 days.

Read | Explaining the Bankruptcy law and the need to have one

Closely watching the working of the Bankruptcy Code the rules for which have been framed by the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India or IBBI, which regulates the professionals handling the process will be banks sitting on a mountain of bad debt of over Rs 6 lakh crore, Indias central bank, which is now mandated to direct local lenders to quickly resolve hundreds of cases of firms that have defaulted on their loans and gone belly up, as well as investors known as vulture funds in the West who swoop on such assets, hoping to buy them at rock bottom rates, and make money down the line, following a turnaround.

There is heightened attention on the new process because existing laws and mechanisms such as corporate debt restructuring, which were meant to address the issue of bad debt, havent quite worked.

By the end of this year by when the mandatory 180-day deadline for resolution is reached in a few other cases as well the initial experience of an important reform will be manifest. The stakes are high because the way in which the bankruptcy process evolves, will be crucial for boosting the countrys ranking in the Ease of Doing Business sweepstakes. A little after his government took over, Prime Minister Modi had said that the aim was to take India from a ranking of 142 in 2014 to the top 50 in three years.

There is much more at stake. Speedy resolution of the debt woes of lenders will mean freeing up of capital for fresh lending to Indias businessmen, including small and medium entrepreneurs and industry. It will lead to a more efficient allocation of resources, as well as the development of a market for secondary assets, which the country badly needs rather than the destruction of value of assets, which inevitably results from long delays in settling cases. This will count significantly for banks and lenders in India who, under the looming shadow of investigative agencies, currently baulk at taking decisions such as those on a haircut or accepting a lower value of assets. It is a new experience for India to have a group of lenders or equity or debt holders to approach the NCLT to establish default. If the Tribunal is satisfied and admits the case, a set of people known as insolvency professionals chartered accountants, cost accountants or company secretaries who are regulated by the IBBI, step in. They prepare a resolution plan, which involves restructuring where possible, or liquidation where it is concluded that nothing will work and it is better for the firm to die. The plan must be approved by 75 % of the voting share of creditors, and then sanctioned by the adjudicating authority, the NCLT.

For the new band of insolvency professionals too, it will be a learning process to take de facto interim charge of the firms. They too will be tested. By the end of the year, the number of registered insolvency professionals could top 1000.

Perhaps it would be pragmatic to expect equity and debt holders to try out this route for only some of the worst cases in the initial phase. Theres a good reason. The market for buyouts of distressed assets is yet to develop which means that those whose money is at stake may have to settle for a lower value. Over the next few years, as professional insolvency services improve and the ecosystem for an efficient resolution develops, the impact of this reform will be felt, according to M S Sahoo, who heads the IBBI.

Indias Bankruptcy Code is modelled on the lines of what is in vogue in the US, which has what are known as Chapter 7, 11 and 15 bankruptcies, and the United Kingdom, where resolution has to be within 12 months.

The way the resolution process works in the initial phase will influence decisions to take recourse to it for addressing bigger cases of default. For that, India will need to equip the NCLT better the Tribunal has started off with 11 benches, which could be too few given the huge number of cases that could potentially come up. The bigger challenge will be at the time when cases of individuals are taken up for resolution this is expected a year or so down the line. It would mean putting in place Debt Recovery Tribunals across the country, where individuals can seek to recover their money. And also when the resolution process begins for financial firms like banks which need to be either revived or shut down.

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Why test for bankruptcy law is a larger test for India - The Indian Express

Owner of Joe’s Crab Shack files for bankruptcy | Jacksonville News … – Florida Times-Union

Ignite Restaurant Group Inc., the operator of the Joes Crab Shack and Brick House Tavern & Tap chains, has filed for bankruptcy with an eye toward a possible sale to an affiliate of Kelly Investment Group.

Ignite has seen sales decline as the U.S. dining sector faces drops in customer traffic. The company listed estimated total debts as of April 30 of $197.3 million in Chapter 11 papers filed Tuesday in Houston federal court. Assets totaled $153.4 million.

Ignite announced in April that Robert S. Merritt had resigned as chief executive officer and left the board. Jonathan Tibus, a managing director at turnaround firm Alvarez & Marsal, was chosen to replace him.

The debtors have continued to experience declining financial performance and declines in comparable restaurant sales and income from operations at Joes and Brick House, Tibus said in a court filing. The debtors have closed underperforming restaurants and implemented cost reduction measures to help mitigate the effect of these declines and improve their financial position and liquidity.

Ignite began looking around for a buyer last year, but as its condition deteriorated, viable offers dried up. In June, Ignite lined up Kelly affiliate KRG Acquisitions Co. as a stalking horse to open bidding in a court-supervised auction. KRGs offer consists of $50 million and assumption of liabilities.

