/raid1/www/Hosts/bankrupt/TCR_Public/180518.mbx          T R O U B L E D   C O M P A N Y   R E P O R T E R

              Friday, May 18, 2018, Vol. 22, No. 137

                            Headlines

45 RHODE ISLAND: Has Until May 29 to Exclusively File Plan
5200 ENTERPRISES: Case Summary & 7 Unsecured Creditors
9800 WEDDINGS: To Pay Unsecureds 5% at 3% Interest Under New Plan
ACE MOTOR ACCEPTANCE: Three-Member Creditors' Committee Formed
ACUSPORT CORP: U.S. Trustee Forms Seven-Member Committee

ADVANCED PAIN: Court Conditionally OK's Trustee's Plan Outline
ADVENTIST HEALTHCARE: Fitch Cuts Rating on Revenue Bonds to 'BB+'
AGENT PROVOCATEUR: June 5 Plan Confirmation Hearing
AGROKOR DD: Bank Debt Trades at 2% Off
AKC ENTERPRISES: Proposes Auction Sale of Personal Property

AMERICAN CRYOSTEM: Posts Second Quarter Net Loss of $207,703
ANTONIO ANABO: Selling Oakland Rental Property for $810K
APPVION INC: Delaware Bankruptcy Court Approves Asset Sale
ARBORSCAPE INC: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
ARCIMOTO INC: Incurs $2.04 Million Net Loss in First Quarter

ARCON HOMES: Approval Hearing on Disclosures Set for June 21
ARCON PROPERTIES: June 21 Approval Hearing on Plan Outline
ARMADA LEASING: Plan Discloses Settlement Agreement with R.W. Timms
ATP SECURITY: Unsecureds to Recoup 17.65% Over 48 Months Under Plan
AUTO SUPPLY: Needs Time To Resolve Claims Issues With Committee

AYTU BIOSCIENCE: Reports $2.81 Million Net Loss for Third Quarter
B.C.I. FINANCES: U.S. Ct. Recognizes Australian Foreign Proceedings
BAL HARBOUR: Receiver Taps Meland Russin & Vazquez as Co-Counsel
BALLENGER CONSTRUCTION: Trustee Selling Property for $200K
BENCHMARK POST: Seeks Confirmation of Joint First Amended Plan

BENJYS: Hires Morrison-Tenenbaum PLLC as Counsel
BERTUCCI'S HOLDINGS: June 4 Auction of All Assets Set
BITE THE BULLET: Case Summary & 10 Unsecured Creditors
BLACK MOUNTAIN: Plan Discloses BLM Patent Release via Direct Sale
BLUE COLLAR: Disclosure Statement Hearing Set for June 5

BNEVMA LLC: Reorganization Plan to be Funded by Rental Revenues
BOSS LITHO: Court Authorized Continued Cash Collateral Use
BOSTICK CONSTRUCTION: Needs More Time to Complete Plan Information
BUILDERS FIRSTSOURCE: S&P Raises Corp. Credit Rating to 'BB-'
CALIFORNIA RESOURCES: Stockholders Elected 9 Directors

CAPITAL L. CORP: Selling Page Road Property for $1 Million
CAPITOL CITY BREWING: U.S. Trustee Forms Three-Member Committee
CARMEN RIVERA: Gasapos Buying Columbia Property for $475K
CARTER TABERNACLE: Wants Plan Exclusivity Until Confirmation
CARTHAGE SPECIALTY: Committee Taps Lowenstein Sandler as Counsel

CASABLANCA GLOBAL: S&P Affirms 'B' Corp Credit Rating
CASTILLO ENTERPRISES: Case Summary & 3 Top Unsecured Creditors
COASTAL MENTAL: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
COLLAZO PRODUCE: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
COLORFX INC: June 7 Confirmation Hearing of Committee-Proposed Plan

COMMUNITY CHOICE: Incurs $3.7 Million Net Loss in First Quarter
CONSTELLATION HEALTHCARE: Three Former Execs Face Fraud Charges
CRAIG WALKER: Examiner Selling Walker-Voss Ranches for $4.4 Million
CRESTOR GLOBAL: Trustee Hires Jeff Wright Consulting as Accountant
CS360 TOWERS: Trustee's Selling Condo Unit 307 to Adamses for $390K

CUMULUS MEDIA: Bank Debt Trades at 14% Off
DANA HOLDING: Ohio Court Modifies Amortizable Amount to $10,935
DAYTON SUPERIOR: Bank Debt Trades at 5% Off
DENNIS JOHNSON II: Claims Against Receiver Junked
DENTAL CORP: S&P Assigns 'B-' Corp Credit Rating, Outlook Stable

DEOLEO SA: Bank Debt Trades at 85% Off
DEVON ENERGY: Moody's Affirms 'Ba1' Corporate Family Rating
DIAMOND OFFSHORE: Egan-Jones Hikes Senior Unsecured Ratings to BB
DIFFUSION PHARMACEUTICALS: Incurs First Quarter Net Loss of $11.6M
DIXIE ELECTRIC: Bank Debt Trades at 12% Off

DJO FINANCE: Incurs $17.6 Million Net Loss in First Quarter
DONALD BRANDT: 11th Cir. Vacates Dismissal of FNB Deficiency Claims
DONNIE EARNEST: Selling Panama City Beach Property for $375K
DURAO BUILDING: Hires Richard S. Feinsilver as Counsel
DURFEY DEVELOPMENT: Taps Krigel & Krigel, PC as Attorney

DYNEGY INC: S&P Raises Corp Credit Rating to 'BB', Outlook Stable
EC OFFSHORE: June 12 Plan Confirmation Hearing
EDGARS CONSOLIDATED: Bank Debt Trades at 63% Off
ELEVEN-BAR-SEVEN: Sale of Texas Property to Fund Proposed Plan
EMPIRE GENERATING: S&P Junks Rating to 'CC' on Forbearance Deal

ENDURO RESOURCE: Files Chapter 11 Petition to Facilitate Sale
ENLINK MIDSTREAM: Moody's Affirms 'Ba1' Corporate Family Rating
ENTERPRISE BUSINESS: Plan Discloses Settlement Agreement with TCAC2
ENUMERAL BIOMEDICAL: May 25 Plan Confirmation Hearing
EPICENTER PARTNERS: Taps Quinlan Law Firm as Special Counsel

EPICENTER PARTNERS: Taps Stinson Leonard Street as Special Counsel
ERIN ENERGY: U.S. Trustee Forms 7-Member Committee
ET SOLAR: Unsecureds to Recoup 11.73% Paid Bi-Annually Over 3 Years
FAIRGROUNDS PROPERTIES: Hasshaw Buying Lot 44 for $125K
FILBIN LAND: Hires Judith G. Callaway, CPA, as Accountant

FORD STEEL: Full Payment for Unsecured Creditors Over 5-Year Period
FOSTER ENTERPRISES: Continued Cash Collateral Use Approved
FRANKLIN ACQUISITIONS: City Buying El Property for $855K
FRASER'S BOILER: Unsecureds to be Paid from $50K Creditor Fund
FULLBEAUTY BRANDS: Bank Debt Trades at 75% Off

FUSION CUSTOM: Hires GreerWalker LLP as Financial Advisor
GENERAL GLASS: Dunbar Buying Parkersburg Property for $200K
GEORGIA ANESTHESIA: Schwaiger Buying Personal Property for $33K
GFD CONSTRUCTION: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
GIBSON BRANDS: U.S. Trustee Forms 7-Member Committee

GREATER CLEVELAND: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
GREGORY JOHN TE VELDE: U.S. Trustee Forms 3-Member Committee
GTO EQUIPMENT: Case Summary & 12 Unsecured Creditors
GULF MEDICAL: Needs 90-Day Extension of Plan Filing Deadline
HEAVENLY COUTURE: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors

HOTELS OF STAFFORD: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
INFINITY CUSTOM: Floridian Buying Winter Park Property for $910K
INGLES MARKETS: Moody's Places Ba3 CFR on Review for Upgrade
INT'L MANUFACTURING: Court Not Reassigning Suits vs Battle Creek
IPC CORP: S&P Rates New $132MM First Lien Term Loan 'B-'

JETT RACING: June 28 Plan Confirmation Hearing
JIYA CO: Hires Robert O Lampl Law as Attorney
K & D HOSPITALITY: Vadtal Buying All Assets for $1.4 Million
KENNEWICK PUBLIC: Wants Court to Approve Disclosure Statement
KONA GRILL: Incurs $2.46 Million Net Loss in First Quarter

KONA GRILL: Stockholders Elect Two Directors
LAURITSEN FIREWOOD: Unsecured Creditors' Claims Increased to $223K
LAWRENCE D. FROMELIUS: W.K. Buying Lisle Vacant Land for $60K
LAYFIELD & BARRETT: Court Rejects Former Member's Stay Motion
LELAND CONSULTING: Hires Jan L. Hammerman as Co-Counsel

LELAND CONSULTING: Hires Stuart J. Carr, PC as Attorney
LIBERTY INDUSTRIES: U.S. Trustee Forms Five-Member Committee
LIFELINE SLEEP: SMLHC et al., File Limited Objection to Disclosures
LONGVIEW POWER: S&P Affirms 'CCC' Secured Debt Rating
LONMIN PLC: Bank Debt Trades at 4% Off

MARIE'S FAMILY: Plan Outline Gets Court's Conditional Approval
MARTIN PEMSTEIN: Denial of Bid to Vacate Discharge Order Upheld
MARWILL PROPERTIES: Case Summary & 2 Unsecured Creditors
MCHYL ENTERPRISES: Ordered to File Plan, Disclosures Before July 19
MICRO CONTRACT: New Plan to Pay Unsecureds 20% Over 7 Years

MIDWEST PORTABLE: May 22 Amended Plan Outline Hearing
MILLER'S ALE: Moody's Assigns 'B3' Rating to $285MM Secured Loans
MMI HOLDINGS: Bank Debt Trades at 22% Off
MODERN VIDEOFILM: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
MOXIE LIBERTY: Bank Debt Trades at 3% Off

MUSCLEPHARM CORP: Posts $2.3 Million Net Loss in First Quarter
NATURE'S BOUNTY: Bank Debt Trades at 16% Off
NEXION HEALTH: Plan to Wind Up Bogata Operations
NORTHERN OIL: Moody's Hikes 'Caa1' Corp. Family Rating
NORTHERN OIL: S&P Junks CCR to 'SD' on Distressed Note Exchange

NORTHFIELD 30: Case Summary & 2 Unsecured Creditors
NOVABAY PHARMACEUTICALS: Incurs $2.2-Mil. Net Loss in 1st Quarter
OJER TELEKOMUNIKASYON: Bank Debt Trades at 6% Off
OLIVABEL LLC: Case Summary & 17 Unsecured Creditors
OREXIGEN THERAPEUTICS: June 26 Auction of All Assets Set

ORTHO-CLINICAL DIAGNOSTICS: S&P Rates Secured Credit Facility 'B-'
OUTBACK DEVELOPMENT: June 20 Hearing on Plan and Disclosures
OWENS & MINOR: Fitch Cuts IDR to 'B+' Following Halyard Deal
PATRIOT NATIONAL: Provision Added in Treatment of 510(b) Claimants
PEPPERELL MILLS: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary

PERMIAN PRODUCTION: Moody's Gives B3 CFR & Senior Term Loan Rating
PITTSBURGH ATHLETIC: PA DOR Opposes Confirmation of Amended Plan
PITTSBURGH ATHLETIC: Revises Plan to Classify Membership Interests
PLAYHOUSE SQUARE: S&P Assigns BB+ Rating on 2018 Fixed-Rated Bonds
PREZZO PLC: Bank Debt Trades at 35% Off

PROMETHEUS & ATLAS: Court Approves Third Amended Plan Outline
PUERTO RICO: Baxter Sales Appointed as New Committee Member
PUERTO RICO: Congress Waived Oversight Board's Sovereign Immunity
QEP RESOURCES: Egan-Jones Hikes Senior Unsecured Ratings to BB
REVLON INC: S&P Alters Outlook to Negative & Affirms 'CCC+' CCR

ROBERT SPENLINHAUER: Bankr. Ct. Junks Bid for Stay Pending Appeal
ROCKPORT COMPANY: Case Summary & 30 Largest Unsecured Creditors
ROCKPORT GROUP: Files Chapter 11, Wins OK of 1st Day Motions
ROJESIE INC: Amends Treatment of Condado Secured Claim
RONALD GOODWIN: Moore Offers $44K for Two Sedgwick County Parcels

ROSSER RESERVE: June 21 Plan Confirmation Hearing
RUBY RED: Gadaskin Buying All Assets for $1.5 Million
SCG MADILL: Proposes Auction Sale of All Assets
SEVEN TOWER: Taps Cozen O'Connor as Special Counsel
SHARINN & LIPSHIE: Hires Barnes & Co as Accountant

SOMNANG REALTY: Wilmington Buying Orlando Property for $15K
SOUTH SHORE PAINTING: Hatcher Buying Equity Interest for $3K
SOUTHCROSS ENERGY: Reports First Quarter Results
SOUTHEASTERN GROCERS: Selling Underperforming Store 5419 for $100K
SPENCER GIFTS: Bank Debt Trades at 13% Off

STAR PERFORMANCE: Must File Plan and Disclosures Before July 2
STEINHOFF INTERNATIONAL: Bank Debt Trades at 5% Off
STERNSCHNUPPE LLC: Plan Outline Okayed; June 13 Plan Hearing
STEWART DUDLEY: Magnify Trustee's Sale of Condo Unit 1925 Approved
SUMMIT FINANCIAL: Committee Taps Rice Pugatch Robinson as Counsel

SUNPRO SOLAR: Seeks Authority on Interim Cash Collateral Use
SUNSHINE DAIRY: Taps Boverman & Associates as Business Consultant
THE NEXT STEP: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
THOMAS A. FALKNER: Court to Continue Amended Plan Hearing on May 30
THORNTON & THORNTON: Synergy Already Paid in Full from Assets Sale

TMX FINANCE: Moody's Places Caa2 CFR Under Review for Upgrade
TMX FINANCE: S&P Affirms 'B-' Issuer Credit Rating, Outlook Stable
TRIDENT TPI: Moody's Affirms 'B3' CFR Amid $65MM Add-On to Loans
TRINET GROUP: S&P Hikes Corp Credit Rating to 'BB-', Outlook Pos.
TSAWD HOLDINGS: Bid to Dismiss CAC Malpractice Suit Denied

VANSCOY CHIROPRACTIC: To Sell Business Assets Within 120 Days
VANTAGE CORP: Hires Nelson Mullins Riley as Bankruptcy Counsel
VH VENTURE: Selling Interest in CCG Personal Property for $1.7M
VIDEOLOGY: Files Chapter 11 to Facilitate Amobee Sale Process
VISION INVESTMENT: Hires Haller & Colvin as Attorney

VISTA OUTDOOR: S&P Alters Outlook to Developing & Affirms 'B+' CCR
VISTRA ENERGY: S&P Hikes Corp Credit Rating to BB, Outlook Stable
WALKING CO: Unsecureds to Recover 18.8% to 22% Under Latest Plan
WESLEY HILLYARD: Bankston Buying Royalty Interests for $51K
WESLEY HILLYARD: Proposes Private Sale of Equipment

WESTERN HOST: Case Summary & 10 Unsecured Creditors
WHITING PETROLEUM: Egan-Jones Cuts Commercial Paper Ratings to 'B'
WILLIAM B. LAWTON: Plan and Disclosures Hearing Set for June 14
WILLIAM B. LAWTON: Selling Shares of NRG & Principal Common Stock
WILLIAM B. LAWTON: Selling Shares of NRG & Principal Common Stock

WILLIAMS FINANCIAL: Arbitration Creditors Blocks OK of Plan Outline
WINDSOR MARKETING: 6th Interim Cash Collateral Order Entered
WISEWEAR CORP: Proposes May 23 Auction Sale of 3D Printer
WOOTON GROUP: Sovena Buying Stockton Property for $9.3 Million
WOOTON GROUP: Thomas Buying Fresno Property for $7.5 Million

WORD INTERNATIONAL: Plan Confirmation Hearing Set for June 7
WRIGHT'S WELL: Motion to Terminate Ch.11 Reorganization Granted
YELLOW CAB COOP: Penalty Claimants to Get Nothing in Trustee's Plan
YOCHANAN WALDMAN: Congregation Nachlas Buying Monsey Property
YOUNG MEN'S: Hires Tucker Arensberg, P.C. as Attorney

YOUNG MENS: Hires Schneider Downs Meridian as Financial Advisor
YPG FINANCE: Bank Debt Trades at 7% Off
YUMA ENERGY: Is Actively Seeking Strategic Alternatives
ZALER POP HOLDINGS: Unsecureds to Receive 25% of Claims Over 1 Year
[^] BOOK REVIEW: Long-Term Care in Transition


                            *********

45 RHODE ISLAND: Has Until May 29 to Exclusively File Plan
----------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. S. Martin Teel, Jr., of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Columbia has extended, at the behest of 45 Rhode Island
Ave NE, LLC, the exclusivity period and time in which to submit a
disclosure statement and plan for 46 days to and including May 29,
2018.

As reported by the Troubled Company Reporter on April 20, 2018, the
Debtor asked for the extension, saying that if the sale of its
proposed condominium 3-unit residential building is to occur, a
liquidation plan to be submitted thereafter could be significantly
streamlined, constituting a significant savings of time, costs, and
judicial resources, which savings could be applied to the claims of
creditors.

A copy of the court order is available at:

           http://bankrupt.com/misc/dcb17-00709-51.pdf

                  About 45 Rhode Island Ave NE

45 Rhode Island Ave NE, LLC, listed its business as Single Asset
Real Estate (as defined in 11 U.S.C. Section 101(51B)) whose
principal assets are located at 45 Rhode Island Ave NE, Washington,
DC 20001.

45 Rhode Island Ave NE filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. D. Col.
Case No. 17-00709) on Dec. 14, 2017.  In the petition signed by
Joshua Davis, managing member, the Debtor estimated $1 million to
$10 million in assets and liabilities.

Judge Martin S. Teel, Jr., presides over the case.  James M.
Towarnicky, Esq., is the Debtor's counsel.


5200 ENTERPRISES: Case Summary & 7 Unsecured Creditors
------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: 5200 Enterprises Limited
        4453 Saint Johns Avenue
        Jacksonville, FL 32210

Business Description: 5200 Enterprises Limited is the fee simple
                      owner of a real property located at 5200-
                      5202 1st Avenue, Brooklyn, New York 11232
                      having a tax records valuation of $6.43
                      million.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: May 16, 2018

Case No.: 18-01646

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Middle District of Florida (Jacksonville)

Judge: Hon. Jerry A. Funk

Debtor's Counsel: Jason A. Burgess, Esq.
                  THE LAW OFFICES OF JASON A. BURGESS, LLC
                  1855 Mayport Road
                  Atlantic Beach, FL 32233
                  Tel: 904-372-4791
                  Fax: 904-372-4994
                  Email: jason@jasonaburgess.com

Total Assets: $6.43 million

Total Liabilities: $3.25 million

The petition was signed by John A. Luhrs, president.

A full-text copy of the petition containing, among other items, a
list of the Debtor's seven unsecured creditors is available for
free at:

                      http://bankrupt.com/misc/flmb18-01646.pdf


9800 WEDDINGS: To Pay Unsecureds 5% at 3% Interest Under New Plan
-----------------------------------------------------------------
9800 Weddings, LLC, filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Arizona
its second amended disclosure statement referring to its second
amended plan of reorganization dated April 18, 2018.

Under the new plan, Class 5 unsecured claimants will now be paid an
equal to 5% of the allowed amount of their claims at 3% interest on
the unpaid balance in 60 equal monthly installments with the first
payment due 60 days from the Effective Date. Any liens held by the
Class 5 creditors shall be null and void and removed as of the
Effective Date.

The previous version of the plan provided that unsecured creditors
will get nothing under the plan.

A full-text copy of the Second Amended Disclosure Statement is
available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/azb4-17-01376-125.pdf

A full-text copy of the Second Amended Plan is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/azb4-17-01376-126.pdf

                   About 9800 Weddings LLC

9800 Weddings, LLC, filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. D. Ariz.
Case No. 17-01376) on Feb. 15, 2017.  The petition was signed by
Joe E. May, manager.  At the time of filing, the Debtor had
$800,000 in total assets and $1.26 million in total liabilities.

The case is assigned to Judge Brenda Moody Whinery.  The Debtor is
represented by Eric Slocum Sparks, Esq. at Eric Slocum Sparks,
P.C.

On May 16, 2017, the Debtor filed a disclosure statement, which
explains its proposed Chapter 11 plan of reorganization.


ACE MOTOR ACCEPTANCE: Three-Member Creditors' Committee Formed
--------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. J. Craig Whitley of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Western District of North Carolina on May 10, 2018, ordered, upon
the recommendation of the U.S. Bankruptcy Administrator, the
appointment of the official committee of unsecured creditors in the
Chapter 11 case of Ace Motor Acceptance Corporation.

The committee members are:

     (1) AutoScribe Corporation
         Attn: Laurie Nelson
         12276 San Jose Boulevard
         Jacksonville, FL 32223

     (2) Jamal Sprye, et al v. Ace Plaintiff Class
         Attn: Richard S. Gordon
         c/o Gordon, Wolf & Carrey
         100 W. Pennsylvania Avenue, Suite 100
         Towson, MD 21204

     (3) John D. Troxell
         1112 Griffith Road
         Monroe, NC 28112

Official creditors' committees have the right to employ legal and
accounting professionals and financial advisors, at a debtor's
expense.  They may investigate the debtor's business and financial
affairs.  Importantly, official committees serve as fiduciaries to
the general population of creditors they represent.

                About Ace Motor Acceptance Corp

Ace Motor Acceptance Corporation, founded in 1998 --
https://www.acemotoracceptance.com/ -- is a North Carolina
corporation that provides automobile loans.  Formerly known as Ace
Financial Services Inc., AMAC focused on a point of sale special
finance program.  In 2010 the Company added a program offering
financing to Buy Here Pay Here (BHPH) dealers.  In 2011, the
Company developed and trademarked its BHPH in a Box program. BHPH
in a Box provides a wide array of benefits to BHPH dealers
including capital to fund receivables and floorplan lines to fund
inventory.  Additional benefits include training, insurance
tracking and a reports package to assist dealers in many aspects of
running a BHPH dealership.

Ace Motor Acceptance, based in Matthews, NC, filed a Chapter 11
petition (Bankr. W.D.N.C. Case No. 18-30426) on March 15, 2018.  In
the petition signed by CEO Russell E. Algood, the Debtor estimated
$10 million to $50 million in both assets and liabilities.  The
Hon. Laura T. Beyer presides over the case.  James H. Henderson,
Esq., at The Henderson Law Firm PLLC, serves as bankruptcy counsel.


ACUSPORT CORP: U.S. Trustee Forms Seven-Member Committee
--------------------------------------------------------
Daniel M. McDermott, U.S. Trustee for Region 9, on May 10, 2018,
appointed seven creditors to serve on the official committee of
unsecured creditors in the Chapter 11 case of AcuSport Corporation.


The committee members are:

     (1) Roger Mustian, CFO & Treasurer
         Daniel Defense, Inc.
         101 Warfighter Way
         Black Creek, GA 31308
         Tel: (912) 851-3280
         E-mail: rmustian@danieldefense.com

     (2) Catherine Maxwell, CFO
         Encore Live LLC
         1635 Rogers Road
         Fort Worth, TX 76107
         Tel: (817) 334-0240
         E-mail: catherine@encorelive.com

     (3) Jacob Witten, Credit Manager
         Glock Inc.
         6000 Highlands Parkway
         Smyrna, GA 30082
         Tel: (770) 319-4791
         E-mail: Jacob.witten@glock.us

     (4) Carla Robertson, Controller
         Hornady Manufacturing Company
         3625 Old Potash Highway
         Grand Island, NE 68803
         Tel: (308) 382-1390 x218
         E-mail: crobertson@hornady.com

     (5) Enza Cohn, VP of Finance
         PMC Ammunition, Inc.
         10777 Westheimer Road, Suite 1100
         Houston, TX 77042
         Tel: (281) 407-5655
         E-mail: enza.cohn@pmcammo.com

     (6) Vicki Sharp, International/Domestic Credit Manager
         Remington Arms Company, LLC
         870 Remington Drive
         Madison, NC 27025
         Tel: (336) 548-8536
         E-mail: vicki.sharp@remington.com

     (7) Jim Hanus, Director of Finance
         Vista Outdoor
         1 Vista Way
         Anoka, MN 55303
         Tel: (763) 323-2485
         E-mail: jim.hanus@vistaoutdoor.com

Official creditors' committees have the right to employ legal and
accounting professionals and financial advisors, at a debtor's
expense.  They may investigate the debtor's business and financial
affairs.  Importantly, official committees serve as fiduciaries to
the general population of creditors they represent.

                        About AcuSport

AcuSport Corporation -- https://www.acusport.com -- is a
distributor of outdoor and shooting sports products.  Employing
more than 200 people, AcuSport is centrally headquartered in
Bellefontaine, Ohio and has regional sales offices in Pennsylvania,
Georgia, Minnesota, Montana, California and Texas.  AcuSport also
operates a warehouse and distribution                      
facility located in Salt Lake City, Utah.  Since its inception in
1982, AcuSport has been privately owned by no more than three
shareholders.

The Debtor filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection (Bankr. S.D.
Ohio Case No. 18-52736) on May 1, 2018, estimating its assets at
between $10 million and $50 million and its liabilities at between
$50 million and $100 million.  The petition was signed by John K.
Flanagan, chief financial officer.

Judge John E. Hoffman Jr. presides over the case.

Thomas R. Allen, Esq., Richard K. Stovall, Esq., Matthew J. Fisher,
Esq., and Erin L. Gapinski, Esq., at Allen Kuehnle Stovall & Neuman
LLP serve as the Debtor's local counsel.

Jason J. DeJonker, Esq., and Cullen Kuhn, Esq., at Bryan Cave
Leighton Paisner LLP serve as the Debtor's general counsel.

Huron Transaction Advisory LLC is the Debtor's investment banker.

Huron Consulting Services LLC is the Debtor's financial advisor.

Donlin, Recano & Company, Inc., is the Debtor's claims, noticing
and solicitation agent.


ADVANCED PAIN: Court Conditionally OK's Trustee's Plan Outline
--------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Thomas J. Catliota of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Maryland issued an order conditionally approving the
disclosure statement referring to a chapter 11 plan filed by
Trustee Alan M. Grochal, dated March 22, 2018, for Debtor Advanced
Pain Management Services, LLC and American Spine Surgery Center
LLC.

The hearing to consider the final approval of the Disclosure
Statement and the confirmation of the Plan will be held in
Courtroom 3E of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court, U.S. Courthouse, 6500
Cherrywood Lane, Greenbelt, Maryland 20770, May 31, 2018, at 11:00
A.M.

May 9, 2018 is fixed as the last day for filing and serving written
objections to the conditionally approved Disclosure Statement or
confirmation of the Plan, and the last day for filing written
acceptances or rejections of the Plan.

The Troubled Company Reporter previously reported that creditors
holding Class 4 general unsecured claims under the Trustee’s plan
will receive periodic pro rata distributions from the revenues
generated from the liquidation of the assets after creditors in
Classes 1 to 3 are paid in full.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement is available at:

          http://bankrupt.com/misc/mdb17-16047-255.pdf  

                 About Advanced Pain Management

Advanced Pain Management Services, LLC --
http://www.americanspinemd.com/-- is a small business debtor as  
defined in 11 U.S.C. Section 101(51D), engaged in the health care
business.  The Company collected gross revenue for $9.97 million
in
2016 and gross revenue of $10.65 million in 2015.

Advanced Pain Management Services filed a Chapter 11 petition
(Bankr. W.D. Ky. Case No. 17-30863) on March 16, 2017.  In the
petition signed by Khalid Kahloon, CEO and general counsel, the
Debtor disclosed $1.84 million in total assets and $2.50 million in
total liabilities.  The Kentucky case was assigned to Judge Thomas
H. Fulton.  APMS was represented by James Edwin McGhee, III, Esq.,
at Kaplan & Partners LLP.

Advanced Anesthesiology Associates LLC (Bankr. D. Md. Case No.
17-18849), Advanced Pain Surgery Center, LLC (Bankr. D. Md. Case
No. 17-18850) and American Spine Surgery Center LLC (Bankr. D. Md.
Case No. 17-1885) collectively operate a medical practice
specializing in pain management in Frederick, Maryland and in
Waldorf, Maryland.

On May 1, 2017, the APMS case was transferred to the District of
Maryland (Bankr. D. Md. Case No. 17-16047).  The Maryland petition
disclosed under $1 million in both assets and liabilities.  The
petition was filed pro se.

Bankruptcy Judge Thomas J. Catliota presides over the Maryland
cases.

On May 11, 2017, the Court entered an order approving the
appointment of Alan M. Grochal as Chapter 11 trustee.  The trustee
hired Tydings & Rosenberg LLP as bankruptcy counsel; Ellin &
Tucker, Chartered as accountant; Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell
and Berkowitz, PC as special counsel to prosecute and resolve the
Medicare Claims; and Gorfine, Schiller & Gardyn, P.A., as tax
consultant.


ADVENTIST HEALTHCARE: Fitch Cuts Rating on Revenue Bonds to 'BB+'
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Fitch Ratings has assigned a 'BB+' Issuer Default Rating (IDR) to
Adventist HealthCare and has downgraded to 'BB+' from 'BBB-' debt
issued by Maryland Health and Higher Educational Facilities
Authority on behalf of Adventist HealthCare. The downgrade is based
on the application of Fitch's updated "Rating Criteria for U.S.
Not-For-Profit Hospitals and Health Systems" dated Jan. 9, 2018.

The Rating Outlook is Stable.

SECURITY

The bonds are secured by mortgages on facilities, unrestricted
revenues and a debt service reserve fund.

ANALYTICAL CONCLUSION

The 'BB+' IDR and revenue bond downgrade to 'BB+' reflect AHC's
highly leveraged financial profile under the application of Fitch's
revised not-for-profit healthcare criteria, which places a
heightened emphasis on maintenance of leverage ratios and liquidity
through the cycle in Fitch's rating case. Although Fitch expects
operating performance to strengthen modestly with the completion of
a replacement facility, the growth in resources required to
appreciably improve the leverage profile in the forward looking
period is unlikely, and Fitch expects that the balance sheet will
remain highly leveraged through Fitch's rating cycle.

KEY RATING DRIVERS

Revenue Defensibility: 'bbb'; Good Payor Mix in Competitive Service
Area

AHC's revenue defensibility is midrange. AHC's two acute care
hospitals operate in the competitive Montgomery County, MD service
area with competitive pressures from a new market entrant in 2013
resulting in a market share decline. With an overall market share
stabilizing at 24.5%, AHC maintains a solid but not leading
presence in the combined market. The service area is
demographically strong with population growth and solid economic
indicators, as reflected in the payor mix with Medicaid and
self-pay totaling a low 14% of gross revenues.

Operating Risk: 'a'; Operating Margins Reflect Solid Cost
Management

Fitch expects that AHC's operating performance will continue to
demonstrate strong cost management under Maryland's all-payor
Global Budget Revenue (GBR) program. Operating EBITDA margins,
which have averaged 8.4% since the onset of Maryland's GBR, are
expected to improve to 10% (as per Fitch's base case) following the
completion of a replacement facility in mid-2019 located in a
nearby and more favorable location. AHC is at the high point of its
capital cycle with capital expenditures to depreciation averaging
156% over the past four years, with high spending needs continuing
through 2019, but still supporting the strong operating risk
assessment.

Financial Profile: 'bb'; High Debt Levels Limit Flexibility

AHC's leverage and liquidity profile substantially limit
flexibility with cash to adjusted debt at a low 34% and net
adjusted debt to adjusted EBITDA of 5.1x in year five of Fitch's
rating case. AHC's financial profile through the cycle remains
consistent with the below investment grade rating.

Asymmetric Additional Risk Considerations

No asymmetric factors were applied in this rating determination.

RATING SENSITIVITIES

Deleveraging Balance Sheet: An upgrade may be warranted if AHC's
cash flow supports a substantial buildup of additional resources
while continuing to fund capital needs, although Fitch sees this
level of improvement as unlikely in the forward period.

Maintenance of Margins and Capital Needs: Failure to generate
adequate cash flow to maintain margins at expected levels or an
increase in capital expenditures beyond the current capital plan
would produce downward rating pressure.

CREDIT PROFILE

Adventist HealthCare (AHC) is the parent company of a diversified
healthcare system located in Montgomery County, MD. The main
operating entities of AHC are 290-bed Shady Grove Medical Center
(SGMC) in Rockville, 236-bed Washington Adventist Hospital (WAH) in
Takoma Park, and 117-bed Adventist Behavioral Health (ABH) in
Rockville. The obligated group is comprised of AHC and Adventist
Rehabilitation Hospital of Maryland (ARH), a comprehensive
inpatient rehabilitation facility. The obligated group accounts for
about 96% of total system revenues and 98% of assets in 2017.
Non-obligated entities include a home health company, an
18-physician medical group, a clinically integrated network, and
ancillary services.

WAH's acute care operations will be relocated to a new facility in
White Oak, MD, about six miles from its current location, targeted
to open in mid-2019. In addition to the 170-bed replacement
facility, the project includes a central utility plant, a parking
garage and a medical office building. The project is proceeding on
time and on budget. The existing WAH campus will retain the
existing behavioral health, rehabilitation and other non-acute
healthcare services including physician offices and a clinic.

AHC operates under Maryland's Global Budget Revenue Program (GBR)
implemented under the state's Medicare waiver in 2014. The GBR
program is a quality improvement system that includes a fixed
revenue stream designed to reimburse hospitals for managing care in
the most appropriate setting. Fitch views the GBR favorably as it
delivers a predictable revenue stream. AHC secured a rate increase
under the GBR for capital costs related to the replacement facility
that will cover over 90% of the additional principal and interest
and about 77% of the additional depreciation and interest expense
of the new hospital upon opening.

Revenue Defensibility

AHC's revenue source characteristics are assessed at mid-range with
Medicaid and self-pay totaling just below 14% of gross revenues in
2017. Approximately 75% of AHC's revenues fall under Maryland's
Global Budget Revenue (GBR) program which delivers a predictable
revenue stream. Fitch views positively that upon opening of the new
White Oak facility, over 90% of additional depreciation and
interest expense related to the replacement facility will be
incorporated into rate increases from the GBR. Fitch expects the
revenue source characteristics to continue to support adequate
operating flexibility.

AHC's two acute care hospitals are located 15 miles apart with two
distinct primary service areas. Overall market share is 24.5% in
the competitive Washington, DC-Baltimore metropolitan area. SGMC
has the leading market position in its primary service area (PSA)
with close to 50% market share compared to its closest competitor
Holy Cross Germantown, a member of the large and geographically
diverse Trinity Health (revenue bonds rated 'AA-'/Negative
Outlook), which opened in 2013 and has about a 13% market share.
SGMC market share initially fell sharply upon the opening of Holy
Cross Germantown but has stabilized at the current level over
recent years with the addition of new service lines in
neurosurgery, orthopedics and digestive health. WAH has a 21%
market share and is second to Holy Cross main campus located in
nearby Silver Spring which has about 45% market share.

With the completion of the White Oak facility and the transfer of
the acute care services from WAH, management expects that existing
inpatient volumes within the overlapping primary and secondary
service areas will transition to the White Oak campus, but only 10%
of SGMC inpatient volume will transition to White Oak. Management
expects 2019 inpatient admissions of close to 10,200 at the White
Oak campus, and a PSA market share of 18.8% in most of its
inpatient service lines. The Takoma Park Campus will continue to
serve behavioral health patients which total about 2,000 admissions
annually. The White Oak and behavioral health total expected volume
compares closely with the current volume at WAH.

AHC's service area has a strong demographic profile with solid
population growth and strong economic indicators. Montgomery
County's median household income well exceeds that of the state and
unemployment levels are consistently low and a very low 2.9% in
2017. SGMC's PSA covers eight zip codes in the south-central
portion of Montgomery County and includes the towns of Rockville
and Gaithersburg. WAH's PSA includes 11 zip codes in southern
Montgomery County and western Prince George's County, which borders
Washington, DC. The White Oak campus is located in the White Oak
area of Silver Spring, MD, home to the Food and Drug Administration
and part of Maryland's priority funding location for economic
growth. The White Oak campus is located six miles north of the
existing WAH campus and the service area substantially overlaps
that of WAH but provides for improved access points that afford
enhanced contact for patients, staff and emergency services. Fitch
expects the service area to remain strong and support revenue
growth.

Operating Risk

AHC has had solid operating performance with operating EBITDA
margins of 8.5% and 8.3% in 2016 and 2017, respectively. Net income
and margins have been closely tracking with the financial
feasibility study completed in conjunction with the 2016 financing.
Operating earnings have been somewhat suppressed by AHC's employed
medical group and clinical integration activities with an operating
loss of $17.8 million in 2016 and an improved $5.4 million
operating loss in 2017. Fitch views the investment in employed
physicians and the clinical integration activities as necessary to
accomplish the goals of population based healthcare management and
recognizes that the overall system operations benefit from this
arrangement.

AHC began receiving a fixed revenue budget amount on Jan. 1, 2014
under Maryland's GBR program. Rate increases under the program to
date have been modest, but stable operations reflect AHC's ability
to manage costs effectively under the fixed budget payment model.
Inpatient admissions have declined, which is a positive factor
under GBR, and AHC continues to invest in non-regulated service
lines and growing revenues outside of the GBR.

Fitch considers AHC's capital expenditure requirements to be high.
AHC is at the high point of its capital cycle given the late stage
of the construction of a replacement hospital due to open in
mid-2019. The project includes a new 170-bed all private room acute
care hospital and state of the art outpatient facility. The
projected cost of approximately $300 million and additional capital
improvements were funded with $270 million of series 2016 bond
proceeds and an equity contribution of approximately $67 million.
The project is on time and on budget. Management's original plan to
issue $18 million in additional debt in 2019 to repurpose the WAH
location has been put on hold in conjunction with the decision to
finance the construction of the central utility plant at the White
Oak campus with $37 million of bank debt rather than through a
lease, as management determined the financing option to be cash
flow positive. The WAH improvements will be funded through cash
flow.

Capital expenditures have averaged 156% of depreciation over the
past four years and the average age of plant in 2017 is 13 years,
indicative of the aging WAH facility. Following the completion of
the existing project, management expects routine capital
expenditures of about $40 million annually, which can be scaled
back if not supported by adequate cash flow.

Financial Profile

AHC's financial profile is stressed with the net debt increase of
$291 million in 2016 and $40 million in 2017 of bonds payable
related to the financing of the replacement facility, the
construction of a central utility plant, and other capital
improvements. Adjusted debt levels increased to $711.9 million
(which includes 5x operating lease expense of $104.6 million) in
fiscal 2017. Cash to adjusted debt of 34% and net adjusted debt to
EBITDA of 5.1 times in fiscal 2017 are reflective of AHC's high
leverage and reduced financial flexibility.

