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4:26-bk-90399
Texas Southern
A one-time Jackson Walker LLP sought to exit a lawsuit asserting she, a former Texas bankruptcy judge and law firms fomented "mass corruption," textile developer Lycra confirmed its restructuring plan, and a police union received approval to modify its Chapter 11 stay to appeal a state court judgment.
Textile developer Lycra received confirmed Thursday from a Texas bankruptcy judge for its restructuring plan, which calls for erasing $1.2 billion of debt from its balance sheet, capping a quick trip through Chapter 11.
Textile developer The Lycra Co. LLC urged a Texas bankruptcy judge to confirm its Chapter 11 plan, saying it recently reached a deal with a subset of creditors to support the plan cutting $1.2 billion from its balance sheet.
A New York bankruptcy judge will weigh a German dating service's bid for Chapter 15 recognition, US Magnesium will undergo an omnibus hearing, Lycra will seek plan confirmation, and a judge will oversee Ascend Elements' second-day Chapter 11 hearing.
A team of attorneys from Porter Hedges LLP and Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP is representing an ad hoc lender group with a total claim of about $790 million in the Chapter 11 bankruptcy of spandex manufacturer The Lycra Co. LLC.
Fiber manufacturer The Lycra Co. has recruited an experienced team of bankruptcy attorneys from Linklaters LLP and Haynes Boone to guide it through a prearranged Chapter 11 restructuring.
The maker of spandex is looking to swap its debt for equity in Chapter 11, a longtime book distributor plans to finish winding down operations while its bankruptcy keeps an automatic stay on litigation, and a microbiome treatment developer wants to sell its assets in bankruptcy.
Label maker Multi-Color's Chapter 11 case will stay in New Jersey, Spandex maker Lycra hit Chapter 11 in Texas, and Jackson Walker can pay clients demanding refunds over a relationship between a former firm attorney and a bankruptcy judge. This is the week in bankruptcy.
A Texas bankruptcy judge Tuesday agreed to give interim approval for fiber manufacturer The Lycra Company LLC to tap into $50 million of its $75 million in debtor-in-possession financing as the company moves toward a quick debt restructuring.