Ignite says all Joes Crab Shack and Brick House Tavern restaurants will remain open as it goes through the bankruptcy and sales process. In an FAQ, the company says that it will continue to accept gift cards, coupons and other promotions in accordance with its policies.

Joes Crab Shack made headlines last year when the company backed away from its no-tipping policy that began in November 2015., according to Consumerist, a consumer website that is a not-for-profit subsidiary of Consumer Reports.

Under the policy, the company said it would implement a new set wage practice. Servers were to be paid at a rate starting at $14/hour based on their past performance, Consumerist reported. To generate the revenue needed for the new wages, the company executed a 12 percent to 15 percent increase to the restaurants menu.

Six months later, the company ditched the policy and brought back its standard system.

The broader U.S. restaurant industry is suffering headwinds on multiple fronts. Eateries are relying more heavily on discounts and specials to attract diners, crimping profit margins. And a historic bout of food deflation has turned grocery stores into a bigger bargain. Thats made consumers more likely to eat meals at home.

Chain restaurants also are losing market share to mom-and-pop places a shift for the industry. Sales for independent restaurants are expected to grow about 5 percent through 2020, while chains will climb just 3 percent, according to Pentallect Inc., a research firm in Chicago.

Ignite operates 112 Joes including one in Jacksonville Beach and 25 Brick House restaurants only ones in Florida are in Orlando and Tampa in 32 states, plus three franchises in the United Arab Emirates, according to court papers. It employs 8,400 people, including 5,500 part-time workers. The first Joes opened in Houston in 1991.

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Owner of Joe's Crab Shack files for bankruptcy | Jacksonville News ... - Florida Times-Union

Ex-Pepperell man jailed in bankruptcy case – Lowell Sun

BOSTON -- A former Pepperell man who used a snowmobile to flee to his native Canada to avoid criminal charges here will spend 18 months in federal prison and then face deportation hearings that could send him back to Canada once again.

Cyril Gordon Lunn, 69, was accused in 2004 of concealing $3 million to $4 million in assets during bankruptcy proceedings, and of making false statements under the penalty of perjury.

In March of 2005, Lunn rented a snowmobile in Maine and used it to flee across the border into Canada, where he remained a fugitive until his arrest and extradition back to the U.S. last year, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.

In January, Lunn pleaded guilty to concealing assets from bankruptcy creditors and making false statements under the penalty of perjury in one of his bankruptcy cases.

Prosecutors say that from 1985 to 2001, Lunn owned the CY Realty Corporation, a construction and development business in Pepperell. From 1998 to September of 2001, Lunn transferred both personal and business assets, including $3 million to $4 million in cash, into Canada, according to prosecutors. Much of the cash was deposited into safe deposit boxes, according to prosecutors.

When Lunn filed bankruptcy for himself and CY Realty Corporation in 2001, he failed to disclose the transfers, and made false statements claiming he had closed all his safe deposit boxes, according to a press release from the U.

On Wednesday, U.S. District Court Judge Timothy Hillman sentenced Lunn to 18 months in federal prison and ordered him to pay $6,339 in restitution. Lunn will face deportation hearings once he is released from prison.

Follow Robert Mills on Twitter and Tout @Robert_Mills

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Ex-Pepperell man jailed in bankruptcy case - Lowell Sun

Bankruptcy forces curtain to fall on community theater – Chicago Tribune

As members of the Crown Point Community Theatre prepare for the group's final curtain call July 9, they say performing arts in the city will live on.

"We have to consider this a beginning," said Marion Kellum, of Crown Point.

Kellum was among the founding members of the Crown Point Community Theatre 13 years ago, and he was among a group of its members and supporters who gathered at the theater Tuesday to learn about the theater's closing from the board.

Kellum said the theater has come a long way since its inception when members performed all of the shows in the Hall of Justice in downtown Crown Point, the Crown Point United Methodist Church and in open-air spaces at Crown Point High School. Having a space to finally call its own when the theater opened its doors five years ago in the building at 1125 Merrillville Road was a milestone.

"We did some terrific work," Kellum said. "In my opinion, we have a tremendous history. Instead of feeling depressed, we should feel very proud."

The Tuesday session was a wake of sorts for the theater, which has a history of successful programming.

Matt Valukis, CPTC president, said the economics of running the theater and maintaining its space became too much. The board has consulted with an attorney and will be filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy after one last show run ending July 9, he said. The bankruptcy will include closing of its theater.

"We are incredibly fortunate to have served the community for 13 years," Valukis said. "We've had some really great programs."

Valukis and Vice President Becky Jascoviak, of Valparaiso, said that despite being a popular theater with successful shows and classes that would routinely fill, overhead ultimately became too much for the group to handle.