Fitch's base case tracks to forecasts provided in the financial
feasibility study, includes the approved GBR rate increases for the
new facility, and adjusts depreciation and amortization to reflect
a slightly different debt profile for years 2018-2020. In years
2021-2022, the base case utilizes revenue and expense growth rates
of 3.1% as the White Oak hospital stabilizes. Capital expenditures
for the forward period include costs associated with the current
project and ongoing routine and strategic investment. AHC maintains
a stable operating profile through the forward look in the base
case with operating EBITDA margin reaching 10% in 2020.

Fitch's rating case applies the standard stress to revenue growth
but pushes the stress to year two of the forward look to account
for the guaranteed revenues in 2018 under GBR. Revenue growth is
stressed at 2% lower than the base case in year two, 1% lower in
year three, 1% higher in year four and equal to the base case in
year five. AHC's portfolio stress in the event of a drop in GDP is
limited by its investment allocation which has a high percentage of
cash and fixed income. It also assumes a reduction in capital
expenditures totaling approximately $30 million over years
2020-2022, reflecting management's flexibility to reduce or
postpone non-essential capital expenditures during a period of
stress. AHC's performance through the cycle remains in line with a
below investment grade rating, with cash to adjusted debt of 40%
and net adjusted debt to adjusted EBITDA of 3.8 times in year five
of the rating case. Fitch expects that the financial profile will
remain consistent with the below investment grade rating for the
forward period absent considerable improvement in operations
leading to substantially improved financial resources.

Asymmetric Additional Risk Considerations

No asymmetric additional risk considerations were applied in the
rating determination. Approximately 96% of bonded debt is fixed
rate. $126.4 million series 2016B direct bank bonds have a 10-year
maturity and 30- year amortization. As of fiscal 2017, AHC has a $3
million dollar unsecured line of credit with no borrowings
outstanding and a $16 million secured line of credit expiring at
the end of June 2018 with $3.5 million outstanding. AHC has one
interest rate swap in the notional amount of $50.1 million.


AGENT PROVOCATEUR: June 5 Plan Confirmation Hearing
---------------------------------------------------
Judge Michael E. Wiles of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of New York issued an order approving Agent
Provocateur, Inc. and Agent Provocateur, LLC's disclosure statement
for their proposed chapter 11 plan of liquidation.

The Confirmation Hearing will be held at 10:00 a.m. (prevailing
Eastern Time) on June 5, 2018.

The deadline by which Ballots accepting or rejecting the Debtors'
Plan must be received by the Debtors' counsel will be 5:00 p.m.
(prevailing Eastern time) on May 22, 2018.

Any objections to confirmation of the Plan must be made in writing
and filed and served before May 29, 2018.

Under the liquidation plan, each holder of an Allowed Class 3 Claim
(General Unsecured Claims Against Agent Provocateur, LLC) will
receive, from Available Cash belonging to Agent Provocateur, LLC,
payment in full, in Cash, of the Allowed amount of its Claim;
provided, however, if there is not sufficient Available Cash in the
Estate of Agent Provocateur, LLC to satisfy all Allowed Claims in
Class 3 in full, each holder of an Allowed Claim in Class 3 will
receive its Pro Rata share of the amount of Available Cash in the
Estate of Agent Provocateur, LLC in accordance with the terms of
the Creditor Trust Agreement. Estimated recovery for this class is
100%.

Each holder of an Allowed Class 4 Claim (General Unsecured Claims
Against Agent Provocateur, Inc.), on each Distribution Date, will
receive its Pro Rata share of the Available Cash in accordance with
the terms of the Creditor Trust Agreement. For purposes of
determining the amount of Available Cash for distribution to the
holders of Allowed Claims in Class 4, the Creditor Trustee will
segregate in separate accounts Cash belonging to each of the
Debtors’ Estates until all Allowed Claims in Class 3 have been
paid in full from Available Cash belonging to Agent Provocateur,
LLC. Upon payment in full of all Allowed Claims in Class 3, the
remaining Available Cash belonging to Agent Provocateur, LLC will
be transferred to an account for the benefit of the creditors of
Agent Provocateur, Inc. and will be included in the calculation of
Available Cash for distribution to the holders of Allowed Claims
against Agent Provocateur, Inc. Estimated recovery for this class
is 2.9%.

The Plan provides for the formation of a Creditor Trust pursuant to
the Creditor Trust Agreement. On the Effective Date, the Debtors
will transfer and convey all right, title, and interest in the
Creditor Trust Assets to the Creditor Trust, and all Creditor Trust
Assets will automatically and irrevocably vest in the Creditor
Trust without further action on the part of the Debtors or the
Creditor Trustee, and with no reversionary interest in the
Debtors.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/nysb17-10987-239.pdf

                   About Agent Provocateur

Agent Provocateur, Inc., based in New York, New York, filed a
Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Case No. 17-10987-MEW) on
April 11, 2017.  The Debtors operate retail shops in New York and
other areas of the country selling women's lingerie.

The Hon. Michael E. Wiles presides over the case. William H.
Schrag, Esq., at Thompson Hine LLP, serves as bankruptcy counsel.

In its petition, the Debtor estimated $1,000,001 to $10 million in
assets and $10,000,001 to $50 million in liabilities.

William K. Harrington, U.S. Trustee for the Southern District of
New York, on May 4 appointed three creditors of Agent Provocateur,
Inc., et al., to serve on the official committee of unsecured
creditors.  Fox Rothschild LLP serves as the Committee's counsel.

U.S. Trustee William K. Harrington appointed Warren E. Agin as the
consumer privacy ombudsman for Agent Provocateur, Inc.


AGROKOR DD: Bank Debt Trades at 2% Off
--------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which Agrokor DD is a
borrower traded in the secondary market at 97.69
cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4, 2018,
according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM Pricing.
This represents a decrease of 1.89 percentage points from the
previous week. Agrokor DD pays 675 basis points above LIBOR to
borrow under the $470 million facility. The bank loan matures on
July 31, 2022. Moody's rates the loan 'Caa1' and Standard & Poor's
gave a 'CCC+' rating to the loan. The loan is one of the biggest
gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted syndicated loans with
five or more bids in secondary trading for the week ended Friday,
May 4.

Agrokor -- http://www.agrokor.hr/en/-- is a conglomerate, largely
centered in agribusiness, with headquarters in Zagreb, Croatia.
The Agrokor Group's core businesses are the production and
distribution of food and beverages and retail.


AKC ENTERPRISES: Proposes Auction Sale of Personal Property
-----------------------------------------------------------
AKC Enterprises, Inc., asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Eastern District of Missouri to authorize the sale of personal
property, including but not limited to, a piano, furniture, stoves,
kitchen equipment, tables, point of sale equipment, artwork, wall
hangings, decor, small wares, and other related items throughout
the real property at 501 South Main Street, St. Charles, Missouri,
at auction.

A hearing on the Motion is set for June 4, 2018 at 11:00 a.m.  The
objection deadline is May 21, 2018.

The Debtor is a Missouri corporation that operates a winery, wine
shop and restaurant in 501 South Main.  It has entered into an
asset purchase agreement, subject to higher and better offers, for
the sale of 501 South Main and has filed a motion to approve the
sale with the Court.  The sale of 501 South Main does not include
the Personal Property.

The Debtor has selected GRS Appraisal & Auction Service to conduct
one or more public auction(s) of the Personal Property.  It has
filed its application to approve the retention of GRS to conduct
the Auction(s).

By the Motion, the Debtor asks entry of an Order authorizing it to
(i) sell the Personal Property at the Auction(s) free and clear of
all liens, claims and encumbrances to the highest bidders at the
Auction(s); and (ii) execute and deliver any documents, agreements,
bills of sale, deeds, certificates of title, affidavits, or other
similar instruments to facilitate the Sale of the Personal Property
to the successful bidders at the Auction(s).

The Debtor has determined that, in its business judgment, the sale
of the Personal Property at the Sale is in the best interest of its
Chapter 7 estate and its creditors.  The proposed Sale of the
Personal Property will be for fair and reasonable consideration,
and is in good faith in that the Sale will be an auction with the
opportunity for competitive bidding.

Subject to further order of the Court, the Sale contemplates an
auctioneer commission equal to 15% of the final hammer price of the
goods sold and conditionally sold and a 15% buyer's premium from
each successful buyer on goods they purchase.  All anticipated
expenses of the Sale, such as advertising, will be paid by the
auctioneer.  Any extraordinary and unanticipated expenses will be
allowed by further order of Court after notice to the Debtor's
counsel and to the Office of the U.S. Debtor.

To facilitate a prompt closing of the Sale(s), the Debtor asks that
the time period set forth in Bankruptcy Rule 6004(h) be waived and
that the order approving the Sale hereunder be immediately final.

                    About AKC Enterprises

AKC Enterprises, Inc., doing business as Little Hills Winery, doing
business as Little Hills Restaurant, doing business as Little Hills
Wine Shop, is a locally owned and operated wine producer in Saint
Charles, Missouri.  Its wines are made from French/American
Hybrids, German/American Hybrids and Native Missouri Grapes.  The
Company harvests grapes purchased from Missouri Grape Growers and
some Illinois Grape Growers.  It also produces its fruit wines from
fruit purchased from local suppliers.  The company --
https://www.littlehillswinery.com/ -- now produces 16 to 18 wines
depending on the time of year, designated and paired with its menu
served at its restaurant.  The Restaurant offers banquets,
catering, and delivery (Grubgo.com) services.  The Restaurant
accommodates 300 persons on its terraces and 100 inside its
building. The company's Little Hills Wine Shop is located at 710 S.
Main Street, just two blocks South of the Restaurant.  The Shop
features Little Hills Wines and many other Missouri Made Wines.

AKC Enterprises filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. E.D. Mo. Case
No. 18-40472) on Jan. 29, 2018.  In the petition signed by David
Campbell, president, the Debtor disclosed $1.20 million in assets
and $1.57 million in liabilities.  Thomas H. Riske, Esq., at
Carmody MacDonald P.C., serves as bankruptcy counsel to the Debtor.
An official committee of unsecured creditors has not been
appointed in the Chapter 11 case.


AMERICAN CRYOSTEM: Posts Second Quarter Net Loss of $207,703
------------------------------------------------------------
American Cryostem Corporation filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission its Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q reporting a
net loss of $762,096 on $779,849 of total revenues for the six
months ended March 31, 2018, compared to a net loss of $107,588 on
$750,142 of total revenues for the three months ended March 31,
2017.

For the three months ended March 31, 2018, American Cryostem
reported a net loss of $207,703 on $240,583 of total revenues
compared to a net loss of $12,307 on $429,671 of total revenues for
the three months ended March 31, 2017.

As of March 31, 2018, the Company had $1.32 million in total
assets, $1.93 million in total liabilities and a total
shareholders' deficit of $613,493.

As of March 31, 2018, the Company had a cash balance of $323,683 a
decrease of $88,359 since Sept. 30, 2017, its fiscal year end.  The
Company's sources of cash were $244,815 from operations, as
compared to a loss of $29,178 for the same period in fiscal 2017.
The Company used $347,140 for investing activities, mainly its
investment in Baoxin.

"Should we be unable to raise sufficient funds, we will be required
to curtail our operating plans if not cease them entirely.  We
cannot assure you that we will generate the necessary funding to
operate or develop our business," American Cryostem stated in the
Quarterly Report.  "In the event that we are able to obtain the
necessary financing to move forward with our business plan, we
expect that our expenses will increase significantly as we attempt
to grow our business.  Accordingly, the above estimates for the
financing required may not be accurate and must be considered in
light these circumstances."

There was no significant impact on the Company's operations as a
result of inflation for the six months ended March 31, 2018.

"We will require additional capital to fund marketing, operational
expansion, processing staff training, as well as for working
capital.  We are attempting to raise sufficient funds would enable
us to satisfy our cash requirements for a period of the next 12 to
24 months.  In order to finance further market development with the
associated expansion of operational capabilities for the time
period discussed above, we will need to raise additional working
capital.  However, we cannot assure you we can attract sufficient
capital to enable us to fully fund our anticipated cash
requirements during this period.  In addition, we cannot assure you
that the requisite financing, whether over the short or long term,
will be raised within the necessary time frame or on terms
acceptable to us, if at all.  Should we be unable to raise
sufficient funds we may be required to curtail our operating plans
if not cease them entirely.  As a result, we cannot assure you that
we will be able to operate profitably on a consistent basis, or at
all, in the future.

"In order to move our Company through its next critical growth
phase of development and commercialization and to ensure we are in
position to support our research collaborations and market
penetration strategies.  Management continues to seek new
investment into the Company from existing and new investors with
particular emphasis on identifying the best deal structure to
attract and retain meaningful capital sponsorship from both the
retail and institutional investing communities, while limiting
dilution to our current shareholders.  Management also focuses its
efforts on increasing sales and licensing revenue and reducing
expenses."

A full-text copy of the Form 10-Q is available for free at:

                    https://is.gd/22YLZx

                   About American CryoStem

Eatontown, New Jersey-based American CryoStem Corporation (OTC:
CRYO), founded in 2008, is a biotechnology company, standardizing
adipose tissue (fat) derived technologies (Adult Stem Cells) for
the fields of Regenerative and Personalized Medicine.  The Company
operates a state-of-art, FDA-registered, laboratory in New Jersey
and licensed laboratories in Hong Kong, Bangkok, Thailand, China
and Tokyo, Japan, which operate on its proprietary platform,
dedicated to the collection, processing, bio-banking, culturing and
differentiation of adipose tissue and adipose derived stem cells
(ADSCs) for current or future use in regenerative medicine.  CRYO
maintains a strategic portfolio of intellectual property (IP) that
surrounds its proprietary technology which supports a growing
pipeline of stem cell applications and biologic products.  The
Company is leveraging its platform and a developed product
portfolio to create a global footprint of licensed laboratory
affiliates, domestic and international physicians networks and
research organizations who purchase tissue collection, processing
and storage consumables from CRYO.  The Company has also secured a
number of online domain names relevant to its business, including
http://www.americancryostem.com/and
http://www.acslaboratories.com/  

American CryoStem incurred a net loss of $1.22 million for the year
ended Sept. 30, 2017, following a net loss of $1.88 million for the
year ended Sept. 30, 2016.

Fruci & Associates II, PLLC, in Spokane, Washington, issued a
"going concern" qualification in its report on the consolidated
financial statements for the year ended Sept. 30, 2017, citing that
the Company has incurred significant losses since its inception
which raises substantial doubt about the Company's ability to
continue as a going concern.


ANTONIO ANABO: Selling Oakland Rental Property for $810K
--------------------------------------------------------
Antonio H. Anabo asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern
District of California to authorize the sale of the rental property
located at 462 37th Street, Oakland, California to Danny Leung and
Mansour Ghanbari for $810,000, subject to overbid.

A hearing on the Motion is set for May 10, 2018 at 10:00 a.m.

The Debtor previously obtained authority to the Property on March
23, 2018.  The Debtor and previous buyer, Next Level Architecture,
LLC, mutually agreed to cancel their sale agreement and not
complete closing escrow on the Court approved sale on April 3,
2018.  Next Level Architecture was not satisfied with the condition
of the property and the Debtor wished to sell the Property without
additional contingencies.

The Debtor obtained authority to sell the Property to Sukpran Gill
and Property Investors 2016, LLC on April 13, 2018.  Unfortunately,
buyers did not fulfill their end of the sale agreement as of close
of business April 27, 2018.  The sale based on the Second Sale
Motion failed to close and the Property was re-listed on the MLS.

On April 30, 2018, the Debtor accepted received an offer to
purchase the Property from the Buyers.  The parties have entered
into the California Residential Purchase Agreement and Joint Escrow
Instruction.

The principal terms of agreement are:

     1. The purchase price is $810,000. The Buyers will make an
initial deposit of $10,000 into escrow and the balance of the
purchase price is $800,000.

     2. The Buyers are making an all cash offer and will place the
funds in escrow upon execution of the purchase agreement and
subject to Court approval.

     3. The loan to Wells Fargo Home Mortgage will be paid in the
full amount of $512,000 plus accrued interest on the closing date.

     4. The Property will be sold "as is, where is" with no
warranties or representations of any kind whatsoever.

     5. The Buyers agree that the sale is not subject to an
appraisal, inspection, or any contingencies.  Further, they will be
responsible for any unlawful detainer actions that may arise after
the sale is completed.

     6. The Buyers acknowledge the sale is subject to overbid at a
hearing for the sale of the property at a date to be determined by
the Court.

     7. Escrow is to close within three days or less of the Court's
approval of the sale.

The proposed sale will pay out the first and only lien holder,
Wells Fargo Home Mortgage will be paid in full, from the proceeds
of the sale, in the amount of $512,000 plus accrued interest on the
closing date.  The remaining proceeds from the sale will be used to
fund the Debtor's Chapter 11 Plan of Reorganization.

The Debtor listed the Property for sale with Cielo Fuentes.  Since
that time the agent has listed the Property on the MLS and has
shown the property for the last couple of months.  Since falling
out of escrow during the two previous sales to Next Level
Architecture, LLC and then to Sukpran Gill, the Broker relisted the
Property.

The Debtor proposes these overbidding procedures:

     1. The initial overbid must be at least $10,000 more than the
initial offer of $810,000.  The overbid must be on substantially
the same terms as set forth in the Purchase Agreement.

     2. Overbid increments will be $10,000 after the initial
overbid.

     3. Any successful overbidder must be able to close by the
Proposed Closing Date, or upon the Court's approval, whichever is
later.

     4. Any party wishing to overbid on the Property during the
hearing on the Motion must contact Debtor's counsel at least 48
hours prior to the hearing and provide evidence of available
financial resources such as funds and/or proof of ability to
finance the Debtor’s counsel up to the overbidder's maximum bid
to the Debtor's reasonable satisfaction.

     5. Any overbidder wishing to overbid on the Property during
the hearing must also submit, before the time of the hearing, a
deposit for the purchase of the Property, by cashier's check or
other cash equivalent in the amount of at least $10,000 made
payable to Tang & Associates Client Trust Account.  The successful
overbidder's deposit will be applied towards the purchase of the
Property and will not be refunded in the event the overbidder
cannot successfully close escrow, pursuant to the terms of the sale
as proscribed.

     6. If a broker brings a prospective bidder who is ultimately
the successful bidder and to whom the sale is approved, the broker
will share in the commission on the terms set forth in the purchase
agreement.

A copy of the Agreement attached to the Motion is available for
free at:

    http://bankrupt.com/misc/Antonio_Anabo_85_Sales.pdf

                      About Antonio H. Anabo

Antonio H. Anabo is a married man resident of the State of
California, Alameda County.  He has been employed by AC Transit as
a bus driver for the past 27 years.  His wife is unemployed.  His
assets are five real properties that were purchased between 1998
and 2006 for investment purposes and realization of gain.  

Antonio H. Anabo sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. N.D. Cal.
Case No. 16-42839) on Nov. 1, 2017.  The Debtor tapped Kevin Tang,
Esq., at Tang & Associates, as counsel.


APPVION INC: Delaware Bankruptcy Court Approves Asset Sale
----------------------------------------------------------
Appvion, Inc., on May 14, 2018, disclosed that the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the District of Delaware approved the sale of
substantially all of the Company's assets to a group of its lenders
led by Franklin Advisers, Inc. (the "Purchaser").  The sale is
expected to be completed by the end of May.

The Purchaser submitted the previously announced stalking horse bid
on February 8, 2018.  Under the terms of the executed asset
purchase agreement filed with the Bankruptcy Court, the total
consideration is approximately $340 million plus the assumption of
substantial liabilities, including many of the Company's
contractual obligations.  The transaction will substantially reduce
Appvion's debt from approximately $585 million to less than $175
million and provide additional liquidity to fund the Company's
operations.

Kevin Gilligan, Chief Executive Officer of Appvion, said, "We are
pleased to receive the Court's approval of the sale of our company
to a group of our lenders who have been long-term supporters of
Appvion.  Their continued investment is a vote of confidence in the
future of our business."

Gilligan added, "Our goal when we began the Chapter 11 process was
to better position Appvion to compete long-term in the evolving
specialty paper market and further invest in the innovation that
has always made us a market leader.  Under new ownership, Appvion
will have a substantially deleveraged balance sheet, enabling us to
better execute our business strategy.  We expect to complete the
sale expeditiously and emerge as a healthier, financially-stable
business that will be an even stronger partner to all of our
stakeholders in the years to come."

Franklin Advisers said, "We at Franklin Advisers are extremely
pleased to see that the Court has approved the sale to allow
Appvion to emerge from bankruptcy in a healthier financial position
that enables long-term stability and growth while simultaneously
affording us the opportunity to continue to demonstrate our
commitment to both the unionized and non-unionized employees, the
Company's customers, suppliers, and other stakeholders, as well as
our valued clients."

In addition, the Court on May 14 approved a global settlement
between Appvion, the Purchaser, Franklin Advisers, the Official
Committee of Unsecured Creditors, and holders of the Company's $250
million of second lien notes.  This settlement, which does not
affect the sale, will facilitate an orderly wind down of the
Company's legacy liabilities and pave the way for completion of the
Chapter 11 cases in an expeditious manner.

The sale does not include assumption by the Purchaser of the
Company's employee stock ownership plan ("ESOP") or its pension
plans.  The ESOP will be terminated following completion of the
sale and the outstanding shares of Company stock will be
extinguished.  The pension plans will be taken over by the Pension
Benefit Guaranty Corporation, a federal government agency that
guarantees payment of basic pension benefits earned by millions of
American workers and retirees.

Appvion and certain of its subsidiaries filed voluntary Chapter 11
cases on October 1, 2017 to facilitate a balance sheet
restructuring and better position the business for long-term growth
and success.

DLA Piper is serving as legal counsel to Appvion, Guggenheim is
serving as the Company's investment banker, and AlixPartners is
providing Chief Restructuring Officer services.  O'Melveny & Myers,
PJT Partners LP, and MERU are serving as advisors to Franklin
Advisers on the transaction.

                       About Appvion Inc.

Appvion, Inc. -- http://www.appvion.com/-- produces thermal,
carbonless, security, inkjet, digital specialty, and colored
papers.  The Company is the largest manufacturer of direct thermal
paper in North America.  Headquartered in Appleton, Wisconsin,
Appvion operates coating and converting plants there and in West
Carrollton, Ohio and a pulp and paper mill in Roaring Spring,
Pennsylvania.  The Company employs approximately 1,400 people and
is 100% employee-owned.

Appvion, Inc., and five affiliated debtors each filed a voluntary
petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr.
D. Del. Lead Case No. 17-12082) on Oct. 1, 2017.  The cases are
pending before the Honorable Kevin J. Carey.

Appvion Inc. disclosed total assets of $413,430,904 and total
liabilities of $714,758,194 as of Aug. 31, 2017.

DLA Piper is serving as legal counsel to Appvion, Guggenheim
Securities LLC is serving as the Company's investment banker, and
Alan Holtz of AlixPartners is serving as the Company's Chief
Restructuring Officer.  Prime Clerk LLC is the claims and noticing
agent.

On Oct. 11, 2017, Andrew Vara, acting U.S. trustee for Region 3,
appointed an official committee of unsecured creditors.  The
Committee retained Lowenstein Sandler LLP, as counsel, Klehr
Harrison Harvey Branzburg LLP, as Delaware co-counsel.

On Dec. 1, 2017, the court appointed Justin R. Alberto as the fee
examiner.  He tapped Bayard, P.A., as legal counsel.


ARBORSCAPE INC: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
--------------------------------------------------------
No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Chapter 11 case of Arborscape, Inc., as of May 8, 2018.

                     About Arborscape, Inc.

ArborScape, Inc., is a Colorado-based company dedicated to
providing sustainable landscapes for its clients by promoting the
art and science of horticulture using environmentally friendly
products and services.  It offers tree trimming and removal
services, tree spraying, lawn and tree care services.  The company
was founded in 1995.

ArborScape sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. D. Colo. Case No. 18-12660) on April 3, 2018.  In the
petition signed by David Merriman, president, the Debtor disclosed
$1.63 million in assets and $1.54 million in liabilities.  Judge
Joseph G. Rosania Jr. presides over the case.


ARCIMOTO INC: Incurs $2.04 Million Net Loss in First Quarter
------------------------------------------------------------
Arcimoto, Inc., filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
its Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q reporting a net loss of $2.04
million on $656 of total revenues for the three months ended March
31, 2018, compared to a net loss of $509,961 on $40,580 of total
revenues for the three months ended March 31, 2017.

As of March 31, 2018, Arcimoto had $15.86 million in total assets,
$1.98 million in total liabilities and $13.87 million in total
stockholders' equity.

As of March 31, 2018, the Company had approximately $1,425,000 in
cash and cash equivalents and another $9,746,000 in certificates of
deposits with maturities between three and nine months representing
a decrease in cash and cash equivalents and certificate of deposits
of approximately $2,899,000 from Dec. 31, 2017.  Sources of cash
are predominantly from the sale of equity. The Company anticipates
that its current sources of liquidity, including cash and cash
equivalents, together with its current projections of cash flow
from operating activities, may provide it with adequate liquidity
in the event the Company is able to achieve the product cost
reductions in its current plans.

"We may raise funds in the future, including with potential equity
or debt offerings, subject to market conditions and recognizing
that we cannot be certain that additional funds would be available
to us on favorable terms or at all.  The amount and timing of funds
that we may raise is undetermined and would vary based on a number
of factors, including our liquidity needs as well as access to
current and future sources of liquidity," the Company stated in the
SEC filing.

Sources of revenue in the first quarter of 2018 were $0 from the
sale of vehicles, $0 from merchandise sales, $656 in metal
fabrication revenue, and $0 in grant revenue.

The Company incurred an operating loss of $2.0 million in the first
quarter of 2018, compared to an operating loss of $0.5 million in
the first quarter of 2017.

                     Recent Company Highlights

    * Pre-orders for the FUV increased to 2,461 units, compared to

      1,281 units at March 31, 2017

    * Demonstrated the FUV at several notable industry events
      across the country

    * Completed a third and fourth Signature Series FUV, both to
      be used for marketing purposes

    * Continued to build-out Arcimoto's vertically-integrated
      metal fabrication and automation capabilities to both reduce
      vehicle production costs and increase the pace of production

    * On-track to methodically ramp FUV production in stages to
      mitigate risk, which entails the construction of 6
      additional station-built Signature Series FUVs, followed by
      15 line-built Beta Series FUVs starting in Q2 2018, and 25
      line-built Pilot Series FUVs starting in Q3 2018, after
      which full Retail Series FUV production is expected to begin

Management Commentary

"We have made significant progress on the goals cited in our Reg A
offering materials," said Mark Frohnmayer, founder and president of
Arcimoto.  "Our operations team remains laser-focused on meeting
our goal of scalable retail series production of the FUV by the end
of 2018.

"The primary focus of our business and marketing team is defining
the end-to-end customer experience, including innovative tools and
initiatives to build brand awareness and facilitate purchase.  Our
activities to-date have driven significant media attention and
continue to increase the demand for our vehicles.  As of May 8,
2018, FUV pre-orders are 2,660 vehicles, representing approximately
$40 million in anticipated revenue.  We expect that the pace of new
orders will accelerate as we deliver more FUVs to our pre-order
customers and fully develop our in-market experience center
locales.

"The entirety of Arcimoto remains focused on executing upon our
stated goal of delivering a vehicle to enhance the daily driving
routine of our customers, and that we believe truly moves the
needle on mobility emissions, while creating value for our
shareholders."

A full-text copy of the Form 10-Q is available for free at:

                     https://is.gd/E6MaP6

                     About Arcimoto, Inc.

Arcimoto, Inc., designs, develops, manufactures, and sells
three-wheeled electric vehicles.  The company was formerly known as
WTP Inc and changed its name to Arcimoto, Inc. in December 2011.
On Sept. 21, 2017, the Company listed its shares of common stock on
the Nasdaq Capital Market, following the conclusion of a Regulation
A offering that netted $18.1 million, after offering costs.
Arcimoto, Inc. was founded in 2007 and is headquartered in Eugene,
Oregon.

The report from the Company's independent accounting firm
dbbmckennon, the Company's auditor since 2016, on the consolidated
financial statements for the year ended Dec. 31, 2017, includes an
explanatory paragraph stating that the Company has suffered
recurring losses from operations and has earned limited revenues
from its intended operations, which raises substantial doubt about
its ability to continue as a going concern.

Arcimoto incurred a net loss of $3.31 million in 2017 and a net
loss of $1.91 million in 2016.  As of Dec. 31, 2017, Arcimoto had
$17.10 million in total assets, $1.31 million in total liabilities
and $15.78 million in total stockholders' equity.


ARCON HOMES: Approval Hearing on Disclosures Set for June 21
------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Robert N. Opel, II of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Middle District of Pennsylvania issued an amended order setting the
hearing to consider approval of Arcon Homes, LLC's disclosure
statement on June 21, 2018 at 10:00 a.m.

May 25, 2018 is fixed as the last day for filing and serving
written objections to the disclosure statement.

                        About Arcon Homes

Arcon Homes, LLC, filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition (Bankr.
M.D. Pa. Case No. 18-00213) on Jan. 22, 2018.  The Debtor's counsel
is Robert E. Chernicoff, Esq., at Cunningham Chernicoff &
Warshawsky, P.C.


ARCON PROPERTIES: June 21 Approval Hearing on Plan Outline
----------------------------------------------------------
Judge Robert N. Opel, II, of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Middle District of Pennsylvania issued an amended order setting the
hearing to consider approval of Arcon Properties, LLC's disclosure
statement on June 21, 2018 at 10:00 a.m.

May 25, 2018 is fixed as the last day for filing and serving
written objections to the disclosure statement.

The Troubled Company Reporter previously reported that unsecured
creditors of Arcon Properties, LLC, and Arcon Homes, LLC, will be
paid 10% of their claims under the companies' proposed Chapter 11
plans of reorganization.

A copy of the disclosure statement is available for free at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/pamb18-00212-76.pdf

Copies of the Chapter 11 plans are available for free at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/pamb18-00212-75.pdf
     http://bankrupt.com/misc/pamb18-00213-41.pdf

              About Arcon Properties and Arcon Homes

Arcon Properties, LLC, is a Pennsylvania company which commenced
business in April, 2013.  It was formed for the purpose of owning a
real property located at 195 Airport Road, Selinsgrove, Snyder
County, Pennsylvania.  The real estate was initially to be utilized
as a manufactured building plant and associated offices.

Arcon Homes, LLC, was formed for the purpose of owning equipment
and various vehicles and carriers to be utilized in the
manufactured building business.  It is a Pennsylvania company,
which commenced business in 2007.

Arcon Properties and Arcon Homes sought protection under Chapter 11
of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. M.D. Pa. Case Nos. 18-00212 and
18-00213) on Jan. 22, 2018.  The petitions were signed by Merrill
D. Miller, Jr., member.  

At the time of the filing, Arcon Properties estimated assets and
liabilities of $1 million to $10 million.  Arcon Homes estimated
assets of less than $500,000 and liabilities of $1 million to $10
million.

Judge Robert N. Opel II presides over the cases.  

Robert E. Chernicoff, Esq., at Cunningham, Chernicoff & Warshawsky
P.C., serves as the Debtors' counsel.



ARMADA LEASING: Plan Discloses Settlement Agreement with R.W. Timms
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Armada Leasing, LLC, and High Country Transportation, Inc., filed
with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas a
second amended disclosure statement in support of its joint chapter
11 plan of reorganization.

On Sept. 22, 2017, the Debtors initiated adversary proceeding no.
17-03081 by filing their Original Complaint against R.W. Timms.
Simultaneously, the Debtors filed with the Bankruptcy Court their
Emergency Application in Support of Order Requiring R.W. Timms
Leasing, LLC and R.W. Timms TX Investments, LLC to Appear and Show
Cause, if any, Why They Should Not be Held in Contempt of Court for
Asserting Control over Property of the Estate in Violation of the
Automatic.

In the Original Complaint, the Debtors allege, inter alia, that
R.W. Timms breached the Agreement by failing to pay for the Dry Van
Trailers. At a mediation held on Feb. 15, 2018, the Debtors and
R.W. Timms reached an agreement to settle the Adversary Proceeding
for $283,000.

This latest filing discloses that the Debtors filed a motion to
approve the settlement and on April 13, 2018, the Court entered an
order approving the settlement. The Debtors expect to have received
payment of the settlement amount before the Confirmation Hearing.

Allowed Class 7 Settlement Class Claims will now be paid their pro
rata portion of the Settlement Pool. To the extent the amount of
the Allowed Settlement Class Claims is less than $800,000, those
claims will be paid in full. All amounts in excess of this will be
paid from subsequent Guaranteed Quarterly Distributions.

A full-text copy of the Second Amended Disclosure Statement is
available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/txnb17-32498-11-259.pdf

                       About Armada Leasing

Headquartered in Dallas, Texas, Armada Leasing, LLC --
http://www.highcountrytrans.com/-- specializes in leasing trucks
to owner-operators.  High Country Transportation, Inc., an
affiliate of Armada which is also based in Dallas, is in the
trucking industry.  

HCT operates in three divisions, namely: the over-the-road
hopperbottom division which focuses on serving shippers in the
Midwest, Texas and Western 11 states; the dedicated dry bulk
division which operates in Colorado and New Mexico and actively
seeks new opportunities in the West, Midwest and Texas; and the
Freedom over-the-road dry van division which focuses on helping
contractors who also have the entrepreneurial drive to create their
own trucking business.  

Armada and HCT filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection (Bankr.
N.D. Tex. Lead Case No. 17-32498) on June 29, 2017.  The petitions
were signed by Kirk Crowley, managing member of Armada and
vice-president of HCT.

At the time of the filing, Armada estimated assets of $1 million
to
$10 million and liabilities of $10 million to $50 million.  HCT
estimated assets and liabilities of $10 million and $50 million.


ATP SECURITY: Unsecureds to Recoup 17.65% Over 48 Months Under Plan
-------------------------------------------------------------------
ATP Security Inc. filed a motion asking the U.S. Bankruptcy Court
for the Central District of California for an order approving the
adequacy of its disclosure statement to accompany its plan of
reorganization.

Under the plan, general unsecured creditors can expect payment on
first of the month following confirmation of the Debtor's plan,
which is estimated to be Sept. 1, 2018 in the amount of $100 and
continuing every month for 48 months.  The Debtor will pay
unsecured class $100 per month for months 1-24.  Payments to
unsecured class will step up to $600 per month for months 24-28.
Unsecured creditors will receive payments equivalent to 17.65% of
their claims.

Future earnings from continued operations of the Debtor and
infusion of capital consisting of a capital contribution from
Debtor's principal in the amount of $1,000 are the sources of money
earmarked to pay creditors and interest holders.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/txnb17-33578-11-455.pdf

                    About ATP Security Inc.

ATP Security Inc., filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition (Bankr.
C.D. Cal. Case No. 17-21914) on September 28, 2017, disclosing less
than $1 million in both assets and liabilities.  Judge Sandra R.
Klein presides over the case.


AUTO SUPPLY: Needs Time To Resolve Claims Issues With Committee
---------------------------------------------------------------
Auto Supply Co., Inc., asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Middle District of North Carolina to extend the exclusive periods
during which only the Debtor can file a plan of liquidation and
disclosure statement and obtain acceptances of the Plan through and
including June 7, 2018, and Aug. 6, 2018, respectively.

The Court has set May 8, 2018, as the date by which the Debtor must
file its Disclosure Statement and Plan.  Consequently, the Debtor
has until July 7, 2018, to obtain acceptance of the Plan by
impaired classes.

On Jan. 10, 2018, the Debtor filed a motion to sell substantially
all of its assets to a stalking horse bidder, or other successful
bidder, at an auction sale.  The Court entered an interim order on
Jan. 31, 2018, approving, inter alia, the form of asset purchase
agreement, the auction bidding procedures, and the notice of
auction sale.  The Court entered a final order on March 1, 2018,
approving the sale of the assets to Elliott Auto Supply Co., Inc.
dba Factory Motor Parts he successful bidder at the auction sale,
free and clear of liens, claims and encumbrances, transferring
liens, claims and encumbrances to the proceeds of sale, and
authorizing the assumption and assignment of certain executory
contracts and leases in connection with the sale of the assets.
The Debtor and FMP closed the sale of the assets on March 12,
2018.

The Debtor and the Committee have been working in concert since
mid-March to resolve certain claims issues and to formulate what it
hopes will be a joint plan of liquidation to submit to the Court
with a Disclosure Statement.

The Debtor anticipates that it and the Committee will be able to
agree on a proposed Plan, if additional time is provided for the
parties to finalize their discussions and drafting.

The Debtor seeks an additional 30 days to draft a Disclosure
Statement and develop a Plan in collaboration with the Committee.
The Plan will not be accepted by each class of claims impaired
under the Plan before 180 days after the date of the order for
relief.  Thus, Debtor also seeks an extension of the period for
soliciting acceptances of the Plan by an additional 30 days.
The Debtor has consulted with the Committee and it does not oppose
this request.
A copy of the Debtor's request is available at:

          http://bankrupt.com/misc/ncmb18-50018-270.pdf

                   About Auto Supply Company

Founded in 1954, Auto Supply Co., Inc. -- http://www.ascodc.com/--
is a family-owned supplier of OEM and aftermarket automotive parts,
serving the automotive repair professional from three distribution
centers, 15 store locations and seven battery trucks throughout
North Carolina and Western Virginia. The Company is based in
Winston Salem, North Carolina.

About Auto Supply Co. sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. M.D.N.C.
Case No. 18-50018) on Jan. 8, 2018.  In the petition signed by
President Charles A. Key, Jr., the Debtor disclosed total assets of
$13.17 million and total debt of $22.04 million.

The case is assigned to Judge Lena M. James.

The Debtor tapped Ashley S. Rusher, Esq., at Blanco Tackabery &
Matamoros, P.A., as its bankruptcy counsel, and The Finley Group as
its financial advisor.

The Office of the U.S. Trustee on Jan. 22, 2018, appointed an
official committee of unsecured creditors.  The committee hired
Kane Russell Coleman Logan PC as its bankruptcy counsel, and
Waldrep LLP as its local counsel.


AYTU BIOSCIENCE: Reports $2.81 Million Net Loss for Third Quarter
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Aytu Bioscience, Inc., filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission its Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q reporting a net loss
of $2.81 million on $607,473 of total revenue for the three months
ended March 31, 2018, compared to a net loss of $5.21 million on
$893,548 of total revenue for the three months ended March 31,
2017.

For the nine months ended March 31, 2018, the Company reported a
net loss of $10.73 million on $2.73 million of total revenue
compared to a net loss of $15.75 million on $2.38 million of total
revenue for the same period last year.

As of March 31, 2018, the Company had $23.37 million in total
assets, $10.62 million in total liabilities and $12.75 million in
total stockholders' equity.

Cash and cash equivalents totaled approximately $12.1 million as of
March 31, 2018.

Sales, general, and administrative expenses for the quarter were
$4,637,000, which is in line with the same period last year.

Cash used in operations for the quarter was $4,078,000.

