Bankruptcy

  • March 01, 2024

    McCarter & English Denied $1M Fee Bid In Celsius Ch. 11

    A New York bankruptcy judge has granted requests by a number of creditor groups in the Celsius Network Chapter 11 case for fees and expenses but denied a $1 million request by a borrower group represented by McCarter & English, saying it had failed to make a substantial contribution to the case.

  • March 01, 2024

    Fintech Co. Vesttoo's Ch. 11 Plan OK'd After Dissent Defused

    A Delaware bankruptcy judge has approved the Chapter 11 liquidation plan proposed by the official committee of unsecured creditors to bankrupt Israeli fintech firm Vesttoo Ltd., after the committee sorted out a final objection to the plan.

  • March 01, 2024

    MediaMath Floats Ch. 11 Dismissal After $22M Sale Of Assets

    Bankrupt adtech company MediaMath Holdings Inc. asked a Delaware bankruptcy judge to end its Chapter 11 case and allow it to dissolve, because it's sold off basically all it had for $22 million and there's nothing left to reorganize.

  • March 01, 2024

    Amazon Seller Can Tap DIP Funds, Aims For Quick Ch. 11

    A New Jersey bankruptcy judge allowed Amazon aggregator Thrasio Holdings Inc. to tap into $35 million of its $360 million post-petition financing package on Friday, over objections from a bankruptcy watchdog, and approved other measures that will allow the third-party seller to continue hawking pillows, cocktail shakers, hiking poles and hundreds of other goods online through its Chapter 11 case.

  • March 01, 2024

    Conn. AG Tells Lawmakers To Ban MV Realty's 'Scam Deals'

    Connecticut's attorney general urged state lawmakers to protect vulnerable homeowners by passing legislation banning a business model used by MV Realty to rack up thousands in junk fees on people who sign their 40-year exclusive listing agreements.

  • March 01, 2024

    Trustee's Office Goes After More Jackson Walker Fees In Texas

    As fallout over the Judge David R. Jones case continues, the U.S. Trustee's Office has filed a flurry of new motions in multiple bankruptcy cases, seeking to claw back fees paid to Jackson Walker LLP and, in at least one case, to reopen proceedings. 

  • March 01, 2024

    Bankruptcy Group Of The Year: Davis Polk

    Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP helped Revlon, Party City and LATAM Airlines get their bankruptcy cases over the finish line while moving Purdue Pharma through the appeals of its Chapter 11 plan, landing the firm a spot among Law360's Bankruptcy Practice Groups of the Year.

  • February 29, 2024

    Lordstown To Pay $25M In SEC Probe Of Overhyped EVs

    Bankrupt automaker Lordstown Motors Corp. has agreed to return $25.5 million to shareholders who were allegedly drawn in by false assurances that the company had secured tens of thousands of pre-orders for electric trucks that it didn't even have the parts to build, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission announced Thursday.

  • February 29, 2024

    Stolen Funds Render FTX Clawback Moot, Embed Parties Say

    Parties associated with stock trading platform Embed Financial Technologies told a Delaware bankruptcy judge Thursday that defunct cryptocurrency exchange FTX Trading Ltd. can't claw back $240 million from a prepetition acquisition because the funds used to buy Embed were stolen from FTX customers.

  • February 29, 2024

    US Trustee Opposes Proterra Ch. 11 Plan's Future Exculpation

    The Office of the U.S. Trustee objected Thursday to the Chapter 11 plan of electric bus maker Proterra Inc., saying it includes exculpation provisions that would cover actions after it emerges from bankruptcy, and interferes with the payment of required quarterly fees to the trustee's office.

  • February 29, 2024

    Yellow Corp. Gets Ch. 11 Control Extended To End Of July

    Bankrupt Yellow Freight Corp. has secured an extra 90 days to hold onto the wheel of its Chapter 11 case in Delaware, after citing both the complexity of its case and the "tremendous" progress in selling off its assets.

  • February 29, 2024

    Amazon Seller Thrasio Seeks $360M DIP Facility In Ch. 11

    Thrasio Holdings Inc., which aggregates third-party brands for sale on Amazon, has urged a New Jersey bankruptcy court to sign off on an agreement the company struck with lenders to finance the consumer goods business' Chapter 11 case to the tune of $360 million.

  • February 29, 2024

    Celsius Floats Fix For Customers' 'Devastating' Ballot Blunder

    Hundreds of Celsius Network customers who mistakenly elected to receive a reduced payout for their cryptocurrency claims would get a chance to correct their "devastating" error under a plan filed by the crypto company in New York bankruptcy court.