"Our programming is strong. Overhead killed us," Valukis said.

CPCT is run only by volunteers. Between 10 and 20 volunteers oversee operations, scheduling and production of the shows, as well as fundraising. Valukis said the space costs about $26,000 a year to operate for rent and utilities. Productions cost between $2,500 and $3,000. Ticket sales generate between $4,000 and $8,000 per production and represent a small portion of the theater's income. The remainder comes from grants, donations and sponsorships.

Over the years the theater has received numerous grants, but for the past two years it was unsuccessful in its grant applications, officials said.

The financial stress was compounded by the loss of the group's 501(c)(3) charitable status after a misunderstanding about tax filing requirements, officials said. The group is operating as a fund of the Crown Point Community Foundation in order to maintain its charitable standing while the accounting issues are addressed with the IRS and the theater winds down operations.

Valukis said that as the financial statements were being reviewed, it was realized many past board members supported the theater with hundreds and sometimes thousands of dollars in personal donations.

"While we are beyond grateful for their gift, board members continually giving of their own money wasn't a financially feasible way to run a business," he said.

In 2016, the theater went from an artistic board to a financial board to address the issues.

"We were a little too late to right the ship," Valukis said.

Jascoviak said there will be opportunities for members to find a place in other theater groups across the area. The Northwest Indiana Excellence in Theater Foundation has 12 members, including CPCT, and works with 40 theater groups across Northwest Indiana. All of the theaters already work together sharing resources, including personnel.

Valukis said there potentially will be a venue for any future theater group that may form when Gloria Touhy and the Indiana Ballet Theatre complete the renovation of the Old Nurse's Home on North Main Street. The venue will have a 70-seat black-box theater that could be used for future productions.

"That's one of those things we can take a little solace in," Valukis said.

Kerianne Valukis, Matt's wife and a volunteer, said the decision was necessary.

"This is heartbreaking for us. It was literally agonizing to come to this decision," she said.

She said the last show is a fitting bookend to the theater's run at its current location. CPCT will finish its run with a production of Jason Robert Brown's "The Last Five Years," with dates from June 23 through July 9, Kerianne Valukis said. Five years ago, the theater opened to a play by the same writer, "Songs for a New World," she said.

Kellum encouraged members to look to the future and said there are too many people who love theater for this to be the end. He imagines one day in the not so distant future the creation of a new local theater group that will debut with a "big, splashy show to get it started."

"We're not going to die. We have a group of people who love theater and want to see it produced," Kellum said.

Carrie Napoleon is a freelance reporter for the Post-Tribune.

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Bankruptcy forces curtain to fall on community theater - Chicago Tribune

Why Students Should Be Able To Declare Bankruptcy On Their Loans – ATTN:

At $1.3 trillion, the student loan debt crisis has eclipsed both credit card and auto loan debt to become Americans second largest outstanding payment, behind only mortgage debts. However, an individual can discharge all of these types of debt by declaring bankruptcy save for student loans.

Before 1976, they were able to do just that. That was the year when Congress changed the bankruptcy code in order to prohibit private or federal loans from being discharged during the first five years of repayment unless they had an undue burden.

An undue burden has been defined by the courts as you basically have no money at all, which means if you have enough money to hire a lawyer in the first place to handle your case then youre likely disqualified, Henry Sommer, former president of the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys (NACBA), told ATTN:.

Over the course of the 80s and 90s, Congress repeatedly made it more difficult for individuals to declare bankruptcy on their student loans as a part of budget negotiations, according to Sommer.

One example of that came in the form of the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984, which exempted all private student loans of their ability to be discharged. This gradual, decades-long process reached its conclusion in 2005 when Congress passed the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act and ensured neither federal or private student loans could be discharged in bankruptcy unless the borrower could prove repayment constituted an undue hardship.

As a result, Congress has made certain that these non-expiring loans are more likely to be paid back and that it would, in turn, bring in an estimated $2 billion in payments in 2016. These actions have not gone without grassroots and legislative backlash, though.

In a May press release, Rep. John Delaney (D-MD) said that the inclusion of student loans in the bankruptcy code was a matter of fairness:

Bankruptcy has long been an option of last resort for individuals facing an irresolvable level of debt; bankruptcy isnt easy or enjoyable, but its a necessary part of our financial system. It doesnt make sense for students with heavy debt burdens to be worse off than someone with credit card debt or mortgage debt.

Delaney has introduced the Discharge Student Loans in Bankruptcy Act for the past three sessions of Congress, a bill that would allow all student loans to be discharged if bankruptcy was declared.