                   Q3 2018 Operational Highlights

   * Grew Natesto paid prescriptions to 2,300 in the quarter
     ending March 31, 2018, bringing total year-to-date paid
     prescriptions to 5,168, 219% growth over the same period last
     year

   * Launched the Natesto Support Program (NSP) and announced that

     through just the first nine weeks of implementation:

       - 63% of all enrolled patients who have been previously
         treated with a topical testosterone replacement therapy
         have been approved for Natesto treatment by payors
         through the NSP

       - 70% of patients who have had their prescription claim
         adjudicated at one specific large national payor, have
         been approved for Natesto treatment

       - Overall and across all enrolled patients, coverage for
         Natesto through the NSP has improved by approximately 21%
         at this early stage of implementation

  * Presented new research findings for Natesto at the Endocrine
    Society's 100th Annual Meeting

  * Received market registration for the MiOXSYS system for male
    infertility in Mexico

  * Completed an underwritten public offering for total gross
    proceeds of $12.9 million

Josh Disbrow, chief executive officer of Aytu BioScience commented,
"During the quarter, we made solid progress toward our stated goals
of increasing Natesto paid prescriptions, increasing product
revenues to reflect lower discounting and patient couponing levels,
and continuing to build clinical support that differentiates
Natesto from other marketed testosterone replacement therapies.
First, we launched the Natesto Support Program to capture more
prescription reimbursement.  In the first nine weeks since the
launch of this program, 63% of all enrolled patients, who have been
previously treated with a topical testosterone replacement therapy,
have been approved for Natesto treatment by payors through the
program.  Second, we began actively pursuing third party payors to
more broadly cover Natesto.  During the quarter we have formally
proposed contract terms with multiple payors and have received a
favorable, initial response from one particularly large national
plan.  Third, we continued to invest in increasing the body of
clinical evidence supporting Natesto's distinct efficacy and safety
profile.  We initiated a clinical study, at the University of
Miami, studying Natesto's effect on spermatogenesis in hypogonadal
men, for which we expect completion in the second half of fiscal
2019.  Finally, the company presented new research findings at the
Endocrine Society's 100th annual meeting, illustrating additional
safety benefits of Natesto."

Mr. Disbrow added, "As a result of the early progress with the
Natesto Support Program, we are realizing a significantly higher
percentage of revenue-generating prescriptions.  Although, a
step-change in the revenue line was expected to occur as a result
of the significant voucher and coupon utilization that concluded in
Q3, upon the discontinuation of vouchers and zero-revenue
prescriptions on April 1, 2018, the early results demonstrate that
the company's combined strategy is working and is yielding the
positive results we anticipated.  Already in April we have seen a
significant increase in Natesto revenue over January, February, and
March, and we anticipate continued growth as we progress into this
next phase of the Natesto launch."

                           Going Concern

For the quarter ended March 31, 2018, and for the most recent four
quarters ended March 31, 2018, the Company used an average of $3.8
million of cash per quarter for operating activities.  Looking
forward, the Company expects cash used in operating activities to
be in the range of historical usage rates, and the Company expects
its revenue to increase.  Therefore, it is uncertain as to whether
the Company is sufficiently capitalized.  The Company said that
because it may not have a large enough cash balance as of March 31,
2018, Accounting Standards Update 2014-15, Presentation of
Financial Statements -- Going Concern (Subtopic 205-40) requires
the Company to report that there is an indication that substantial
doubt about the Company's ability to continue as a going concern
exists.

"The ability of the Company to continue its operations is dependent
on management's plans, which include continuing to build on the
historical growth trajectory of Natesto, seeking to acquire cash
generating assets and if needed, accessing the capital markets
through the sale of our securities.  Based on our ability to raise
capital in the past as well as our continued growth, the Company
believes additional financing will be available and will continue
to be available to support the current level of operations for at
least the next 12 months from the date of this report.  There can
be no assurance, however, that such financing will be available on
terms which are favorable to the Company, or at all.  While Company
management believes that its plan to fund ongoing operations will
be successful, there is uncertainty due to the Company's limited
operating history and therefore no assurance that its plan will be
successfully realized," the Company stated in the SEC filing.

A full-text copy of the Form 10-Q is available for free at:

                       https://is.gd/4GXWoW

                       About Aytu BioScience

Englewood, Colorado-based Aytu BioScience, Inc. (OTCMKTS:AYTU) --
http://www.aytubio.com/-- is a commercial-stage specialty
healthcare company concentrating on developing and commercializing
products with an initial focus on urological diseases and
conditions.  Aytu is currently focused on addressing significant
medical needs in the areas of urological cancers, hypogonadism,
urinary tract infections, male infertility, and sexual
dysfunction.

Aytu BioScience reported a net loss of $22.50 million for the year
ended June 30, 2017, a net loss of $28.18 million for the year
ended June 30, 2016, and a net loss of $7.72 million for the year
ended June 30, 2015.

Aytu BioScience received on April 9, 2018 a letter from The Nasdaq
Stock Market LLC indicating that the Company has failed to comply
with the minimum bid price requirement of Nasdaq Listing Rule
5550(a)(2).  Nasdaq Listing Rule 5550(a)(2) requires that companies
listed on the Nasdaq Capital Market maintain a minimum
closing bid price of at least $1.00 per share.


B.C.I. FINANCES: U.S. Ct. Recognizes Australian Foreign Proceedings
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Sean H. Lane of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern
District of New York granted the foreign representatives' petitions
for recognition under Chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code of the
Australian liquidation proceedings of debtors B.C.I. Finances Pty
Limited, Binqld Finances Pty Limited, E.G.L. Development (Canberra)
Pty Limited, and Ligon 268 Pty Limited.

Liquidators John Sheahan and Ian Russell Lock sought recognition of
the Debtors' Australian liquidation proceedings as foreign main
proceedings under Chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code in order to
facilitate the administration of the Debtors' estates in Australia.
Specifically, the Liquidators seek the assistance of the Court in
gaining access to and/or conducting discovery of Andrew and Michael
Binetter, and any Debtor assets, documents, or records they may
have with them in the United States.

Objecting parties Ligon 158 Pty Limited and Andrew Binetter argue
that the Debtors are not eligible for relief under Chapter 15
because they have not satisfied Section 109(a) of the Bankruptcy
Code, which dictates that "only a person that resides or has a
domicile, a place of business, or property in the United States, or
a municipality, may be a debtor under this title."

The Court holds that the retainer account constitutes property of
the Debtors that satisfies Section 109(a) of the Bankruptcy Code.
It is well established that "[a] debtor's funds held in a retainer
account in the possession of counsel to a foreign representative
constitute property of the debtor in the United States and satisfy
the eligibility requirements of section 109." As a general matter,
courts that have construed the "property" requirement in Section
109 "with respect to foreign corporations and individuals have
found the eligibility requirement satisfied by even a minimal
amount of property located in the United States."

The Court also concludes that the Debtors' Fiduciary Duty Claims
against Andrew and Michael Binetter constitute property in the
United States to satisfy Section 109(a). It is undisputed that
these claims are property of the Debtors.

The parties also disagree regarding the sufficiency and propriety
of the record concerning Australian law. The Objecting Parties
specifically request that "[s]hould this Court determine that it
must refer to Australian law, . . . the Court reopen the
evidentiary hearing to allow for cross-examination of [Debtors'
Australian law expert] and rebuttal." But the Court has already
accepted dueling declarations from both sides' experts, and
declines to re-open the record on Australian law. Instead, the
Court has examined the existing record and finds it to be
sufficient for determining applicable Australian law. The record
here is consistent with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 44.1, which
governs determinations of foreign law.

Having found that Australian law applies, the Court agrees with the
Debtors' expert that Australian law provides that the Fiduciary
Duty Claims are located in New York where the Binetters reside. The
Liquidators submitted two declarations on the issue from their
expert on Australian law. Mr. Tobin Meagher first concludes that
the Fiduciary Duty Claims against Andrew and Michael Binetter
constitute property of the Debtors. Mr. Meagher also concludes that
Australian courts classify "a claim for breach of fiduciary duty .
. . in terms of property, as a chose in action . . . ." The
Objecting Parties' expert does not dispute either of these
conclusions, both of which the Court finds persuasive and adopts.

A full-text copy of the Court's Memorandum Decision dated April 24,
2018 is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/nysb17-11266-40.pdf

Counsel for John Sheahan and Ian Russell Lock as Liquidators:

     Robert N. H. Christmas, Esq.
     Christopher J. Fong, Esq.
     NIXON PEABODY LLP
     55 West 46th Street
     New York, New York 10036
     rchristmas@nixonpeabody.com
     cfong@nixonpeabody.com

Counsel for Ligon 158 Pty Limited and Andrew Binetter:

     Adam H. Friedman, Esq.
     Jonathan T. Koevary, Esq.
     OLSHAN FROME WOLOSKY LLP
     1325 Avenue of the Americas
     New York, New York 10019
     afriedman@olshanlaw.com
     jkoevary@olshanlaw.com

                     About BCI Finances

B.C.I. Finances PTY Ltd. is an Australian borrowing and lending
entity that operated within a complex group of companies targeted
by Australian authorities for 25 years of tax avoidance.

B.C.I. Finances Pty Limited (in Liquidation) and three affiliates,
Binqld Finances Pty Limited (in Liquidation), E.G.L. Development
(Canberra) Pty Limited (in Liquidation), and Ligon 268 Pty Limited
(in Liquidation) filed Chapter 15 petitions (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Lead
Case No. 17-11266) on May 9, 2017, to seek recognition of their
winding down proceedings in Australia.

John Sheahan and Ian Russell Lock, the foreign representatives,
signed the Chapter 15 petitions.

The Hon. Sean H. Lane presides over the Chapter 15 cases.

Robert N. H. Christmas, Esq., and Christopher J. Fong, Esq., at
Nixon Peabody LLP, in New York, serve as counsel to the
petitioners.


BAL HARBOUR: Receiver Taps Meland Russin & Vazquez as Co-Counsel
----------------------------------------------------------------
Drew M. Dillworth, court appointed receiver for Bal Harbour Quarzo,
LLC a/k/a Synergy Capital Group, LLC a/k/a Synergy Investments
Group, LLC, seeks authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of Florida, Miami Division, to retain Peter D.
Russin and the law firm of Meland Russin & Budwick, P.A. and
Gerardo A. Vazquez and the law firm of Yazquez & Associates as
special litigation co-counsel for the Receiver and the Debtor's
estate.

The Receiver seeks to employ and retain MRB and Yazquez as his and
the estate's special litigation co-counsel to investigate and, if
appropriate in the discretion of the Receiver, pursue any and all
claims or causes of action of the estate (including, without
limitation, claims under chapter 5 of the Bankruptcy Code and tort
claims), against the Lender, and any avoidance actions against
various third parties pursuant to section 544 of the Bankruptcy
Code at the direction of the Receiver.

Fees MRB and Vazquez will charge are:

     i. For any Recovery that is realized generated, received,
obtained or accrued to or for the benefit ofthe estate prior to the
filing of a complaint in respect of any MRB Litigation Claim -25%
of such gross Recovery.

    ii. For any Recovery that is realized, generated, received,
obtained or accrued to or for the benefit of the estate after the
filing of a complaint and before the filing of an answer to the
complaint in respect of any MRB Litigation Claim - 30% of such
gross Recovery.

   iii. For any Recovery that is rcalized, generated, received,
obtained or accrued to or for the benefit of the estate after the
filing of an answer to the complaint in respect of any MRB
Litigation Claim - 35% of such gross Recovery.

    iv. For any Recovery that is realized, generated, received,
obtained or accrued to the benefit of the estate after the filing
of a notice of appeal of any judgment obtained by the
Receiver/estate in respect of any MRB Litigation Claim - 40% of
such gross Recovery.

Peter D. Russin, Esq., shareholder with the law firm of Meland
Russin & Budwick, P.A., attests that his firm is a disinterested
person as defined in Section 101(14) of the Bankruptcy Code.

Gerardo A. Vazquez, Esq., sole principal of Vazquez & Associates,
attests that his firm is a disinterested persons in Section 101(14)
of the Bankruptcy Code.

The attorneys can be reached through:

     Peter D. Russin, Esq.
     Meland Russin & Budwick, P.A.
     200 S Biscayne Blvd #3200
     Miami, FL 33131
     Phone: +1 305-358-6363

          -- and --

     Gerardo A. Vazquez, Esq.
     Vazquez & Associates
     701 Brickell Avenue, Suite 2000
     Miami, FL 33131
     Tel: 305-371-8064
     Fax: 305-371-4967

                  About Bal Harbour Quarzo

Bal Harbour Quarzo, LLC, also known as Synergy Capital Group, LLC,
also known as Synergy Investments Group, LLC, is a Florida limited
liability company based in Miami operating in the hotels and motels
industry.

Based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Bal Harbour Quarzo, LLC, through
its receiver, filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case
No. 18-11793) on Feb. 16, 2018.  In the petition signed by Drew M.
Dillworth, receiver appointed by Florida State Court, the Debtor is
estimated to have $10 million to $50 million in total assets and
$50 million to $100 million in total liabilities.  Judge Raymond B
Ray presides over the case.  Eric J Silver, Esq., at Stearns Weaver
Miller Weissler Alhadeff & Sitterson, P.A., is the Debtor's
counsel.  Genovese Joblove & Battista, P.A., is special counsel.

The U.S. Trustee for Region 21 on April 20, 2018, appointed three
creditors to serve on the official committee of unsecured creditors
in the Chapter 11 case.  The Committee retained Linda Leali, P.A.,
as counsel.



BALLENGER CONSTRUCTION: Trustee Selling Property for $200K
----------------------------------------------------------
Michael B. Schmidt, the Liquidating Trustee of Ballenger
Construction Co., asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern
District of Texas to authorize the sale of the Trust's interest in
the real property described in Cameron County, Texas as 10.362 ac
tract, NE Corner of US Hwy 281 & FM 509, Los Indios, Texas, to
Brenta, LLC for the total sum of $200,000.

Objections, if any, must be filed within 21 days from the service
of Notice.

The Trustee intends to sell the Trust's interest in the Property to
the Buyer, free and clear of all liens, claims and interests for
the total cash sum of $200,000, as is, where is, and with all
faults in accordance with the terms and provisions of the Contract.
To the extent valid, all liens, claims and interest will attach to
the proceeds of the sale.

Further, the Trustee intends to sell the Property to the Buyer,
free and clear of the liens, claims and interests of as set forth
in Schedule C, but not limited to, those of Frost National Bank.
All liens, claims and interests will attach to the proceeds, to the
extent valid.  The Trustee is simultaneously paying the $176 filing
fee for the Motion.

A copy of the Contract and Schedule C attached to the Notice is
available for free at:

    http://bankrupt.com/misc/Ballenger_Construction_1183_Sales.pdf

The sale of the Property will benefit the estate in that the net
funds received will be used to pay unpaid taxes and closing costs.
The Trustee and the estate retain all rights under 506 (c) of the
Code.  He believes that the sales price is the best price
obtainable.  

He asks, at his discretion, upon his review and verification of any
valid liens, the Court authorizes him to pay all such liens and
broker fees and closing costs, including attorney documentation
fees from the proceeds of the sale or have such liens and fees (or
any portion thereof) withheld and paid by the title company at
closing.  

The Trustee asks the Court to waive the stay provided under FRBP
6004(h).

The Purchaser:

          BRENTA, LLC
          902 E. Owassa Road
          Edinburg, TX 78542
          Telephone: (956) 227-4337
          E-mail: javier@tadcoroofing.com

The Trustee can be reached at:

          Michael B. Schmidt
          401 Grant Place
          Corpus Christi, TX 78411
          Telephone: (361) 884-9949
          Facsimile: (361) 884-6000
          E-mail: m_schmidt@swbell.net

                About Ballenger Construction

Ballenger Construction Co., filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
protection (Bankr. S.D. Tex. 12-20645) on Dec. 7, 2012, in Corpus
Christi, listing under $50,000 in assets and $10 million to $50
million in liabilities.  Judge Richard S. Schmidt oversees the
case.  The Debtor is represented by Roderick Glen Ayers, Jr.,
Esq., at Langley Banack Inc., as counsel.  The petition was signed
by Joe C. Ballenger Jr./Joe C. Ballinger Sr., president/CEO.tr

Michael B. Schmidt is appointed as the Liquidating Trustee of the
Debtor.


BENCHMARK POST: Seeks Confirmation of Joint First Amended Plan
--------------------------------------------------------------
Benchmark Post, Inc. and Benchmark Sound Services, Inc. filed a
motion asking the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of
California to confirm their jointly proposed first amended chapter
11 plan of reorganization.

The Plan is an operating plan of reorganization, pursuant to which
the Debtors will continue operating the Benchmark enterprise and
utilize the earnings from the same to pay creditors as contemplated
under the Plan. Management of the Debtors will not change. The
effective date of the Plan is 15 days after entry of the order
confirming the Plan. The Plan provides for payment in full of all
allowed claims over time. The Plan will be funded by the
Reorganized Debtors' ongoing operations and contributions from
Pedro Jimenez, the sole owner of the Debtors. The Debtors’
projections show that the Debtors' cash position will be vastly
improved by the end of 2020, and the Debtors believe that their
ongoing operations will continue to flourish beyond 2020 and
through the life of the Plan.

The secured and unsecured deficiency claims of JPMorgan, which
together comprise Classes 1 and 3, will be paid in full, with
interest accruing at a rate of 6.5%, from July 2018 through April
2025. The Debtors will first make interest-only payments to
JPMorgan, which will then be followed by combined interest and
principal payments, and the amount of principal that will be repaid
in the monthly payments will increase at certain intervals.

The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation's Class 2 claim, which is
contingent and unliquidated, will not be paid since the contingency
that would give rise to the PBGC's right to payment (failure to
meet minimum funding contributions to the Pension Plan) has not
been met.

The other unsecured claims, which comprise Class 4, will be paid in
full over a period of 84 months commencing on Jan. 1, 2019.

The Debtors assert that the Plan complies with all of the
applicable provisions of Sections 1129(a) and (b) of the Code
necessary for the Court to confirm the Plan. Among other things,
the Debtors will have sufficient funds to satisfy both ongoing
operations and scheduled creditor payments. Thus, the Plan is
"feasible." Moreover, as demonstrated by the liquidation analysis
contained in the Disclosure Statement accompanying the Plan, the
Debtors' creditors will recover more under the Plan than they would
in a chapter 7 liquidation.

For these reasons, the Debtors request that the Court confirm the
Plan and grant the motion in its entirety.

A full-text copy of the Debtors' Motion is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/cacb2-17-15568-154.pdf

                    About Benchmark Post Inc.

Located in Burbank, CA, Benchmark Post --
http://www.benchmarkpost.com/-- is an independent state-of-the-art
facility providing post production audio services for feature
films, television and motion picture advertising.  Benchmark Post
was founded in January 2015 by Re-Recording mixer Pedro Jimenez.

Benchmark Post, Inc., and its affiliates filed a Chapter 11
bankruptcy petition (Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 17-15568) on May 5,
2017.  The Hon. Barry Russell presides over the case.
SulmeyerKupetz APC represents the Debtor as counsel.

In its petition, Benchmark Post, Inc., estimated $1 million to $10
million in both assets and liabilities.  Benchmark Sound Services,
estimated $100,000 to $500,000 in assets, and $1 million to $10
million in liabilities. The petition was signed by Pedro Jimenez,
president.


BENJYS: Hires Morrison-Tenenbaum PLLC as Counsel
------------------------------------------------
Benjys Kosher Pizza & Dairy Restaurant Inc. d/b/a Benjys seeks
authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy Copurt for the Eastern District
of New York to hire Morrison-Tenenbaum PLLC as its counsel,
effective as of March 12, 2018.

Professional services that MT Law will render:

     a. advise the Debtor with respect to its powers and duties as
debtor-in-possession in the management of its estate;

     b. assist in any amendments of Schedules and other financial
disclosures and in the reparation/review/amendment of a disclosure
statement and plan of reorganization;

     c. negotiate with the Debtor's creditors and taking the
necessary legal steps to confirm and consummate a plan of
reorganization;

     d. prepare on behalf of the Debtor all necessary motions,
applications, answers, proposed orders, reports and other papers to
be filed by the Debtor in this case;

     e. appear before the Bankruptcy Court to represent and protect
the interests of the Debtor and its estate; and

     f. perform all other legal services for the Debtor that may be
necessary and proper for an effective reorganization.

Lawrence F. Morrison, Esq., partner at Morrison Tenenbaum, PLLC,
attests that MT Law is a "disinterested party" within the meaning
of Secs. 101(14) and 327 of the Bankruptcy Code.

MT Law's hourly rates are:

     Lawrence F. Morrison   $525.00
     Associates             $380.00
     Paraprofessionals      $175.00

The counsel can be reached through:

     Lawrence F. Morrison, Esq.
     MORRISON TENENBAUM PLLC
     87 Walker Street, Floor 2
     New York, NY 10013
     Phone: 212-620-0938
     Email: lmorrison@m-t-law.com
     
                   About Benjys Kosher Pizza &
               Dairy Restaurant Inc. d/b/a Benjys

Benjys Kosher Pizza & Dairy Restaurant Inc. d/b/a Benjys is a
counter-serve kosher pizzeria that has everything from breakfast &
ice cream to sushi & falafel.

Benjys Kosher Pizza & Dairy Restaurant Inc. d/b/a Benjys filed a
Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 18-41353) on March
12, 2018, listing under $1 million in both assets and liabilities.
The case is assigned to Judge Elizabeth S. Stong.  Lawrence
Morrison, at Morrison Tenenbaum PLLC, is the Debtor's counsel.


BERTUCCI'S HOLDINGS: June 4 Auction of All Assets Set
-----------------------------------------------------
Bertucci's Holdings, Inc., and affiliates filed with the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware a notice of their
intended sale of substantially all assets to Right Lane Dough
Acquisition, LLC, subject to overbid.

Pursuant to the Bid Procedures Order entered by the Court on May 7,
2018, the Debtors have entered into an Agreement with the Stalking
Horse Bidder for the sale of substantially all of their assets
subject to a competitive bidding process as set forth in the
Bidding Procedures Order.

All interested parties are invited to make an offer to purchase the
Acquired Assets in accordance with the terms and conditions
approved by the Court by 10:00 a.m. (EDT) on May 31, 2018.
Pursuant to the Bidding Procedures, the Debtors may conduct an
Auction for the Acquired Assets beginning at 10:00 a.m. (EDT) on
June 4, 2018, at the offices of Landis Rath & Cobb LLP or such
later time or other place as the Debtors notify all Qualified
Bidders who have submitted Qualified Bids.

Participation at the Auction is subject to the Bidding Procedures
and the Bidding Procedures Order.  

A hearing to approve the Sale of the Acquired Assets to the highest
and best bidder will be held on June 5, 2018 at 11:30 a.m. (EDT) at
the Court.  The hearing on the Sale may be adjourned without notice
other than an adjournment in open court.

Objections, if any, to the proposed Sale must be filed and served
in accordance with the Bidding Procedures Order, and actually
received no later than 4:00 p.m. (EDT) on May 30,2018.

The notice is qualified in its entirety by the Bid Procedures
Order.

                    About Bertucci's Holdings

Founded in 1981, Bertucci's Holdings, Inc. --
http://www.bertuccis.com/-- owns and operates 59 full-service
casual family restaurants offering traditional Italian and
contemporary food centered around its signature open kitchens and
brick ovens.  As of the petition date, the company and its
affiliates have 969 full-time employees and 3,245 part-time
employees.  Bertucci's is headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts
and operates in 11 east coast states from New Hampshire to
Virginia.

Bertucci's Holdings, Inc., sought protection under Chapter 11 of
the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Del. Lead Case No. 18-10894) on
April 15, 2018.  In the petitions signed by Brian Connell, chief
financial officer and senior vice-president, the Debtors estimated
assets of less than $50,000 and liabilities of $50 million to $100
million.  

Judge Mary F. Walrath presides over the cases.

The Debtors tapped Landis Rath & Cobb LLP as their bankruptcy
counsel; Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP as special corporate counsel;
Imperial Capital, LLC as investment banker; Hilco Real Estate, LLC,
as real estate advisor; and Prime Clerk LLC as claims and noticing
agent and administrative advisor.


BITE THE BULLET: Case Summary & 10 Unsecured Creditors
------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Bite The Bullet LLC
        4780 W Ann Rd Suite 5-230
        North Las Vegas, NV 89031

Business Description: Bite The Bullet LLC --
                      https://www.bitethebullet.co -- is an
                      ammunition supplier based in Las Vegas,
                      Nevada.  Bite the Bullet is a licensed,
                      insured, and ATF approved Federal Firearm
                      License(FFL) manufacturer of commercially
                      loaded Ammo.  Since 2013, Bite the Bullet
                      has been supplying bulk ammo online offering
                      a variety of high use popular calibers.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: May 16, 2018

Case No.: 18-12813

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       District of Nevada (Las Vegas)

Judge: Hon. Laurel E. Babero

Debtor's Counsel: Robert Atkinson, Esq.
                  ATKINSON LAW ASSOCIATES LTD.
                  8965 S. Eastern Ave Suite 260
                  Las Vegas, NV 89123
                  Tel: (702) 614 0600
                  Fax: (702) 614 0647
                  Email: robert@nv-lawfirm.com
                         bknotices@nv-lawfirm.com

Total Assets: $465,433

Total Liabilities: $1.26 million

The petition was signed by David Zitiello Jr., managing member.

A full-text copy of the petition containing, among other items, a
list of the Debtor's 10 unsecured creditors is available for free
at:

                    http://bankrupt.com/misc/nvb18-12813.pdf


BLACK MOUNTAIN: Plan Discloses BLM Patent Release via Direct Sale
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Black Mountain Golf and Country Club, Inc., filed with the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the District of Nevada first amended
disclosure statement to accompany its first amended chapter 11 plan
of reorganization.

In 1962, Debtor purchased approximately 140 acres of real property
from the United States Bureau of Land Management ("BLM"). At the
time of Debtor's purchase of the BLM Property, it was valued at
$25,000; however, Debtor obtained a 10% discount by purchasing the
BLM Property subject to a reversionary right in favor of the BLM
(the "BLM Patent"), which provided that if Debtor "attempts to
transfer title to or control over the lands to another or the lands
are devoted to a use other than that for which the lands were
conveyed, without the consent of the Secretary of the Interior or
his delegate. . . title shall revert to the United States."

This latest filing discloses that the Reorganized Debtor will
continue its efforts to achieve the release of the BLM Patent via a
direct sale in accordance with federal regulations.  This involves,
among other things, submitting the necessary documentation to BLM;
affording time for BLM to publish required notices in the Federal
Register; and affording time for BLM to fulfill other required
reviews and notifications. Should a direct sale move forward, the
Reorganized Debtor anticipates that, concurrently with the funding
of the repurchase price to the BLM, the Reorganized Debtor will
close on one or more sales to third-party buyers of all or portions
of the then-released BLM Property.

A full-text copy of the First Amended Disclosure Statement is
available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/nvb17-11540-304.pdf

A full-text copy of the First Amended Reorganization Plan is
available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/nvb17-11540-303.pdf

             About Black Mountain Golf & Country Club

Based in Henderson, Nevada, Black Mountain Golf & Country Club is a
member-owned golf facility open to the public.  The Company is
non-profit corporation and a tax-exempt entity.

Black Mountain Golf & Country Club, Inc., sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Nev. Case No.
17-11540) on March 30, 2017.  The petition was signed by Larry
Tindall, president.  At the time of the filing, the Debtor
estimated its assets at $10 million to $50 million and debts at $1
million to $10 million.

The case is assigned to Judge Bruce T. Beesley.  Morris Polich &
Purdy LLP, now known as Clark Hill PLC, is the Debtor's legal
counsel.  The Debtor employed Coffey & Rader CPA as its accountant
and Harper Appraisal, Inc., as appraiser. The Debtor hired Ray
Fredericksen of Per4mance Engineering in connection with its
efforts to rezone its property.

No request has been made for the appointment of a trustee or
examiner, and no official committees have been appointed in this
Chapter 11 case.


BLUE COLLAR: Disclosure Statement Hearing Set for June 5
--------------------------------------------------------
Judge Robert Summerhays of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Western District of Louisiana will convene a hearing on June 5,
2018 at 10:00 a.m. to consider the adequacy of Blue Collar
Enterprises, LLC's disclosure statement.

Objections to the proposed disclosure statement must be in writing
and filed and served least seven full business days before the
hearing.

                  About Blue Collar Enterprises

Blue Collar Enterprises, LLC, which conducts business under the
name Blue Dog Cafe -- http://www.bluedogcafe.com/-- is a
restaurant serving Cajun cuisine, Louisiana fusion, steaks and
seafood amidst a private collection of artworks by renowned artist
George Rodrigue (the creator of the iconic Blue Dog).  It has two
locations in Lafayette and Lake Charles, Louisiana.

Blue Collar Enterprises sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D. La. Case No. 18-50447) on April 11,
2018.

In the petition signed by Stephen Santillo and Andrew Rodrigue,
members, the Debtor disclosed $37,700 in assets and $1.15 million
in liabilities.

Judge Robert Summerhays presides over the case.


BNEVMA LLC: Reorganization Plan to be Funded by Rental Revenues
---------------------------------------------------------------
BNEVMA, LLC, filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern
District of Florida a disclosure statement describing its proposed
plan of reorganization.

The Debtor believes that there is minimal risk to creditors as to
completion of the Plan. The Plan will be funded primarily by rental
revenues, and any additional Cash held by the Debtor as of the date
of the Confirmation Hearing.

If the Debtor's Plan is confirmed, each holder of an Allowed
general unsecured claim in Class 36 will share in a total
distribution of $5,000 pro rata. Payments of $1,000 will be
distributed pro rata on an annual basis, commencing on the first of
the month after the Effective Date, until the aggregate amount of
$1,000 is paid. The Debtor may prepay any or all of the
distributions with no prepayment penalty. The Class 36 Claims are
Impaired and any of the Class 36 Claimholders are entitled to vote
to accept or reject the Plan.

The Reorganized Debtor will continue to exist after the Effective
Date with all assets revesting in the Reorganized Debtor and with
all powers of limited liability companies under the laws of the
State of Florida and without prejudice to any right to alter or
terminate such existence (whether by merger or otherwise) under
Florida law.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/flsb18-13392-24.pdf

The Debtor is represented by:

     Aaron A. Wernick, Esq.
     2255 Glades Road, Suite 337W
     Boca Raton, Florida 33431
     (561) 395-0500
     (561) 338-7532 fax
     awernick@furrcohen.com

                      About BNEVMA LLC

BNEVMA, LLC, a real estate lessor, is the fee simple owner of 14
real estate properties (consisting of condominium units and
townhouses) in Wellington, Palm Beach Gardens, Boynton Beach, Lake
Forth, Boca Raton, North Palm Beach, Royal Palm Beach, Florida,
having an aggregate value of $2.71 million.

BNEVMA sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code
(Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No. 18-13392) on March 23, 2018.

In the petition signed by Nermine Hanna, manager, the Debtor
disclosed $2.71 million in assets and $4.01 million in
liabilities.

Judge Paul G. Hyman, Jr., presides over the case.


BOSS LITHO: Court Authorized Continued Cash Collateral Use
----------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Sandra R. Klein of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Central District of California authorized Boss Litho, Inc., to use
cash collateral on an interim basis to pay all of its ordinary
expenses with up to a 15% variance.

Any party asserting an interest in the Debtor's cash collateral is
granted a replacement lien upon all of the Debtor's post-petition
accounts, equipment, inventory, and other personal property with
the same validity and priority as their liens upon the Debtor's
pre-petition assets as of the petition date, with such replacement
lien being a perfected security interest in and to the Debtor's
postpetition collateral having the same extent, validity and
priority as the secured creditor had in the prepetition collateral
of the Debtor on the petition date.

In addition, the Debtor is authorized to make the adequate
protection payments to the secured creditors as set forth in the
Budget.

In order to provide further adequate protection to Secured
Creditors who assert an interest in the Debtor's cash collateral,
the Debtor: (a) will permit the Secured Creditors and its agents
access to inspect the prepetition collateral, on reasonable notice
to Debtor; (b) will keep the prepetition collateral insured as
required by the Secured Creditors’ Loan Documents and United
States Trustee Guidelines; and (c) will provide the Secured
Creditors with continuing reporting as required under their loan
documents.

A full-text copy of the Interim Order is available at

                    http://bankrupt.com/misc/cacb18-11454-179.pdf

                      About Boss Litho Inc.

Boss Litho, Inc. -- http://bosslitho.com/-- is a printing and
packing company located in the City of Industry, California.  Boss
Litho sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code
(Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 18-11454) on Feb. 9, 2018.  In the
petition signed by Jean Paul Nataf, president, the Debtor estimated
assets and liabilities of $1 million to $10 million.  Judge Sandra
R. Klein presides over the case.  Kogan Law Firm, APC, is the
Debtor's counsel.


BOSTICK CONSTRUCTION: Needs More Time to Complete Plan Information
------------------------------------------------------------------
Bostick Construction, LLC, requests the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Northern District of Mississippi that it be granted an
additional 60 days from the date of an order granting its motion
within which to file its Disclosure Statement and Plan, and a
similar extension to obtain Plan confirmation and for the same
extensions of its periods of exclusivity.

Absent the requested extension, the Debtor is required to file its
Disclosure Statement and Plan of Reorganization on or before May 7,
2018.  

The Debtor and its counsel have diligently attempted to gather the
information necessary to complete these documents and file them in
a timely manner.  However, because of the extent of the information
involved, they have not been able to complete gathering the
information. Nevertheless, as a result of these ongoing reviews,
the Debtor has preliminarily formulated a plan of reorganization
and a disclosure statement, but they are not yet in final form as
of May 6, 2018.

Moreover, the Debtor relates that the Mississippi Department of
Revenue and the Internal Revenue have contacted the Debtor's
counsel on several occasions requesting updates and responses to
withholding taxes and related matters. But the Debtor has not been
responsive with respect to those particular issues and requests,
and counsel is concerned about the status of those particular
matters. While there may very well be explanations for Debtor's
silence in that regard, none has been forthcoming thus far. Thus,
further investigation into Debtor's silence must occur before a
meaningful Disclosure Statement and Plan can be filed and
prosecuted.

                  About Bostick Construction

Bostick Construction, LLC, filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition
(Bankr. N.D. Miss. Case No. 17-12814) on July 31, 2017, estimating
under $1 million in assets and liabilities.  Managing member Joseph
Bostick signed the petition.  The Debtor is represented by Jarret
P. Nichols, Esq., at the Law Offices of Craig M. Geno, PLLC.


BUILDERS FIRSTSOURCE: S&P Raises Corp. Credit Rating to 'BB-'
-------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings raised its corporate credit rating on Builders
FirstSource Inc. to 'BB-' from 'B+'. The outlook is stable.

S&P said, "At the same time, we raised our issue-level rating on
the company's first-lien debt (including the $465 million term loan
and $750 million senior secured notes, both due 2024) to 'BB-' (the
same as the corporate credit rating) from 'B+'. The recovery rating
remains '3', indicating our expectation of meaningful (50%-70%;
rounded estimate: 55%) recovery in the event of a payment default.

"The upgrade to 'BB-' from 'B+' reflects Builders' improved EBITDA
margins, at 6.6% as of March 31, 2018, compared to 5.6% at the end
of 2015. We expect further EBITDA margin growth as the company
shifts toward higher-margin, value-added product categories. Still,
we consider EBITDA margins at this level to be average for a
building products distributor in this competitive, thin-margin
industry.

"In 2017, the company increased sales in its higher-margin segments
by 8% by building four new truss manufacturing facilities and
improving productivity at 20 facilities. We expect further
operating performance improvements in 2018 and 2019 as the company
adds more such facilities to produce higher-margin prefabricated
components and millwork this year. We expect that these value-added
segments--which contributed 36% of total company sales in
2017--will continue to result in higher overall EBITDA margins.

"The stable outlook reflects our view that Builders FirstSource
will benefit from continued modest growth in U.S. residential
construction along with mid- to high-single-digit repair and
remodel growth. We expect these to be the main factors to drive
company revenues past $7.5 billion and adjusted EBITDA toward $550
million in 2018. We expect such earnings to reduce debt leverage
sustainably below 4x over the next several quarters, with
longer-term leverage of about 3.5x.

"We could lower the rating if management adopted more aggressive
financial policies--such as leveraged share repurchases or
debt-financed acquisitions--that resulted in leverage approaching
5x over the next 12 months. An unexpected softening in residential
construction activity could have the same effect on sales and
EBITDA generation, also driving up leverage. Specifically, a sales
decline in excess of 30% or a 150-basis-point compression in EBITDA
margin over the next 12 months could lead to such a rise in
leverage.

"We view another upgrade as unlikely over the next 12 months given
the inherent cyclicality and earnings volatility in Builders
FirstSource's business. For a higher rating, we would expect the
company to maintain debt leverage below 3.5x while reducing future
earnings volatility--either by moving into more stable end markets
(such as repair and remodel or commercial renovation) or expanding
its product offering into significantly higher-margin products."


CALIFORNIA RESOURCES: Stockholders Elected 9 Directors
------------------------------------------------------
California Resources Corporation held its 2018 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders on May 9, 2018, at which the stockholders elected
William E. Albrecht, Justin A. Gannon, Harold M. Korell, Harry T.
McMahon, Richard W. Moncrief, Avedick B. Poladian, Anita M. Powers,
Robert V. Sinnott and Todd A. Stevens to the Board of Directors.

The ratification of the selection of KPMG LLP as the Company's
independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year
ending Dec. 31, 2018 was approved.  The advisory vote to approve
named executive officer compensation was approved.  The Second
Amendment to the California Resources Corporation 2014 Employment
Stock Purchase Plan was approved.

The proposal to change the supermajority vote requirement for
stockholders to remove directors without cause to a majority vote
requirement was not approved.  The proposal to change the
supermajority vote requirement for stockholders to amend the Bylaws
to a majority vote requirement was not approved.  The proposal to
change the supermajority vote requirement for stockholders to amend
certain provisions of the Amended and Restated Certificate of
Incorporation to a majority vote requirement was not approved.

                   About California Resources
  
California Resources Corporation -- http://www.crc.com/-- is an
oil and natural gas exploration and production company in
California.  The Company operates its resource base exclusively
within the State of California, applying complementary and
integrated infrastructure to gather, process and market its
production.  Using advanced technology, California Resources
Corporation focuses on safely and responsibly supplying affordable
energy for California by Californians.

California Resources reported a net loss attributable to common
stock of $266 million for the year ended Dec. 31, 2017, compared to
net income attributable to common stock of $279 million for the
year ended Dec. 31, 2016.  As of March 31, 2018, California
Resources had $6.69 billion in total assets, $806 million in total
current liabilities, $4.94 billion in long-term debt, $275 million
in deferred gain and issuance costs, $607 million in other
long-term liabilities, $724 million in redeemable noncontrolling
interest and a total deficit of $654 million.

                          *     *     *

As reported by the TCR on Nov. 14, 2017, S&P Global Ratings
affirmed its 'CCC+' corporate credit rating on Los Angeles-based
exploration and production company California Resources Corp (CRC).
The outlook is negative.  "The affirmation of the 'CCC+' corporate
credit rating on CRC reflects our assessment of the company's
improving, but still weak financial measures combined with
increased capital spending that should stem production declines
following a tumultuous 2016."

In November 2017, Moody's Investors Service upgraded California
Resources' Corporate Family Rating (CFR) to 'Caa1' from 'Caa2' and
Probability of Default Rating (PDR) to 'Caa1-PD' from 'Caa2-PD'.
Moody's said the upgrade of CRC's CFR to 'Caa1' and stable outlook
reflects CRC's improved liquidity and the likelihood that it will
have sufficient liquidity to support its operations for at least
the next two years at current commodity prices.


