Mid Cap
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June 17, 2025
Pa. Landlord Says Kohl's Can't Skirt Lease, Shield Profits
The owner of a Pottstown, Pennsylvania, mall has accused Kohl's of attempting to unilaterally terminate its lease and duck payment obligations while liquidating merchandise to which the landlord was entitled, according to a lawsuit filed in federal court.
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June 17, 2025
Catching Up With New Bankruptcy Case Action
Tariff-related uncertainty led home furnishing retailer At Home Group Inc. and automotive parts manufacturer Marelli Corp. to file for bankruptcy, Florida-based Contour Spa cited rapid expansion as a key reason for its financial downfall, and a firm behind a major hospital redevelopment project in Detroit filed for Chapter 11 after failing to meet its commitments to the city.
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June 17, 2025
Judge OKs Deal To End LeClairRyan Founder Tax Claims
A Virginia bankruptcy judge Tuesday approved a settlement striking LeClairRyan PLLC founder Gary LeClair from the list of owners of the defunct firm, relieving him of responsibility for a share of the firm's nearly $21 million in tax liabilities.
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June 17, 2025
Hooters Can Seek Ch. 11 Plan Votes Following Creditor Deal
A Texas bankruptcy judge determined Tuesday that Hooters of America may solicit votes on its Chapter 11 plan after the troubled casual dining chain reached an agreement with its unsecured creditors committee, overruling objections lodged by the U.S. Trustee's Office.
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June 17, 2025
BowFlex Recall Burdens Buyers Of 3.7M Dumbbells, Suit Says
A BowFlex buyer is suing the brand's new owner in California federal court, alleging that a recall of defective adjustable dumbbells wrongly leaves out the vast majority of the product's buyers, covering only about 100,000 of the 3.8 million products sold.
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June 16, 2025
Stoli USA Gets Initial Approval To Keep Using Lender Cash
The U.S. arm of vodka giant Stoli Group and lender Fifth Third Bank reached an agreement Monday to let the company make a $400,000 payment to keep product shipments on track, with a Texas bankruptcy judge saying he would consider additional relief at a hearing set for Tuesday.
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June 16, 2025
SilverRock Lenders Say $60M Ch. 11 Baseline Bid Too Low
Secured lenders of resort construction firm SilverRock Development Corporation have objected to the debtor's proposed designation of a stalking-horse bid, telling a Delaware bankruptcy court on Monday the $60 million offer is far below the asserted value of the company's real estate assets.
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June 16, 2025
Burgess Biopower Gets OK For Ch. 11 Debt-Equity Swap
A Delaware bankruptcy judge on Monday approved the Chapter 11 debt-equity-swap reorganization of New Hampshire power plant operator Burgess BioPower.
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June 16, 2025
23andMe Names New Buyer, Pa. Retirees Sue Over Ch. 9 Sale
Retired employees of a Philadelphia suburb filed a lawsuit to open the sale of municipal water systems to private operators in Chester, Pennsylvania's Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcy. 23andMe said it selected a nonprofit created by its co-founder to buy the consumer genetic testing company's assets, replacing a pharmaceutical developer that won a Chapter 11 auction. And Jackson Walker, one of its former attorneys and a former bankruptcy judge are facing a proposed class action, the latest fallout from a 2023 ethics scandal in Texas.
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June 16, 2025
Angeion Group Expands, Rebrands Its Bankruptcy Services
Philadelphia-based litigation support company Angeion Group, which provides legal administration and group litigation support services, announced Monday the hiring of two new executive vice presidents for its bankruptcy services division.
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June 16, 2025
Aztec Fund Gets OK To Wind Down Business In Ch. 11
A Texas bankruptcy judge has approved private equity investment group Aztec Fund's Chapter 11 liquidation plan, letting the debtor wind down its business after agreeing to sell three office buildings to settle a dispute with Bank of America.
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June 13, 2025
Real Estate Recap: Builders' Hack, Korean Mezz, Hotel Angst
Catch up on this past week's key developments by state from Law360 Real Estate Authority — including an inside look at California's Builder's Remedy, aggressive moves by South Korean mezzanine lenders, and why one BigLaw hospitality leader says hotels are "scared to death."