In a statement to ATTN: reemphasizing the last-ditch importance of this option, Rep. Delaney said:

The purpose of this bill is allowing people who need to declare bankruptcy the full clean slate that they need, with student loan debt on equal footing to all other forms of debt. This is not a bill designed to create any sort of incentive to declare bankruptcy when you otherwise would not. There are serious consequences to declaring bankruptcy, and no one should go down that path unless it is necessary. This is a commonsense bill and were going to keep working to build support.

In June, the latest version of the bill was referred to members of the House Subcommittee on Regulatory Reform, Commercial And Antitrust Law. If past is prologue, it will languish there without further activity.

If Delaneys bill became law, students unable to payback their loans would be able to wipe away their debts. But it wouldnt be easy.

Declaring bankruptcy has also become harder since 2005, due to means-based restrictions lobbied for by loan companies, according to Sommers. Those individuals who were able to declare bankruptcy would face heavy penalties:

Chapter 7 bankruptcy requires individuals to give up certain property, heirlooms, and savings as part of their repayment. It also creates a ten-year period in which they may have difficulty obtaining new credit.

Chapter 13 bankruptcy still requires a three to five year repayment plan of a portion of the debt.

Both plans prohibit the filing of bankruptcy again for several years and could negatively impact a persons credit.

Many tools are likely going to be necessary if the student loan debt crisis is to end, including reining in the cost of higher education, increasing the amounts of Pell grants, and reducing the interest rates on loans. Perhaps the option to discharge loans in bankruptcy should be added to that list.

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Why Students Should Be Able To Declare Bankruptcy On Their Loans - ATTN:

For Hartford, bankruptcy not an easy way out – The CT Mirror

Carol M. Highsmith / Library of Congress

The Hartford skyline

At a May 22 town hall meeting on Hartfords dire budget situation, a resident urged Mayor Luke Bronin not to file for bankruptcy, saying it would be a death knell for the city.

Would it?

Almost since taking office at the beginning of last year, Bronin has proclaimed from the metaphorical rooftops that the capital city doesnt have the resources to meet its increasing financial obligations and is at risk of insolvency.

The city patched the last hole in the current budget with short-term borrowing and faces a projected $65 million gap in next years budget, with no new sources of revenue. Withoutadditional help $40 million more from the state and union concessions that mostly have yet to materialize Bronin has said he will not rule out filing for bankruptcy.

A Hartford bankruptcy is almost incomprehensible to those who remember the citys thriving downtown and humming factories in the post-World War II years. But the reality is that after decades of slow decline, marked by middle-class flight, rising costs and loss of its once-imposing manufacturing base, the city is tapped out.

Most agree that a bankruptcy filing by the states capital city would be a major embarrassment for the city and the state. That might not be the worst of it.

The prospect of bankruptcy is frightening enough that most distressed cities try mightily to avoid it.

Since Congress created what is now Chapter 9 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code in 1937 to allow political subdivisions of states (but not states themselves) to file for bankruptcy protection, relatively few have done so.

There have been only 673 filings under Chapter 9, fewer than nine a year, and most of those were special districts school, utility or sewer districts not cities or towns, said James Spiotto, a Chicago lawyer and bankruptcy specialist, and co-author of Municipalities in Distress: How States and Investors Deal with Local Government Financial Emergencies.

Keith M. Phaneuf / CTMirror.org

Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin and Corporation Counsel Howard Rifkin

Since 1980 only 54 counties, cities or towns have filed for Chapter 9 protection, and more than a third of those filings were withdrawn or dismissed. Nonetheless, some highly publicized municipal bankruptcy proceedings have gone forward in the past decade, the best known of which include Detroit; Vallejo, Stockton and San Bernardino, Cal.; Jefferson County, Ala.; and in New England, Central Falls, R.I.

These communities were out of options. The trend in Connecticut and across the country has been for states to intervene and help distressed communities right themselves (a couple of states, Georgia, for one, dont allow their towns to file for Chapter 9 protection).

State intervention is almost always a better option, said Spiotto in a telephone interview. Here are some reasons why:

If a city is willing to endure this array of unpleasantries, it can have its debts reduced to a sustainable level and get a new start.Vallejo slogged through bankruptcy with severe cuts in public safety and reductions in home values, among other challenges. But in the end, Acting City Manager Phil Batchelor told an NPR interview in 2012 that the experience has been good. We were able to save probably in excess of $30 million, but we had legal bills of over $12 million.

Detroit, whose $18 billion municipal bankruptcy in 2013 was the largest in U.S. history, has seen new investment in downtown and some neighborhoods some are calling it a comeback city though other neighborhoods are still abandoned and forlorn. The Motor City is recovering, but not recovered, said Spiotto.

University of Connecticut

A rendering of the UConn Hartford campus nearing completion downtown. The new campus will add vitality downtown, but it also will be exempt from city property taxes.