CAPITAL L. CORP: Selling Page Road Property for $1 Million
----------------------------------------------------------
Capital L. Corp. asks approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Northern District of Ohio to sell the real property located at
1340 Page Road, Aurora in Portage County, Ohio, which includes an
office/warehouse building de signated as parcel no.
03-035-00-00-001-014 as well as approximately 3.2 acres designated
as parcel no. 03-041-00-00-001-014, to Michael Ostetrico and James
Scalia for $1,015,000.

The Debtor is a corporation incorporated under the laws of the
State of Ohio and is located in Aurora, Ohio.  It owns the Page
Road Property.  The Debtor and various Prepetition Lenders had
entered into certain loan arrangements evidenced by, among other
things, certain documents, instruments, and agreements, under which
the Prepetition Lenders allege interests in the Page Road
Property.

Although each of the Prepetition Lenders allege that their
respective indebtedness is secured by substantially all of the
Debtor's assets, James Mirgliotta has a first mortgage on the
Property as well as a first priority, perfected security interest
in the Debtor's cash on deposit, rents, accounts receivable, and
all other income and profits derived from the Page Road Property.
As of Feb. 5, 2017, the amount outstanding to Mirgliotta totaled
$563,356.

First National Bank has a second mortgage on the Page Road
Property.  As of the Petition Date, the amount outstanding to First
National totaled $1,461,100.

Dennis Gehrisch and Robert Ranallo are in third position on the
Page Road Property and are personal guarantors of 25% of the
obligation to First National.  If Gehrisch/Ranallo are owed
anything, the amount would reduce indebtedness to First National by
an equal amount.

Dollar Bank is in fourth position on the Page Road Property via a
judgment lien.  However, the Debtor believes there is insufficient
equity in the Page Road Property for Dollar Bank to receive a
distribution from the sale of the Page Road Property, after
distributions are made with respect to the claims of the first two
mortgagors, Mirgliotta and First National.

On Sept. 1, 2017, the Debtor and Mirgliotta entered into an agreed
Final Cash Collateral Order, pursuant to which the Prepetition
Lenders were granted replacement liens in and to the cash
collateral of Debtor and its estate to the same extent and in the
same priority as such Prepetition Lenders had in the cash
collateral of Debtor as of the Petition Date.  Such replacement
liens are subject and subordinate to Carve-Out consisting of up to
$40,000 in the aggregate for the allowed fees and expenses of
Brouse McDowell LPA, counsel to the Debtor.

Additionally, under the terms of the Final Cash Collateral Order,
the Debtor is obligated to close on a sale of the Page Road
Property no later than May 15, 2018.  If a sale does not close by
May 15th, the Page Road Property will be sold by public auction,
the terms of which will be determined by further order of the
Court.   A failure to close on a sale by public auction on or
before July 15, 2018 will constitute an event of default under the
Final Cash Collateral Order.

Pursuant to the terms of the Exclusive Sales Listing Agreement
annexed as Exhibit B to the Retention Motion, te Debtors 12-month
engagement of the Broker CBRE, Inc expired on July 29, 2017.
Throughout its 12-month engagement, the Broker employed extensive
marketing efforts to locate qualified purchasers; however the
Broker did not locate a purchaser to close on a sale of the Page
Road Property.

After the expiration of the Broker's engagement, the Debtor
continued to market the Page Road Property from July of 2017 to
date.  As a result of the Debtor's marketing efforts, it has
identified the Purchasers as buyers for the Page Road Property.
The proposed sale to the Purchasers is fully set forth in the copy
of the real estate purchase agreement executed on April 16, 2018.

Pursuant to the Purchase Agreement, the Purchasers will pay a total
purchase price of $1,015,000 to purchase the Debtor's entire Page
Road Property, with $970,000 of the Purchase Price allotted to the
Building Parcel and $45,000 of the Purchase Price allotted to the
3.2 Acre Parcel, free and clear of liens, encumbrances, and other
interests.

The offer presented in the Purchase Agreement is the only offer
received for the Page Road Property since the expiration of the
Broker's engagement in July of 2017.  Accordingly, its submits that
the Purchase Agreement represents the current highest and best
offer for the Page Road Property.

Prior to the Petition Date, the Debtor entered into certain
commercial lease agreements , which have been extended
postpetition, with McMillan Builders (leasing unit 1),
Allcrete/Asset Pro Limited, c/o Timothy Thomas (leasing unit 2),
and Video Net Work (leasing units 5 and 6).  Further, postpetition,
Debtor entered into certain commercial lease agreements with
Jermaine Bennett (leasing unit 3), Legend Mold and Machine LLC
(leasing unit 4), Jim Scalia, doing business as Concrete Guys
(leasing units 7 and 8), and MO Haulers Recovery LLC (leasing unit
9).

Conditioned upon an order approving the Motion and the closing of
the sale of the Page Road Property, the Debtor asks an order
approving the (i) assumption and assignment of the Prepetition
Leases to the Purchasers, and (ii) assignment of the Postpetition
Leases to the Purchasers.  It submits that no amounts are owed to
the Tenants and that the cure amount to assume the Leases is zero.

The Debtor further asks a waiver of any stay of effectiveness of
the order approving the Motion pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule
6004(h).

The Purchasers:

          Michael Ostetrico and James Scalia
          977 Gaynelle Avenue
          Streetsboro, OH 44241

The Creditors:

          FIRST NATIONAL BANK
          4140 East State St.
          Hermitage, PA 16148

          DOLLR BANK
          1301 East 9th St., 9th FL
          Cleveland, OH 44114-3053

          James Mirgliotta
          449 Berwick Circle
          Aurora, OH 44202

          Dennis Gehrisch
          8345 Harbor Dr.
          Mentor, OH 44060

          Robert Ranallo
          9700 Hobart Rd.
          Willoughby, OH 44094

                      About Capital L. Corp.

Capital L. Corp. sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code in the Northern District of Ohio (Akron) (Case No.
16-50850) on April 13, 2016.  

The petition was signed by Louis Telerico, president.  The case is
assigned to Judge Alan M. Koschik.

The Debtor estimated both assets and liabilities in the range of $1
million to $10 million.

On Aug. 18, 2018, the Court retained CBRE, Inc. as the Debtor's
real estate broker.


CAPITOL CITY BREWING: U.S. Trustee Forms Three-Member Committee
---------------------------------------------------------------
John P. Fitzgerald, III, Acting U.S. Trustee of Region 4, on May 10
appointed three creditors to serve on the official committee of
unsecured creditors in the Chapter 11 case of Capitol City Brewing
Company, L.C.

The committee members are:

     (1) Andrew Howells, President
         Lost Liter Consulting Co.,
         dba Barmetrix of DC
         1342 Ingraham Street, NW
         Washington, DC 20011
         Tel: (202) 258-9538
         E-mail: andrew.howells@barmetrix.com

     (2) Erica Wright, Credit Manager
         Coastal Sunbelt Produce, LLC
         9001 Whiskey Bottom Road
         Laurel, MD 20723
         Tel: (301) 604-1230
         E-mail: EWright@thecoastalcos.com

         Represented by: Marion Dere Muller, Esq.
                         17 W. Jefferson St., Suite 100
                         Rockville, MD 20850
                         Tel: (301) 340-2500
                         E-mail: mmuller@mdmullerlaw.com

     (3) Megan Christian, Accounting Mgr.
         JJ McDonnell & Co., Inc.
         7010 Brookdale
         Elkridge, MD 21075
         Tel: (410) 799-4000
         E-mail: mchristian@jjmcdonnell.com

         Represented by: Matthew Davendorf, Esq.
                         Pascal, Weiss & Hirao, P.C.
                         1008 Pennsylvania Ave., SE
                         Washington, DC 20003
                         Tel: (202)-544-2200
                         E-mail: mdevendorf@pascalweiss.com

Official creditors' committees have the right to employ legal and
accounting professionals and financial advisors, at a debtor's
expense.  They may investigate the debtor's business and financial
affairs.  Importantly, official committees serve as fiduciaries to
the general population of creditors they represent.

              About Capitol City Brewing Company

Capitol City Brewing Company, L.C., is a brewpub in Washington,
D.C., which offers local brews that represent beer styles from
around the world.

Capitol City Brewing Company sought protection under Chapter 11 of
the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D.D.C. Case No. 18-00161) on March 14,
2018.  In the petition signed by David Von Storch, president of the
Debtor's manager Urban Adventures Companies Inc., the Debtor
estimated assets and liabilities of less than $1 million.  Judge S.
Martin Teel, Jr., presides over the case.  John P. Van Beek, Esq.,
and Neil D. Goldman, Esq., at Goldman & Van Beek, P.C., serves as
the Debtor's legal counsel.


CARMEN RIVERA: Gasapos Buying Columbia Property for $475K
---------------------------------------------------------
Carmen Mercedes Rivera asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Maryland to authorize the sale of the real property
located at 6184 Sunny Spring, Columbia, Maryland to Marvin Gasapos
for $474,900,

The Debtor is the owner of the Property which is improved by a
residential dwelling.  The Property is an investment property and
is not Debtor's residence.  The Debtor intends to sell it.

The Debtor has entered into a Residential Contract of Sale dated
Dec. 26, 2017, subject to the Court's approval, for the sale of the
Property to the Purchaser for $474,900.  The Debtor submits that
the Purchase Price is fair and reasonable, and consistent with the
fair market value of the Property.

A copy of the Residential Contract of Sale attached to the Motion
is available for free at:

          http://bankrupt.com/misc/Carmen_Rivera_147_Sales.pdf

Pursuant to the sale, the Debtor has retained Fairfax Realty, Inc.,
as real estate broker for the sale.  The Debtor has agreed to pay
Fairfax a commission of 4% of the sale price of the Property.
Should a sale result due to Fairfax's cooperation with a subagent
of Fairfax, or a buyer's agent, the commission will be shared by
Fairfax's payment of 2.5% of the sale price to the subagent or
buyer's agent.

The Debtor has also agreed to pay $295 as an administrative fee as
part of the compensation to be provided to Fairfax for its
services.  She has filed an Application for Approval of Employment
of Real Estate Broker asking the Court's approval of her employment
of Fairfax as the broker for the sale.  At the time of the filing
of the Motion, the Application was pending before the Court.

The Property is encumbered by a Deed of Trust securing payment to
PNC Bank, N.A.  The proceeds of the sale will be paid to satisfy
PNC's Bank's Class 3 Claim under the Plan in full.  The proceeds
will also be applied to pay the requisite closing costs, realtor's
commission and transfer taxes, in accordance with the terms of the
Contract.

The Debtor projects that following the payment of the foregoing
costs of sale and secured debt, the Debtor will receive net
proceeds in the amount of approximately $30,000.  She will use
these proceeds to pay attorney's fees incurred in the preparation
of the Motion, in an amount not to exceed $3,500, and a portion of
payments due under the Plan.  The sale is in the best interests of
creditors, the estate and the Debtor.  The Debtor will prepare and
file a notice of the proposed disbursement of the net sale proceeds
prior to the disbursement.

Based upon the foregoing, cause exists to approve the Debtor's
proposed sale of the Property, upon the terms and conditions set
forth.

The Debtor submits that, given the nature of the proposed
transaction, cause exists for the court to exercise its discretion
and abrogate the 14-day stay provided for by Rule 6004(h).

The Creditor:

          PNC BANK
          P.O. BOX 94982
          Cleveland, OH 44101-4982

Counsel for the Debtor:

          Christopher L. Hamlin, Esq.
          MCNAMEE, HOSEA, JERNIGAN, KIM GREENAN & LYNCH, P.A.
          6411 Ivy Lane, Suite 200
          Greenbelt, MD 20770
          Telephone: (301) 441-2420
          E-mail: sgoldberg@mhlawyers.com
                  chamlin@mhlawyers.com

Carmen Mercedes Rivera sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. D. Md.
Case 14-10124) on Jan. 15, 2014.  The Court confirmed the Debtor's
Amended Plan of Reorganization dated April 7, 2015.


CARTER TABERNACLE: Wants Plan Exclusivity Until Confirmation
------------------------------------------------------------
Carter Tabernacle Christian Methodist Episcopal Church Inc. asks
the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Florida to
extend through the date of entry of a final order as to whether its
plan of reorganization may be confirmed by the Court.

The Debtor says that competing plans would cause confusion for the
creditors, burden the Debtor, and create unnecessary attorneys'
fees and expenses.  The Debtor has timely met all obligations
throughout this case and maintains that cause exists for this
requested extension.

As reported by the Troubled Company Reporter on May 12, 2017, the
Court extended the exclusive period within which only the Debtor
may file a Plan of Reorganization through and including 15 days
after the adjudication of the Motion for Determination of Secured
Status of the Claim of American First Federal, Inc.

The deadline by which the Debtor must obtain approval of its Plan
by all impaired classes in order to retain exclusivity is on or
before May 4, 2018, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. Section 1121 (c)(3).  The
Court has scheduled an initial confirmation hearing for May 21,
2018, which is outside the Exclusivity Deadline.  The Debtor is
working towards a consensual confirmation and hopes to confirm the
case at the initial confirmation hearing.

To the extent a consensual confirmation is not possible, the Court
has indicated that it does not have sufficient time for an
evidentiary hearing on May 21 and therefore would need to schedule
an evidentiary hearing for a later date.
A copy of the Debtor's request is available at:

            http://bankrupt.com/misc/flmb16-06350-208.pdf

                      About Carter Tabernacle

Carter Tabernacle Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, Inc., also
known as Carter Tabernacle CME Church, is a Florida not for profit
corporation established in 1972 to provide ministry services to the
Washington Shores community and the surrounding communities in and
around West Colonial and John Young Parkway.  The Church provides
its ministry services from a sanctuary located at 1 South Cottage
Hill Road, Orlando, FL 32805.

Carter Tabernacle filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. M.D. Fla.
Case No. 16-06350) on Sept. 26, 2016.  In the petition signed by
Dr. James T. Morris, president/director, the Debtor estimated
assets and liabilities at $1 million to $10 million.

The Debtor tapped Ryan E. Davis, Esq. at Winderweedle, Haines, Ward
& Woodman, P.A., as the Debtor's counsel.  The Debtor hired Integra
Realty Resources to appraise its property located at 1 South
Cottage Hill Road, Orlando, Florida.

No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Debtor's case.


CARTHAGE SPECIALTY: Committee Taps Lowenstein Sandler as Counsel
----------------------------------------------------------------
The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors of Carthage Specialty
Paperboard, Inc., and its debtor-affiliates seeks authority from
the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of New York to
retain Lowenstein Sandler LLP as counsel to the Committee,
effective as of March 26, 2018.

The professional services that Lowenstein Sandler will provide to
the Committee are:

     (a) advise the Committee with respect to its rights, duties,
and powers in the Chapter 11 Cases;

     (b) assist and advise the Committee in its consultations with
the Debtors relative to the administration of the Chapter 11
Cases;

     (c) assist the Committee in analyzing the claims of the
Debtors' creditors and the Debtors' capital structure and in
negotiating with holders of claims and equity interests;

     (d) assist the Committee in its investigation of the acts,
conduct, assets, liabilities, and financial condition of the
Debtors and of the operation of the Debtors' business;

     (e) assist the Committee in its investigation of the liens and
claims of the holders of the Debtors' prepetition debt and the
prosecution of any claims or causes of action revealed by such
investigation;

     (f) assist the Committee in its analysis of, and negotiations
with, the Debtors or any third party concerning matters related to,
among other things, the assumption or rejection of certain leases
of nonresidential real property and executory contracts, asset
dispositions, financing or other transactions and the terms of one
or more plans of reorganization for the Debtors and accompanying
disclosure statements and related plan documents;

     (g) assist and advise the Committee as to its communications
to unsecured creditors regarding significant matters in these
Chapter 11 Cases;

     (h) represent the Committee at hearings and other
proceedings;

     (i) review and analyze applications, orders, statements of
operations, and schedules filed with the Court and advise the
Committee as to their propriety;

     (j) prepare, on behalf of the Committee, any pleadings,
including without limitation, motions, memoranda, complaints,
adversary complaints, objections, or comments in connection with
any of the foregoing as may be necessary in furtherance of the
Committee's interests and objectives in these Chapter 11 Cases,
including without limitation, the preparation of retention papers
and fee applications for the Committee's professionals including,
Lowenstein Sandler; and

     (k) perform such other legal services as may be required or
are otherwise deemed to be in the interests of the Committee in
accordance with the Committee's powers and duties as set forth in
the Bankruptcy Code, Bankruptcy Rules, or other applicable law.

Lowenstein Sandler's standard hourly rates are:

     Partners of the Firm                        $600 - $1,285
     Senior Counsel and Counsel                  $405 - $760
     (generally 7 or more years' experience)
     Associates                     $350 - $580
     (generally less than 6 years' experience)
     Paralegals and Assistants            $135 - $340

Lowenstein Sandler has agreed to discount its standard hourly rates
for partners by 15% in rendering services to the Committee in these
Chapter 11 Cases.

Jeffrey D. Prol, a partner of the law firm of Lowenstein Sandler,
attests that Lowenstein Sandler is a "disinterested person" as that
term is defined in Section 101(14) of the Bankruptcy Code.

The counsel can be reached through:

     Jeffrey D. Prol, Esq.
     Lowenstein Sandler LLP
     One Lowenstein Drive
     Roseland, NJ 07068
     Tel: +1 973.597.2490
     Fax: +1 973.597.2491
     Email: jprol@lowenstein.com

             About Carthage Specialty Paperboard

Carthage Specialty Paperboard, Inc. -- http://www.carthagespbd.com/
-- is a paperboard manufacturer in Carthage, New York, serving a
diverse range of markets from pulp-substitute specialty paperboard
to industrial grade chipboards.

Carthage Specialty Paperboard and its affiliate Carthage
Acquisition, LLC sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D.N.Y. Lead Case No. 18-30226) on Feb.
28, 2018.

In the petitions signed by Donald Schnackel, vice-president of
finance, Carthage Specialty estimated assets and liabilities of $10
million to $50 million; and Carthage Acquisition estimated assets
of $1 million to $10 million and liabilities of $10 million to $50
million.

The Debtor hires Bradley Woods & Co. Ltd., as financial advisor and
investment banker.

The U.S. Trustee for Region 2 appointed an official committee of
unsecured creditors.


CASABLANCA GLOBAL: S&P Affirms 'B' Corp Credit Rating
-----------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings affirmed its 'B' corporate credit rating on
Casablanca Global Intermediate Holdings L.P. d/b/a Apple Leisure
Group (ALG). S&P removed the rating from CreditWatch negative,
where it placed it on April 3, 2018. The outlook is negative.

S&P said, "We also assigned our 'B' issue-level and '3' recovery
rating to ALG's proposed senior secured credit facilities,
including a $175 million first-lien revolving credit facility and
$950 million first-lien term loan (to be issued by co-borrowers
Casablanca US Holdings Inc., Casablanca Foreign Holdings B.V., and
ALG Servicios Financieros Mexico, S.A. de C.V.). We expect to
withdraw the ratings on ALG's existing first- and second-lien debt
once they are repaid following the close of the transaction."

The affirmation reflects sufficient leverage capacity to
accommodate the incremental debt proposed to fund the recent
acquisition of The Mark Travel Corp., partially because the company
is using equity to fund almost half the purchase price. S&P said,
"The negative outlook reflects our forecast that adjusted cash flow
from operations (CFO) to debt in 2018 will be weak at about 10%,
and we believe this measure could be highly variable. However, we
expect good operating performance to result in CFO to debt in the
mid-teens percentage area in 2019 following a full-year
contribution of Mark Travel and the realization of planned cost and
revenue synergies. We believe liquidity is otherwise adequate, and
we believe the company will have a good amount of cash on the
balance sheet at the end of 2018."

S&P said, "The negative outlook reflects our expectation that ALG's
leverage will be high over the near term, with estimated 2018 CFO
to debt at about 10% in 2018, and that this measure could be highly
variable. As a result, we expect minimal near-term cushion compared
with our 10% CFO to debt downgrade threshold for ALG until at least
2019, when the recently acquired Mark Travel contributes a full
year of cash flow and the company begins to realize expected
synergies. We believe liquidity is otherwise adequate and the
company will have a good amount of cash on the balance sheet at the
end of 2018.   

"We could lower the rating if cash flows deteriorate and we believe
CFO to debt will remain below 10%, on average. This could result
from a meaningful downturn in the economic cycle, an event that
weakens travel to Mexico or the Caribbean, poor inventory
management of the company's chartered flights, an increase in
member cancellations or decline in contract sales in the UVC
business, or sustained negative swings in customer deposits and
other working capital accounts.  

"We could revise the outlook to stable once we believe CFO to debt
will improve to and remain around 15%, on average, likely the
result of a successful integration of Mark Travel including the
realization of expected cost and revenue synergies. Higher ratings
are unlikely at this time given the financial sponsor ownership and
our expectation for leverage to remain high over time as a result.
However, we could consider higher ratings if we are confident the
company will maintain CFO to debt around 20%, on average."


CASTILLO ENTERPRISES: Case Summary & 3 Top Unsecured Creditors
--------------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Castillo Enterprises, LLC
        P.O. Box 141394
        Gainesville, FL 32614

Business Description: Castillo Enterprises, LLC is a privately
                      held company located at 6619 SW Archer Road
                      Gainesville, FL 32608.  Castillo Enterprises
                      is a small business debtor as defined in 11
                      U.S.C. Section 101(51D).  It previously
                      sought protection from creditors on June 18,
                      2012 (Bankr. N.D. Fla. Case No. 12-10282).

Chapter 11 Petition Date: May 15, 2018

Case No.: 18-10126

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Northern District of Florida (Gainesville)

Judge: Hon. Karen K. Specie

Debtor's Counsel: Jose I. Moreno, Esq.
                  JOSE I MORENO, P.A.
                  240 NW 76th Drive, Suite D
                  Gainesville, FL 32607
                  Tel: 352-332-4422
                  Fax: 352-332-4462
                  Email: jimoreno@bellsouth.net

Estimated Assets: $500,000 to $1 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Tatiana Castillo, manager.

A full-text copy of the petition containing, among other items, a
list of the Debtor's three unsecured creditors is available for
free at:

             http://bankrupt.com/misc/flnb18-10126.pdf


COASTAL MENTAL: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
--------------------------------------------------------
No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Chapter 11 case of Coastal Mental Health Center, Inc. as of May
14, according to a court docket.

                 About Coastal Mental Health Center

Coastal Mental Health Center, Inc., sought protection under Chapter
11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 18-02161) on
April 16, 2018.  In the petition signed by its chief executive
officer Timohty John Scaletta, the Debtor disclosed assets and
liabilities of less than $1 million.  The Debtor is represented by
Joel M. Aresty, P.A., as its legal counsel.


COLLAZO PRODUCE: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
--------------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Collazo Produce, Inc.
        1117 Agriculture Street
        Raleigh, NC 27603

Business Description: Collazo Produce, Inc. is a wholesale,
                      importer, and distributor of a huge
                      line of fresh fruits and vegetables.
                      The company's products are received
                      from local and national farmers,
                      to include international farmers and
                      distributed throughout North Carolina.
                      Collazo Produce's customers are
                      restaurants, supermarkets and individual
                      customers of North Carolina.  The company
                      serves the Raleigh, Durham, Greensboro,
                      Winston Salem, Fayetteville, Greensville,
                      and Charlotte metro areas.  

                      http://www.collazoproduce.com/

Chapter 11 Petition Date: May 15, 2018

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Eastern District of North Carolina
       (Raleigh Division)

Case No.: 18-02459

Judge: Hon. Stephani W. Humrickhouse

Debtor's Counsel: Trawick H Stubbs, Jr., Esq.
                  STUBBS & PERDUE, P.A.
                  P. O. Drawer 1654
                  New Bern, NC 28563
                  Tel: 252 633-2700
                  Fax: 252 633-9600
                  Email: efile@stubbsperdue.com
                         tstubbs@stubbsperdue.com

Estimated Assets: $100,000 to $500,000

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Juan A. Castillo, president.

A full-text copy of the petition containing, among other items, a
list of the Debtor's 20 largest unsecured creditors is available
for free at: http://bankrupt.com/misc/nceb18-02459.pdf


COLORFX INC: June 7 Confirmation Hearing of Committee-Proposed Plan
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Bankruptcy Judge Victoria S. Kaufman approved the first amended
disclosure statement describing the liquidating plan of Debtor
ColorFX, Inc. proposed by the Official Committee of Unsecured
Creditors.

May 18, 2018 is the deadline for parties-in-interest to file and
serve objections to confirmation of the Plan and to submit
ballots.

May 29, 2018 is the deadline for the Committee to file replies to
objections to confirmation of the Plan.

June 7, 2018 at 1:00 p.m. is the hearing on confirmation of the
Plan.

                       About ColorFX Inc.

ColorFX, Inc. is a commercial printer and engages in the production
of full color, printed product utilizing both digital and
traditional litho presses up to 40" size, for both end users, trade
printers and print brokers. It operates primarily as a "trade
printer" with a limited direct sales force of its own, and also has
an extensive e-commerce site to attract web-based customers.  In
addition to printing services, the company offers extensive product
finishing services such as bindery services, direct mail
facilitation, and limited pre-press and design services.

ColorFX, Inc. filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition (Bankr. C.D.
Cal. Case No. 17-10830) on March 31, 2017.  The petition was signed
by Yolanda Avedissin, president.  In its petition, the Debtor
estimated $1 million to $10 million in both assets and
liabilities.

The Hon. Victoria S. Kaufman presides over the case.  Lewis R.
Landau, Esq., is counsel to the Debtor.

On May 5, 2017, the Office of the U.S. Trustee appointed an
official committee of unsecured creditors.


COMMUNITY CHOICE: Incurs $3.7 Million Net Loss in First Quarter
---------------------------------------------------------------
Community Choice Financial Inc. filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission its Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q reporting a
net loss of $3.68 million on $87.65 million of total revenues for
the three months ended March 31, 2018, compared to a net loss of
$8.36 million on $85.35 million of total revenues for the same
period last year.

As of March 31, 2018, Community Choice had $204.01 million in total
assets, $412.86 million in total liabilities and a total
stockholders' deficit of $208.84 million.

              Liquidity and Need for Additional Capital

The Company's cash balance of $89,694,000 as of March 31, 2018,
plus cash from operating activities, is expected to be sufficient
to fund the Company's operations through the first quarter of 2019.
However, $237,290,000 of senior notes, $47,000,000 of revolving
credit facility debt, and $60,000,000 in subsidiary notes are due
in the second quarter of 2019.  

"The Company's expected cash position will not be sufficient to
repay this indebtedness as it becomes due and the Company will need
to restructure or refinance this indebtedness and there can be no
assurances as to the ability of the Company to conclude such a
restructuring or refinancing.  These factors raise substantial
doubt regarding the Company's ability to meet its obligations and
continue as a going concern for the period which extends one-year
from the issuance of these financial statements.

"While the Company is currently engaged in negotiations with its
largest bondholders, the success of such negotiations cannot be
assured.  Any inability to reach an agreement with existing debt
holders, secure sufficient refinancing sources for our pending debt
maturities and/or our inability to continue as a going concern
could have a significant and material adverse effect on the
Company, its operations and its investors and, in particular, could
significantly impair recoveries by our investors under our existing
indebtedness.  It is unlikely that the Company's assets, in any
event, would be sufficient to satisfy its current debt
obligations."

A full-text copy of the Form 10-Q is available for free at:

                      https://is.gd/lq674x

                About Community Choice Financial

Dublin, Ohio-based Community Choice Financial Inc. --
http://www.ccfi.com/-- is a retailer of financial services to
unbanked and underbanked consumers through a network of 483 retail
storefronts across 12 states and are licensed to deliver similar
financial services over the internet in 30 states.  CCFI focuses on
providing consumers with a wide range of convenient financial
products and services to help them manage their day-to-day
financial needs including consumer loans, check cashing, prepaid
debit cards, money transfers, bill payments, and money orders.
Please visit www.ccfi.com for more information.

Community Choice incurred a net loss of $180.89 million in 2017,
compared to a net loss of $1.54 million in 2016.  As of Dec. 31,
2017, Community Choice had $212.40 million in total assets, $417.57
million in total liabilities and a total stockholders' deficit of
$205.16 million.

                           *    *    *

As reported by the TCR on April 19, 2018, S&P Global Ratings said
it lowered its issuer credit rating on Community Choice Financial
Inc. (CCFI) to 'CC' from 'CCC'.  The outlook is negative.  "The
downgrade follows the company's amended revolver and subsidiary
note payable on March 30, 2018 -- both of which require CCFI to
make a proposal to restructure its senior secured notes, which, if
completed, we would likely view as a selective default."

In February 2016, Moody's Investors Service affirmed Community
Choice Financial's 'Caa1' corporate family rating.  Moody's
affirmation of Community Choice's ratings reflects the company's
meaningfully reduced leverage as a result of its recently announced
debt repurchases at a substantial discount.


CONSTELLATION HEALTHCARE: Three Former Execs Face Fraud Charges
---------------------------------------------------------------
The Securities and Exchange Commission on May 16, 2018 announced
fraud charges against three former Constellation Healthcare
Technologies Inc. executives who falsified financial and other
information they provided to a private firm in the course of
negotiating the private firm's acquisition of a majority stake in
Constellation.  Houston-based Constellation filed for bankruptcy in
March, a little more than a year after the January 2017
acquisition.

According to the SEC's complaint, the executives convinced a
private firm to acquire a majority of Constellation's equity and
provided fake information, including financial statements for three
fictitious subsidiaries supposedly acquired for more than $62
million.  The complaint alleges that the former executives funded
the sham acquisitions with stock sales in London and then diverted
the proceeds to themselves.  The complaint charges former
Constellation chief executive Parmjit (Paul) Parmar, former chief
financial officer Sotirios (Sam) Zaharis, and former company
secretary Ravi Chivukula.  In September 2017, amid concerns about
Constellation's financial condition, Parmar resigned and Zaharis
and Chivukula were put on administrative leave.

"Using phony balance sheets, doctored bank statements, and other
fabrications to conceal the theft of investor monies, which we
allege occurred in this case, will not go undetected or
unpunished," said Marc P. Berger, Director of the SEC's New York
Regional Office.

In a parallel action, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District
of New Jersey on May 16 announced criminal charges against Parmar,
Zaharis, and Chivukula.

The SEC's complaint, filed in U.S. District Court in New Jersey,
charges Parmar, Zaharis, and Chivukula with violating the antifraud
provisions of the federal securities laws.  The SEC is seeking
permanent injunctions, return of allegedly ill-gotten gains plus
interest, civil penalties, and officer-and-director bars against
the Parmar, Zaharis, and Chivukula.

The SEC's investigation, which is continuing, has been conducted by
John O. Enright and Sheldon L. Pollock of the New York Regional
Office and supervised by Lara S. Mehraban.  The SEC appreciates the
assistance of the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of New
Jersey and the FBI.

Constellation Healthcare Technologies, Inc. is a healthcare
services organization providing outsourced revenue cycle
management, practice management, and group purchasing services to
U.S. physicians.


CRAIG WALKER: Examiner Selling Walker-Voss Ranches for $4.4 Million
-------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Randel Lewis, Examiner for the Craig J. Walker, Susan Ann Walker
and Walker III-Voss, LLC, asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Colorado to authorize the sale of Walker III-Voss
interest in the real estate, consisting of approximately 3,644
acres in the Counties of Huerfano and Las Animas, Colorado, to
Ronald B. Montano for $4.4 million, consisting of a credit bid and
cancellation of the Buyer's first deed of trust of approximately
$1.2 million, plus cash consideration of $3.2 million.

On Sept. 27, 2016, the Court entered its Order Granting Examiner's
Motion to Approve Settlement Agreement, approving an agreement
among the Debtors, the Examiner, the Committee and certain
creditors.  The Court also approved the Settlement separately in
the Walker-Voss Case on Sept. 27, 2016.

On April 6, 2017, the Court approved a separate settlement with
Hallmark Marketing Co., to resolve two pending adversary
proceedings and disputes related to Hallmark's secured claim in the
Walker-Voss Case, among other things.  The Hallmark settlement
requires the sale of the Walker-Voss Ranches.  

The Walker-Voss Ranches are encumbered by liens totaling
approximately $4.2 million: a first deed of trust on a portion of
the Walker-Voss Ranches held by the Buyer, with a current balance
of approximately $1.2 million; and a $3 million lien held by
Hallmark under the terms of the Hallmark Settlement.

The Court appointed Broker Hall and Hall Partners, LLP has assessed
the Walker-Voss Ranches and has recommended listing prices to the
Examiner and Hallmark.  The Broker visited the properties in the
fall of 2017 and the parties have discussed alternatives for
liquidating the Walker-Voss estate's interests in the ranches in
order to maximize recovery and minimize the associated tax
burdens.

In order to facilitate the liquidation of estate assets and
ultimately, resolution of the Walker-Voss Case, the Examiner has
entered into a contract to sell the Walker-Voss Ranches to the
Buyer for total consideration of $4.4 million, consisting of a
credit bid and cancellation of the Buyer's first deed of trust of
approximately $1.2 million, plus cash consideration of $3.2
million.

A copy of the Contract to Buy and Sell Real Estate attached to the
Motion is available for free at:

      http://bankrupt.com/misc/Craig_Walker_1317_Sales.pdf

Through this Motion, the Examiner asks approval of the Sale
Contract and the sale of the Walker-Voss estate's interest in the
Walker-Voss Ranches free and clear of any liens, claims, and
interests, as well as authorizing the Examiner to execute any and
all closing documents in connection with the sale.  The Examiner
also asks an order approving the Broker's compensation -- a flat
fee in the amount of $50,000 as provided in the Sale Contract and
as negotiated as part of the transaction.

           About Craig J. Walker and Susan Ann Walker

Craig J. Walker and Susan Ann Walker sought Chapter 11 protection
(Bankr. D. Colo. Case No. 15-18281) on July 24, 2015.  The official
committee of unsecured creditors was appointed in the Debtors'
Bankruptcy Case on Aug. 10, 2015, as amended by the United States
Trustee on Feb. 24, 2016.  On Nov. 10, 2015, the Court appointed C.
Randel Lewis, as examiner for the Debtors. On Dec. 1, 2015, the
Examiner was appointed to carry out the Examiner Order.  The
Examiner was appointed in the Walker III-Voss, LLC Case on Oct. 5,
2016.  On July 18, 2017, the Court appointed Hall and Hall
Partners, LLP as Broker.


CRESTOR GLOBAL: Trustee Hires Jeff Wright Consulting as Accountant
------------------------------------------------------------------
Christopher J. Moser, the Chapter 11 Trustee appointed in Crestor
Global Investments, Funds II, LLC, seeks authority from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas, Fort Worth
Division, to retain Jeff Wright Consulting Services, LLC as an
accountant to prepare Monthly Operating Reports.

JWCS will charge a flat fee of $300.00 per month to prepare the
MORs.

Jeff Wright, sole member and sole employee of Jeff Wright
Consulting Services, LLC, attests that he does not represent any
interest adverse to the Debtor or its estate and is a disinterested
person as defined U.S.C. Sec. 101(14).

The accountant can be reached through:

     Jeff Wright, MBA
     Jeff Wright Consulting Services, LLC
     10935 Estate Lane, Suite 432
     Dallas, TX 75238

              About Crestor Global Investments

Crestor Global Investments, Funds II, LLC, filed a Chapter 11
bankruptcy petition (Bankr. N.D. Tex. Case No. 17-34797) on Dec.
29, 2017.  In the petition signed by authorized representative,
Athuman Omar, the Debtor estimated under $1 million in total assets
and liabilities.  The Debtor is represented by Joyce W. Lindauer
Attorney, PLLC.


CS360 TOWERS: Trustee's Selling Condo Unit 307 to Adamses for $390K
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Bradley Sharp, the Chapter 11 Trustee of CS360 Towers, LLC, asks
the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of California to
authorize the sale of the Condo Unit 307 located at 500 N Street,
Sacramento, California to Mark B. Adams and Therese A. Adams for
$390,000.

Pursuant to the Sales Procedures Order entered by the Court on June
15, 2017, the Trustee is authorized to enter into contracts for the
sale of the Debtor's condominium units, and provide notice of the
proposed sale and an opportunity to overbid.  In connection with
the Sale and Bid Procedure Order and Sales Procedures, the Trustee
has marketed and sold Unit 307, and asks the entry of an order
approving the sale pursuant to the Sale and Bid Procedure Order.

On April 11, 2018, the Trustee filed and served a Notice of Sale
and Opportunity to Overbid pursuant to the Sale and Bid Procedure
Order and approved Sales Procedures.  On April 17, 2018, the
Trustee filed and served an Amended Notice of Sale and Opportunity
to Overbid pursuant to the Sale and Bid Procedure Order and
approved Sales Procedures.  

The Amended Sale Notice disclosed the proposed sale of Unit 307 for
$390,000, and solicited overbids and outlined the sales procedures
previously approved by the court. The Amended Sale Notice includes
a copy of the sale contract between the estate and the Purchaser.
No overbid was received by the Trustee.  The amended deadline for
the receipt of overbids was April 28, 2018.

The sale of Unit 307 is not free and clear -- the deed of trust
will be reconveyed by the secured creditor following payment out
the escrow for the sale of the property.  Accordingly, having
complied with the procedures and requirements outlined by the Sale
and Bid Procedure Order, the Trustee is entitled to seek entry of
an order approving the sale on this ex parte basis.

Out of the sales proceeds, $30,000 will be paid to the bankruptcy
estate.  After that payment to the bankruptcy estate, all net
proceeds will be paid by agreement to the senior secured creditor,
whose claim is secured by Unit 307.

                        About CS360 Towers

CS360 Towers, LLC, filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. E.D. Cal.
Case No. 17-20731) on Feb. 3, 2017.  Mark D. Chisick, manager,
signed the petition.  The Debtor tapped Stephan M. Brown, Esq., at
the Bankruptcy Group, P.C., as counsel.  At the time of filing, the
Debtor disclosed total assets of $18.46 million and total
liabilities of $5.72 million.

The case is assigned to Judge Robert S. Bardwil.  

Bradley Sharp was appointed as Chapter 11 Trustee for the estate of
CS360 Towers, LLC pursuant to order of the court dated March 15,
2017.  The assets of the estate include condominium units (both
residential and commercial) in the building located at 500 N.
Street, Sacramento, California, and various claims and causes of
action.

Attorneys for Chapter 11 Trustee Bradley Sharp:

         Jamie P. Dreher, Esq.
         Downey Brand LLP
         621 Capitol Mall, 18th Floor
         Sacramento, CA 95814-4731
         Telephone: (916) 444-1000
         Facsimile: (91b) 444-2100
         E-mail: jdreher@downeybrand.com


CUMULUS MEDIA: Bank Debt Trades at 14% Off
------------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which Cumulus Media
Partners is a borrower traded in the secondary market at 86
cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4, 2018,
according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM Pricing.
This represents a decrease of 1.18 percentage points from the
previous week. Cumulus Media pays 1000 basis points above LIBOR to
borrow under the $125 million facility. Moody's gave no rating the
loan and Standard & Poor's gave a 'CCC' rating to the loan. The
loan is one of the biggest gainers and losers among 247 widely
quoted syndicated loans with five or more bids in secondary trading
for the week ended Friday, May 4.