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June 13, 2025
23andMe Founder's $305M Bid Buys Back Co. In Ch. 11 Sale
With a winning bid of $305 million, a nonprofit controlled by 23andMe founder Anne Wojcicki beat out Regeneron Pharmaceuticals to purchase the bankrupt company's assets, 23andMe announced Friday.
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June 13, 2025
Manhattan Private School Plans Ch. 7 After Loan Impasse
Counsel for a Manhattan private school told a New York bankruptcy it is planning to convert its case into a Chapter 7 liquidation after it was unable to reach a deal with its secured lender on Chapter 11 financing.
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June 13, 2025
ENGlobal OK'd For Ch. 11 Sale And Wind Down Plan
Engineering firm ENGlobal Corp. on Friday confirmed a Chapter 11 plan to wind down following the sale of its business just over three months after it filed for bankruptcy in Texas.
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June 13, 2025
What's Happening In Bankruptcy Court This Coming Week
Vodka company Stoli Group and pharmaceutical giant Purdue are both headed to court to make the case for their bankruptcy plan disclosure statements, New Hampshire power plant operator Burgess BioPower will try to get its Chapter 11 plan confirmed, and trucking company Yellow Corp. is facing a bid to send it to liquidation.
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June 13, 2025
Edgio's Ch. 11 Plan Confirmed After Consensus Reached
A Delaware bankruptcy judge on Friday approved digital content delivery company Edgio Inc.'s Chapter 11 reorganization plan following a consensual agreement between the debtor, the unsecured creditors committee and prepetition lender Lynrock Lake Master Fund LP.
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June 13, 2025
The Supreme Court's Week: By The Numbers
The U.S. Supreme Court issued six decisions this week, with the justices finding unanimity in four, including ones involving the threshold disabled students must meet in disability discrimination cases against public schools and another over whether the government can escape a Federal Tort Claims Act suit sparked by a mistaken FBI raid. Here, Law360 Pulse takes a data-driven dive into the week that was at the U.S. Supreme Court.
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June 13, 2025
Jackson Walker, Ex-Judge Facing Class Action Over Romance
A former bankruptcy judge and Jackson Walker LLP have been hit with another lawsuit over the judge's secret romance with a former firm partner, this time a proposed class action from a group of bondholders of financial company GWG Holdings Inc.
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June 13, 2025
Heritage Coal Secures $21.6M Asset Bid In Ch. 11
Bankrupt mining operation Heritage Coal completed a Chapter 11 auction for its assets late Thursday, with a $21.6 million joint bid emerging as the highest and best offer, according to court filings.
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June 13, 2025
Chili's Worker Says Bankruptcy Does Not Doom Wage Suit
A former Chili's employee's wage and hour lawsuit against the chain's parent company should stay in play, the worker told a California federal court, saying his failure to list the case in his individual bankruptcy proceedings does not mean his case has to be thrown out.
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June 12, 2025
Fla. Doc Sues In Del. Alleging Multistate Group Conspiracy
A Florida doctor and emergency room companies serving departments in Texas, Florida and Oklahoma have sued multiple entities in Delaware's Court of Chancery allegedly involved in an elaborate private equity-tied scheme to duck bans on the corporate practice of medicine.
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June 12, 2025
23andMe Ombudsman Not Confident Sale Is Lawful
The privacy expert probing 23andMe's proposed sale of customers' genetic data in bankruptcy told a Missouri federal judge Wednesday that he couldn't determine the deal wouldn't violate state privacy laws and recommended the company be required to obtain consent from its customers before handing over the data.
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June 12, 2025
Ch. 11 Creditors Seek Sanctions In $57M Conn. Mortgage Feud
An unsecured-creditor committee has asked a Connecticut federal bankruptcy judge to sanction a successor to an entity that lent $57 million to the bankrupt real estate and building companies behind a luxury Newtown apartment complex, saying the successor hasn't provided details about the mortgage or several reserves earmarked within it.
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June 12, 2025
3rd Circ. Will Reconsider Shipbuilder's Ch. 11 Reopening Bid
The Third Circuit said Thursday that it will reconsider whether to reopen Congoleum Corp.'s 2003 Chapter 11 bankruptcy so the bankruptcy court, not a district court, can say whether Congoleum affiliate Bath Iron Works should share liability for cleaning up a polluted New Jersey river.