Central Falls, in the final year of its five-year recovery plan, has stabilized its finances, gotten its credit rating upgraded and begun a number of economic development initiatives, said Wilder Arboleda, the citys business outreach and public relations coordinator.

So although bankruptcy isnt quite a death knell, the more common response to a city in distress is fiscal and technical assistance from the state, along with a period of state oversight.Some states, such as Pennsylvania and North Carolina, have boards that regularly monitor the finances of their cities, to be able to intervene before troubles reach the crisis stage.

Gov. Dannel Malloy has proposed such an oversight board for Connecticut, which legislators are still considering.Such a board probably would have intervened in Hartford sooner than 2017; the city has been struggling for several years, selling assets and repackaging debt to balance its budget.

To date, Connecticut has responded ad hoc and usually late in the game when one of its municipalities has foundered on fiscal shoals. In the last three decades, the state has stepped in to oversee the finances of Bridgeport, Waterbury, West Haven and Jewett City, a borough of Griswold.

Bridgeport actually filed for bankruptcy in 1991, but its petition was rejected when the city could not prove it was insolvent, one of several requirements for bankruptcy approval.

State officials opposed Bridgeports petition, not wanting to see the states largest city go bankrupt, then offered help buying a park and a zoo to get the city through the crisis. In 1994 the General Assembly passed a law requiring the governors written approval before a municipality can file for bankruptcy. Gov. Malloy has said he hopes Hartford can avoid bankruptcy.

At this point it looks like there will be another ad hoc intervention. The legislature is working on a solution for Hartford, looking at a myriad of options, said House Democratic majority leader Matthew Ritter. All would include strings, some level of state oversight.

But its not clear that this approach will solve the real problem.

Bankruptcy or state receivership is the symptom of a larger problem that being whatever it was that caused the insolvency. Cities get into fiscal jams for a variety of reasons: mismanagement, a spectacularly poor infrastructure investment, loss of a major employer, unsustainable union contracts, corruption or a slowly declining tax base.

Bankruptcy can buy time, lower debt and protect the city from lawsuits, but it doesnt solve the underlying problem. Just because you go into Chapter 9 doesnt mean you have more revenue, said Spiotto.

Ideally, bankruptcy or receivership will result in a long-term fiscal plan that will align spending with revenues, and a plan to address the problem that put the city in the hole.

Hartford has awarded generous union contracts in the past a good number of police officers have retired with pensions that are higher that their working salaries and made some questionable investments (a baseball stadium that was finally built and a soccer stadium that wasnt) in recent years, but it has had nowhere near the mismanagement that plagued Bridgeport or Waterbury before those cities submitted to state oversight.

The citys fundamental problem is that it doesnt have enough taxable property to support itself.Connecticut is heavily reliant on the property tax; it is virtually the only way municipalities can raise revenue.

Hartford occupies only 18 square miles, and more than half of its property is off the taxable grand list hospitals, colleges, government buildings, etc. The city has far and away the highest tax rate for commercial property in the state, 74.29 mills, and Mayor Bronin is loathe to raise it.

Lack of an adequate tax base is a characteristic of several distressed cities. Central Falls, for example, has 19,000 people on an astoundingly small 1.2 square miles. One of the efforts to revive the city has been a task force aimed at getting foreclosed properties back on the tax rolls, said principal planner Trey Scott.

With less taxable property than some of its suburbs, but with the bills for many of its regions social ills, Hartford can only raise about half the money it spends, and must rely heavily on state assistance.

Bronin said he has cut 100 jobs and $20 million from the budget, but still has fixed costs pensions, health care and debt service that are rising. He said the city is being run efficiently, and he would welcome someone looking over his shoulder.

An oversight panel might give the city some leverage with its unions one of which voted down a contract last month that would have saved the city $4 million over six years. But though union concessions are probably essential to gaining more state help, they wont by themselves balance the budget.

A one-time bailout wont work either; the city needs a revenue source for a period of years to meet rising debt and pension obligations. The legislature could provide ongoing help by adding to the sales tax, or, as Bronin noted in his budget message, by fully funding state reimbursements for nontaxable property, known as payments-in-lieu-of-taxes, or PILOT, a program that has been chronically underfunded for decades. Fully funding PILOT would provide Hartford with enough money an estimated $50 million a year to stabilize its budget.

As Hartford officials are well aware, it is not a good time to ask. The state faces a daunting deficit of more than $5 billion over the next two years. Lawmakers have gone into special session to work on the budget, and are not expected to have a solution for Hartford until the state budget is completed.