DANA HOLDING: Ohio Court Modifies Amortizable Amount to $10,935
---------------------------------------------------------------
In the appeals case captioned DANA CORPORATION, N.K.A. DANA HOLDING
CORPORATION, Appellant, and Cross-Appellee, v. TESTA, TAX COMMR.,
Appellee and Cross-Appellant, No. 2015-0460 (Ohio), the Supreme
Court of Ohio entered a ruling in favor of Dana Corporation and
reversed the Board of Tax Appeals' decision.

In this case, the tax commissioner ordered a reduction of the
amortizable amount reported by Dana because of a tax-free
reorganization of the corporation that was consummated on Jan. 31,
2008. The parties use the term "old Dana" when referring to the
corporation before the reorganization and "new Dana" when referring
to the corporation after the reorganization.

Old Dana timely filed the amortizable-amount report on June 30,
2006. Old Dana was a consolidated group of affiliated corporations,
meaning that the group reported income and deductions as a single
taxpayer. The total amortizable amount reported was $12,493,003.
Around the same time that old Dana filed the report, the old Dana
consolidated group went into Chapter 11 bankruptcy, during which it
reorganized. It emerged from bankruptcy on Jan. 31, 2008, as new
Dana, a consolidated group that had all the net operating losses
("NOLs") transferred from old Dana pursuant to 26 U.S.C. 381,
subject to whatever reduction occurred as a result of the
realization of cancellation-of-debt income ("CODI").

Like old Dana, new Dana is a consolidated group of affiliated
entities for federal income-tax purposes. Consolidated filing
"systematically affects the computation of taxable income by
aggregating transactions of individual members of the consolidated
group," while "eliminat[ing] the tax effect of transactions within
the affiliate group." Thus, "Dana's NOLs" refers to the aggregate
NOLs of the constituent corporations.

In Dana’s appeal, the Court confronts an issue arising out of the
special credit against the commercial-activity tax ("CAT") set
forth at R.C. 5751.53 (the "CAT credit"). One factor in calculating
the CAT credit is the net operating losses that were incurred by
the corporation before the enactment of the CAT. To take the
credit, a company was required to file a report with appellee and
cross-appellant, the tax commissioner, that calculated, based on a
formula set forth in R.C. 5751.53(A)(9), an amount that would be
applied gradually over a period of up to 20 years ("amortizable
amount") against the CAT. Appellant and cross-appellee, Dana
Corporation, now known as Dana Holding Corporation, filed its
report indicating that its amortizable amount was $12,493,003.
Based on his audit of Dana Corporation's amortizable-amount report,
the tax commissioner ordered two reductions that decreased the
amortizable amount to $4,728,051. Dana agreed with the first of the
two adjustments, which reduced the amortizable amount to
$10,935,324, but contested the second reduction from $10,935,324 to
$4,728,051. Dana argues that the second adjustment, a percentage
reduction consistent with the percentage reduction of Dana's
federal NOLs on account of its cancellation-of-debt income that
resulted from its bankruptcy, was not authorized by R.C.
5751.53(F). The BTA disagreed with Dana's position and affirmed the
tax commissioner's full reduction. This issue forms the principal
basis for Dana's appeal to this court. In the alternative, Dana
argues that even if it was proper for the tax commissioner to
reduce the amortizable amount, his calculation of the reduction was
erroneous.

On cross-appeal, the tax commissioner faults the BTA for rejecting
his post-final-determination calculation of the amortizable amount
that relies on the testimony of the tax commissioner's expert
witness, who opined that the amortizable amount ought to be zero.
Additionally, the tax commissioner contends that the BTA ought to
have entertained his alternative theory, raised for the first time
shortly before the hearing at the BTA, that Dana's NOLs were fully
offset by a properly recomputed valuation allowance.

The Court agrees with Dana's main contention on appeal, and the
Court rejects the arguments advanced by the tax commissioner on
cross-appeal. The Court, therefore, reverses the decision of the
BTA and, pursuant to R.C. 5717.04, order modification of the
amortizable amount to $10,935,324.

A full-text copy of the Court's Decision dated April 24 is
available at https://bit.ly/2Il0qvW from Leagle.com.

Zaino, Hall & Farrin, L.L.C., Richard C. Farrin --
rfarrin@zhftaxlaw.com -- Debora D. McGraw -- dmcgraw@zhftaxlaw.com
-- and Thomas M. Zaino -- tzaino@zhftaxlaw.com -- for appellant and
cross-appellee.

Michael DeWine, Attorney General, Barton A. Hubbard, Assistant
Attorney General, for appellee and cross-appellant.

                         About Dana Holding

Based in Toledo, Ohio, Dana Corporation designs and manufactures
products for every major vehicle producer in the world, and
supplies drivetrain, chassis, structural, and engine technologies
to those companies.  Dana employs 46,000 people in 28 countries.
Dana is focused on being an essential partner to automotive,
commercial, and off-highway vehicle customers, which collectively
produce more than 60 million vehicles annually.  Dana has
facilities in China in the Asia-Pacific, Argentina in the
Latin-American regions and Italy in Europe.

Dana Corp. and its affiliates filed for Chapter 11 protection on
March 3, 2006 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Case No. 06-10354).  Corinne Ball,
Esq., and Richard H. Engman, Esq., at Jones Day, in Manhattan and
Heather Lennox, Esq., Jeffrey B. Ellman, Esq., Carl E. Black, Esq.,
and Ryan T. Routh, Esq., at Jones Day in Cleveland, Ohio,
represented the Debtors.  Henry S. Miller at Miller Buckfire & Co.,
LLC, served as the Debtors' financial advisor and investment
banker.  Ted Stenger from AlixPartners served as Dana's Chief
Restructuring Officer.  Thomas Moers Mayer, Esq., at Kramer Levin
Naftalis & Frankel LLP, represented the Official Committee of
Unsecured Creditors.  Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson,
LLP, served as counsel to the Official Committee of Equity Security
Holders.  Stahl Cowen Crowley, LLC, served as counsel to the
Official Committee of Non-Union Retirees.

The Debtors filed their Joint Plan of Reorganization on Aug. 31,
2007.  Judge Burton Lifland confirming the Plan, as thrice amended,
on Dec. 26, 2007. The Plan was declared effective Jan. 31, 2008.
Upon emergence, the Company was renamed as Dana Holding
Corporation.


DAYTON SUPERIOR: Bank Debt Trades at 5% Off
-------------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which Dayton Superior
Corporation is a borrower traded in the secondary market at 95.00
cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4, 2018,
according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM Pricing.
This represents an increase of 3.06 percentage points from the
previous week. Dayton Superior pays 950 basis points above LIBOR to
borrow under the $225 million facility. The bank loan matures on
February 17, 2022. Moody's rates the loan 'Caa1' and Standard &
Poor's gave a 'B-' rating to the loan. The loan is one of the
biggest gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted syndicated loans
with five or more bids in secondary trading for the week ended
Friday, May 4.


DENNIS JOHNSON II: Claims Against Receiver Junked
-------------------------------------------------
District Judge Robert C. Chambers entered an order granting
Defendant Zachary B. Burkons' motion to dismiss the claims against
him in the case captioned THOMAS H. FLUHARTY, Trustee of the
Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Estates of Dennis Ray Johnson, II (No.
3:16-BK-30227); DJWV2, LLC (No. 3:16-BK-30062); Southern Marine
Services, LLC (No. 3:16-BK-30063); Southern Marine Terminal, LLC
(No. 3:17-BK-30064); Redbud Dock, LLC (No. 3:16-BK-30398); Green
Coal, LLC (No. 3:16-BK-30399); Appalachian Mining & Reclamation,
LLC (No. 3:16-BK-30400) Producer's Land, LLC 3:16-BK-30401);
Producer's Coal, Inc. (3:16-BK-30402); Joint Venture Development,
LLC (No. 3:16-BK-30403), Plaintiffs, v. PEOPLES BANK, NA, PEOPLES
INSURANCE AGENCY, LLC, GREAT AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW
YORK, and ZACHARY B. BURKONS, Defendants, Civil Action No.
3:17-4220 (S.D.W.V.).

Receiver Burkons became embroiled in the circumstances underlying
this action through a court order. A group of debtors ("Coal
Group") defaulted on loans held by Peoples Bank, N.A. Peoples Bank
initiated a lawsuit against the Coal Group, among other entities,
in the Circuit Court of Cabell County, West Virginia, requesting
judgment on the money due under the loans. Peoples Bank also asked
the Circuit Court to appoint a receiver to handle the matters of
the Coal Group. Granting the request of Peoples Bank, the Circuit
Court initially appointed Mr. David G. Zatezalo as the receiver.
However, shortly after his appointment, Mr. Zatezalo requested that
the state court relieve him of his receivership appointment. The
Circuit Court then appointed Receiver Burkons as the replacement
receiver in the matter, "in order to continue operation within the
receivership.

Plaintiff, acting as trustee for the Coal Group, predominately
premises his claims against Receiver Burkons upon two instances.
The first, Plaintiff claims that Receiver Burkons traveled to
Kentucky where he allegedly "physically assaulted [Dennis Ray]
Johnson[, II], causing severe physical and emotional injuries."
Plaintiff claims Receiver Burkons assaulted Johnson in an effort to
"repossess" equipment that supposedly served as collateral for the
defaulted loans held by Peoples Bank. As such, Plaintiff asserts
that Receiver Burkons committed this alleged physical assault
"ostensibly under color of 'receivership.'"

Second, Plaintiff focuses upon Receiver Burkons's filing of
Involuntary Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Petitions against some of the
Coal Group entities. Plaintiff contends that these petitions were
filed fraudulently. In support of that contention, Plaintiff
asserts that Receiver Burkons never actually had authority to act
as a receiver because he failed to post the appropriate bond, a
requirement under West Virginia law.

The Plaintiff, thus, alleges claims against Receiver Burkons under
three causes of action: (1) violation of the Racketeer Influenced
and Corrupt Organizations Act ("RICO"); (2) common law fraud; and
(3) physical assault.

Receiver Burkons contends that three sufficient and independent
lines of legal reasoning require this Court to dismiss the claims
against him. Receiver Burkons's three arguments are as follows: (1)
dismissal is appropriate because he is a court-appointed receiver,
and the Court lacks jurisdiction to hear a collateral attack on the
actions taken as a receiver; (2) dismissal is appropriate because
he is entitled to immunity for the actions taken within his
capacity as a court-appointed receiver; and (3) dismissal is
appropriate because Plaintiff's Complaint fails to state a claim
against Receiver Burkons.

Receiver Burkons's primary argument for dismissal rests upon the
Supreme Court's 1881 decision in Barton v. Barbour. In that case,
the Court announced the aptly titled "Barton doctrine." Under the
doctrine, if a plaintiff wishes to sue a court-appointed receiver
for the actions taken while serving in that capacity, the plaintiff
must acquire leave from the court that appointed the receiver. If
the plaintiff fails to obtain leave from the appointing-court, then
the secondary court in which the plaintiff has brought the relevant
claims lacks subject matter jurisdiction over those claims.

The Court finds that the Barton doctrine applies to Plaintiff's
claims against Receiver Burkons, and thus the Court lacks subject
matter jurisdiction to hear them. On the face of Plaintiff's
Complaint, Plaintiff alleges that Receiver Burkons acted "under the
color of 'receivership,'" and that Receiver Burkons claimed that he
was authorized to act due to his receivership appointment. Upon
these allegations by Plaintiff, combined with the general
presumption that actions by a receiver are done in the official
capacity, the Court must conclude that Receiver Burkons acted
within the context of his court-appointed duties.

In sum, the Court finds that it lacks subject matter jurisdiction
over the claims brought against Receiver Burkons. Although Receiver
Burkons's acts were potentially wrongful, wrongfulness alone does
not eviscerate the Barton doctrine.

A full-text copy of the Court's Order dated April 24, 2018 is
available at https://bit.ly/2IIkX0H from Leagle.com.

Thomas H. Fluharty, Trustee of the Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Estates of
& Dennis Ray Johnson, II, Plaintiffs, represented by Joe M. Supple,
SUPPLE LAW OFFICE.

DJWV2, LLC, Southern Marine Services, LLC, Southern Marine
Terminal, LLC, Redbud Dock, LLC, Green Coal, LLC, Appalachian
Mining & Reclamation, LLC, Producer's Land, LLC, Producer's Coal,
Inc. & Joint Venture Development, LLC, Plaintiffs, represented by
Joe M. Supple, SUPPLE LAW OFFICE & Martin P. Sheehan , SHEEHAN &
NUGENT.

Peoples Bank, NA, Defendant, represented by Arch W. Riley, Jr. --
ariley@bernsteinlaw.com -- BERNSTEIN-BURKLEY, John J. Richardson --
jrichardson@bernsteinlaw.com -- BERNSTEIN-BURKLEY & Kirk B. Burkley
-- kburkley@bernsteinlaw.com -- BERNSTEIN-BURKLEY.

Peoples Insurance Agency, LLC, Defendant, represented by Lawrence
E. Morhous, BREWSTER MORHOUS CAMERON ROBERT C. CHAMBERS, Lisa M.
Zaring -- lzaring@mrjlaw.com -- MONTGOMERY RENNIE & JONSON, pro hac
vice & Ralph E. Burnham -- rburnham@mrjlaw.com -- MONTGOMERY RENNIE
& JONSON.

Great American Insurance Company of New York, Defendant,
represented by Carol P. Smith – csmith@fbtlaw.com -- FROST BROWN
TODD & Christopher S. Burnside -- cburnside@fbtlaw.com -- FROST
BROWN TODD, pro hac vice.

                  About Dennis Ray Johnson

Dennis Ray Johnson, II, filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. S.D.
W.Va. Case No. 16-30227) on May 9, 2016, and was represented by
Christopher S. Smith, Esq., at Hoyer, Hoyer & Smith, PLLC.  In
January 2017, Mr. Johnson tapped Lewis Glasser Casey & Rollins PLLC
as new counsel.

Mr. Johnson is a businessman with ownership interests in at least
10 entities. He operates various rental real estate entities and
coal associated operations. Mr. Johnson is a member of each of the
following debtor companies -- Appalachian Mining and Reclamation,
LLC, DJWV1, LLC, DJWV2, LLC, Elkview Reclamation and Processing,
LLC, Green Coal, LLC, Joint Venture Development, LLC, Little
Kentucky Elk, LLC, Moussie Processing, LLC, Producer's Coal, Inc.,
Producer's Land, LLC, Redbud Dock, LLC, Southern Marine Services,
LLC, Southern Marine Terminal, LLC, and The Silo Golf Course, LLC
-- and has filed a motion asking the Bankruptcy Court to jointly
administer the bankruptcy cases. Mr. Johnson is also a guarantor of
the debt for most of the companies.

Mr. Johnson operated as a debtor-in-possession until Thomas
Fluharty was appointed Chapter 11 trustee on November 7, 2016.
Counsel for the Trustee is Joe M. Supple, Esq., at Supple Law
Office PLLC, in Point Pleasant, West Virginia.


DENTAL CORP: S&P Assigns 'B-' Corp Credit Rating, Outlook Stable
----------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings assigned its 'B-' corporate credit rating to
Toronto-based dental support organization Dental Corp. of Canada
Inc. (dentalcorp). The outlook is stable.

S&P said, "At the same time we assigned a 'B-' issue-level rating
and '3' recovery rating to the company's first-lien credit facility
consisting of a US$33 million revolving credit facility due 2023, a
US$500 million first-lien term loan due 2025, and a US$125 million
delayed-draw first-lien term loan due 2025. The '3' recovery rating
indicates our expectation for meaningful (50%-70%; rounded
estimate: 60%) recovery in a default scenario. We also assigned a
'CCC' issue-level rating and a '6' recovery rating to the company's
US$200 million second-lien term loan due 2026 and US$50 million
delayed-draw second-lien term loan due 2026. The '6' recovery
rating indicates our expectation for negligible (0%-10%; rounded
estimate: 0%) recovery in a default."

Toronto-based DSO dentalcorp is being acquired by financial sponsor
L Catterton, which is using the proceeds from the proposed offering
to fund the acquisition as well as refinance existing debt at
dentalcorp. The 'B-' corporate credit rating on dentalcorp reflects
the company's limited size, scale, and scope of operation in an
industry with limited barriers to entry, as well as its aggressive
debt-funded expansion in the Canadian dental market.

Post the transaction, adjusted leverage will exceed 8x. These
negative factors are somewhat offset by dentalcorp's leadership
position in the fragmented Canadian DSO market, stable cash pay
environment, and generally favorable industry with recurring
revenue base.

S&P said, "The stable outlook reflects our expectation that
dentalcorp will continue to pursue acquisitions that will drive
double-digit revenue growth and that EBITDA margins will remain
stable. At the same time, we expect the company's aggressive
debt-financed growth strategy will keep adjusted leverage above 8x
through fiscal 2019."


DEOLEO SA: Bank Debt Trades at 85% Off
--------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which Deoleo SA is a
borrower traded in the secondary market at 15.00
cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4, 2018,
according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM Pricing.
This represents an increase of 13.46 percentage points from the
previous week. Deoleo SA pays 900 basis points above LIBOR to
borrow under the $345 million facility. The bank loan matures on
October 14, 2023. Moody's rates the loan 'Caa3' and Standard &
Poor's gave a 'C' rating to the loan. The loan is one of the
biggest gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted syndicated loans
with five or more bids in secondary trading for the week ended
Friday, May 4.

Madrid, Spain-based Deoleo SA -- http://www.deoleo.es/-- produces
olive oil, rice, table olives, vinegars, mayonnaise, mustards,
ketchup, flour, and dates. Deoleo also produces byproducts of olive
oil processing that are used by cosmetics and health food
producers.


DEVON ENERGY: Moody's Affirms 'Ba1' Corporate Family Rating
-----------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service affirmed the ratings for Devon Energy
Corporation (Devon), including the company's Ba1 Corporate Family
Rating (CFR), Ba1-PD Probability of Default Rating (PDR), Ba1
senior unsecured debt rating and SGL-1 Speculative Grade Liquidity
(SGL) Rating. Devon's rating outlook is stable.

Concurrently, Moody's affirmed EnLink Midstream Partners, LP's
(EnLink) Ba1 CFR, Ba1-PD PDR, Ba1 senior unsecured notes rating and
its SGL-3 Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating. EnLink's rating
outlook is stable.

"Devon is improving its capital efficiency through its focus in the
STACK and Delaware Basin, while the company has reduced debt using
asset sale proceeds and is maintaining strong liquidity," commented
Amol Joshi, Moody's Vice President. "Devon should generate better
margins by growing oil production from its higher-return assets and
offset the decline profile of its legacy assets. Controlling
capital spending, further reducing debt and growing its cash flow
should improve the company's credit profile, even as its
consolidated debt metrics are pulled down by EnLink's leverage."

Issuer: Devon Energy Corporation

Ratings Affirmed:

Corporate Family Rating, Affirmed Ba1

Probability of Default Rating, Affirmed Ba1-PD

Senior Unsecured Notes, Affirmed Ba1 (LGD4)

Senior Unsecured Shelf, Affirmed (P)Ba1

Subordinate Shelf, Affirmed (P)Ba2

Preferred Stock Shelf, Affirmed (P)Ba3

Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating, Affirmed SGL-1

Senior Unsecured Commercial Paper, Affirmed NP

Outlook Action:

Outlook, Remains Stable

Issuer: Devon Financing Corporation U.L.C.

Ratings Affirmed:

Senior Unsecured Notes, Affirmed Ba1 (LGD4)

Senior Unsecured Shelf, Affirmed (P)Ba1

Outlook Action:

Outlook, Remains Stable

Issuer: Devon Financing Trust II

Ratings Affirmed:

Preferred Stock Shelf, Affirmed (P)Ba3

Outlook Action:

Outlook, Remains Stable

Issuer: EnLink Midstream Partners, LP

Ratings Affirmed:

Corporate Family Rating, Affirmed Ba1

Probability of Default Rating, Affirmed Ba1-PD

Senior Unsecured Notes, Affirmed Ba1 (LGD4)

Senior Unsecured Shelf, Affirmed (P)Ba1

Perpetual Preferred Units, Affirmed Ba3 (LGD6)

Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating, Affirmed SGL-3

Outlook Action:

Outlook, Remains Stable

RATINGS RATIONALE

Devon's Ba1 CFR is supported by Moody's expectation of improving
capital efficiency due to the company's drilling focus on its
higher-return assets in the STACK and Delaware Basin. Devon's cash
flow based leverage metrics will likely improve after a number of
steps taken by the company to shore up its credit profile including
significant debt reduction, capital spending cuts and asset sales.
Devon is constrained by its relatively weak operating margins due
to a sizeable component of lower margin heavy oil and legacy
production base, and significant capital required to develop its
higher growth assets. Devon is supported by the significant size
and scale of its E&P operations with a diversified geographic
presence across key onshore hydrocarbon basins in North America.
The company has a mix of oil versus natural gas production as well
as shale versus conventional properties, providing some commodity
price optionality and a manageable overall portfolio decline rate.
Devon's interest in the EnLink companies, which own a sizeable and
valuable midstream business, represents a source of alternative
liquidity.

Devon's SGL-1 rating reflects very good liquidity that is supported
by its material cash balances, large undrawn credit facility and an
unsecured capital structure. While Devon is striving to spend
within cash flow, the company's liquidity incorporates Moody's
expectation that Devon will outspend cash flow after share
repurchases in 2018. At March 31, 2018, Devon had cash balances
exceeding $1.4 billion and no drawings under its revolver ($51
million in letters of credit outstanding under the revolver).

Devon has a $3 billion unsecured revolving credit facility that
matures in October 2019 (except for $164 million of the facility
that matures in October 2018). The revolver has only one material
financial covenant requiring debt/total capitalization of less than
65%. Devon has considerable cushion under this covenant, with
debt/total capitalization of 26% at March 31, 2018. After reducing
debt in 2016 and in the first quarter of 2018 using proceeds from
asset sales, Devon has a manageable debt maturity schedule until
its revolver matures.

EnLink receives significant revenues through its relationship with
Devon, and its Ba1 CFR reflects the company's high customer
concentration risk with Devon combined with Devon's controlling
ownership. EnLink's credit profile benefits from a high proportion
of fee-based revenue and significant minimum volume commitments
(MVC) that help provide volume stability and support cash flow
visibility, and a coordinated growth strategy with Devon in the
STACK. These strengths are partially offset by EnLink's
concentration in the mature Barnett Shale, where volumes have been
declining, and the need to continue to offset this exposure through
growth in other regions such as the STACK, which entails execution
risk. EnLink is building out its STACK assets to offset the
expected margin decline within its Barnett Shale assets after those
MVCs expire at the end of 2018. Devon represented slightly less
than 47% of EnLink's 2017 gross operating margin, and this
dependence on Devon could decrease somewhat after the MVCs expire.
EnLink's rating is also restrained by the inherent risks associated
with its high-payout master limited partnership business model.

Devon's rating could be upgraded if the company's RCF/Debt exceeds
30% and its LFCR exceeds 1.5x, while growing its STACK and Delaware
production to offset declining legacy production. The rating could
be downgraded if RCF/Debt falls below 15% or capital efficiency
deteriorates. A significant increase in shareholder friendly
actions that materially erode the company's cash balances could
also lead to a downgrade.

EnLink's outlook is stable. An upgrade of Devon's ratings could
lead to EnLink being considered for an upgrade. In addition, EnLink
needs to maintain leverage below 4.5x and distribution coverage of
at least 1.1x. For an upgrade, there will also need to be
sufficient visibility regarding the profitable execution of
EnLink's ongoing build-out of its STACK assets, to offset the
expected margin decline within its Barnett Shale assets after the
MVCs expire. Ratings would likely be downgraded if Devon were to be
downgraded. EnLink's ratings could also be downgraded if
debt/EBITDA increased to above 5.5x, or distribution coverage
dropped below 1x for a sustained period. Material debt levels
incurred at EnLink Midstream, LLC (EnLink GP) would also pressure
EnLink's rating.

The principal methodology used in rating Devon Energy Corporation,
Devon Financing Corporation U.L.C. and Devon Financing Trust II was
Independent Exploration and Production Industry published in May
2017. The principal methodology used in rating EnLink Midstream
Partners, LP was Midstream Energy published in May 2017.

Devon Energy Corporation, headquartered in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma,
is a large independent exploration and production company with a
focus on onshore oil and gas properties in the US and Canada.
EnLink Midstream Partners, LP, headquartered in Dallas, Texas, is a
publicly traded master limited partnership. Devon owned 64% of
EnLink Midstream, LLC, the indirect general partner entity of
EnLink, and approximately 23% of EnLink, as of December 31, 2017.


DIAMOND OFFSHORE: Egan-Jones Hikes Senior Unsecured Ratings to BB
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Egan-Jones Ratings Company, on May 9, 2018, upgraded the foreign
currency and local currency senior unsecured ratings on debt issued
by Diamond Offshore Drilling Inc. to BB from BB-.

Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. is an offshore drilling contractor.
The company is headquartered in Houston, Texas and has major
offices in Australia, Brazil, Mexico, Scotland, Singapore and
Norway.



DIFFUSION PHARMACEUTICALS: Incurs First Quarter Net Loss of $11.6M
------------------------------------------------------------------
Diffusion Pharmaceuticals Inc. reported financial results for the
three months ended March 31, 2018 and provides a business update.

"During the first quarter patients continued to be screened and
enrolled into our lead clinical program, the INvestigation of TSC
Against Cancerous Tumors (INTACT) trial for the treatment of
inoperable glioblastoma multiforme, or GBM," said David Kalergis,
chairman and chief executive officer of Diffusion Pharmaceuticals.
"In January the first patients were dosed in this 236-patient Phase
3 study.  The protocol calls for half of patients to be enrolled in
the treatment arm, which is standard of care radiation and
chemotherapy, plus TSC, and half to be enrolled in the control arm,
which is standard of care alone.  The design of INTACT is based on
an almost four-fold increase in overall survival at two years
demonstrated in inoperable GBM patients in the preceding Phase 2
study.  We are hopeful that similar survival will be demonstrated
in our pivotal Phase 3 study and that TSC will provide an effective
treatment for these patients, for whom current options are
limited."

The Company continues to prepare for a Phase 2, randomized,
double-blind, placebo-controlled trial with TSC in acute stroke.
The contemplated study, based on an abstract that was presented in
January at the International Stroke Conference, calls for the
administration of TSC by specially-trained Emergency Medical
Technicians to ambulance-transported patients within two hours of
the onset of a suspected acute stroke.  The in-ambulance
administration could potentially overcome the current severe timing
delay in administering therapy to stroke patients.  The trial,
which has been named the Pre-Hospital Ambulance Stroke Trial - TSC
(PHAST-T), is expected to commence in late 2018, subject to
funding.

Diffusion is pleased to announce the granting of U.S. patent number
9,950,067, which expands the Company's coverage of the use of TSC
and related compounds in cancer therapy.  The claims of the new
U.S. patent relate to the treatment of a number of cancer types
such as brain cancer (including glioblastoma) and pancreatic
cancer, using TSC in conjunction with radiation therapy and
chemotherapy.  "This new U.S. patent further strengthens our IP
portfolio in cancer treatment and is relevant to our technology in
the Phase 3 study," stated General Counsel and IP Counsel Thomas
Byrne.

"Intellectual property is an important component of our growth
strategy, and we are pleased this patent has issued," Mr. Kalergis
added.  "We are expecting additional patent allowances in the near
future that will further augment our IP."

                First Quarter Financial Results

Diffusion reported a net loss attributable to common stockholders
of $11.56 million for the three months ended March 31, 2018,
compared to a net loss attributable to common stockholders of
$28.69 million for the same period last year.

As of March 31, 2018, Diffusion had $33.36 million in total assets,
$3.64 million in total liabilities and $29.72 million in total
stockholders' equity.

The Company had cash and cash equivalents of $16.2 million as of
March 31, 2018.  The Company believes that its cash and cash
equivalents will enable it to fund its operating expenses and
capital expenditure requirements through June 2019.

Diffusion recognized $1.8 million in research and development
expenses during the three months ended March 31, 2018, compared
with $1.0 million during the three months ended March 31, 2017. The
increase was mainly attributable to a $1.1 million increase in
expense related to the Company's Phase 3 GBM trial, offset by a
$0.3 million decrease in manufacturing costs.

General and administrative expenses for the three months ended
March 31, 2018 were $1.5 million compared with $1.6 million for the
three months ended March 31, 2017.  Salaries and wages increased by
$0.2 million due to the increase in headcount, which was offset by
a decrease in professional fees of approximately $0.3 million.

In connection with the private placement of its Series A preferred
stock and common stock warrants in March of 2017, the Company
determined the warrants to be classified as liabilities and subject
to remeasurement at each reporting period.  As a result, the
Company recognized $10.2 million in excess fair value of the common
stock warrants over the gross proceeds from our private placement.
The Company also recognized $2.9 million in placement agent
commission and other offering costs.  In total, for the three
months ended March 31, 2017, the Company recorded a $12.9 million
expense for the change in fair value of our common stock warrant
liabilities, which was primarily attributable to the increase in
the market price for its Common Stock.  There were no such charges
in 2018 as the warrants were reclassified into equity in November
of 2017.

Diffusion stated in the Quarterly Report that "The Company has not
generated any revenues from product sales and has funded operations
primarily from the proceeds of public offerings, convertible notes
and convertible preferred stock.  Substantial additional financing
will be required by the Company to continue to fund its research
and development activities.  No assurance can be given that any
such financing will be available when needed or that the Company's
research and development efforts will be successful."

"The Company currently does not have any commitments to obtain
additional funds and may be unable to obtain sufficient funding in
the future on acceptable terms, if at all.  On March 2, 2018, the
Company received a written notice from the staff of the Listing
Qualifications Department of the Nasdaq Stock Market LLC indicating
the Company was not in compliance with Nasdaq Listing Rule
5550(a)(2) because the bid price for the Company's common stock had
closed below $1.00 per share for the previous 30 consecutive
business days.  In accordance with Nasdaq Listing Rule
5810(c)(3)(A), the Company has 180 calendar days from the date of
such notice, or until Aug. 29, 2018, to regain compliance with the
minimum bid price requirement.  To regain compliance, the bid price
for the Company's Common Stock must close at $1.00 per share or
more for a minimum of 10 consecutive business days.  In the event
the Company is unable to regain compliance, it could adversely
affect the Company's ability to obtain future funding. If the
Company cannot obtain the necessary funding, it will need to delay,
scale back or eliminate some or all of its research and development
programs or enter into collaborations with third parties to:
commercialize potential products or technologies that it might
otherwise seek to develop or commercialize independently; consider
other various strategic alternatives, including a merger or sale of
the Company; or cease operations.  If the Company engages in
collaborations, it may receive lower consideration upon
commercialization of such products than if it had not entered into
such arrangements or if it entered into such arrangements at later
stages in the product development process."

A full-text copy of the Form 10-Q is available for free at:

                     https://is.gd/AHAiJl

                About Diffusion Pharmaceuticals

Based in Charlottesville, Virginia, Diffusion Pharmaceuticals Inc.
-- http://www.diffusionpharma.com-- is a clinical-stage
biotechnology company focused on extending the life expectancy of
cancer patients by improving the effectiveness of current
standard-of-care treatments including radiation therapy and
chemotherapy.  Diffusion is developing its lead product candidate,
trans sodium crocetinate (TSC), for use in the many cancers where
tumor hypoxia (oxygen deprivation) is known to diminish the
effectiveness of SOC treatments.  TSC targets the cancer's hypoxic
micro-environment, re-oxygenating treatment-resistant tissue and
making the cancer cells more vulnerable to the therapeutic effects
of SOC treatments without the apparent occurrence of any serious
side effects.

Diffusion reported a net loss attributable to common stockholders
of $2.61 million compared to a net loss attributable to common
stockholders of $18.03 million for the year ended Dec. 31, 2016.
As of Dec. 31, 2017, Diffusion had $26.14 million in total assets,
$4.91 million in total liabilities and $21.22 million in total
stockholders' equity.


DIXIE ELECTRIC: Bank Debt Trades at 12% Off
-------------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which Dixie Electric is a
borrower traded in the secondary market at 88.00
cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4, 2018,
according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM Pricing.
This represents an increase of 2.22 percentage points from the
previous week. Dixie Electric pays 875 basis points above LIBOR to
borrow under the $110 million facility. The bank loan matures on
June 8, 2023. Moody's rates the loan 'Caa2' and Standard & Poor's
gave a 'CCC+' rating to the loan. The loan is one of the biggest
gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted syndicated loans with
five or more bids in secondary trading for the week ended Friday,
May 4.


DJO FINANCE: Incurs $17.6 Million Net Loss in First Quarter
-----------------------------------------------------------
DJO Global, Inc., announced financial results for its public
reporting subsidiary, DJO Finance LLC, for the first quarter ended
March 31, 2018.

First Quarter Highlights

   * Net sales were $292.6 million, up 1.5% compared to the first
     quarter of 2017.

   * Operating income increased 501.9% to $33.5 million from $6.7
     million in the prior year period.

   * Net loss attributable to DJOFL was $17.6 million, compared to
     a net loss of $40.0 million in the prior year period.

   * Adjusted EBITDA increased 13.2% over the prior year quarter
     to $64.8 million.

Business Transformation Outcomes

   * Business Transformation continues to drive profitability
     expansion and remains on track to deliver 7% to 10% annual
     cost reductions by end of 2018.

   * Transformation actions taken to date expected to contribute
     $21.8 million in savings over the next four quarters.

"After starting the quarter with slow revenue trends reflecting the
overall market performance, we saw improvement later in the
quarter, particularly in March.  In line with our annual plan, we
expect to build revenue momentum throughout the year as growth
investments that began late in 2017 begin to materialize," said
Brady Shirley, DJO's president and chief executive officer,
"Overall performance was highlighted by continued, strong earnings
growth and significant margin expansion."

"From a bottom-line perspective, we continue to demonstrate that
our multi-year transformation is working, delivering 13% Adjusted
EBITDA growth and over 200 basis point improvement in margin.  The
growth in Adjusted EBITDA is a product of improving gross margins
and strong control of operating expenses, reflecting the hard work
our team has put into our transformation initiatives," commented
Mike Eklund, DJO's chief financial officer and chief operating
officer.  "Additional operations initiatives are already underway
focused on enhancing customer satisfaction as well as financial
metrics.  We remain confident in our ability to continue the
improvement we have seen since the start of this journey early last
year."

Sales Results

Net sales for DJOFL for the first quarter of 2018 were $292.6
million, an increase of 1.5% compared to the first quarter of 2017.
On the basis of constant currency rates, sales declined 1.7%.  The
number of selling days in the first quarter of 2018 was unchanged
from the prior year period in the US but there was one less selling
day outside the US.

Net sales for DJO's Surgical Implant segment grew 8.1% in the first
quarter of 2018 to $53.6 million, reflecting greater than 20%
growth in the Company's large shoulder implant product line and
single digit growth in our knee and hip implant product lines.

Net sales for DJO's International segment grew 13.3% in the first
quarter of 2018 to $88.6 million, or 1.5% on a constant currency
basis with one less selling day.  There was strong sales growth in
France, Scandinavia and Australia, partially offset by slower sales
in the UK, Spain and Benelux region.

Net sales for DJO's Recovery Sciences segment were $35.9 million in
the first quarter of 2018, down 6.8% compared to the first quarter
of 2017, driven by softness in the segment's Chattanooga product
line.

Net sales for DJO's Bracing and Vascular segment were $114.5
million in the first quarter of 2018, a decline of 6.2% compared to
the first quarter of 2017, reflecting challenges in the segment's
Dr. Comfort product line and a decline in its US bracing business.

Earnings Results

Operating income improved to $33.5 million from $6.7 million in the
prior year quarter, primarily due to a significant reduction in
selling, general and administrative expenses.  Net loss
attributable to DJOFL in the first quarter of 2018 was $17.6
million compared to a net loss of $40.0 million for the first
quarter of 2017.

Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter of 2018 grew 13.2% to $64.8
million from $57.2 million in the first quarter of 2017.  Including
projected future savings of $21.8 million from cost savings
programs currently underway as permitted under the Company's credit
agreement and the indentures governing our outstanding notes,
Adjusted EBITDA for the twelve months ended March 31, 2018 was
$297.5 million.

The Company defines Adjusted EBITDA as net (loss) income
attributable to DJOFL plus net interest expense, income tax
provision (benefit), and depreciation and amortization, further
adjusted for certain non-cash items, non-recurring items and other
adjustment items as permitted in calculating covenant compliance
under the Company's secured term loan and revolving credit
facilities and the indentures governing its 8.125% second lien
notes and its 10.75% third lien notes.  A reconciliation between
net loss attributable to DJOFL and Adjusted EBITDA is included in
the attached financial tables.

Net cash provided by continuing operating activities for the first
quarter of 2018 was $12.2 million compared to $38.6 million in the
first quarter of 2017.  The decline in cash flow was attributable
to higher inventory balances to allow for the transition of
suppliers and modernization of distribution facilities as part of
the Company's transformation initiative, and to the payment of
one-time costs accrued in the prior year.

A full-text copy of the press release is available at:

                        https://is.gd/vOmGd2

                         About DJO Finance

Vista, California-based DJO Finance LLC --
http://www.DJOglobal.com/-- is a global developer, manufacturer
and distributor of medical devices with a broad range of products
used for rehabilitation, pain management and physical therapy.  The
Company's products address the continuum of patient care from
injury prevention to rehabilitation after surgery, injury or from
degenerative disease, enabling people to regain or maintain their
natural motion.

DJO Finance LLC reported a net loss of $35.09 million on $1.18
billion of net sales for the year ended Dec. 31, 2017, compared to
a net loss of $285.68 million on $1.15 billion of net sales for the
year ended Dec. 31, 2016.  As of Dec. 31, 2017, DJO Finace had
$2.02 billion in total assets, $2.81 billion in total liabilities
and a total deficit of $790.47 million.

                           *    *    *

As reported by the TCR on April 13, 2018, Moody's Investors Service
affirmed its 'Caa1' Corporate Family Rating of DJO Finance LLC.
The affirmation of DJO's 'Caa1' CFR reflects that, while the
company's overall liquidity profile has improved, the company
remains highly leveraged with debt/EBITDA in excess of 9.0x.
Further, the company faces significant refinancing risk as the
majority of its debt comes due in 2020.


DONALD BRANDT: 11th Cir. Vacates Dismissal of FNB Deficiency Claims
-------------------------------------------------------------------
In the case captioned FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ONEIDA, N.A.,
Plaintiff-Appellant, v. DONALD H. BRANDT, Defendant-Appellee, No.
17-11654 (11th Cir.), the United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh
Circuit vacates the district court's dismissal of First National's
deficiency claims and remands for the district court to consider,
in the first instance, whether the dismissal of Donald Brandt's
Chapter 11 case without a discharge has any effect on First
National's ability to pursue its deficiency claims in this case.

First National brought the action against Brandt to collect the
remaining amounts due on several loans after the real estate
securing those loans was sold and the proceeds of those sales did
not cover the outstanding balances. Brandt, who had earlier filed a
Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition, moved to dismiss First National's
claims on the ground that First National could not state a claim
for a deficiency because it had not complied with certain
provisions of Brandt's previously confirmed Chapter 11 plan. The
district court agreed with Brandt and dismissed all of First
National's deficiency claims that related to loans made before
Brandt filed his Chapter 11 petition. First National appealed that
dismissal.

