Diamondhead Casino Corporation
Case Number:
1:24-bk-11354
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Court:
Nature of Suit:
Firms
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November 03, 2025
Diamondhead Trustee Gets OK For Jan. Real Estate Sale
A Delaware bankruptcy judge on Monday gave the trustee overseeing the Chapter 7 of casino developer Diamondhead Casino Corp. the go-ahead to put the vacant proposed casino site on the auction block in January.
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October 31, 2025
What's Happening In Bankruptcy Court This Coming Week
Eletson holdings will seek approval of a joint motion for sanction, a Delaware bankruptcy judge will consider letting Mountain Sports take plan votes and a New York City nightclub will vie for disclosure approval from the same Delaware judge.
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October 30, 2025
Under The Radar: Bankruptcy News You May Have Missed
A trustee overseeing equity assets from Rite Aid's last Chapter 11 urged a New Jersey bankruptcy judge to let him wind the trust down. Diamondhead Casino's president and Chapter 7 trustee fought over a meeting notice. And cheese maker Rizo-Lopez Foods asked to transition its Chapter 11 proceedings into a Chapter 7 case.
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July 31, 2025
Casino Developer Must Stay In Involuntary Ch. 7, Judge Finds
A Delaware bankruptcy judge has refused to throw out or convert the involuntary Chapter 7 proceedings launched against the onetime hopeful developer of a casino in Mississippi, concluding the creditors that forced it into bankruptcy did not act in bad faith.
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March 05, 2025
Diamondhead Casino Creditors Say Ch. 7 Is Only Path
A group of creditors that forced casino developer Diamondhead Casino into a Delaware Chapter 7 case said in a post-trial brief the proceeding should stay in place because it is the best chance for all creditors to receive recoveries on their claims against the debtor, which has been unable to monetize its assets for years.
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January 16, 2025
Creditors Push For Mississippi Casino Developer Ch. 7
Creditors for developer Diamondhead Casino Corp., which has been trying for years to build a casino in Mississippi near the Gulf Coast, pressed a Delaware bankruptcy judge to liquidate the company, saying it's the "fairest and the most equitable" way to collect the $2.4 million they are owed.