Though it will be challenging to find more money for Hartford, Bronin argues that it is essential that the state create more economic and social vibrancy in its major cities, making them a draw for bright young people, because thats what businesses are looking for today. The departure of GE from its suburban Fairfield campus to Boston and the impending departure of Aetnas headquarters from Hartford would appear to support his argument.

Some distressed cities across the country have gotten back on the road to prosperity, via sound economic planning. Pittsburgh, for example, invested in medicine and technology, along with arts, infrastructure and riverfront activity, which have helped the city recover from the crushing loss of the steel industry in the latter half of the last century.

Hartford has a number of initiatives underway downtown housing, a new UConn branch, bus and train transit, plus a longstanding riverfront revival program that should help its economic growth. It is one of four cities awarded a share of $30 million by CTNext to create high-tech innovation hubs.

It just needs, somehow, to bridge the budget gap.

This is not a drill. Hartford may once have been the richest little city in the country a comment attributed to the renowned novelist Henry James but it is no longer.

The Jan. 9 city council agenda had a proposed resolution urging the city to buy a re-usable tree for Christmas presentation and cease purchasing poinsettias and/or other plants to decorate city hall until the city is financially able to do so.

It has come to that.

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For Hartford, bankruptcy not an easy way out - The CT Mirror

Retailer BCBG Unveils Going-Concern Bankruptcy Sales – Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Retailer BCBG Unveils Going-Concern Bankruptcy Sales
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Women's clothing retailer BCBG Max Azria Group LLC announced bankruptcy deals worth $165 million to sell off its core businesses, which would live on as a going concern. Marty Staff, BCBG's interim acting chief executive officer, said the proposed ...

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Retailer BCBG Unveils Going-Concern Bankruptcy Sales - Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Abengoa Bankruptcy Liquidation Plan Confirmed – Bankrupt Company News (press release) (blog)

The U.S. Bankruptcy Court confirmed Abengoa Bioenergy US Holdings Third Amended Joint Plans of Liquidation.

As previously reported, The Plan as currently proposed, including the proposed treatment of the MRA Guarantee Claims, is premised on substantive consolidation and provides Bioenergy General Unsecured Creditors with a substantially higher recovery than they could otherwise expect to receive. The most important consideration for the Holders of the MRA Guarantee Claims was that their entitlement to the $32.5 million.

In addition, The proposed settlement allows the Plan Proponents to avoid costly, time consuming, and potentially uncertain litigation, whereby if unsuccessful certain creditors would receive no recovery in 2017 and little, if any recovery in 2018, or even later if the parties engage in protracted litigation. As reflected in the Liquidation Analysiswithout the proposed settlement of the MRA Guarantee Claims, most of the available proceeds for distribution to Holders of Bioenergy General Unsecured Claims would have been distributed to the Holders of MRA Guarantee Claims, leaving Holders of Bioenergy General Unsecured Claims with a small fraction of their projected recovery under the Plan as proposed.

The order states, Pursuant to section 1123 of the Bankruptcy Code and Bankruptcy Rule 9019, the Cofides Settlement is an integrated compromise and settlement of numerous issues and disputes designed to achieve a beneficial and efficient resolution of these Chapter 11 Cases for all parties in interest. The Court finds that the relief sought in the Cofides Settlement Motion is an exercise of sound business judgment, and is in the best interests of the Debtors, the Debtors estates, creditors, and all parties in interest, and that the legal and factual bases set forth in the Cofides Settlement Motion establish just cause for the relief granted herein, and that the Cofides Settlement Motion satisfies rules 2002 and 9019 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.

This renewable energy plant operator filed for Chapter 11 protection on February 24, 2016, listing $648 million in pre-petition assets.

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Abengoa Bankruptcy Liquidation Plan Confirmed - Bankrupt Company News (press release) (blog)

Creditors seek to force bankruptcy of Tinley Park firm – Chicago Tribune

Creditors of a Tinley Park real estate brokerage who claim they are owed hundreds of thousands of dollars are trying to force the firm into bankruptcy.

Oak Park Avenue Realty Ltd. is an affiliate of Mack Industries, also based in Tinley Park, which filed for Chapter 11 restructuring in late March. Oak Park Avenue wasn't included in that bankruptcy filing.

Mack Industries built its business purchasing homes that had been foreclosed on, fixed them up and then found renters for them. Homes were also sold to investors, and Mack in turn would guarantee them a steady income stream by finding renters.

Owners of the homes are owed at least $433,000 by Oak Park in unpaid rents and security deposits collected by the firm from renters, according attorney Brian Jackiw, who is representing them in the petition, filed May 31, seeking involuntary Chapter 11 for the company.

Locally, one creditor, from Orland Park, is owed $153,000, and other property owners are from Frankfort and New Lenox as well as states, including California, Colorado and Virginia. Jackiw said he is being contacted by other property owners who may join the case.

