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New York Bankruptcy Judge Allows Case Against Crypto CEO to Move Forward Image

New York Bankruptcy Judge Allows Case Against Crypto CEO to Move Forward

Michael A. Mora

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled that a lawsuit, in which the plaintiff alleged that Alex Mashinsky, the founder and ex-CEO of Celsius Network, caused the insolvent crypto lender to incur billions of dollars in damages, can move forward because the terms of the agreement to stay stated that it would be lifted when the litigant’s criminal trial ended.

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Rising Bankruptcy Filings Make Today’s Headlines, But Keep An Eye on Historic Policies Image

Rising Bankruptcy Filings Make Today’s Headlines, But Keep An Eye on Historic Policies

Scott Williams

Nearly 50 years has passed since the last major change in bankruptcy law. The financial landscape now where debtors go through bankruptcy is very different. Is the Bankruptcy Code still achieving its fundamental goals, and are there ways to improve it?

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Three Things Trustees Should Know About Affirmative Defenses in Preference Litigation Image

Three Things Trustees Should Know About Affirmative Defenses in Preference Litigation

Brad Jones

Since 2019, courts have struggled with the interpretation of due diligence requirement to Section 547, specifically whether the due diligence requirement is an element of a preference claim that must be adequately pleaded in the plaintiff’s complaint. While the law is still developing, there are three important takeaways for trustees to consider.

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District Court Cautiously Affirms Five-Year Old Purdue Preliminary Injunction Image

District Court Cautiously Affirms Five-Year Old Purdue Preliminary Injunction

Michael L. Cook

This decision explains the judicial rationale for bankruptcy court preliminary injunctions.

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Ninth Circuit: Fully Secured, Nonrecourse Creditors Qualify As ‘Countable’ Creditors Image

Ninth Circuit: Fully Secured, Nonrecourse Creditors Qualify As ‘Countable’ Creditors

Lawrence J. Kotler & Geoffrey A. Heaton

Addressing a matter of first impression, the bankruptcy appellate panel for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit recently held that fully secured, nonrecourse creditors qualify as “countable” creditors for purposes of determining the viability of an involuntary bankruptcy petition under Section 303(b) of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.

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Post-Petition Rent Obligations On ‘Residential’ Versus ‘Nonresidential’ Property Image

Post-Petition Rent Obligations On ‘Residential’ Versus ‘Nonresidential’ Property

Francis J. Lawall & Nikki Donofrio

The lifeblood of any debtor operating in Chapter 11 is access to cash to maintain ongoing operations. This is particularly important in cases involving assisted living and skilled nursing facilities given the health, safety, and welfare concerns with respect to their residents. One of the most significant calls on cash involves post-petition rent obligations due on leased facilities.

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Beyond Bordeaux’s Bankruptcy: A Lesson In Adapting to the Evolving Sports Media Landscape Image

Beyond Bordeaux’s Bankruptcy: A Lesson In Adapting to the Evolving Sports Media Landscape

Jeffrey Schlerf

Word that the historic French franchise Girondins de Bordeaux filed for bankruptcy recently rocked European football. But one force in particular poses an even broader threat to the sustainability of the elite level of French soccer than relegation: media rights.

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Inconvenient Bankruptcy Appeals Image

Inconvenient Bankruptcy Appeals

Michael L. Cook

Bankruptcy courts are not infallible, and their rulings should be reviewable. But too many district courts and bankruptcy appellate panels (BAPs) regularly refuse to review nonfinal bankruptcy court orders for questionable reasons.

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Subchapter V Could Be Ideal Choice for Franchisees Image

Subchapter V Could Be Ideal Choice for Franchisees

Craig R. Tractenberg

When franchisees choose to financially reorganize under the Bankruptcy Code, they may be the right size to choose to reorganize under Subchapter V of Chapter 11. Where the franchisor and the franchisee cannot reconcile, Subchapter V may provide the franchisee with breathing room and leverage to be revitalized.

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Mortgage Can Be Modified By Ch. 11 Plan, Even If Debtor Is Not Indebted, But Cram-Down Limited Image

Mortgage Can Be Modified By Ch. 11 Plan, Even If Debtor Is Not Indebted, But Cram-Down Limited

Andrew C. Kassner & Joseph N. Argentina Jr.

Today we review a situation where a 50% interest in mortgaged commercial real estate was transferred without the consent of the lender, and the new tenant-in-common owner subsequently filed a Chapter 11 case and attempted to modify the payment terms of the mortgage loan to which he is not a party.

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