The appeal presents two issues for the Court's review. The first
question is the one that the parties briefed: whether a secured
creditor whose pre-petition debt is oversecured at the time of the
Chapter 11 filing--and who therefore fails to identify any part of
the debt as unsecured--is precluded from later seeking a deficiency
judgment after the debtor has failed to comply with the terms of
the plan and the collateral no longer fully secures the debt. The
second question arose after the parties had filed their briefs when
Brandt dismissed his bankruptcy petition. That question is whether,
by dismissing his Chapter 11 case without a discharge, Brandt is
now foreclosed from arguing that First National cannot seek a
deficiency judgment related to its pre-petition real-estate loans
based on First National's failure originally to identify any
portion of these loans as being undersecured. Notably, because
Brandt's Chapter 11 case was dismissed after this appeal was
already fully briefed, the effect of that dismissal, as well as the
facts and circumstances surrounding it, have not been meaningfully
briefed by the parties.

The dismissal of Brandt's Chapter 11 case without a
discharge--after issuance of the district court order on appeal
here--is a potentially significant event that may affect the
ultimate disposition of this case and on which there has been
insufficient briefing. For that reason, the Court vacates the
district court's dismissal order and remands for that court to
consider this newly raised issue and, if necessary, to develop a
fuller factual record.

A full-text copy of the Court's Decision dated April 24, 2018 is
available at https://bit.ly/2L2FNGB from Leagle.com.

David Hywel Leonard, for Plaintiff-Appellant.

Joseph H. Lang, Jr. -- jlang@carltonfields.com -- for
Plaintiff-Appellant.

Richard John Cole, III, for Defendant-Appellee.

Nicholas A. Brown -- brownn@gtlaw.com -- for Plaintiff-Appellant.

John Philip Newton, for Defendant-Appellee.

Based in Daleville, Alabama, Donald Ernest Brandt, dba Brandt
Enterprises, Wilbur Group, and Brandt and Father, filed for chapter
11 bankruptcy protection (Bankr. M.D. Tenn. Case No. 09-08066) on
July 20, 2009.  Judge Keith M. Lundin presides over the case.
Steven L. Lefkovitz, Esq., in Nashville, Tennessee,
serves as bankruptcy counsel.  The Debtor listed total assets of
$2,038,659 and total debts of $2,432,341 in his petition.


DONNIE EARNEST: Selling Panama City Beach Property for $375K
------------------------------------------------------------
Donnie Ray Earnest, Sr., and Susan Christina Earnest ask the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Florida to authorize
their sale of the real property located at 6529 Beach Drive, Panama
City Beach, Florida, described as Holiday Beach Unit #3, Lot 15
Blk, iORB 1841 P 2399, ORB 2341 F' 68, ORB 2535 P 1241, to for
$375,000, subject to higher and better offers.

Objections if any must be filed within 21 days from the date of
Notice.

The mortgage holder, Vericrest Financial, filed Claim #11 in the
amount of $402,605 on April 26, 2013.  The mortgage of Vericrest
Financial will be satisfied through the sale of the real property.
Any remaining proceeds will be deposited into the DIP account.  The
closing Statement is subject to approval of Vericrest Financial.
No party in interest is being adversely affected by the sale.

The Debtors have listed the property for the sum of $375,000, or
best offer.

The Debtors pray the Court will enter an Order allowing them to
sell real property; satisfy the mortgage with Vericrest Financial;
pay all closing costs and realtor commissions; and deposit all
remaining funds in the DIP account.

A copy of the Listing Agreement with MJH Real Estate Brokerage, LLC
and Berkshire Hathaway Beach Properties of Florida attached to the
Motion is available for free at:

       http://bankrupt.com/misc/Donnie_Earnest_284_Sales.pdf

Donnie Ray Earnest, Sr., and Susan Christina Earnest sought Chapter
11 protection (Bankr. N.D. Fla. Case No. 12-50592) on Dec. 27,
2012.

Counsel for the Debtors:

     Charles M. Wynn, Esq.
     4436 Clinton Street
     P.O. Box 146
     Marianna, FL 32447
     Telephone: (850) 526-3520
     Facsimile: (850) 526-5210
     E-mail: Charles@Wynnlaw-fl.com
             Court@Wynnlaw-fi.com


DURAO BUILDING: Hires Richard S. Feinsilver as Counsel
------------------------------------------------------
Durao Building Enterprises, Inc.. seeks authority from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the  Eastern District of New York to employ
Richard S. Feinsilver as its counsel.

Services to be rendered by Feinsilver are:

     a. preparation and filing of the chapter 11 petition,
schedules and statements;

     b. negotiations with creditors, as required;

     c. attendance at all Section 341(a) meetings with creditors
adn the United States Trustee;

     d. preparation of the Plan, Disclosure and all amendments to
same, as required;

     e. attendance at all hearings, including hearings on status
disclosure statements - status conferences with the United States
Trustee and creditors, if required.

Richard S. Feinsilver, Esq. attests that his firm does not hold nor
represent any interests adverse to the Debtor-in-Possession,
creditors, ot other parties in interest of the estate.

Hourly rates of the firm are:

     Richard S. Feinsilver, Esq.   $350.00
     Legal Assistant               $60.00

The counsel can reached through:

     Richard S. Feinsilver, Esq.
     Richard S. Feinsilver
     One Old Country Road, Suite 125
     Carle Place, NY 11514
     Phone: 516-873-6330
     Fax: 516-873-6183
     Email: feinlawny@yahoo.com

              About Durao Building Enterprises Inc.

Based in New York, New York, Durao Building Enterprises Inc. filed
a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 18-72533) on April
16, 2018, listing under $1 million in both assets and liabilities.
The case is assigned to Judge Louis A. Scarcella.  Richard S.
Feinsilver is the Debtor's counsel.


DURFEY DEVELOPMENT: Taps Krigel & Krigel, PC as Attorney
--------------------------------------------------------
Durfey Development, Inc., seeks authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Western District of Missouri to employ Erlene W.
Krigel and the law firm of Krigel & Krigel, P.C. to serve as
attorneys for the Debtor.

Services to be rendered by Krigel & Krigel are:

     (a) advise the Debtor with respect to its powers and duties as
Debtor and Debtor-in-Possession in the continued management and
operation of its business;

     (b) attend meetings and negotiate with representatives of
creditors and other parties in interest;

     (c) take all necessary action to protect and preserve the
estate, including the prosecution of actions on its behalf, the
defense of any actions commenced against the Debtor's estate, and
objections to claims filed against the estate;

     (d) prepare on behalf of Debtor all motions, applications,
answers, orders, reports and papers necessary to the administration
of the estate;

     (e) negotiate and prosecute on the Debtor's behalf all
contracts for the sale of assets, plan of reorganization,
disclosure statement, and all related agreements and/or documents,
and take any action that is necessary for the Debtor to obtain
confirmation of its Plan of Reorganization;

     (f) appear before this Court and the United States Trustee;
and protect the interests of the Debtor's estate before the Court
and the U.S. Trustee; and

     (g) perform all other necessary legal services and provide all
other necessary legal advice to the Debtor in connection with this
Chapter 11 proceedings.

Krigel & Krigel's hourly rates for 2018 are:

     Sanford P. Krigel   $350   
     Erlene W. Krigel    $275    
     Paul Hentzen        $275    
     Karen Rosenberg     $250  
     Steve Braun         $250
     Kelsey Nazar    $250
     Dana Wilders        $250
     Lara Pabst          $250
     Christopher Smith   $250
     Legal assistants    $75

Erlene W. Krigel, Esq. of Krigel & Krigel, P.C., attests that he
and his firm do not represent or hold any interest adverse to the
estate and are disinterested for the purpose of representing the
Debtor in these Chapter 11 proceedings.

The counsel can be reached through:

     Erlene W. Krigel, Esq.
     KRIGEL & KRIGEL, P.C.
     4520 Main Street, Suite 700
     Kansas City, MO 64111
     Tel: (816) 756-5800
     Fax: (816) 756-1999
     Email: ekrigel@krigelandkrigel.com

                   About Durfey Development

Durfey Development is a Subchapter C corporation, organized in
Missouri.  It owns a number of rental houses and provides
renovation and rehab services for consumers.

Durfey Development filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. W.D. Mo.
Case No. 18-50193) on May 4, 2018, listing under $1 million in both
assets and liabilities.  Judge Brian T. Fenimore presides over the
case.  Erlene W. Krigel at Krigel & Krigel, P.C., is the Debtor's
counsel.


DYNEGY INC: S&P Raises Corp Credit Rating to 'BB', Outlook Stable
-----------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings said that it has raised its corporate credit
rating on Dynegy Inc. to 'BB' from 'B+' and removed the rating from
CreditWatch, where S&P placed it with positive implications on Oct.
30, 2017. The outlook is stable.

S&P said, "At the same time, we raised our issue-level rating on
the company's secured debt to 'BBB-' from 'BB' and our issue-level
rating on its unsecured debt to 'BB' from 'B+' and removed the
ratings from CreditWatch, where we placed them with positive
implications on Oct. 30, 2017. The '1' recovery rating on Dynegy's
secured debt remains unchanged, indicating our expectation for very
high (90%-100%; rounded estimate: 95%) recovery in the event of a
payment default. The '3' recovery rating on the company's unsecured
debt also remains unchanged, indicating our expectation for
meaningful (50%-70%; rounded estimate: 55%) recovery in the event
of a payment default.

"The upgrade reflects the recent closing of Dynegy's merger with
Vistra Energy Corp. While the transaction has not changed our
opinion of the company's standalone credit quality, we raised our
rating to indicate Dynegy's core status within Vistra Energy.
Specifically, we believe that Dynegy is now integral to Vistra and
anticipate that the company will not likely divest the firm
considering management's joint strategy for the business.
Consequently, we equalized our corporate credit ratings on the
companies.

"The stable outlook on Vistra (and by extension, Dynegy) reflects
our belief that the increased diversity of its fuels, geographic
coverage, and revenue, along with the capacity payments and retail
revenues that accounts for almost 50% of its aggregate EBITDA,
should allow the company to maintain consolidated adjusted
debt-to-EBITDA in the 3.00x-3.25x range and adjusted funds from
operations (FFO)-to-debt of about 25%. The stable outlook also
incorporates our view that the low capital intensity of the
company's retail business will continue to provide it with a
countercyclical hedge when its wholesale margins decline while also
generating solid cash flow conversion. Finally, the outlook
indicates our expectation for elevated cash flow from the company's
wholesale power business given the significantly higher forward
power prices in ERCOT for the summers of 2018 and 2019. As Dynegy
is a core entity within the Vistra structure, any change we make to
our rating on Vistra will also cause to change our rating on
Dynegy.

"We could lower our ratings on Vistra if its debt-to-EBITDA
increases above 3.75x on a sustained basis or its FFO-to-debt ratio
declines below 20%. We note that our analysis includes financial
ratios that are weaker than management's expectations because we
forecast a slower deleveraging and impute significant off-balance
sheet debt. Our assessment also assumes a lower level of net debt
treatment for surplus cash. We think that the company could slow
its expected deleveraging through 2019 if it chooses to deploy its
cash for acquisitions instead.

"We will raise our ratings if we continue to gain confidence in the
sustainability and stability of Vistra's retail power business even
as that business continues to grow at projected levels. Given the
materially higher expected summer power prices, we see some risks
for the company's retail margins because this business has not
witnessed stressed conditions since 2011. Specifically, we will
raise the ratings if adjusted debt-to-EBITDA declines below 3.0x on
a sustained basis or its FFO-to-debt increases above 25% on a
sustained basis. We do not expect to raise the ratings before
2020."


EC OFFSHORE: June 12 Plan Confirmation Hearing
----------------------------------------------
Bankruptcy Judge Robert Summerhays issued an order approving the
amended disclosure statement referring to a plan of reorganization
for EC Offshore Properties, Inc. proposed by Chapter 11 Trustee
Martin A. Schott and EC Mako Energy, LLC.

June 5, 2018 is fixed as the last date for filing written
acceptances or rejections of the Plan and the last date for filing
and serving objections, if any, to the confirmation of the Plan.

June 12, 2018 at 10:00 a.m. is fixed as the date and time for
hearing on confirmation of the Plan. The hearing will be held at
214 Jefferson Street, 1st Floor Courtroom, Lafayette, Louisiana.

Prior to the Disclosure Statement hearing, the Debtor amended the
outline explaining the Plan to provide that all but $10,000 of the
Allowed Secured Prepetition Lender Claims, which total $9,700,000,
will be exchanged for 100% of Reorganized ECOP Equity Interests.
The $10,000 of the Allowed Secured Claim will be rolled into an
Exit Financing Note and the Prepetition Lender Deficiency Claim
will be treated as a Class 5 General Unsecured Claim.

As previously reported by the Troubled Company Reporter, Allowed
General Unsecured Claims are impaired and are estimated to receive
10% for claims other than prepetition lender deficiency claims if
the class votes to accept the Plan or 1.35% if the class votes to
reject the Plan.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement is available at:

         http://bankrupt.com/misc/lawb15-50085-321.pdf

A full-text copy of the Amended Disclosure Statement is available
at:

         http://bankrupt.com/misc/lawb15-50085-344.pdf

                        About EC Offshore

Petitioning Creditors Campbell Evans, Open Choke Exploration, LLC,
and OCXO, LLC, which collectively hold more than $140,000 in debt,
filed an involuntary Chapter 11 case against Houston, Texas-based
EC Offshore Properties, Inc., on Jan. 26, 2015 (Bankr. W.D. La.
Case No. 15-50085).  The Petitioners' counsel are Armistead M.
Long, Esq., and Louis M. Phillips, Esq., at Gordon Arata McCollam
Duplantis & Eagan, LLC.  On April 1, 2015, an order for relief
adjudicating the Debtor as a debtor was entered in the Bankruptcy
Case.

Martin A. Schott was appointed Chapter 11 trustee and is
represented by:

     HELLER, DRAPER, PATRICK, HORN & MANTHEY, L.L.C.
     650 Poydras Street, Suite 2500
     New Orleans, LA 70130-6103
     Tel: (504) 299-3300
     Fax: (504) 299-3399

Van Ness Feldman LLP serves as special regulatory counsel for the
Chapter 11 trustee.  Gordon, Arata, McCollam, Duplantis & Egan,
LLC, serves as special oil and gas counsel to the Chapter 11
trustee.  Postlethwaite & Netterville, CPA, serves as tax
accountants to the Chapter 11 trustee.


EDGARS CONSOLIDATED: Bank Debt Trades at 63% Off
------------------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which Edgars Consolidated
Stores Ltd. is a borrower traded in the secondary market at 37.25
cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4, 2018,
according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM Pricing.
This represents an increase of 16.60 percentage points from the
previous week. Edgars Consolidated pays 475 basis points above
LIBOR to borrow under the $820 million facility. The bank loan
matures on October 14, 2022. Moody's rates the loan 'Caa1' and
Standard & Poor's gave a 'CCC-' rating to the loan. The loan is one
of the biggest gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted
syndicated loans with five or more bids in secondary trading for
the week ended Friday, May 4.



ELEVEN-BAR-SEVEN: Sale of Texas Property to Fund Proposed Plan
--------------------------------------------------------------
Eleven-Bar-Seven filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Northern District of Texas its first amended disclosure statement,
dated April 24, 2018, to accompany its proposed first amended
plan.

The Debtor does not intend to operate further other than to
liquidate its Property located at 200 Fairway Lane, Georgetown,
Texas 78628 valued at $1,564,200. The Debtor believes the Property
will sell for sufficient funds to pay Class 1 claimants, Class 2
claimants, and Administrative claimants in full.  The Debtor
originally said an equity investment and cash on hand from
operations will fund payments under the Plan, but later amended the
Disclosure Statement to provide that plan payments will be funded
by proceeds from the sale of the Property.

The Allowed Claims of Unsecured Creditors in Class 2 will be paid
the balance of the Sale Proceeds less all administrative and
priority claims (but not less than 10% of their Allowed Claim) on
the Initial Distribution Date. The Class 2 Claimants are impaired
under this Plan and are entitled to vote on the Plan.

A full-text copy of the First Amended Disclosure Statement is
available for free at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/txnb17-31273-11-53.pdf

A full-text copy of the original Disclosure Statement is available
for free at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/txnb17-31273-51.pdf

                   About Eleven-Bar-Seven

Eleven-Bar-Seven Ltd., based in Irving, Texas, filed a Chapter 11
petition (Bankr. N.D. Tex. Case No. 17-31273) on April 4, 2017. The
Hon. Harlin DeWayne Hale presides over the case. Martin Keith
Thomas, Esq., serves as bankruptcy counsel.

In its petition, the Debtor estimated $500,000 to $1 million in
assets and $1 million to $10 million in liabilities. The petition
was signed by Phillip Lynn Lloyd, president/owner.


EMPIRE GENERATING: S&P Junks Rating to 'CC' on Forbearance Deal
---------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings lowered its corporate credit ratings on Empire
Generating Co, LLC to 'CC' from 'CCC'. The outlook is negative. The
recovery rating on the senior secured term loan B remains '4'
(30%-50%; rounded estimate: 40%).

The downgrade reflects our view that a default or distressed
restructuring is a virtual certainty. It follows Empire's May 9
entry into a forbearance agreement with a majority of its lenders.

In summation, the lenders agreed to waive their right to foreclose
on the loan in the event of a technical default caused by a
covenant breach. Although the forbearance agreement will
effectively delay an expected technical default, we anticipate that
Empire will enter into Chapter 11 proceedings in the near future.

The negative outlook reflects the likelihood that we will lower the
rating to 'D' following the forbearance. We expect the lenders to
foreclose on the term loan and Empire to declare Chapter 11. If the
company were to restructure its debt during this period, it would
constitute a distressed transaction, which would also lead to a
downgrade to 'D'.


ENDURO RESOURCE: Files Chapter 11 Petition to Facilitate Sale
-------------------------------------------------------------
Enduro Resource Partners LLC on May 15, 2018, disclosed that in
order to facilitate assets sales to maximize recoveries to its
creditor constituencies, the Company and certain of its affiliates
have filed voluntary petitions for a court-supervised proceeding
under chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code in the United
States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware ("the Court").
Enduro intends to operate in the ordinary course of business
during the sale process and chapter 11 cases.  Enduro Royalty
Trust, a publicly-traded Delaware statutory trust formed on May 3,
2011, has not filed a chapter 11 petition and will also continue to
operate in the normal course.

Following an extensive marketing and sale process the Company, its
Board of Managers, and its first lien lenders determined that the
sale of all of Enduro's assets (including ownership of its
outstanding units in Enduro Royalty Trust (the "trust units"))
through a court-supervised process is the best course of action in
terms of maximizing value for all stakeholders.  Enduro expects the
ultimate purchaser of its trust units to assume Enduro's
responsibilities under the Amended and Restated Trust Agreement
with Enduro Royalty Trust.

Enduro has reached an agreement with its first lien lenders to
utilize their cash collateral to fund the Company throughout the
sale process.  This arrangement, which is subject to court
approval, is expected to support the Company's day-to-day
operations during this process and to be sufficient to fund
Enduro's operations during the chapter 11 process.  Employees,
royalty, working interest, and joint interest billing partners, and
vendors should expect no material impact on day-to-day operations
or interactions with the Company.

Enduro also filed a motion seeking authorization to pursue a sale
process under Section 363 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.  To this
end, Enduro has entered into three stalking horse purchase
agreements, copies of which were filed with the Court on May 15.
These purchase agreements are subject to higher and better bids,
which Enduro expects to begin soliciting promptly in accordance
with the process described in the applicable filings with the
Court.

The Company has filed a number of customary motions with the Court
seeking court authorization to support its operations, including
the payment of employee wages, salaries, and benefits.  Enduro is
also seeking court authorization to meet its outstanding
obligations to its royalty, working interest, and joint interest
billing partners, as well as certain vendors.  The Company expects
to receive Court approval for these requests shortly.

Additional information is available at http://www.kccllc.net/Enduro
and by calling 866-967-0493 (toll free) or 310-751-2693
(international callers).  Court filings and other information
related to the court-supervised proceedings are available at a
website administered by the Company's claims agent, Kurtzman Carson
Consultants (KCC), at http://www.kccllc.net/Enduro.

The Company has retained Latham & Watkins LLP and Young Conaway
Stargatt & Taylor, LLP as co-counsel, Evercore Group, L.L.C. as
financial advisor and Alvarez & Marsal North America, LLC as
restructuring advisor.

Enduro Resource Partners LLC is an oil and gas exploration and
acquisition/exploitation company with a focus on long-lived oil and
gas properties in the onshore United States.


ENLINK MIDSTREAM: Moody's Affirms 'Ba1' Corporate Family Rating
---------------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service affirmed the ratings for Devon Energy
Corporation (Devon), including the company's Ba1 Corporate Family
Rating (CFR), Ba1-PD Probability of Default Rating (PDR), Ba1
senior unsecured debt rating and SGL-1 Speculative Grade Liquidity
(SGL) Rating. Devon's rating outlook is stable.

Concurrently, Moody's affirmed EnLink Midstream Partners, LP's
(EnLink) Ba1 CFR, Ba1-PD PDR, Ba1 senior unsecured notes rating and
its SGL-3 Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating. EnLink's rating
outlook is stable.

"Devon is improving its capital efficiency through its focus in the
STACK and Delaware Basin, while the company has reduced debt using
asset sale proceeds and is maintaining strong liquidity," commented
Amol Joshi, Moody's Vice President. "Devon should generate better
margins by growing oil production from its higher-return assets and
offset the decline profile of its legacy assets. Controlling
capital spending, further reducing debt and growing its cash flow
should improve the company's credit profile, even as its
consolidated debt metrics are pulled down by EnLink's leverage."

Issuer: Devon Energy Corporation

Ratings Affirmed:

Corporate Family Rating, Affirmed Ba1

Probability of Default Rating, Affirmed Ba1-PD

Senior Unsecured Notes, Affirmed Ba1 (LGD4)

Senior Unsecured Shelf, Affirmed (P)Ba1

Subordinate Shelf, Affirmed (P)Ba2

Preferred Stock Shelf, Affirmed (P)Ba3

Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating, Affirmed SGL-1

Senior Unsecured Commercial Paper, Affirmed NP

Outlook Action:

Outlook, Remains Stable

Issuer: Devon Financing Corporation U.L.C.

Ratings Affirmed:

Senior Unsecured Notes, Affirmed Ba1 (LGD4)

Senior Unsecured Shelf, Affirmed (P)Ba1

Outlook Action:

Outlook, Remains Stable

Issuer: Devon Financing Trust II

Ratings Affirmed:

Preferred Stock Shelf, Affirmed (P)Ba3

Outlook Action:

Outlook, Remains Stable

Issuer: EnLink Midstream Partners, LP

Ratings Affirmed:

Corporate Family Rating, Affirmed Ba1

Probability of Default Rating, Affirmed Ba1-PD

Senior Unsecured Notes, Affirmed Ba1 (LGD4)

Senior Unsecured Shelf, Affirmed (P)Ba1

Perpetual Preferred Units, Affirmed Ba3 (LGD6)

Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating, Affirmed SGL-3

Outlook Action:

Outlook, Remains Stable

RATINGS RATIONALE

Devon's Ba1 CFR is supported by Moody's expectation of improving
capital efficiency due to the company's drilling focus on its
higher-return assets in the STACK and Delaware Basin. Devon's cash
flow based leverage metrics will likely improve after a number of
steps taken by the company to shore up its credit profile including
significant debt reduction, capital spending cuts and asset sales.
Devon is constrained by its relatively weak operating margins due
to a sizeable component of lower margin heavy oil and legacy
production base, and significant capital required to develop its
higher growth assets. Devon is supported by the significant size
and scale of its E&P operations with a diversified geographic
presence across key onshore hydrocarbon basins in North America.
The company has a mix of oil versus natural gas production as well
as shale versus conventional properties, providing some commodity
price optionality and a manageable overall portfolio decline rate.
Devon's interest in the EnLink companies, which own a sizeable and
valuable midstream business, represents a source of alternative
liquidity.

Devon's SGL-1 rating reflects very good liquidity that is supported
by its material cash balances, large undrawn credit facility and an
unsecured capital structure. While Devon is striving to spend
within cash flow, the company's liquidity incorporates Moody's
expectation that Devon will outspend cash flow after share
repurchases in 2018. At March 31, 2018, Devon had cash balances
exceeding $1.4 billion and no drawings under its revolver ($51
million in letters of credit outstanding under the revolver).

Devon has a $3 billion unsecured revolving credit facility that
matures in October 2019 (except for $164 million of the facility
that matures in October 2018). The revolver has only one material
financial covenant requiring debt/total capitalization of less than
65%. Devon has considerable cushion under this covenant, with
debt/total capitalization of 26% at March 31, 2018. After reducing
debt in 2016 and in the first quarter of 2018 using proceeds from
asset sales, Devon has a manageable debt maturity schedule until
its revolver matures.

EnLink receives significant revenues through its relationship with
Devon, and its Ba1 CFR reflects the company's high customer
concentration risk with Devon combined with Devon's controlling
ownership. EnLink's credit profile benefits from a high proportion
of fee-based revenue and significant minimum volume commitments
(MVC) that help provide volume stability and support cash flow
visibility, and a coordinated growth strategy with Devon in the
STACK. These strengths are partially offset by EnLink's
concentration in the mature Barnett Shale, where volumes have been
declining, and the need to continue to offset this exposure through
growth in other regions such as the STACK, which entails execution
risk. EnLink is building out its STACK assets to offset the
expected margin decline within its Barnett Shale assets after those
MVCs expire at the end of 2018. Devon represented slightly less
than 47% of EnLink's 2017 gross operating margin, and this
dependence on Devon could decrease somewhat after the MVCs expire.
EnLink's rating is also restrained by the inherent risks associated
with its high-payout master limited partnership business model.

Devon's rating could be upgraded if the company's RCF/Debt exceeds
30% and its LFCR exceeds 1.5x, while growing its STACK and Delaware
production to offset declining legacy production. The rating could
be downgraded if RCF/Debt falls below 15% or capital efficiency
deteriorates. A significant increase in shareholder friendly
actions that materially erode the company's cash balances could
also lead to a downgrade.

EnLink's outlook is stable. An upgrade of Devon's ratings could
lead to EnLink being considered for an upgrade. In addition, EnLink
needs to maintain leverage below 4.5x and distribution coverage of
at least 1.1x. For an upgrade, there will also need to be
sufficient visibility regarding the profitable execution of
EnLink's ongoing build-out of its STACK assets, to offset the
expected margin decline within its Barnett Shale assets after the
MVCs expire. Ratings would likely be downgraded if Devon were to be
downgraded. EnLink's ratings could also be downgraded if
debt/EBITDA increased to above 5.5x, or distribution coverage
dropped below 1x for a sustained period. Material debt levels
incurred at EnLink Midstream, LLC (EnLink GP) would also pressure
EnLink's rating.

The principal methodology used in rating Devon Energy Corporation,
Devon Financing Corporation U.L.C. and Devon Financing Trust II was
Independent Exploration and Production Industry published in May
2017. The principal methodology used in rating EnLink Midstream
Partners, LP was Midstream Energy published in May 2017.

Devon Energy Corporation, headquartered in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma,
is a large independent exploration and production company with a
focus on onshore oil and gas properties in the US and Canada.
EnLink Midstream Partners, LP, headquartered in Dallas, Texas, is a
publicly traded master limited partnership. Devon owned 64% of
EnLink Midstream, LLC, the indirect general partner entity of
EnLink, and approximately 23% of EnLink, as of December 31, 2017.


ENTERPRISE BUSINESS: Plan Discloses Settlement Agreement with TCAC2
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Enterprise Business Corporation filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the District of Puerto Rico a disclosure statement and
summary of its amended plan of reorganization.

Since the filing of the bankruptcy petition the Debtor has engaged
in settlement conversations with its main secured creditor,
Triangle Cayman Asset Company 2 in order to be able to provide
treatment to the secured claim in a fashion acceptable to Triangle
which would lead to a more expeditious confirmation of the proposed
Plan of Reorganization. After multiple discussions, the parties
were able to reach an agreement for the treatment of Triangle’s
claim. The same was filed on March 14, 2018, and approved by the
Court of April 13, 2018.

Triangle’s secured claims are classified in Class 6 and 7 under
the plan. The Debtor proposes to pay Triangle's secured claims as
per the terms and conditions of the Settlement Agreement approved
by the Bankruptcy Court.

Class 9 under the plan consists of the general unsecured claims
including deficiency claims. As of this date claims have been filed
under this class in the amount of $599,475.55, including the
deficiency claim of Triangle in the amount of $591,474.55. Members
of this class shall be paid 5% of their allowed claims in 60 equal
consecutive monthly installments from the Effective Date.

The proposed plan will be funded with Debtor's own assets, the
surrendering or sale of the real property as per the agreement
being negotiated with Triangle, the collection of any account
receivables, Debtor's cash in bank and funds from Debtor's
post-petition operations. Debtor's shareholders will provide
additional capital input to fund the plan, namely the payment to
administrative claims, general unsecured creditors and priority
creditors. In the event an agreement with Triangle is reached,
Debtor's shareholders will acquire Property 30835.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement is available at:

      http://bankrupt.com/misc/prb17-05940-11-57.pdf

A full-text copy of the Amended Plan of Reorganization is available
at:

      http://bankrupt.com/misc/prb17-05940-11-58.pdf

                    About Enterprise Business

Enterprise Business, Corp., owns a fee simple interest in a single
story building located at Sabalos Ward (Folio 149, Tomo 1024 De
Mayaguez) valued at $310,000. It is also the fee simple owner of a
car wash located at Betances Street (Folio 26, Tomo 1535, De
Mayaguez) valued at $471,000.

The Company previously sought bankruptcy protection on Sept. 21,
2015 (Bankr. D.P.R. Case No. 15-07259) and Dec. 17, 2013 (Bankr.
D.P.R. Case No. 13-10452).

Enterprise Business Corporation, based in Mayaguez, Puerto Rico,
filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. D.P.R. Case No. 17-05940) on
Aug. 23, 2017.  In the petition signed by Ivan Torres Nazario,
president, the Debtor disclosed $1.03 million in assets and $1.37
million in liabilities.  Carmen D Conde Torres, Esq., at C. Conde &
Assoc., serves as the Debtor's bankruptcy counsel.


ENUMERAL BIOMEDICAL: May 25 Plan Confirmation Hearing
-----------------------------------------------------
Judge Frank J. Bailey of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District
of Massachusetts approved Enumeral Biomedical Holdings, Inc. and
affiliates' first amended disclosure statement in support of their
first amended chapter 11 plan dated March 14, 2018.

The deadline to vote on or object to the Plan will be 4:00 p.m. on
May 23, 2018 ("Voting/Objection Deadline"). Any and all objections
to confirmation of the Plan must be in writing.

Ballots to accept or reject the Plan must be completed and returned
to the Debtors' counsel so as to actually be received not later
than the Voting/Objection Deadline.

The hearing on confirmation of the Plan will be held commencing at
11:00 a.m., Eastern Daylight Time, on May 25, 2018, in the United
States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Massachusetts,
Courtroom No. 3, 12th Floor, John W. McCormack Federal Building, 5
Post Office Square, Boston, Massachusetts.

General Unsecured Claims under the first amended plan have been
asserted at approximately $2,337,722.14. The Debtors expect the
claim of their former landlord, filed in the amount of
$1,538,319.80, to be disallowed in full or substantially reduced.
The Debtors expect that approximately $375,000 will be available
for distribution on account of Allowed General Unsecured Claims.
The Debtors believe that the Plan provides general unsecured
creditors with the best opportunity to realize the highest possible
return on account of their Claims. The projected distribution of
between 15-45% under the Plan contrasts with a likely distribution
of zero if the Plan does not take effect.

Although formed as separate and distinct legal entities, the
Debtors generally operated as a single corporate enterprise. Thus,
while EBHI owned the valuable intellectual property assets of the
combined Debtors, Enumeral Biomedical Corp. maintained the primary
operating account used to pay employees and certain vendors, and
was licensee under the Platform License from MIT. The Debtors do
not know of any liabilities of any of the Debtors that could not
plausibly be asserted as liabilities of the entire group. Thus, for
reasons of fairness and to avoid the expense of establishing the
particular Debtor or Debtors responsible for each claim, the Plan
provides that the Debtors estates will be substantively
consolidated. This means that they will be treated as a single
legal entity for the purpose of allowing and paying creditors'
claims.

A full-text copy of the First Amended Disclosure Statement is
available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/mab18-10280-103.pdf

A full-text copy of the First Amended Chapter 11 Plan is available
at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/mab18-10280-82.pdf

                  About Enumeral Biomedical

Headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Enumeral Biomedical
Holdings, Inc., formerly doing business as Cerulean Group, Inc. --
http://www.enumeral.com/-- is a biopharmaceutical company focused  
on discovering and developing novel antibody immunotherapies that
help the immune system fight cancer and other diseases.  The
Company utilizes a proprietary platform technology that facilitates
the rapid high resolution measurement of immune cell function
within small tissue biopsy samples. Its initial focus is on the
development of a pipeline of next generation monoclonal antibody
drugs targeting established and novel immuno-modulatory receptors.

Enumeral Biomedical Holdings, Inc., Enumeral Biomedical Corp., and
Enumeral Securities Corporation sought for Chapter 11 protection
(Bankr. D. Mass. Case Nos. 18-10280 to 18-10282) on Jan. 29, 2018.
Kevin G. Sarney, interim president and CEO, signed the petitions.

Judge Frank J. Bailey is the case judge for Case Nos. 18-10280 and
18-10281, and Judge Joan N. Feeney is assigned to Case No.
18-10282.
               
At the time of filing, Enumeral Biomedical Holdings disclosed $1.6
million in assets and $2.54 million in debt.

Daniel C. Cohn, Esq. and Jonathan Horne, Esq., of Murtha Cullina
LLP, serve as the Debtors' counsel.


EPICENTER PARTNERS: Taps Quinlan Law Firm as Special Counsel
------------------------------------------------------------
Epicenter Partners, L.L.C. and Gray Meyer Fannin, L.L.C. and Mesch
Clark Rothschild, as counsel for the estates, seek authority from
the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Arizona to employ the
Quinlan Law Firm as special counsel pursuant to Bankruptcy Code
Sec. 328(a) for the limited purposes of representing the estate
(including any authorized representative of the May Liquidating
Trust) with respect to claims against the Arizona State Land
Department.

The professional services that Quinlan is to render are:

     a. provide legal advice to the May Debtors in their claim
against the Arizona State Land Department;

     b. take any necessary action to recover certain property and
monies owed the May Debtors as a result of the ASLD Action;

     c. represent the May Debtors in litigation;

     d. prepare on behalf of the May Debtors the necessary
pleadings and other legal papers relating to the ASLD Action; and

     e. perform all other legal services the May Debtors deem
necessary with respect to the ASLD Action.

Hourly rates of Quinlan attorneys are:

     William Quinlan       $625
     Paraprofessionals     $190

William Quinlan, Esq., a partner at the Quinlan Law Firm, attests
that Quinlan does not represent any entity having an adverse
interest in connection with these cases.

The counsel can be reached through:

     William Quinlan, Esq.
     Quinlan Law Firm, LLC
     2415 East Camelback Road, Suite 700
     Phoenix, AZ 85016
     Phone: 602-732-6500
     Fax: 312-629-6012
     Email: wjq@quinlanfirm.com

                   About Epicenter Partners

Epicenter Partners LLC was formed in 2004 to acquire, manage, sell
or hold land for investment.  Gray Meyer Fannin LLC came into
existence in 2001 and was originally formed to provide development
services for affiliates.  Both are fully owned by Gray/Western
Development Company and managed, pursuant to that entity, by Bruce
Gray.

The companies sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. D. Ariz. Lead Case No. 16-05493) on May 16, 2016.
Epicenter disclosed $143,212,665 in assets and $66,913,279 in
liabilities.

Epicenter and GMF tapped Thomas J. Salerno, Esq., at Stinson
Leonard Street, LLP, as their Chapter 11 counsel.  Mesch Clark
Rothschild was later hired as substitute counsel to Stinson Leonard
Street.

On June 15, 2016, the Office of the U.S. Trustee appointed five
creditors of Epicenter and GMF to serve on the official committee
of unsecured creditors.  The committee is represented by Michael W.
Carmel, Ltd., as counsel.

On November 22, 2016, Sonoran Desert Land Investors LLC, East of
Epicenter LLC, and Gray Phoenix Desert Ridge II LLC, sought
protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Ariz.
Case Nos. 16-07659 to 16-07661).  The cases are jointly
administered with that of Epicenter.

On February 6, 2017, CPF Vaseo Associates LLC, a secured creditor,
proposed a plan of reorganization for Epicenter, Gray Meyer,
Sonoran, East of Epicenter, and Gray Phoenix.

On Feb. 7, 2017, Sonoran, East of Epicenter and Gray Phoenix filed
a plan of reorganization and disclosure statement proposing to pay
their general unsecured creditors in full.  The plan has been
proposed for the three companies only.


EPICENTER PARTNERS: Taps Stinson Leonard Street as Special Counsel
------------------------------------------------------------------
Epicenter Partners, L.L.C. and Gray Meyer Fannin, L.L.C. and Mesch
Clark Rothschild, as counsel for the estates, seek authority from
the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Arizona to employ
Stinson Leonard Street as special counsel for the limited purposes
of representing the estate (including any authorized representative
of the May Liquidating Trust) with respect to specific lender
liability litigation against Burford/Ganymede Investment.

The professional services that STINSON is to render are:

     a. provide legal advice to the May Debtors in the
Burford/Ganymede

     b. lender liability action (the Burford/Ganymede Action);

     c. take any necessary action to recover certain property and
monies owed the May Debtors as a result of the Burford/Ganymede
Action;

     d. represent the May Debtors with regard to the
Burford/Ganymede Action;

     e. prepare on behalf of the May Debtors the necessary
pleadings and other legal papers related to the Burford/Ganymede
Action; and

     f. perform all other legal services the May Debtors deem
necessary with respect to the Burford/Ganymede Action.

Thomas J. Salerno, Esq. partner attests that his firm has no
connection with the creditors, any other party in interest, or
their respective attorneys.

Hourly rates of Stinson's attorneys are:

     Michael Manning   $760.00
     Jeffrey Goulder   $575.00

The counsel can be reached through:

     Thomas J. Salerno, Esq.
     Stinson Leonard Street
     1850 N. Central Ave., Suite 2100
     Phoenix, AZ 85004
     Tel: 602-212-8508

                   About Epicenter Partners

Epicenter Partners LLC was formed in 2004 to acquire, manage, sell
or hold land for investment.  Gray Meyer Fannin LLC came into
existence in 2001 and was originally formed to provide development
services for affiliates.  Both are fully owned by Gray/Western
Development Company and managed, pursuant to that entity, by Bruce
Gray.

The companies sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. D. Ariz. Lead Case No. 16-05493) on May 16, 2016.
Epicenter disclosed $143,212,665 in assets and $66,913,279 in
liabilities.

Epicenter and GMF tapped Thomas J. Salerno, Esq., at Stinson
Leonard Street, LLP, as their Chapter 11 counsel.  Mesch Clark
Rothschild was later hired as substitute counsel to Stinson Leonard
Street.

On June 15, 2016, the Office of the U.S. Trustee appointed five
creditors of Epicenter and GMF to serve on the official committee
of unsecured creditors.  The committee is represented by Michael W.
Carmel, Ltd., as counsel.