A call left for Oak Park seeking comment was not immediately returned.

Forcing the company into bankruptcy could result in assets being identified that could be sold off to repay Oak Park's creditors, Jackiw said.

He said the investors he so far represents own, collectively, about 125 properties, mainly single-family homes.

Are the amounts as far as unpaid rents owed cover a specific time period?

Jackiw said some of the creditors are owed two months' rent and some are owed for four months. He said Oak Park would generally send property owners monthly account statements showing information, such as how much rent was collected and what management fees were charged by the company, but that, in most instances, Oak Park stopped sending out those reports about two months ago.

In connection with Mack Industries' bankruptcy, allegations of fraudulent financial transactions have been aired against Mack and its founder and chief executive, James K. "Mack" McClelland, who is an owner of Oak Park Avenue Realty.

American Residential Leasing, the largest unsecured creditor in the case, had asked the court to name a receiver a request since approved by the judge to oversee Mack's operations, alleging there have been "several million dollars' worth of potentially fraudulent" fund transfers and distributions among Mack insiders and affiliated companies.

Separately, lender Colony American Finance sued McClelland individually, alleging he owes more than $19 million to the company for defaulting on a December 2015 loan agreement, the proceeds of which were used to buy and rehab properties. In its complaint, filed just weeks after Mack Industries' Chapter 11 filing, Colony American states $9.8 million was advanced to McClelland for rehab work and alleges that some of that money was "misappropriated, misapplied and converted" for other uses.

The trustee in the Mack bankruptcy case recently won court approval to hire a forensic accountant who spent years as an FBI special agent investigating money laundering and fraud schemes.

In explaining in a court filing the need to bring on someone with specialized skills, the trustee noted a "complex history of opaque financial and business dealings" among Mack, its numerous subsidiaries and company principals.

mnolan@tribpub.com

Twitter @mnolan_J

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Creditors seek to force bankruptcy of Tinley Park firm - Chicago Tribune

Vikki Lindemuth favors appointment of trustee to handle husband’s bankruptcy – Topeka Capital Journal

Saying her husband, Kent Lindemuth, had interfered with attempts to sell properties to help resolve the Lindemuth bankruptcy case, Vikki Lindemuth supports a federal judges appointment of a trustee to direct his part of the couples bankruptcy.

Appointment of a Chapter 11 trustee to take control of Kent Lindemuths interests will stop Kent from disrupting the debtors business operations, Vikki Lindemuth said in a response to U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert Bergers preference to appoint the trustee.

Berger gave the parties 20 days to respond to the plan to appoint a trustee. He issued the decision May 25 rather than ordering liquidation to repay debts.

Berger also has issued an order granting Vikki Lindemuths motion to sever the couples joint bankruptcy case. The Lindemuths are in the middle of a divorce.

Kent Lindemuth hasnt responded to the judges plan to appoint a trustee for him. His wife, however, said appointing a trustee on his behalf will restore and preserve the confidence of the debtors creditors, vendors, lessees, potential lessees and others that the reorganized debtors will be able to meet their continuing obligations under their respective plans.

As part of the Lindemuths bankruptcy reorganization plan, James B. Lloyd, who has power of attorney, has managed the debtors businesses based on the bankruptcy reorganization plans.

But Kent Lindemuth has progressively undermined Lloyds authority by representing to the debtors vendors, lessees, potential lessees, and others that he is in control of the debtors businesses and properties, Vikki Lindemuth wrote in support of appointing a trustee.

Vikki Lindemuth contends six automotive and moving and storage businesses owned by Kent Lindemuth havent paid all the rent owed on the Lindemuth property they occupy ostensibly because they didnt have sufficient income. The rent shortfalls have caused the debtors to default on some real estate taxes, Vikki Lindemuth said.

However, income from two of the moving and storage businesses was more than enough to make their rent payments, Vikki Lindemuth said.

She also contended Kent Lindemuth has actively interfered with Lloyds attempts to market and sell some properties to reduce past taxes owed, debt and preserve the debtors remaining assets.

Kent Lindemuths pending federal criminal charges have been widely publicized, and have caused great consternation among the debtors creditors, vendors, lessees, potential lessees, and everyone else who is or may become involved with the debtors business operations, Vikki Lindemuth wrote.

Some current lessees are questioning whether to extend their leases, and the Lindemuths have lost opportunities to lease some property, Vikki Lindemuth said.

Berger scheduled June 22 as the date he would appoint a Chapter 11 supervisory trustee for Kent Lindemuth.

Kent Lindemuth is charged with 107 counts of bankruptcy fraud, six counts of money laundering, two counts of receipt of firearms, and one count each of perjury and receipt of ammunition.