  • March 01, 2024

    Inside BigLaw's 'Tremendous' Hunger For Restructuring Attys

    Even as the economy appears poised to pick up steam in 2024, BigLaw firms are still aggressively adding restructuring capabilities, with a number of recent lateral hires reflecting the glut of work still to be found in the practice area.

  • February 29, 2024

    Bankruptcy Group Of The Year: Brown Rudnick

    The bankruptcy department at Brown Rudnick LLP has coalesced into a powerful team able to fight for the rights of commercial and tort creditors in large Chapter 11 cases, including securing the dismissal of insolvency cases for Johnson & Johnson's talc unit — twice — and forging a resolution for the sprawling case of cryptocurrency player BlockFi Inc., earning it a spot among Law360's 2023 Bankruptcy Groups of the Year.

  • February 29, 2024

    Bankrupt Endo To Pay $465M To Resolve Opioid Claims

    Drugmaker Endo International has agreed to pay as much as $465 million to resolve criminal and civil claims stemming from its sale and marketing of a powerful opioid, and will turn over its assets to a group of secured lenders who will operate the company under a new corporate structure.

  • February 28, 2024

    Fla. Judge OKs $43.5M Deutsche Bank Deal In Ch. 15 Case

    A Florida bankruptcy judge on Wednesday approved a $43.5 million settlement between Deutsche Bank AG and liquidators for a group of Caribbean-based companies to resolve claims against the bank for its alleged role in a real estate Ponzi scheme targeting rich South Americans.

  • February 28, 2024

    Gemini To Pay $37M Fine, Vows To Make Customers Whole

    Crypto exchange Gemini Trust Co. has committed to making users of its now-shuttered Earn product whole through the bankruptcy of its former partner Genesis Global under a new settlement with a New York regulator that included a $37 million fine for additional alleged compliance failures.

  • February 28, 2024

    Kwok Trustee Seeks Second Judge's Help With Clawbacks

    Offering four high-profile bankruptcies as examples, the Chapter 11 trustee overseeing the $374 million case of Chinese exile Ho Wan Kwok has suggested that a second Connecticut bankruptcy judge could act as a mediator to help speed a deluge of 278 avoidance actions efficiently toward possible settlements.

  • February 28, 2024

    NY Bar Assoc. Building Owner Hits Ch. 11 Amid Lender Tiff

    The company that controls the historic New York County Lawyers Association Building in Manhattan petitioned a New Jersey bankruptcy court for Chapter 11 protection Wednesday, estimating between $50 million and $100 million in debt, as it faces in New York a roughly $28 million lawsuit leveled by a mortgage lender.

  • February 28, 2024

    Brazilian Airline Approved For Ch. 11 Loan Worth $1B

    GOL Linhas Aereas Inteligentes SA received final bankruptcy court approval Wednesday for a debtor-in-possession financing package that has grown to $1 billion after achieving consensus with creditors that previously objected to the package.

  • February 28, 2024

    Bankrupt Coffee Co. Says Nicaraguan Asset Sale Unlikely

    Coffee supplier Mercon Coffee Corp. Wednesday told a New York bankruptcy judge it no longer believes it will be able to win government cooperation for the sale of its Nicaraguan assets before it runs out of cash to fund its Chapter 11 case.

  • February 28, 2024

    Homeowners Urge Judge To Toss 'Tactical' MV Realty Ch. 11

    A committee of homeowners who signed agreements with MV Realty told a Florida bankruptcy judge on Tuesday that the company filed for Chapter 11 as a maneuver to dodge a series of state actions seeking to void predatory deals with some 40,000 homeowners in 34 states.

  • February 28, 2024

    Erika Girardi Can't Shed Costume Merchant's Suit

    A California federal judge has kept alive a costume merchant's malicious prosecution claim against singer and reality TV star Erika Girardi, saying the merchant showed evidence that Girardi had him wrongfully arrested and prosecuted on made-up fraud charges.

  • February 28, 2024

    US Trustee Taps Ex-Prosecutor To Be FTX Examiner

    The U.S. Trustee's Office has urged a Delaware bankruptcy judge to allow Robert Cleary, a former U.S. attorney who is now with Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler LLP, to investigate FTX's finances as an examiner in the defunct cryptocurrency company's Chapter 11 case.

Expert Analysis

  • Insurers, Prepare For Large Exposures From PFAS Claims

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    With thousands of lawsuits concerning per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances pending across the country, several large settlements already reached, and both regulators and the plaintiffs bar increasingly focusing on PFAS, it is becoming clear that these "forever chemicals" present major exposures to insurers and their policyholders, say Scott Seaman and Jennifer Arnold at Hinshaw.