On November 22, 2016, Sonoran Desert Land Investors LLC, East of
Epicenter LLC, and Gray Phoenix Desert Ridge II LLC, sought
protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Ariz.
Case Nos. 16-07659 to 16-07661).  The cases are jointly
administered with that of Epicenter.

On Feb. 6, 2017, CPF Vaseo Associates LLC, a secured creditor,
proposed a plan of reorganization for Epicenter, Gray Meyer,
Sonoran, East of Epicenter, and Gray Phoenix.

On Feb. 7, 2017, Sonoran, East of Epicenter and Gray Phoenix filed
a plan of reorganization and disclosure statement proposing to pay
their general unsecured creditors in full.  The plan has been
proposed for the three companies only.


ERIN ENERGY: U.S. Trustee Forms 7-Member Committee
--------------------------------------------------
The Office of the U.S. Trustee for Region 7 on May 16 appointed
seven creditors to serve on the official committee of unsecured
creditors in the Chapter 11 cases of Erin Energy Corporation and
its affiliates.

The committee members are:

     (1) Baker Hughes      
         Attn: Christopher J. Ryan      
         2001 Rankin Road      
         Houston, TX 77073      
         Tel: 713-879-1063      
         Email: christopher.ryan3@bhge.com

     (2) Oceanic Consultants Nigeria Limited      
         Attn: Ola Oladeji
         Plot 1649 Olosa Street     
         Victoria Island       
         Lagos, Nigeria
         Tel: +234 818-509-7192      
         Email: ola-oladeji@oceanic-cnl.com  

         Counsel: Adedunmade Onibokun and Co.
         Adedunmade Onibokun, Esq.
         5b, Kudirat Abiola Way
         Alausa, Ikeja
         Lagos, Nigeria
         Tel: +234 805-542-4566
         Fax: +234 909-563-5314
         Email: info@adedunmadeonibokun.com

     (3) Schlumberger Overseas S.A.       
         Attn: Donald Burell       
         1325 S. Dairy Ashford       
         Houston, TX 77077       
         Tel: 281-285-1963       
         Email: dburell@slb.com

     (4) Transocean Offshore Gulf of Guinea VII           
         Limited and Indigo Drilling Limited       
         Attn: Brady K. Long       
         4 Greenway Plaza       
         Houston, TX 77046       
         Tel: 713-232-7842       
         Email: brady.long@deepwater.com

         Counsel: Baker Botts L.L.P.
         James R. Prince, Esq.
         2001 Ross Avenue, Suite 900
         Dallas, TX 75201-2980
         Tel: 214-917-0024
         Fax: 214-661-4612
         Email: jim.prince@bakerbotts.com

         Counsel: Daniels & Tredennick
         Douglas A. Daniels, Esq.
         6363 Woodway, Suite 965
         Houston, TX 77057
         Tel: 713-917-0024
         Email: doug.daniels@dtlawyers.com

     (5) James Street Capital Limited       
         Attn: Adedunmade Onibokun       
         Plot 1649 Olosa Street      
         Victoria Island       
         Lagos, Nigeria      
         Tel: +234 809-680-4125      
         Email: jscapitalnigeria@yahoo.com

         Counsel: Adedunmade Onibokun and Co.
         Adedunmade Onibokun, Esq.
         5b, Kudirat Abiola Way
         Alausa, Ikeja
         Lagos, Nigeria
         Tel: +234 805-542-4566
         Fax: +234 909-563-5314
         Email: info@adedunmadeonibokun.com

     (6) AOS Orwell Limited      
         Attn: Nathan Gopi     
         Ononuju Emecheta      
         Plot 52/53 Trans Armadi Industrial      
         Layout, P.M.B. 029      
         Port Hart Harcourt, Rivers State      
         Nigeria      
         Tel: + 234 01-462-7514      
         Email: gopi.nathan@aosorwell.com      
         Email: emecheta.ononuju@aosorwell.com

     (7) Armada Oyo Limited      
         Attn: Malcom Gomes      
         c/o Level 21, Menara Perak, 24, Jalan Perak      
         50450 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia      
         Tel: +60 12-286-6764      
         Email: malcom.gomes@bumiarmada.com

         Munsch Hardt Kopf & Harr, P.C.
         John Cornwell, Esq.
         700 Milam Street, Suite
         2700 Houston, TX 77002-2806
         Tel: 713-222-4066
         Email: jcornwell@munsch.com

Official creditors' committees have the right to employ legal and
accounting professionals and financial advisors, at a debtor's
expense. They may investigate the debtor's business and financial
affairs. Importantly, official committees serve as fiduciaries to
the general population of creditors they represent.

                        About Erin Energy

Houston, Texas-based Erin Energy Corporation (NYSE American:ERN)
(JSE:ERN) -- http://www.erinenergy.com/-- is an independent oil  
and gas exploration and production company focused on energy
resources in sub-Saharan Africa. Its asset portfolio consists of
five licenses across three countries covering an area of 6,100
square kilometers (~1.5 million acres), including current
production and other exploration projects offshore Nigeria, as well
as exploration licenses offshore Ghana and The Gambia.

As of Dec. 31, 2017, Erin Energy had $251.12 million in total
assets, $613.90 million in total liabilities and a total
stockholders' deficiency of $362.77 million.

Erin Energy Corporation and its affiliates sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Texas Lead Case No.
18-32106) on April 25, 2018.  Femi Ayoade, chief executive officer,
signed the petitions.

As of March 31, 2018, the Debtors disclosed $247,535,000 in assets
and $628,724,000 in liabilities.  

Judge Marvin Isgur presides over the cases.

The Debtors tapped Okin & Adams LLP as their legal counsel, and The
Loev Law Firm, PC as their securities law counsel.


ET SOLAR: Unsecureds to Recoup 11.73% Paid Bi-Annually Over 3 Years
-------------------------------------------------------------------
ET Solar, Inc., filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Northern District of California a combined plan of reorganization
and disclosure statement dated April 24, 2018.

Allowed claims of general unsecured creditors not treated as small
claims in Class 2(b) will receive a pro rata portion of a projected
$2,140,589.33 fund, likely to result in recovery of 11.73% on
allowed claims in bi-annual payments over three years without
interest.

On the Effective Date, all property of the estate and interests of
Debtor will vest in the reorganized debtor free and clear of all
claims and interests except as provided in the Plan for purposes of
distribution to creditors in accordance with the terms of the plan.
The Debtor’s assets will be administered by the Distribution
Agent.

A full-text copy of the Combined Plan and Disclosure Statement is
available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/canb17-43031-156.pdf

                      About ET Solar

Based in Pleasanton, California, ET Solar, Inc., is a solar energy
equipment supplier.  ET Solar sought protection under Chapter 11 of
the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D. Cal. Case No. 17-43031) on Dec. 4,
2017.  In the petition signed by Steppe Hao, its president, the
Debtor estimated assets of less than $50,000 and liabilities of $10
million to $50 million.  Judge Charles Novack presides over the
case.  Binder & Malter, LLP, is the Debtor's legal counsel; and
Sensiba San Filippo LLP is the accountant.


FAIRGROUNDS PROPERTIES: Hasshaw Buying Lot 44 for $125K
-------------------------------------------------------
Fairgrounds Properties, Inc., asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the District of Utah to authorize the private sale of the real
property described Lot 44, Fairgrounds Industrial Park, according
to the Official Pat thereof, on file in the Office of the Recorder
of Washington County, State of Utah, to John Hasshaw or assigns for
$125,000, subject to higher and/or better offers.

In 2007, the Debtor purchased acres of real property located in
Hurricane, Utah ("Property").  It developed the Property into
industrial lots and then sold them further construction and
development by the purchasers ("Fairgrounds Lots").  Though various
sales over the years, as of the petition date, the Debtor is left
with approximately 31 acres, which have been divided up into 19
lots.  The Debtor has completed the entire infrastructure of
remaining land including; completion of gutters, paved entries and
water/sewer.

The following pre-petition liens exist against the Lot 44:  (i)
unpaid property taxes; (ii) Deed of Trust in favor of Town &
Country Bank1, recorded Dec. 17, 2008, as entry number 20080048001;
and (iii) Deed of Trust in favor of Dakota Aggregate, LLC, recorded
Feb. 24, 2014, as entry number 20140005359.

Cushman & Wakefield ("C & W") has marketed the Property for private
sale pursuant to a listing agreement from April 1, 2014.  C & W has
actively marketed the Property, including Lot 44 for private sale
pursuant to industry standards.  

Subject to Bankruptcy Court approval, on April 09, 2018, the Buyer
presented an Real Estate Purchase Contract for Land
(“Agreement”) for the purchase of Lot 44 for a purchase price
of $115,000.  ON April 13, 2018, the Debtor presented a
counteroffer to the Buyer in which the Debtor offered Lot 44 for a
purchase price of $125,000, as well as requesting 45 days for
closing to allow the Debtor to obtain Court approval of the sale.
The Buyer has made an earnest money deposit in the amount of
$5,000.

The Settlement and close of the transaction will occur once the
Order is entered.  The sale of the Property is "as is" with no
representation or warranties by the Debtor, except that the Debtor
has authority to enter into the Sale Agreement and sell the
Property with Court approval and will ask approval of the sale free
and clear of liens and interests.  The Debtor further asks the
Court to authorize a break-up fee in favor of the Buyer of $5,000.

The Debtor will consider all written offers for the purchase of Lot
44 made prior to the expiration of the deadline set forth in the
Notice of Hearing filed concurrently with the Motion.  Whether an
offer is a higher and/or better offer will be determined by the
Debtor is its sole discretion.

Upon closing of the sale, whether to the Buyer or to a person who
has submitted a higher and/or better offer, the Debtor will file a
Notice of Sale with the Court that provides information typically
required under Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 6004(f).

In the event that a higher and/or better offer is received and
accepted for the sale of Lot 44, approval of the sale to the Buyer
will be deemed to be approval of the sale to the person submitting
the higher and/or better offer, with the Notice of Sale providing
an itemization of amounts obtained by the Debtor, as well as the
Break-Up Fee to the Buyer.

Following close of the sale of Lot 44, the Debtor anticipates
paying from the gross proceeds of the sale the costs of sale, which
will include a 6% commission as set forth in the Listing Agreement.
The Debtor asks permission to pay (i) all unpaid property taxes
from the sale proceeds as they are secured by Lot 44 pursuant to
Utah law; and ii) PIB the remainder of the funds after paying costs
and taxes.

Fairgrounds Industrial Park, LLC has agreed to voluntarily release
the deed against Lot 44, and it will remain of record against the
rest of the Property with the same rights and priority, if any, as
it had on the Petition Date.

The Debtor asks that the Court waives the 14-day appeal period.

                About Fairgrounds Properties

In 2007, Fairgrounds Properties, Inc., purchased 86 acres of real
property located in Hurricane, Utah.  It developed the property
into industrial lots and then sold them further construction and
development by purchasers.  Through various sales over the years,
as of Oct. 25, 2017, Fairgrounds is left with 31 acres, which have
been divided up into 19 lots.  The Company has completed the entire
infrastructure of remaining land including; completion of gutters,
paved entries and water/sewer.

The company previously sought bankruptcy protection (Bankr. D. Utah
Case No. 11-26803) in 2011.  Fairgrounds Properties' prior Plan of
Reorganization dated Dec. 8, 2011, was confirmed by Judge William
T. Thurman at the confirmation hearing held on April 5, 2012.

Fairgrounds Properties filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. D. Utah
Case No. 17-29271) on Oct. 25, 2017.  In the petition signed by
Robert C. Stevens, its president, the Debtor estimated $1 million
to $10 million in both assets and liabilities.  Darren B. Neilson,
Esq., at Neilson Law, LLC, serves as bankruptcy counsel to the
Debtor.  Cushman & Wakefield is the Debtor's realtor.


FILBIN LAND: Hires Judith G. Callaway, CPA, as Accountant
---------------------------------------------------------
Filbin Land & Cattle Co., Inc., seeks authority from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of California to hire
Judith G. Callaway, CPA as the accountant to provide bookkeeping
services for January 2017 through December 31, 2017 and prepare
Federal and California Individual Tax Returns, and other accountant
services appurtenant thereto to the Debtor in Possession.

The fees charged by Ms. Callaway will be based on the number of
hours of work performed on the project multiplied by the specific
accountant or employee's applicable hourly billing rate, which
range between $85.00 - $215.00. For bookkeeping services, the
services are billed at the rate of $85.00 per hour. For preparing
Debtor in Possession's 2017 Federal and California Individual Tax
Returns, the services are billed at the rate of $215.00 per hour.

Judith G. Callaway, CPA, attests that her firm and its employees
have no connection with the Debtor in Possession, nor its known
employees, creditors, attorneys or accountants, the United States
Trustee, or any person employed with the Office of the United
States Trustee, and is a "disinterested person" within the meaning
of 11 U.S.C. Sec. 101(14) and as required by 11 U.S.C. Sec.
327(a).

The accountant can be reached through:

     Judith G. Callaway, CPA
     Judith G. Callaway, CPA
     920 15th Street
     Modesto, CA 95354
     Tel: 209-526-2652

                 About Filbin Land & Cattle Co.

Filbin Land & Cattle Co., Inc., is a privately-held company in
Patterson, California, engaged in the cattle business.  It is a
merchant wholesaler of raw farm products.

Filbin Land & Cattle Co. sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E.D. Cal. Case No. 18-90030) on Jan. 17,
2018.  In the petition signed by Jeffery Edward Arambel, president
and CEO, the Debtor estimated assets of $1 million to $10 million
and liabilities of $50 million to $100 million.  

Judge Ronald H. Sargis presides over the case.  

The Debtor proposed to hire St. James Law P.C. as its bankruptcy
counsel.


FORD STEEL: Full Payment for Unsecured Creditors Over 5-Year Period
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Ford Steel, LLC, filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of Texas a disclosure statement explaining its
proposed plan of reorganization.

The plan proposes the continuation of the Debtor's business
utilizing the profits to fund the plan over a 5 to 10 year period.
However, the Debtor reserves the right to pre-pay any class on a
pro-rata basis as funds are available over the life of the Plan.

Due to the seasonal nature of the Debtor's business, the Debtor
reserves the right, in the event it is unable to make the full
quarterly or monthly payment to any Class of Creditors in any given
year, to pay the unpaid amount during the remaining three quarters
of that year. Such a delay in payment will not constitute a default
under the Plan.

Class 5 under the plan is impaired and consists of the unsecured
claims in the amount of $1,529,284, excluding insider claims.
These claims will be paid 100% of their claims in equal quarterly
installments over a 5 year period.  The first payment will be made
on the 15th day of the third full month of the first full quarter
following the effective date of the plan.  The anticipated
quarterly installment to these creditors is as follows:

     a. $50,000 over the first year;
     b. $60,000 over the second year;
     c. $75,000 over the third year;
     d. $75,000 over the fourth year; and,
     e. $122,321 over the fifth year.

The Debtor expects that the Plan will enable it to realize the
maximum benefits for all of its creditors. However, if the Plan is
not confirmed, the Debtor will continue to seek other avenues for
reorganization.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/txsb17-35027-79.pdf

                     About Ford Steel LLC

Ford Steel LLC -- http://www.fordsteelllc.com-- is an AISC
certified steel fabricator using state of the art CNC machinery.
The Company fabricates platforms, skids, ladders,
communication/broadcast towers, custom fabrications & more.  Its
office and plant are conveniently located only 30 miles north of
Houston and the Port of Houston, allowing not only nationwide
delivery but worldwide as well.

On Aug. 24, 2006, H.C. Jeffries Tower Company, Inc., established in
1979, purchased a fabrication plant, which is now Ford Steel, LLC,
a part of the H.C. Jeffries Tower Company Group.  Since the
purchase, the 55,000 square foot facility has grown to 100,000
square feet with over 60 employees.  Ford Steel, LLC has an
extensive clientele list including ExxonMobil, Optimized Process
Designs, LyondellBasell, Integrated Flow Solutions and Alimak Hek,
to name a few.

Herbert C. Jeffries owns 86% of Ford and Steve Bales owns the
remaining 14% of that company.

Ford Steel, LLC, filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. S.D. Tex. Case
No. 17-35028) on Aug. 21, 2017.  The petition was signed by Herbert
C. Jeffries, managing member.  The case is assigned to Judge Karen
K. Brown.  The Debtor is represented by Julie Mitchell Koenig, Esq.
at Cooper & Scully, PC.  At the time of filing, the Debtor
estimated $10 million to $50 million in both assets and
liabilities.


FOSTER ENTERPRISES: Continued Cash Collateral Use Approved
----------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Scott C. Clarkson of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Central District of California authorized Foster Enterprises' and
Howard and Anna Foster's use cash collateral through and including
April 30, 2018.

The Court, however, denied the Debtors' request for approval of its
Stipulation with the United States of America, on behalf of its
agency, the Internal Revenue Service, and Allstar Financial
Services, Inc.

As adequate protection, Allstar Financial and the IRS will each
receive a replacement lien against the Debtors' assets, retroactive
to the petition date, with such replacement liens to have the same
extent, validity, scope, and priority as the prepetition liens held
by these secured parties.

Allstar Financial acknowledges having received adequate protection
from the Debtor in the form of periodic cash payments totaling
$20,000 per month in the months of February, March, and April 2018.
The IRS also acknowledges having received from the Debtor periodic
adequate protection payments totaling $9,000 per month in the
months of February, March, and April 2018.

The Debtors is required to immediately make payment of $19,945 to
the IRS on account of postpetition payroll taxes.

As adequate protection for any postpetition diminution in value of
secured creditors' interests in cash collateral, the Debtors will
grant additional replacement liens to the Consensual Lienholders
(Beverly Gross and New Lakeview Farms, LLC) to the same extent,
validity, and priority of the Consensual Lienholders’ respective
prepetition liens, to the extent of any Diminution in Value, and to
the extent of the Debtors' use of cash collateral, in all property
and assets of the Debtors and all proceeds, rents, or profits
thereof, including any after-acquired property of any nature
whatsoever.

A full-text copy of the Order is available at

          http://bankrupt.com/misc/cacb17-15749-261.pdf

                   About Foster Enterprises

Foster Enterprises is a trucking company in Ontario, California.
The principal business address of the Debtor is 13610 S. Archibald
Avenue, Ontario, San Bernardino County, California.

Foster Enterprises sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. C.D. Cal.
Case No. 17-15749) on July 10, 2017.  In the petition signed by
Jeffery Foster, general partner, the Debtor estimated assets and
liabilities at $1 million to $10 million.

The case is jointly administered with the Chapter 11 case of Howard
Dean and Anna Mae Foster (Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 17-15915) filed
on July 10, 2017.  Ms. Foster is also a general partner in Debtor.


The cases are assigned to Judge Scott C. Clarkson.

The Fosters are represented by Dean G. Rallis, Jr., Esq., at Angin,
Flewelling, Rasmussen, Campbell & Trytten LLP.  MGR Real Estate,
Inc. serves as the real estate broker to the Debtor.


FRANKLIN ACQUISITIONS: City Buying El Property for $855K
--------------------------------------------------------
Ronald Ingalls, Chapter 11 trustee of Franklin Acquisitions LLC,
filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of
Texas a supplement to his proposed sale of the real property,
commonly known as 212 W. Overland Avenue, El Paso, Texas, including
improvements located thereon, to the City of El Paso for $855,000.

The sale will be free and clear of all liens, claims and
interests.

The Trustee filed the Supplement to give notice to creditors and
parties in interest as to the claims to be paid out of the sales
proceeds at closing.  The only creditors to be paid at closing will
be those entities holding liens for ad valorem taxes consisting of
the following: (i) El Paso County taxing authorities (approx.
$11,535); (ii) Propel Financial Services, LLC (if an agreement for
a partial release can be reached); and (iii) all other liens will
attach to the sales proceeds pending further order of the Court.

The Creditor:

          PROPEL FINANCUAL SERVICES, LLC
          P.O. Box 100350
          San Antonio, TX 78201-165

                 About Franklin Acquisitions

Franklin Acquisitions LLC is a privately-held company whose
principal assets are located at 932 Cherry Hill, El Paso, Texas.

Franklin Acquisitions sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D. Tex. Case No. 18-30185) on Feb. 6,
2018.  In the petition signed by William D. Abraham, member, the
Debtor estimated assets and liabilities of $1 million to $10
million.  Judge H. Christopher Mott presides over the case.



FRASER'S BOILER: Unsecureds to be Paid from $50K Creditor Fund
--------------------------------------------------------------
Fraser's Boiler Service, Inc., filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court
for the Western District of Washington a disclosure statement
describing its chapter 11 plan.

Under the Plan, Claims and equity interests will be classified into
the following classes with the following treatments:

Class 1 (Other Priority Claims): Each Class 1 claimant will be
entitled to full satisfaction of their Claim. These Claims are not
impaired and not entitled to vote.

Class 2 (General Unsecured Claims): Each Class 2 claimant will be
entitled to a pro rata distribution from the Unsecured Creditor
Fund. These Claims are impaired and entitled to vote.

Class 3 (Asbestos-Related Personal Injury Or Wrongful Death
Claims): Each Class 3 claimant will be entitled to distributions in
accordance with the Trust Distribution Procedures. These Claims are
impaired and entitled to vote.

Class 4 (Equity Interests): Class 4 claimants will receive no
distribution. These Claims are impaired, are deemed to reject the
Plan, and are not entitled to vote.

Pursuant to the Plan, holders of General Unsecured Claims will be
entitled to a pro rata distribution from the Unsecured Creditor
Fund, which contains $50,000, and holders of Asbestos-Related
Personal Injury and Wrongful Death Claims will be entitled to
distributions in accordance with the Trust Distribution Procedures,
which provide that certain Claims may be liquidated by the
Liquidating Trust and other Claims resolved by litigation by the
claimant.

Claims liquidated by the Liquidating Trust will be paid by the
Liquidating Trust in full from amounts received from proposed
settlements with certain Settled Insurers and any subsequent
amounts received on account of the Insurance Rights. The Trust
Distribution Procedures provide for significant limitations on the
types of Claims that will be liquidated by the Liquidating Trust
and the maximum values at which such Claims can be resolved. Claims
liquidated through litigation by the claimant will be tendered by
the Liquidating Trustee to Non-Settled Insurers. In general, these
Claims liquidated through litigation will be paid after settlement
or judgment by the Non-Settled Insurers, although the Trust
Distribution Procedures do provide for some payments by the
Liquidating Trust to Claims resolved by judgment to the extent that
portions of such Claims are unpaid as a result of insurance
settlements or insolvencies.

The Debtor believes that it will be able to make all of the
payments required under the Plan and that confirmation of the Plan
is not likely to be followed by liquidation.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement is available at:

             http://bankrupt.com/misc/wawb18-41245-52.pdf

                   About Fraser's Boiler Service

Headquartered in Olympia, Washington, Fraser's Boiler Service, Inc.
is a boiler, tank, and shipping container manufacturer.

The Debtor sought chapter 11 protection (Bankr. W.D. Wash. Case No.
18-41245) on April 9, 2018, listing its estimated assets at $10
million to $50 million and estimated liabilities at $50 million to
$100 million. The petition was signed by David J. Gordon,
president.

The Debtor is represented by Darren R Krattli, Esq., of Eisenhower
Carlson PLLC.


FULLBEAUTY BRANDS: Bank Debt Trades at 75% Off
----------------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which FULLBEAUTY Brands
Inc. is a borrower traded in the secondary market at 25.00
cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4, 2018,
according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM Pricing.
This represents a decrease of 25 percentage points from the
previous week.

The debt facility is for the original principal amount of $330
million.  Moody's rates the loan 'Caa1/CCC-' and Standard & Poor's
gave a 'CCC-' rating to the loan.  The loan is one of the biggest
gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted syndicated loans with
five or more bids in secondary trading for the week ended Friday,
May 4.



FUSION CUSTOM: Hires GreerWalker LLP as Financial Advisor
---------------------------------------------------------
Fusion Custom Trailers & Motorcoaches, Inc., seeks authority from
the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of North
Carolina, Charlotte Division, to hire GreerWalker LLP as financial
advisors for the Debtor in this chapter 11 case effective as of May
2, 2018.

GreerWalker's current hourly rates are:

     William A. Barbee        $445
     Consultants           $75 to $500

William A. Barbee, Partner of Litigation and Valuation Service of
GreenWalker LLP, attests that his firm does not hold or represent
any interest adverse to the Debtor's estate, and is a
"disinterested person" as that phrase is defined in section 101(14)
of the Bankruptcy Code.

The advisor can be reached through:

     William A. Barbee
     GreerWalker LLP
     227 W. Trade Street, Suite 1100
     Charlotte, NC 28202
     Phone: 704-377-0239

                  About Fusion Custom Trailers

Fusion Custom Trailers & Motorcoaches manufactures and services
custom built trailers, motor coaches, and truck conversions from
its leased premises in Salisbury, North Carolina.  Its principal,
John E. Nicholson, is a resident of Mooresville, North Carolina,
and a debtor in that Chapter 13 bankruptcy proceeding currently
pending (Bankr. W.D.N.C. Case No. 18-50151).

Fusion Custom Trailers & Motorcoaches Inc. filed a Chapter 11
petition (Bankr. W.D.N.C. Case No. 18-30445) on March 20, 2018.

Fusion Custom Trailers is represented by Richard S. Wright, Esq.
and Caleb Brown, Esq. at MOON WRIGHT & HOUSTON, PLLC.


GENERAL GLASS: Dunbar Buying Parkersburg Property for $200K
-----------------------------------------------------------
General Glass Co., Inc., asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of West Virginia to authorize the private sale of
the real estate located at 1900 12th Avenue, Parkersburg, West
Virginia to Dunbar Excavation and Snow Removal, LLC for $200,000.

On April 6, 2017 a public auction of the Parkersburg Property was
conducted by Goldman Associates, Inc.  Although the sum of $5,000
was expended on advertising, there were no bids.  The auction was
concluded without a sale.

Following the auction, the Debtor contacted Claire Barth and
requested that the Parkersburg Property be again listed for sale.
Ms. Barth, previously employed by WV Commercial, LLC, was the
Debtor's court authorized real estate broker during the bankruptcy
proceeding.  Ms. Barth had successfully brokered the Debtor's sale
of its Charleston Property.

Beginning in April 2017, Ms. Barth, now employed at Berkshire
Hathaway, listed the Parkersburg Property at a price of $345,000
with an agreed broker commission of 6%.  The Debtor received no
offers for the Parkersburg Property until February 2018.  On Feb.
6, 2018, the Purchaser offered to purchase the Property for
$190,000.  After a counteroffer was made by the Debtor, a price of
$200,000 was agreed to by the parties.

Because the Debtor's Chapter 11 Plan provides for the sale of the
Parkersburg Property at public auction, the Buyer's title company
has requested that the Debtor asks approval by the Bankruptcy Court
and entry of an order authorizing the sale of the Parkersburg
Property to the Purchaser at private sale free and clear of liens.

The Debtor does not otherwise ask to amend its Chapter 11 Plan and
the proceeds of sale of the Parkersburg Property, less broker
commission and closing costs, will be distributed in accordance
with the terms of the Chapter 11 Plan approved by the Court.  It
asks entry of an order pursuant to 11 U.S.C. Sections 1142(b) and
363 authorizing the sale of the Parkersburg Property to the
Purchaser free and clear of liens and encumbrances with the
proceeds of sale distributed in accordance with the terms of the
Debtor's confirmed Chapter 11 Plan.

The Debtor complied with the terms of the confirmed Chapter 11 Plan
and advertised and held an auction of the Parkersburg Property.  No
bids were made at the auction.  If a bid of $200,000 had been made
at the auction, the Debtor would have accepted the bid and sold
the Parkersburg Property.

The Debtor disagrees with the Buyer's assertion that the Plan does
not authorize the Debtor to sell the Parkersburg Property at
private sale.  However, because the Purchaser is unwilling to close
without express authorization by the Court of a private sale, the
Debtor is unable to consummate the plan absent entry of an Order
approving the sale to Purchaser.

A copy of the Commercial Real Estate Contract of Sale attached to
the Motion is available for free at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/General_Glass_334_Sales.pdf

The Debtor moves for entry of an order that, in the absence of a
stay of the Court's Order approving the sale, if the Purchaser
elects to close under the Purchase Agreement at any time after
entry of the Sale Order, then, with respect to the Purchase
Agreement, Purchaser will be entitled to the protection of Section
363(m) if the Sale Order or an authorization contained therein is
reversed or modified on appeal.

The Debtor also moves for the entry of an order that, effective on
the Closing Date, the sale of the Parkersburg Property is free and
clear under the terms of the Sale.

Itfurther moves for entry of an order that authorizes Cynthia D.
Smith to execute all documents on behalf of the Debtor.  Cynthia D.
Smith is the President of the Debtor and owner of 73% of the
outstanding shares of the Debtor.

Ms. Barth has agreed to reduce her commission to 5% of the gross
proceeds, which will be shared with the Purchaser's broker.  The
Debtor is satisfied that Claire Barth and Berkshire Hathaway
diligently marketed the Property for sale and actively sought a
sale agreement with the Purchaser.  The Debtor asks authority to
pay Berkshire Hathaway a commission equal to 5% of the gross
proceeds, with a portion of that commission paid to the Purchaser's
participating broker.

The Debtor asks authority to pay, at closing, real estate taxes,
closing costs, and broker commission from the proceeds of sale.  It
asks authority to pay all remaining sale proceeds to Supple Law
Office, PLLC to be distributed in accordance with the terms of the
Debtor's confirmed Chapter 11 Plan.

The Debtor further asks authority to distribute all net sale
proceeds to the Debtor's Counsel, Supple Law Office, PLLC to be
disbursed in accordance with the terms of the Debtor's confirmed
Chapter 11 Plan, including the payment of U.S. Trustee fees
incurred.

                     About General Glass Co.

Headquartered in Charleston, West Virginia, General Glass Company,
Inc., a/k/a General Glass Home Center, a/k/a General Glass Design
Center, was founded in 1944 to sell and install commercial glass
throughout West Virginia.

General Glass Company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
(Bankr. S.D. W.V. Case No. 14-20299) on June 10, 2014, estimating
its assets and liabilities at between $1 million and $10 million
each.  The petition was signed by Cynthia D. Smith, president.

Judge Ronald G. Pearson presides over the case.

Christopher S. Smith, Esq., and Nicola D. Smith, Esq., at Hoyer,
Hoyer & Smith, PLLC, serves as the Debtor's bankruptcy counsel.

On Feb. 2, 2017 the Court confirmed the Debtor's Chapter 11 Plan of
Liquidation.


GEORGIA ANESTHESIA: Schwaiger Buying Personal Property for $33K
---------------------------------------------------------------
Northeast Georgia Anesthesia Services, Inc., 24 Amherst, LLC and
Holladay Holdings, LLC ("HHL") ask the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Northern District of Georgia to authorize the sale of
Northeast's personal property, including one C-ARM located in
Dublin, Georgia, nunc pro tunc to April 20, 2018, to Mark Schwaiger
for a total of $32,500, allocating $27,500 toward the C-ARM and
$5,000 toward the balance of the Assets.

The primary asset of Amherst is a piece of commercial real property
located at 24 Amherst Drive, Winder, Barrow County, Georgia.
Amherst rents the Amherst Property to Northeast, which operates a
pain recovery practice at the property.

HHL's principal place of business is located at 984 Old Forge Lane,
Jefferson, Jackson County, Georgia.  HHL owns three pieces of
commercial real property, located at the following addresses: (1)
1503 Professional Court, Dalton, Georgia; (2) 1620 Prince Avenue,
Athens, Georgia; and (3) 1638 Prince Avenue, Athens, Georgia ("HQ
Property").  HHL rents the Dalton and Athens Property to Northeast,
which operates a pain and recovery practice in each of the
properties.  It rents the HQ Property to Northeast, where
Northeast's headquarters is presently located.

Post-petition, Northeast operated 11 locations throughout north and
middle Georgia.  Northeast has locations in Athens, Augusta,
Dalton, Dublin, Gainesville, Greensboro, Hiram, Rome, Suwanee,
Warner Robins and Winder, Georgia.  Since the filing of the case,
Northeast has closed the Dublin and Hiram locations and is planning
on closing the Warner Robins and Augusta locations.

After the closing of the Dublin location, Northeast endeavored to
locate potential purchasers for the medical equipment and other
personal property formerly located at the Dublin location.  

A copy of listing of the Personal Property Northeast sought to sell
from the Dublin location attached to the Motion is available for
free at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/Northeast_Georgia_216_Sales.pdf

The C-ARM is subject to the lien of Leaf Funding, LLC, and is
subject to a cross-collateralization clause, related to which all
of Leafs collateral secures its entire indebtedness.  As of the
Petition Date, Northeast was indebted to Leaf in amount over
$175,000.

The balance of the personal property listed is subject to the
blanket lien of Pinnacle Bank, N.A., Northeast's primary secured
lender.  As of the Petition Date, Northeast was indebted to
Pinnacle in amount over $2.2 million.

Northeast entered into negotiations with at least two parties
regarding the sale of the C-ARM, as well as related to one party
all of the personal property listed. When it appeared that the
party interested in only the C-ARM was declining to proceed its
offer to purchase the same, Northeast entered into a sale agreement
with Mark Schwaiger, an unrelated third party in an arms-length
transaction, to sell the Assets for a total of $32,500, free and
clear of all liens, claims, encumbrances and interests, allocating
$27,500 toward the C-ARM and $5,000 toward the balance of the
Assets listed.

Northeast has requested consent to the sale from Leaf and Pinnacle.
Both have consented to the sale.

The sales proceeds are currently being held by Northeast in a
segregated account, pending approval by the Court.

Leaf's payoff related to the C-ARM is $24,801, with the balance of
the $27,500 sales price allocated to the C-ARM, to be paid to Leaf
to reduce Northeast's overall indebtedness owed to Leaf.  The
balance of the sales proceeds, $5,000, will be paid to Pinnacle to
reduce the indebtedness owed to Pinnacle by Northeast.  

Northeast believes that the sales price as stated constitutes fair
market value for the assets sold and will maximize value to Leaf
and Pinnacle.

Northeast asks the Court to schedule a hearing on May 22, 2018, at
1:30 p.m. on the approval of the sale of the Assets.

                        About 24 Amherst

24 Amherst, LLC, is a real estate company based in Winder, Georgia.
Northeast Georgia Anesthesia Services Inc. is a medical group
specializing in interventional pain management, anesthesiology,
pain management, addiction medicine, physical medicine and
rehabilitation.

Holladay Holdings owns three pieces of commercial real property,
located at these addresses: (1) 1503 Professional Court, Dalton,
Georgia ("Dalton Property"); (2) 1620 Prince Avenue, Athens,
Georgia ("Athens Property"); and (3) 1638 Prince Avenue, Athens,
Georgia ("HQ Property").  Holladay Holdings rents the Dalton and
Athens Property to Northeast, which operates a pain and recovery
practice in each of the properties.  Holladay Holdings rents the HQ
Property to Northeast, where Northeast's headquarters is presently
located.

24 Amherst, LLC and its affiliates sought Chapter 11 protection
(Bankr. N.D. Ga. Case No. 17-22188) on Nov. 14, 2017.  Janene D.
Holladay, its member, signed the petitions.  

The Hon. James R. Sacca presides over these cases.

Anna Mari Humnicky, Esq., at Cohen Pollock Merlin & Small, P.C., is
the Debtor's counsel.  J. Allen Sermour, CPA PC, serves as the
Debtors' accountant.


GFD CONSTRUCTION: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
----------------------------------------------------------
No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Chapter 11 case of GFD Construction, Inc. as of May 16,
according to a court docket.

GFD is represented by:

     Jason Michael Osborn, Esq.
     Osborn Group, LLC
     308 Magnolia Avenue, Suite 102
     Fairhope, AL 36532
     Tel: 251-929-5050
     Email: josborn@osborngroupllc.com

                    About GFD Construction Inc.

GFD Construction, Inc. is a privately-held demolition contractor
based in Pensacola, Florida.  It owns three parcels of contiguous
real property in Escambia County also known as the Blossom Trail
Facility.  The company has engaged in commercial and industrial
activities at the Blossom Trail Facility and has in the past used
portions of the facility for disposing or storing different types
of waste material, including construction and demolition debris and
land clearing debris.  The company previously sought bankruptcy
protection on Feb. 1, 2016 (Bankr. N.D. Fla. Case No. 16-30087) and
Feb. 1, 2017 (Bankr. N.D. Fla. Case No. 17-30084).

GFD Construction sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D. Fla. Case No. 18-30317) on April 2,
2018.  Anthony J. Green, Sr., president, signed the petition.  

At the time of the filing, the Debtor disclosed that it had
estimated assets of less than $100,000 and liabilities of $1
million to $10 million.  

The Debtor tapped Osborn Group, LLC as its legal counsel.


GIBSON BRANDS: U.S. Trustee Forms 7-Member Committee
----------------------------------------------------
The Office of the U.S. Trustee for Region 3 on May 9 appointed
seven creditors to serve on the official committee of unsecured
creditors in the Chapter 11 cases of Gibson Brands, Inc. and its
affiliates.

The committee members are:

     (1) TKL Products Corp.
         Attn: Thomas Dougherty
         2545 Turkey Creek Rd
         Oilville, VA 23129
         Phone: 804-749-8300
         Fax: 804-749-3442   

     (2) Grover Musical Products, Inc.
         Attn: Cory Berger
         9287 Midwest Avenue
         Cleveland, OH 44125-2415
         Phone: 216-391-1234
         Fax: 216-391-8999    

     (3) EDC, Inc.
         Attn: Keith Ebert
         950 Old Winston Road
         Kernersville, NC 27284
         Phone: 336993-0468
         Fax: 336-993-0368

     (4) Advance Plating, Inc.
         Attn: Steve Tracy
         1425 Cowan Court
         Nashville, TN 37207
         Phone: 615-227-6900
         Fax: 615-313-7144

     (5) Koninkijke Philips N.V.
         Attn: Joseph Innamorati
         3000 Minuteman Road
         Andover, MA 01810
         Phone: 978-659-4636
         Fax: 978-856-3512

     (6) Guoguang Electronic Co., Ltd.
         Attn: Kobe Zhang
         1801 East Edinger Avenue, Suite 225
         Santa Ana, CA 92075
         Phone: 714-750-2282

     (7) Tronical GmbH
         Attn: Christopher Adams
         Heselstuecken 18, 22453
         Hamburg Germany
         Phone: 49-172-491-4100
         Fax: 49-40-284-6457-09

Official creditors' committees have the right to employ legal and
accounting professionals and financial advisors, at a debtor's
expense. They may investigate the debtor's business and financial
affairs. Importantly, official committees serve as fiduciaries to
the general population of creditors they represent.

                        About Gibson Brands

Founded in 1894 and headquartered in Nashville, Tennessee, Gibson
Brands, Inc. -- http://www.gibson.com/-- and its subsidiaries
design and manufacture guitars and other fretted instruments.
Gibson's brands include the Les Paul, SG, Flying V, Explorer, J-45,
Hummingbird, and ES-335, among others.

Gibson Brands, Inc. and 11 affiliates filed separate Chapter 11
cases (Bankr. D. Del. Lead Case No. 18-11025) on May 1, 2018.  In
its petition, Gibson Brands estimated $100 million to $500 million
in both assets and liabilities.  The petition was signed by Henry
E. Juszkiewicz, chief executive officer.