Lindemuth, 65, is scheduled to face trial beginning Sept. 12 before U.S. District Judge Daniel Crabtree in Topeka.

Contact reporter Steve Fry at (785) 295-1206 or @TCJCourtsNCrime on Twitter.

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Vikki Lindemuth favors appointment of trustee to handle husband's bankruptcy - Topeka Capital Journal

Bankruptcy fraud earns Pepperell man 18 months | Boston Herald – Boston Herald

A Pepperell man who hid up to $4 million from bankruptcy court, then fled to Canada on a rented snowmobile as the law closed in on him, was sentenced to 18 months in prison yesterday.

Cyril Gordon Lunn, 69, appeared in U.S. District Court in Worcester, where Judge Timothy Hillman imposed the sentence.

Authorities said Lunn, a Canadian citizen, ran a real estate and construction business from 1985 until 2001 and in that time squirreled away between $3 million and $4 million in cash that he kept in safe deposit boxes. When Lunn declared bankruptcy in 2001, he failed to tell authorities about the cash.

The scheme unraveled in 2004 when he testified about transferring the money in a Canadian civil suit.

On March 30, 2005, Lunn failed to check in with federal probation officers. Investigators discovered that two days prior to that scheduled check-in, Lunn had left the Caza Manor Motel in Ayer where he was living.

Then, cops in Presque Isle, Maine, were called by the owner of the Sled Shop.

An individual who identified himself as Cyril Lunn had failed to return a snowmobile, snowmobile suit that had been rented on March 28, according to an ICE report on file at U.S. District Court in Worcester. The rental agent was concerned that Lunn, who appeared to be snowmobiling alone, may have been involved in an accident or fallen through some ice.

Using cash, Lunn had paid $205 to rent the 2002 Ski Doo, snowsuit and helmet, another $500 to cover the deposit, and he bought a $36 pair of gloves. Before he left, Lunn asked the shops owner for directions to the border trail, the report states.

Agents later discovered that on March 28, 2005, Lunn had rented a snowmobile on Presque Isle, ME and illegally entered Canada without inspection via a remote snowmobile trail, the report states.

Royal Canadian Mounted Police recovered the snowmobile, and helmet, on March 31, 2005, in Perth, New Brunswick. It was in good working order and was returned to the shop.

Canadian authorities said the U.S. requested Lunns extradition to face charges of bankruptcy fraud in November 2012. In 2014 the court issued an arrest warrant. Lunn was arrested in New Minas, Nova Scotia, but was granted bail and fought his extradition through the Canadian court system. He lost and was returned to Worcester in July 2016.

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Bankruptcy fraud earns Pepperell man 18 months | Boston Herald - Boston Herald

Curtains for the Pearl, as the Theater Company Files for Bankruptcy – New York Times


New York Times
Curtains for the Pearl, as the Theater Company Files for Bankruptcy
New York Times
The Pearl Theater Company, which took the old-fashioned approach of assembling a resident acting company to mount classic plays in increasingly expensive spaces in Manhattan, announced Wednesday that it had filed for bankruptcy and was closing after ...

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Curtains for the Pearl, as the Theater Company Files for Bankruptcy - New York Times

ISH to emerge from bankruptcy as Seacor subsidiary – WorkBoat (blog)

International Shipholding Corp. (ISH) expects to emerge from bankruptcy as a Seacor Holdings Inc. subsidiary by July 3.

ISH said it has received the OKs from the U.S. Maritime Administration required under its reorganization plan.

This has been a long and challenging process, said ISH CEO Erik Johnsen, noting his company would exit Chapter 11 as a stable, well-capitalized business with a bright future.

The combination of ISHs longstanding history of excellent customer service and Seacors financial resources will ensure continued growth and success at ISH, said Eric Fabrikant, chief operating officer of Seacor, which just spun off Houma, La.-based Seacor Marine Holdings Inc., its OSV fleet trading under SMHI.

ISHs restructuring includes the issuance of new equity to Fort Lauderdale, Fla.-based Seacor in exchange for $10.5 million cash and the conversion of $18.1 million in outstanding debtor-in-possession financing claims to equity. In addition, theres $25 million in a new senior debt exit facility, much of which will be used to satisfy creditor claims, and the sale of its pure car/truck carriers to NYK Group Americas Inc.

New Orleans-based ISH, founded in 1947 as Central Gulf Steamship Corp., filed for bankruptcy protection Aug. 1, 2016 after trying to shed assets and negotiate with lenders. The company, which operated 21 U.S. and foreign-flag vessels, listed assets of $305.1 million and total debts of $226.8 million.

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ISH to emerge from bankruptcy as Seacor subsidiary - WorkBoat (blog)