Expert Analysis
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Avoiding Retail Bankruptcy As Economic Uncertainty Persists
Amid record retail bankruptcies and continued economic uncertainty in 2024, retailers can take specific steps like building stronger cash-flow models, managing inventory wisely and reassessing cost structures to avoid financial distress, say consultants at BRG.
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Banking Compliance Takeaways From Joint Agency Statement
Federal bank regulatory agencies’ recent joint statement warning of risks associated with third-party fintech deposit services spotlights a fundamental problem that may arise with bank deposit products that are made through increasingly complex customer relationships, says Tom Witherspoon at Stinson.
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Litigation Funding Disclosure Key To Open, Impartial Process
Blanket investor and funding agreement disclosures should be required in all civil cases where the investor has a financial interest in the outcome in order to address issues ranging from potential conflicts of interest to national security concerns, says Bob Goodlatte, former U.S. House Representative for Virginia.
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Law Firms Should Move From Reactive To Proactive Marketing
Most law firm marketing and business development teams operate in silos, leading to an ad hoc, reactive approach, but shifting to a culture of proactive planning — beginning with comprehensive campaigns — can help firms effectively execute their broader business strategy, says Paul Manuele at PR Manuele Consulting.
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Bankruptcy Courts May Be Budding Open To Cannabis Cases
Two recent California bankruptcy court rulings, denying motions to dismiss the respective debtors' bankruptcies, provide persuasive authority to allow cannabis debtors the protections of federal bankruptcy law, say Noah Weingarten and Bethany Simmons at Loeb & Loeb.
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Vendor Rights Lessons From 2 Chapter 11 Cases
A Texas federal court’s recent critical vendor order in the Zachry Holdings Chapter 11 filing, as well as a settlement between Rite Aid and McKesson in New Jersey federal court last year, shows why suppliers must object to critical vendor motions that do not recognize creditors' legal rights, says David Conaway at Shumaker.
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Mirror, Mirror On The Wall, Is My Counterclaim Bound To Fall?
A Pennsylvania federal court’s recent dismissal of the defendants’ counterclaims in Morgan v. Noss should remind attorneys to avoid the temptation to repackage a claim’s facts and law into a mirror-image counterclaim, as this approach will often result in a waste of time and resources, says Matthew Selmasska at Kaufman Dolowich.
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Mercon Coffee Ch. 11 Ruling Shows Insider Releases' Limits
A New York bankruptcy court’s recent ruling in Mercon Coffee’s Chapter 11 case highlights the stringent requirements for retention-related transfers to insiders, even in cases where no creditor has objected, say Robert Klyman and Scott Shelley at DLA Piper.
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Bankruptcy Trustees Need More FinCEN Guidance
Recent FinCEN consent orders in two North Carolina bankruptcy cases show that additional guidance is necessary for most types of fiduciaries overseeing bankruptcy estates or other insolvency vehicles, say Brian Shaw and David Doyle at Cozen O’Connor.
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E-Discovery Quarterly: Rulings On Hyperlinked Documents
Recent rulings show that counsel should engage in early discussions with clients regarding the potential of hyperlinked documents in electronically stored information, which will allow for more deliberate negotiation of any agreements regarding the scope of discovery, say attorneys at Sidley.
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Congress Must Increase Small Biz Ch. 11 Debt Cap
Congress must act to reinstate Subchapter V, which recently sunsetted when the debt threshold to qualify reverted from $7.5 million to just over $3 million, meaning thousands of small businesses will no longer be able to use the means of reorganization, says Daniel Gielchinsky at DGIM Law.
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How To Grow Marketing, Biz Dev Teams In A Tight Market
Faced with fierce competition and rising operating costs, firms are feeling the pressure to build a well-oiled marketing and business development team that supports strategic priorities, but they’ll need to be flexible and creative given a tight talent market, says Ben Curle at Ambition.
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Ch. 11 Ruling Clarifies Cross-Border 'Alternative A' Scope
A New York bankruptcy court’s recent ruling in airline holding company SAS’s Chapter 11 case — addressing the applicability of Alternative A, which is similar to Section 1110 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code — is a cautionary tale for contracting European Union member states that have adopted Alternative A domestically but have not made a formal declaration, say attorneys at Pillsbury.