  • Series

    The Pop Culture Docket: Judge Elrod On 'Jury Duty'

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    Though the mockumentary series “Jury Duty” features purposely outrageous characters, it offers a solemn lesson about the simple but brilliant design of the right to trial by jury, with an unwitting protagonist who even John Adams may have welcomed as an impartial foreperson, says Fifth Circuit Judge Jennifer Elrod.

  • 4 Business-Building Strategies For Introvert Attorneys

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    Introverted lawyers can build client bases to rival their extroverted peers’ by adapting time-tested strategies for business development that can work for any personality — such as claiming a niche, networking for maximum impact, drawing on existing contacts and more, says Ronald Levine at Herrick Feinstein.

  • Opinion

    3 Ways Justices' Disclosure Defenses Miss The Ethical Point

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    The rule-bound interpretation of financial disclosures preferred by U.S. Supreme Court Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas — demonstrated in their respective statements defending their failure to disclose gifts from billionaires — show that they do not understand the ethical aspects of the public's concern, says Jim Moliterno at the Washington and Lee University School of Law.

  • Subchapter V Eligibility Ruling Raises Uncertainty For Tenants

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    A Virginia bankruptcy court’s recent ruling in Macedon Consulting — that all remaining rent under a lease should be factored into a lessee's Subchapter V eligibility — raises the question, but does not address, how a court should calculate the amount of debt owed under a lease, creating significant risk for potential tenant debtors, says Sam Ashuraey at Ashuraey Law.

  • Ch. 11 Ruling Sets New Standard For Using Reinstatement

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    A New York bankruptcy court’s recent ruling in Golden Seahorse, which concluded that Section 365(b)(2)(D) of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code only creates a cure exception for nonmonetary defaults, sets a high bar for challenging the requirement to pay default interest as a condition to reinstatement of a loan agreement under a Chapter 11 plan, says Debra Dandeneau at Baker McKenzie.

  • Caregiver Flexibility Is Crucial For Atty Engagement, Retention

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    As the battle for top talent continues post-pandemic, many firms are attempting to attract employees with progressive hybrid working environments — and supporting caregivers before, during and after an extended leave is a critically important way to retain top talent, says Manar Morales at The Diversity & Flexibility Alliance.

  • How A Union Fight Played A Key Role In Yellow's Bankruptcy

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    Finger-pointing between company and union representatives appears to be front and center at the early stages of trucking company Yellow’s bankruptcy case, highlighting the failed contract negotiations' role in the company's demise, says George Singer at Holland & Hart.

  • The FTC May Be Expanding Its Monetary Relief Toolbox

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    The Federal Trade Commission's recent settlement with crypto exchange Celsius — which resolved a Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act pretexting count — reveals an attempt to significantly expand the FTC's authority to obtain monetary relief in ordinary matters regarding unfair or deceptive acts or practices, says Nikhil Singhvi at Covington.

  • Bankruptcy Ruling Shows Section 363's Magic Has Its Limits

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    The Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel's recent ruling in Groves demonstrates that Section 363 — which allows a debtor-in-possession to sell their property in order to generate cash — fails as a tool when it’s used to turn a nondebtor entities' property into property of a debtor's bankruptcy estate, says Brian Shaw at Cozen O'Connor.

  • Serta Simmons Ch. 11 Expands Split On Credit Agreements

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    The recent confirmation of Serta Simmons' Chapter 11 plan by a Texas bankruptcy court judge furthers a split in case law between narrow interpretation of credit agreement provisions and a more holistic approach focused on the practical effect of the uptiering transaction on minority lender rights, say attorneys at Schulte Roth.

  • How High Court Is Assessing Tribal Law Questions

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's four rulings on tribal issues from this term show that Justice Neil Gorsuch's extensive experience in federal Native American law brings helpful experience to the court but does not necessarily guarantee favorable outcomes for tribal interests, say attorneys at Dorsey & Whitney.

  • In-Office Engagement Is Essential To Associate Development

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    As law firms develop return-to-office policies that allow hybrid work arrangements, they should incorporate the specific types of in-person engagement likely to help associates develop attributes common among successful firm leaders, says Liisa Thomas at Sheppard Mullin.

  • Shifts In The CRE Landscape Demand Creative Loan Solutions

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    An increase in commercial real estate loan workouts makes it critical for borrowers, lenders and other CRE participants to examine all the available options and remedies, including mortgage and mezzanine foreclosures, bankruptcy filings and property short sales, say attorneys at Goulston & Storrs.

  • Perspectives

    A Judge's Pitch To Revive The Jury Trial

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    Ohio state Judge Pierre Bergeron explains how the decline of the jury trial threatens public confidence in the judiciary and even democracy as a whole, and he offers ideas to restore this sacred right.

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