The Hon. Christopher S. Sontchi presides over the cases.  Michael
H. Goldstein, Esq., Gregory W. Fox, Esq., and Barry Z. Bazian,
Esq., at Goodwin Procter LLP, serve as lead counsel to the Debtors.
David M. Fournier, Esq., Michael J. Custer, Esq., and Marcy J.
McLaughlin, Esq., at Pepper Hamilton LLP, serve as the Debtors'
Delaware and conflicts counsel.  Brian Fox and Steven R. Kotarba at
Alvarez & Marsal North America, LLC, serve as the Debtors'
restructuring advisors.  Mr. Fox, managing director at Alvarez &
Marsal, serves as Gibson's Chief Restructuring Officer.  Jefferies
LLC serves as the Debtors' investment banker.  Prime Clerk LLC
serves as their claims and noticing agent.

Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP is providing legal
counsel, and PJT Partners is the financial advisor, to the ad hoc
group of unaffiliated noteholders that is supporting the Company's
restructuring.


GREATER CLEVELAND: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
-----------------------------------------------------------
No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Chapter 11 case of Greater Cleveland Avenue Christian Church,
as of May 8, 2018.

                  About Greater Cleveland Avenue
                         Christian Church

Greater Cleveland Avenue Christian Church is a non-profit religious
organization in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

Greater Cleveland Avenue Christian Church sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. M.D.N.C. Case No.
18-50410) on April 20, 2018.  Bishop Sheldon M. McCarter, member
and pastor, signed the petition.  

At the time of the filing, the Debtor estimated assets and
liabilities of $1 million to $10 million.  

Judge Catharine R. Aron presides over the case.


GREGORY JOHN TE VELDE: U.S. Trustee Forms 3-Member Committee
------------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Trustee for Region 17 on May 16 appointed three creditors
to serve on the official committee of unsecured creditors in the
Chapter 11 case of Gregory John te Velde.

The committee members are:

     (1) Valmont Northwest Inc.
         Attention: Patrick Tolman, V.P. Operations
         4225 N. Capitol Avenue North
         Pasco, WA 99301
         Tel: 509-547-1623
         Fax: 509-547-9444
         Email: PTolman@Valmont.com
         Email: drew.clark@Valmont.com
       
     (2) Environmental Fabrics Inc.
         Attention: John Paul Smith, President
         85 Pascon Court
         Gaston, SC 29053
         Tel: 803-420-2174
         Fax: 803-551-5701

     (3) Northwest Liquid Transport
         Attention: Wayne Groen, President
         530 H. Street Road
         Lynden, WA 98264
         Tel: 360-354-7409
         Fax: 360-354-0856
         Email: Nicki@nwltl.com

Official creditors' committees have the right to employ legal and
accounting professionals and financial advisors, at a debtor's
expense. They may investigate the debtor's business and financial
affairs. Importantly, official committees serve as fiduciaries to
the general population of creditors they represent.

                 About Gregory John te Velde

Tipton, California-based Gregory John te Velde filed for Chapter 11
bankruptcy (Bankr. E.D. Cal. Case No. 18-11651) on April 26, 2018.
Mr. te Velde does business as GJ te Velde Dairy, Pacific Rim Dairy
and Lost Valley Farm.  He formerly did business as Willow Creek
Diary.

Judge Fredrick E. Clement oversees the bankruptcy case.

Mr. te Velde is represented by:

     Riley C. Walter
     205 E. River Park Circle, Ste. 410
     Fresno, CA 93720
     Tel: 559-435-9800

In his Chapter 11 petition, the Debtor listed both assets and
liabilities between $100 million and $500 million.


GTO EQUIPMENT: Case Summary & 12 Unsecured Creditors
----------------------------------------------------
Debtor: GTO Equipment, Inc.
        149 Nestles Road
        Soledad, CA 93960

Business Description: GTO Equipment, Inc. is a privately held
                      company based in Soledad, California
                      that provides truck driver services.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: May 16, 2018

Case No.: 18-51128

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Northern District of California (San Jose)

Judge: Hon. Elaine M. Hammond

Debtor's Counsel: Ralph P. Guenther, Esq.
                  DOUGHERTY & GUENTHER, APC
                  601 S Main St.
                  Salinas, CA 93901
                  Tel: (831) 783-3440
                  Email: courts@tkdougherty.com

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Manuel R Lopez, president.

A full-text copy of the petition containing, among other items, a
list of the Debtor's 12 unsecured creditors is available for free
at:

                     http://bankrupt.com/misc/canb18-51128.pdf


GULF MEDICAL: Needs 90-Day Extension of Plan Filing Deadline
------------------------------------------------------------
Gulf Medical Services, Inc., asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Northern District of Florida to extend by 90 days the exclusivity
period during which only the Debtor and its principal, Kenneth
Steber, can file a joint plan of reorganization.

Pursuant to the provisions of Section 1121(b) of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code, the Debtor has a period of 120 days after the date
of the order for relief in which only the Debtor may file a plan of
reorganization.

Accordingly, the 120-day period of exclusivity for the Debtor to
file a plan in this case is May 5, 2018.

A substantial portion of the debts included in this case have been
guaranteed by Mr. Steber.

Subsequent to the filing of this Chapter 11 case, several creditors
in this case have either proceeded with the filing of a lawsuit,
have obtained a judgment, or have otherwise made demand upon Mr.
Steber on the guarantees.

Mr. Steber has consulted with an attorney and will be commencing a
voluntary Chapter 11 case, individually.  Once Mr. Steber's
individual Chapter 11 case is filed, it is anticipated that a
motion to administratively consolidate the two cases will be filed
for the purpose of filing a joint plan of reorganization.

Because the individual case for Mr. Steber will not be filed prior
to the date the period of exclusivity runs, the Debtor requests
that the period of exclusivity be extended.  Section 1121(d)(l)
authorizes the Court, after notice and a hearing, to increase the
120-day period, so long as the extended period is a date which is
not beyond 18 months after the date of the order for relief.

A copy of the Debtor's request is available at:

            http://bankrupt.com/misc/flnb18-30012-75.pdf

                    About Gulf Medical Services

Based in Pensacola, Florida, Gulf Medical Services, Inc. --
http://www.gulfmed.com/-- has been serving respiratory equipment,
sleep therapy equipment, and medical equipment to its customers
since 1987.  The company accepts assignments and bills Medicare,
Medicaid, Blue Cross Blue Shield, TriCare, and many other private
insurance policies.  Its gross revenue amounted to $7.89 million in
2017, $10.06 million in 2016 and $12.16 million in 2015.  

Gulf Medical Services sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D. Fla. Case No. 18-30012) on Jan. 5,
2018.  In the petition signed by Kenneth R. Steber, president, the
Debtor disclosed $1.73 million in assets and $5.15 million in
liabilities.  Judge Jerry C. Oldshue Jr. presides over the case.
Steven J. Ford, Esq., at Wilson, Harrell, Farrington, Ford, Wilson,
Spain & Parsons P.A., serves as the Debtor's bankruptcy counsel.


HEAVENLY COUTURE: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
---------------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Heavenly Couture, Inc.
        252 Forest Ave
        Laguna Beach, CA 92651

Business Description: Heavenly Couture, Inc. --
                      https://heavenlycouture.com --
                      is a fashion forward and innovative company
                      providing fashion apparel and accessories.
                      Heavenly Couture specializes in all types of
                      clothes ranging from tops to jeans, dresses,
                      etc. and fashion accessories and home decor
                      products.  Heavenly Couture is a small
                      family owned business that started as a
                      small boutique in Laguna Beach in 2006.
                      The company has store locations throughout
                      California and Florida and also serves its
                      customers online.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: May 14, 2018

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Central District of California (Santa Ana)

Case No.: 18-11756

Judge: Hon. Theodor Albert

Debtor's Counsel: Michael Jones, Esq.
                  M. JONES & ASSOCIATES, PC
                  505 N Tustin Ave Ste 105
                  Santa Ana, CA 92705
                  Tel: 714-795-2346
                  Fax: 888-341-5213
                  E-mail: mike@mjthelawyer.com
                          mike@MJonesOC.com

Total Assets: $613,913

Total Liabilities: $4.43 million

The petition was signed by Jiah Ha, president.

A full-text copy of the petition containing, among other items, a
list of the Debtor's 20 largest unsecured creditors is available
for free at:

              http://bankrupt.com/misc/cacb18-11756.pdf


HOTELS OF STAFFORD: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
------------------------------------------------------------
The Office of the U.S. Trustee on May 16 disclosed in a court
filing that no official committee of unsecured creditors has been
appointed in the Chapter 11 case of Hotels of Stafford, LLP.

                   About Hotels of Stafford LLP

Hotels of Stafford, LLP, a single asset real estate (as defined in
11 U.S.C. Section 101(51B)), is the fee simple owner of an
undeveloped parcel of real estate located in Sugar Land, Texas,
having an expert valuation of $1.2 million.

Hotels of Stafford sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Ind. Case No. 18-02329) on April 2,
2018.  In the petition signed by Sanjay Patel, manager, the Debtor
disclosed $1.20 million in assets and $1.44 million in liabilities.
Judge James M. Carr presides over the case.  The Debtor tapped KC
Cohen, Lawyer, PC as its legal counsel.


INFINITY CUSTOM: Floridian Buying Winter Park Property for $910K
----------------------------------------------------------------
Infinity Custom Homes, LLC, asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Middle District of Florida to authorize the sale of the real
property located at 1550 Hibiscus Avenue, Winter Park, Florida to
Floridian Construction Group, LLC, for $910,000.

The Debtor holds fee simple title to the Property, which is
encumbered by a first mortgage lien in favor of Patch of Land
Lending, LLC ("POL") in the amount of $728,358.  

On April 23, 2018, the Debtor received an all cash purchase offer
from the Purchaser for the Property.  The Purchaser's offer is
memorialized in an "as is" residential contract for sale and
purchase which contemplates that the Debtor will sell the Property
to the Purchaser, for a total purchase price of $910,000, with
$10,000 initial deposit.  The Sale Contract further provides that
the closing date for the purchase of the Property will take place
within 30 days from the entry of a final order authorizing the sale
as outlined.

A copy of the Contract attached to the Motion is available for free
at:

   http://bankrupt.com/misc/Infinity_Custom_69_Sales.pdf

In light of the foregoing, the Debtor submits that sale of the
Property to the Purchaser has all the earmarks of the sound
exercise its business judgment and satisfies one or more of the
conditions set forth in section 363(t).  As such, the Debtor asks
(i) authorization to sell the Property to the Purchaser, with any
liens on the Property to attach to the sale proceeds; (ii)
authorization to pay the all costs in connection with the such
sale; and (iii) authorization to hold the net proceeds from the
sale of the Property in escrow pending further order of the Court.


The Buyer:

          FLORIDIAN CONSTRUCTION GROUP, LLC
          P.O. Box 1476
          Winter Park, FL 32790

                    About Infinity Custom Homes

Infinity Custom Homes, LLC, headquartered in Winter Park, Florida,
is engaged in activities related to real estate.  Its principal
assets are located at 1761 Legion Drive; 1550 Hibiscus Avenue; 1640
Oneco Avenue; and 130 W. Lake Sue Avenue.

Infinity Custom Homes, LLC, based in Winter Park, Florida, filed a
Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 18-00622) on Feb. 2,
2018.  In the petition signed by David P. Croft, manager, the
Debtor estimated $1 million to $10 million in both assets and
liabilities.  R. Scott Shuker, Esq., at Latham Shuker Eden &
Beaudine, LLP, serves as bankruptcy counsel to the Debtor.


INGLES MARKETS: Moody's Places Ba3 CFR on Review for Upgrade
------------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service placed the ratings for Ingles Markets,
Incorporated's ("Ingles") on review for upgrade. Ratings under
review for upgrade include the company's Corporate Family rating of
Ba3 and its' senior unsecured rating of B1. The company's
Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating of SGL-3 is unchanged.

The review will focus on the company's corporate governance,
composition and independence of its Board of Directors and
financial policies going forward. The review will also focus on the
company's ability to maintain credit metrics at current levels in
light of the competitive and highly promotional business
environment.

RATINGS RATIONALE

Ingles' Ba3 Corporate Family Rating reflects the company's solid
regional franchise, its base of owned real estate and adequate
liquidity. Ingles' financial leverage is modest at about 3.7 times
and interest coverage is strong at about 2.7 times for the LTM
period ending March 31, 2018. Ingles has outperformed its peers in
a challenging business environment which continues to be
characterized by increased promotional activity and intense
competition. The ratings are constrained by its small scale, and
geographic concentration.

On Review for Upgrade:

Issuer: Ingles Markets, Incorporated

Probability of Default Rating, Placed on Review for Upgrade,
currently Ba3-PD

Corporate Family Rating, Placed on Review for Upgrade, currently
Ba3

Senior Unsecured Regular Bond/Debenture, Placed on Review for
Upgrade, currently B1 (LGD4)

Outlook Actions:

Issuer: Ingles Markets, Incorporated

Outlook, Changed To Rating Under Review From Positive

Ingles Markets, Incorporated is a supermarket chain with operations
in six southeastern states. Headquartered in Asheville, North
Carolina, the company operates 201 supermarkets. The company also
owns and operates neighborhood shopping centers, most of which
contain an Ingles supermarket. The company owns 156 of its
supermarkets, either in free-standing stores or as the anchor
tenant in an owned shopping center. The company also owns and
operates a milk processing and packaging plant that supplies
approximately 79% of the milk products sold by the Company's
supermarkets as well as a variety of organic milk, fruit juices and
bottled water products. In addition, the milk processing and
packaging plant sells approximately 75% of its products to other
retailers.

The principal methodology used in these ratings was Retail Industry
published in May 2018.


INT'L MANUFACTURING: Court Not Reassigning Suits vs Battle Creek
----------------------------------------------------------------
District Judge William B. Shubb entered an order declining to
relate or reassign the cases captioned Trustee, International
Manufacturing Group, Inc., Plaintiff, v. BATTLE CREEK STATE BANK
and WINGS INSURANCE, INC., Defendants. BEVERLY N. McFARLAND,
Trustee, Plaintiff, v. BATTLE CREEK STATE BANK, Defendant, Bankr.
Adversary No. 16-02082, Bankr. No. 14-25820 (E.D. Cal.) because
assignment of the matters to the same judge is not likely to effect
a substantial saving of judicial effort.

The order is issued for informational purposes only and will have
no effect on the status of the cases, including any previous
Related (or Non-Related) Case Order of the court.

A copy of the Court's Order dated April 23, 2018 is available at
https://bit.ly/2jYpmPn from Leagle.com.

Beverly N. McFarland, Plaintiff, represented by Christopher Daniel
Sullivan -- csullivan@diamondmccarthy.com -- Diamond McCarthy LLP &
Matthew S. Sepuya  -- msepuya@diamondmccarthy.com -- Diamond
McCarthy LLP.

Battle Creek State Bank, Defendant, represented by Matthew Bryan
Learned, McCarthy and Holthus LLP & Melissa Robbins Coutts,
McCarthy and Holthus LLP.

Wings Insurance, Inc., Defendant, pro se.

International Manufacturing Group, Inc., Debtor, represented by
Marc A. Caraska, Marc A. Caraska, A Law Corporation.

              About International Manufacturing

Deepal Wannakuwatte, the mastermind of a $150 million Ponzi scheme,
put himself and his company, International Manufacturing Group
Inc., into Chapter 11 after he pleaded guilty to one count of wire
fraud and agreed to a 20-year prison sentence.  The bankruptcy
filing was part of his plea bargain with federal prosecutors.  Mr.
Wannakuwatte is the former owner of the Sacramento Capitols tennis
team.

Mr. Wannakuwatte initiated his personal Chapter 11 case on May 30,
2014.  Hank Spacone was appointed as trustee for Wannakuwatte's
Chapter 11 estate.  Betsy Kathryn Wannakuwatte and Sarah Kathryn
Wannakuwatte also have pending Chapter 7 cases.

Mr. Wannakuwatte also submitted a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition
for IMG on May 30, 2014 (Bankr. E.D. Cal. Case No. 14-25820) in
Sacramento.  The case is assigned to Judge Robert S. Bardwil.  The
Debtor tapped Marc A. Caraska, in Sacramento, as counsel.

In June 2014, Beverly N. McFarland was appointed as Chapter 11
trustee for IMG. She tapped Felderstein Fitzgerald Willoughby &
Pascuzzi LLP as her bankruptcy counsel; Diamond McCarthy LLP as her
special litigation counsel; Gabrielson & Company as accountant; and
Karen Rushing as bookkeeper outside the ordinary course of
business.

The U.S. Trustee for Region 7 appointed a three-member unsecured
creditors panel in IMG's case comprising of Byron Younger, Janine
Jones, and Steve Whitesides.


IPC CORP: S&P Rates New $132MM First Lien Term Loan 'B-'
--------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings assigned its 'B-' issue-level rating and '3'
recovery rating to Jersey City, N.J.-based global trading
communication systems, compliance solutions, and network services
provider IPC Corp.'s new $132 million term loan. The '3' recovery
rating indicates S&P's expectation of meaningful (50%-70%; rounded
estimate: 60%) recovery in the event of a payment default.

The new term loan was used to repay the company's the outstanding
balance on its $125 million first-lien notes and to pay related
fees and expenses in connection with the refinancing.

S&P's 'B-' corporate credit rating and stable outlook on IPC are
unaffected because leverage will remain around 7x.

RECOVERY ANALYSIS

Key Analytical Factors

S&P said, "We simulate a hypothetical default in 2020, with the
company exhausting its liquidity sources and reaching a point that
it can no longer service its fixed charges, including interest
expense and maintenance-level capital expenditures. This scenario
could occur from operational missteps due to its cost-reduction
initiatives or if there is prolonged downturn in the financial
services industry, which would likely strain IPC's operations given
the company's reliance on this end market.

"We have valued the company on a going-concern basis using a 5x
multiple of our projected emergence EBITDA. We use an emergence
EBITDA multiple of 5x, which is lower than many rated telecom
peers, given that the trading communication systems business is in
secular decline."

Simulated default assumptions

-- Simulated year of default: 2020
-- EBITDA at emergence: $110 million
-- EBITDA multiple: 5x

Simplified waterfall

-- Net enterprise value (after 5% administrative costs): $521
million
-- First-lien debt claim: $773 million
    --Recovery expectations: 50% to 70%; rounded estimate of 60%
-- Second-lien debt claim: $323 million
    --Recovery expectations: 10% to 30%; rounded estimate of 10%
Note: All debt amounts include six months of prepetition interest.

  RATINGS LIST
  IPC Corp.
  Corporate credit rating                   B-/Stable/--

  New Rating
  IPC Corp.
   Senior Secured
    $132 mil 1st-lien term loan             B-
     Recovery rating                        3(60%)


JETT RACING: June 28 Plan Confirmation Hearing
----------------------------------------------
Jett Racing & Sales, Inc., sought and obtained from Judge David R.
Jones of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of
Texas approval of the disclosure statement explaining its plan of
reorganization.

The Court will conduct a hearing in Courtroom 3A, 3rd Floor, United
States Courthouse, 1300 Victoria Street, in Laredo, Texas 78040 to
consider confirmation of the Plan on June 28, 2018 at 10:00 a.m.
(Laredo time).

June 14, 2018 at 5:00 p.m. (Laredo Time) is the deadline for filing
ballots accepting or rejecting the Plan and for filing and serving
written objections to confirmation of the Plan.

The plan proposes, starting on the Effective Date, to pay the
secured claim holders the value of their collateral over a period
of either ten to twenty years, depending on the type of collateral
held by the creditor, priority unsecured claim over a period of up
to five years from the date the petition for relief was obtained,
and all other creditors approximate 50% of their claims over a
period of seven years.

Specifically, Class 7, comprised of the general unsecured claims
held by 25 unsecured creditors for goods and or services provided
to Debtor in amounts over $1,000.00 and which Debtor estimates
total $151,303.00, not including the claim of the insider, will be
paid, beginning on the Effective Date, regular monthly pro rata
payments of 50% of the respective claims over a period of seven
years at 5.0%
interest in the amount of $1,069.00 per month.  The holders of the
Class 7 claims are impaired and therefore are eligible to vote on
the Plan.

Beginning on the Effective Date, the owner of the company will
continue to operate the Debtor company in the ordinary course of
business and shall use the proceeds to fund the claims held against
Debtor.

Subsequent to the filing of the Plan and Disclosure Statement, the
Debtor filed a supplement to its disclosure statement providing
that the reference to a trucking business is to a former debtor.
Nevertheless, all income to pay claims, as is projected in the plan
proposed by the Debtor, will come from operations of its retail
operation.

Further, the Debtor's operations, from time to time, need capital
contributions from other businesses owned by Debtor's owner. In
that connection, the Debtor would provide the following on the
other companies:

   a. Orion Forwarding, Inc., was incorporated on July 16, 1997.
That particular company is dedicated to buying and selling closeout
lots to be sold to Mexican customers and the logistics of shipping
third-party merchandise to Mexico.

   b. American Air Freight, Inc., was incorporated on July 22,
1985. This company is dedicated to shipping of goods from Orion and
other companies to Mexico.

A copy of the Disclosure Statement is available at:

      http://bankrupt.com/misc/txsb17-50201-64.pdf

A copy of the Supplement is available for free at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/txsb17-50201-89.pdf

                    About Jett Racing & Sales

Founded in 1977, Jett Racing & Sales, Inc., is an electronics and
car accessories retailer in Laredo, Texas. It owns fee simple
interests in (a) a real property located at 1301 Lincoln Street,
Laredo, Texas, Lots 3, 4 & 5 of Block 37 of Laredo's Western
Division Webb County, Texas, valued by the Company at $1.50
million; (b) a lot and building located at 1110 Lincoln Street,
Laredo, Texas, S 52/1 of Lot 5 Ex- Trapezoidal Strip on East Side
Blk 41 WD valued by the Company at $240,000; (c) a lot and building
located at 2008 Matamoros St. Laredo, Texas Lot 4 of Block 291
Laredo's Western Division valued by the Company at $221,000; and
(d) a lot and building located at 6102 Gilbert Laredo, Texas,
valued by the Company at $1.4 million. It also holds a leasehold
interest in a lot and building located at 5201 Bob Bullock Loop
Laredo, Texas 78041.

Jett Racing previously sought bankruptcy protection (Bankr. S.D.
Tex. Case No. 11-50285) on May 12, 2011.

Jett Racing filed another Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. S.D. Tex.
Case No. 17-50201) on Sept. 30, 2017.  Wolf Hofman, the president,
signed the petition. Judge Eduardo V. Rodriguez presides over the
case.  The Debtor disclosed $7.08 million in assets and $7.44
million in liabilities.  Jesse Blanco, Jr., Esq., is the Debtor's
bankruptcy counsel.


JIYA CO: Hires Robert O Lampl Law as Attorney
---------------------------------------------
JIYA Co. seeks authority from the U.S. Bankrupty Court for the
Western District of Pennsylvania to hire Robert O Lampl, John P.
Lacher, David L. Fuchs, Ryan J. Cooney and Sy O. Lampl, as
attorneys.

The Debtor is in need of services of legal counsel to assist in,
among other things, the administration of its Estate and to
represent the Debtor on matters involving legal issues that are
present or are likely to arise in the case, to prepare any legal
documentation on behalf of the Debtor, to review reports for legal
sufficiency, to furnish information on legal matters regarding
legal actions and consequences and for all necessary legal services
connected with Chapter 11 proceedings including the prosecution
and/or defense of any adversary proceedings.

The firm's hourly rates are:

     Robert O Lampl     $450
     John P. Lacher     $400
     David L. Fuchs     $375
     Ryan J. Cooney     $275
     Sy O. Lampl        $200
     Paralegal          $150

Robert O. Lampl, Esq., attests that neither he, nor anyone in his
law firm has any connection with any creditor or any party in
interest, their respective attorneys and accountants, the United
States Trustee, or any person employed in the office of the United
States Trustee.

The counsel can be reached through:

     Robert O Lampl, Esq.
     Robert O Lampl Law Office
     223 Fourth Avenue, 4th Fl.
     Pittsburgh, PA 15222
     Phone: (412) 392-0330
     Tel: (412) 392-0335
     Email: rlampl@lampllaw.com

                        About JIYA Co

Based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, JIYA Co. filed a Chapter 11
petition (Bankr. W.D. Pa. Case No. 17-23651) on Sept. 11, 2017.
Judge Gregory L. Taddonio presides over the case.  Jeffrey T.
Morris at Elliott & Davis PC represents the Debtor as counsel.  At
the time of filing, the Debtor estimated less than $1 million in
assets and liabilities.


K & D HOSPITALITY: Vadtal Buying All Assets for $1.4 Million
------------------------------------------------------------
K & D Development asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western
District of Pennsylvania for authorization to sell of the real
estate used for Super 8 brand hotel, located at 111 Sheraton Drive,
Greensburg, Pennsylvania, 15601, Tax Map No. 50-16-00-0-325-00-000,
to Vadtal, LLC for $1.35 million, subject to higher and better
offers.

The Debtor is the sole owner of the real estate.  A full
description of the property may be found in the Office of the
Recorder of Deeds of Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, at
Instrument No. 200207030043364.

The property is subject to existing property tax liens and also
subject to a mortgage held by First National Bank of Pennsylvania.
At the time of filing, the Debtors listed the value of the real
estate at the filing date as $1.2 million based on recent
comparable sales, and listed the value of the related personalty at
$70,000.

The Debtor has had active negotiations with Vadtal, LLC for the
purchase of the Debtor's real estate, fixtures to said real estate,
and all the Debtor-owned personalty therein listed on its Schedule
A/B.  Thanks to those good-faith and arms'-length negotiations, the
Debtor has entered into an agreement for the sale of its assets
with the Buyer.

The proposed sale encompasses substantially all of the Debtor's
assets as listed in Schedule A/B of their bankruptcy petition, with
the exception of accounts receivable in existence at the time of
the bankruptcy filing.  The current offer proposes sale of these
assets at an asking price of $1.35 million.

A copy of the signed sales agreement attached to the Motion is
available for free at:

    http://bankrupt.com/misc/K&D_Hospitality_111_Sales.pdf

The property being sold is subject to two liens: (a) the first lien
is held by the Westmoreland County Tax Claim Bureau, 40 N.
Pennsylvania Avenue, Suite 109, Greensburg, Pennsylvania 15601 in
the amount of $90,014, based on a statutory property tax lien; and
(b) the second lien held by First National Bank of Pennsylvania,
100 Federal Street, 4th Floor, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 15212, at
the account number with the last four digits 9460, and a payoff
amount as of the Motion date of $1,115,830 and per diem of $259,
based on a mortgage signed by the Debtor.

The Debtor believes the proceeds of sale would be greater than the
amount needed to satisfy these liens, such that it has authority to
seek a sale of the assets free and clear of liens.   First National
Bank of Pennsylvania explicitly does not consent to any sale that
would not produce sufficient funds to satisfy its lien, and the
Debtor concedes it would not have authority to sell the property
free and clear of liens if the ultimate sales price is insufficient
for that purpose.  Moreover, the Bankruptcy Code requires that any
sale of the Debtor's assets outside the ordinary course of business
be subject to higher and better offers.

To that end, the Debtor asks approval of a sale of its assets, as
well as of the bidding procedures for such sale to allow for an
orderly sales process and to provide reasonable assurances that any
potential bidder is qualified to complete a sale.  Due to the
nature of the case, the Debtor believes and avers any buyer must
show an ability to qualify for the purchase of the property before
submitting a bid.

The Debtor proposes these requirements for any party to be entitled
to bid at or before the time of the sale hearing:

          a. Any third-party purchaser (i.e. a purchaser other than
Vadtal, LLC) who wishes to submit a bid for the Assets will submit,
in writing, a bid substantially in form of the Model Sale and
Purchase Agreement.

          b. All bids will be on the same terms and conditions as
set forth in the model agreement, with the exception of the
filled-in blanks as described in sub-paragraph A.

          c. No bid will add additional terms, conditions, or
contingencies not already provided for in Exhibit B.  The Debtor
expressly disclaims any warranty of merchantability or fitness for
any particular purpose, and makes no express or implied warranty as
to the condition of any property or asset.  Beyond the
contingencies and conditions already provided in any submitted bid,
any sale of property is as-is, where-is.

          d. Any bid submitted by a third-party purchaser will be
at least $50,000 greater than the original bid provided by Vadtal,
LLC.

          e. The third-party purchaser will provide a $10,000
good-faith deposit, to be held in escrow and later disposed of as
described in Exhibit B.

          f. The third-party purchaser will be entitled to any due
diligence materials previously provided by the Debtors to Vadtal,
LLC, but will not be automatically entitled to any other due
diligence documents.

          g. To the extent the third-party buyer wishes to continue
using the Super 8 brand, the third party-purchaser will either be
preapproved to use the Super 8 name and brand, or will apply for
approval by Super 8 on or before the time of the sale hearing.

          h. Any and all bids will become irrevocable no later than
5 business days prior to the hearing on the Motion to Sell.

Any third-party purchaser that satisfies all of the terms and
conditions provided in the Motion, as well as Vadtal LLC, will be
entitled to submit higher and better offers at the time of the sale
hearing.  

First National Bank of Pennsylvania and the Westmoreland County Tax
Claim bureau will be entitled to credit bid up to the amount of
their lien on the Debtor's assets.  No other party will be entitled
to bid at the time of the sale hearing.  The initial bid at the
sale hearing will be the bid by Vadtal LLC, in the amount listed in
the sales agreement at Exhibit A.  If no other qualifying bids are
received on or before the time of the hearing, then the sale will
be confirmed to Vadtal, LLC, on the terms and conditions previously
agreed to.  If any qualified purchasers exist at the time of the
sale hearing, those qualified purchasers will be entitled to submit
their own bids for the Debtor's Assets.

If more than one qualified purchaser submits a bid in the same
dollar amount, the earliest bid received will have priority to
purchase the property, subject to higher and better offers.  All
parties entitled to bid at the sale hearing will have the right and
ability to orally submit offers to the Court at the time of the
sale hearing, provided such an offer is a higher and better offer
than those previously provided to the Court.  However, all bidders,
with the sole exception of Vadtal, LLC, will be required to attend,
either in person, through a proxy, or through counsel, for their
bid to be considered at the time of hearing.

At the conclusion of the bidding process, the Debtor will ask the
Court to enter an order confirming the highest and best offer
submitted, and authorizing the Debtor and the bidder submitting the
highest and best offer to close on, and subsequently consummate,
the sale of its assets.

All deposits from proposed buyers will be held by the realtor
appointed in the case or by an approved escrow agent until the time
of successful closing and consummation, at which time they will be
disposed of as provided in Exhibits A and B.  The Closing will
occur within 60 days of the sale hearing, with a report of sale to
be filed with the Court within 15 days of closing.

If the highest bidder fails to consummate and successfully close
the sale, the Debtor will alert the Court accordingly, and will be
entitled to an immediate order confirming the second highest bid as
the new highest bid and to close with that party.  The agreement
with Vadtal, LLC also includes a clause where, if Vadtal is not the
successful bidder at the time of the hearing, it is allowed to seek
reimbursement for actual costs and expenses it incurred through
this sale process, up to a maximum amount of $250,000.

Previously, the Debtor has been assured that the amount to be
reimbursed under such circumstances is substantially less than
$50,000, such that the current bidding procedures would take into
account those extra expenses for purposes of determining a higher
and better offer.  

After a successful closing, the proceeds of the sale will be
distributed as follows in the order provided:

          a. First, to secured claims held by the Westmoreland
County Tax Claim Bureau and First National Bank of Pennsylvania to
satisfy those claims in full;

          b. To the costs of sale and administrative costs,
including but not limited to advertising, printing, mailing, and
notice fees; the realtor's commission and any fees related to the
same, as well as legal fees and costs of Counsel for the Debtor, to
the extent those fees are approved by the Court;

          c. To other costs of closing, including if necessary
actual costs expended by Vadtal LLC if it is not the highest
bidder;

          d. All remaining funds (including funds dedicated towards
administrative fees, professional fees and costs not yet approved
by the Court) to be held by the Debtor-in-possession in a separate,
non-interest bearing account pending further order of Court
concerning distribution of the same.

The Debtor believes and therefore avers the sale, if completed,
will be in the best interests of the Debtor, creditors, and of all
other parties to the present action.

The Purchaser:

          VADTAL, LLC
          8005 Pressley Court
          Pittsburgh, PA 15237

The Purchaser is represented by:

          Brenda B. Sebring, Esq.
          SEBRING & ASSOCIATES
          339 Old Haymaker Road
          Suite 1101, Parkway Building
          Monroeville, PA 15146
          Telephone: (412) 856-3500
          E-mail: bbs@sebringlaw.com

                    About K & D Hospitality

Founded in 2006, K & D Hospitality, LLC, is a small business debtor
as defined in 11 U.S.C. Section 101(51D) that operates under the
rooming and boarding houses industry.

K & D Hospitality filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
(Bankr. W.D. Pa. Case No. 17-24167) on Oct. 18, 2017, estimating
its assets and liabilities at between $1 million and $10 million
each.  The petition was signed by Parmod Patel, president.

Judge Carlota M. Bohm presides over the case.

Justin P. Schantz, Esq., at the Law Care of David A. Colecchia And
Associates, serves as the Debtor's bankruptcy counsel.


KENNEWICK PUBLIC: Wants Court to Approve Disclosure Statement
-------------------------------------------------------------
Kennewick Public Hospital District filed a motion asking the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Washington to approve
its disclosure statement explaining its proposed plan of
reorganization.

The Debtor proposes June 11, 2018 at 4:00 p.m. prevailing Pacific
Time as the Plan Objection Deadline and June 20, 2018 at 10:00 a.m.
prevailing Pacific Time as the date and time for the Confirmation
Hearing.

The Plan provides for the sale and transfer of substantially all of
the District's assets to RCCH free and clear of all liens, Claims,
and encumbrances. Specifically, the Plan presently contemplates,
among other things, the following: (a) the Debtor will reject the
Hospital Lease, and the Debtor and the Hospital Lessor will enter
into the New Hospital Lease; (b) the Debtor will assume the Medical
Office Building Lease, as amended and restated, and assign the
Medical Office Building Lease to RCCH; (c) the District will enter
into the Management Agreement, which provides that the day-to-day
District Operations will be managed by RCCH post-Confirmation until
the Closing Date; and (d) the District will enter into the
Community Care Agreement, which provides the terms under which the
District, in its capacity as the Reorganized Debtor, will continue
its remaining after the Effective Date.

The holders of Allowed Claims in Class 9, including Allowed Claims
in connection with the LTGO Bond, will be entitled to receive their
Pro Rata share of Distributions from assets of the Creditors Trust.
Distributions from the Creditors Trust will be paid in accordance
with the terms of the Plan and the terms and conditions governing
the Creditors Trust.

About Kennewick Public Hospital District

Originally established in 1948, Kennewick Public Hospital
District,
doing business as Trios Health, owns and operates a multi-faceted
public healthcare system primarily serving residents in Kennewick,
Pasco, Richland, and surrounding communities.

Kennewick -- http://www.trioshealth.org/-- is one of the largest  
multi-specialty medical groups in Eastern Washington.  It has two
hospitals and multiple urgent and outpatient care centers, which
together provide inpatient and outpatient services at 12 different
locations in the city of Kennewick.  Kennewick maintains a
workforce of approximately 1,104 employees, including medical
staff
comprising over 89 providers.

Kennewick is a "municipality" as defined in Section 101(40) of the
Bankruptcy Code.  It is a "public hospital district," a form of
municipal corporation authorized under Washington's Public
Hospital
Districts Act.

The Debtor sought protection under Chapter 9 of the Bankruptcy
Code
(Bankr. E.D. Wash. Case No. 17-02025) on June 30, 2017.  The
petition was signed by Craig Cudworth, chief executive officer.

At the time of the filing, the Debtor disclosed that it had
estimated assets and liabilities of $100 million to $500 million.

Foster Pepper PLLC represents the Debtor as bankruptcy counsel.
Garden City Group is the Debtor's claims and noticing agent.

On September 1, 2017, the Office of the U.S. Trustee appointed an
official committee of unsecured creditors.


KONA GRILL: Incurs $2.46 Million Net Loss in First Quarter
----------------------------------------------------------
Kona Grill, Inc. filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
its Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q reporting a net loss of $2.46
million on $42.01 million of revenue for the three months ended
March 31, 2018, compared to a net loss of $3.37 million on $45.22
million of revenue for the three months ended March 31, 2017.

As of March 31, 2018, Kona Grill had $87.01 million in total
assets, $83.84 million in total liabilities and $3.16 million in
total stockholders' equity.

The Company's cash flows used in operating activities was $0.5
million of net cash during the first three months of 2018 compared
to cash flows provided by operating activities of $0.6 million of
net cash during the first three months of 2017.  The year over year
decrease in cash from operating activities is primarily due to
timing of payments and receipt of tenant allowance reimbursements
and timing of payments for accrued expenses during the first
quarter of 2018.

Capital expenditures for the first quarter of 2018 were $0.4
million, primarily associated with remodel and maintenance related
activities.  Capital expenditures for the first quarter of 2017
were $4.4 million, primarily associated with our Scottsdale Quarter
restaurant which opened in the second quarter of 2017, residual
payments from restaurants opened during the fourth quarter of 2016,
and maintenance capital expenditures.

Net cash used in financing activities during the first quarter of
2018 was $0.4 million and consisted of $0.2 million in payments
under its credit facility and $0.2 million in fees associated with
Amendment No. 4.  Net cash provided by financing activities during
the first quarter of 2017 was $2.6 million and consisted primarily
of $8.0 million of borrowings under the credit facility and $0.2
million of proceeds from stock option exercises, partially offset
by $3.6 million for the repurchase of common stock under the
Company's October 2016 stock repurchase program, $1.9 million in
payments under the credit facility and $0.2 million for debt
issuance costs associated with an amendment to the credit
facility.

"We remain focused and resilient in this challenging industry
environment.  We continue to focus on service, hospitality and
cleanliness to ensure our restaurants provide a great experience to
each of our guests.  We have many initiatives in place to take Kona
Grill to the next level, including several involving menu
innovation and increasing the frequency of guest visits," said
Berke Bakay, president and CEO of Kona Grill.

"During the quarter, we saw measurable improvements in operating
margins from cost-savings initiatives implemented under our new
operational leadership team.  These initiatives include reducing
the amount of discounts and promotional activity which has
negatively impacted sales, but has significantly improved
profitability.  As a result of these efforts, during the first
quarter of 2018, restaurant operating profit improved $0.4 million
or 8.7% while EBITDA improved $0.9M or 140% compared to the first
quarter of 2017," he continued.

"As previously announced, we completed a private placement at a
premium and raised $5.6 million in capital.  We'll use the funds
raised to pay down our revolving credit facility as well as working
capital.  As part of the transaction, we appointed hotel magnate,
Alex Zheng, to our Board of Directors as vice-chairman. Alex brings
a wealth of knowledge and experience to our board and also the
potential to grow the brand in China through a master franchise
agreement," he continued.

"We are also excited to announce that we have filed registration
statements in certain states where required to expand the Kona
Grill brand in the United States through franchising.  We believe a
dual strategy of both company-owned and franchised restaurants
allows for the optimal expansion of the brand in many markets
throughout the U.S.  To this end, we are working on a smaller
prototype of between 5,000 and 5,300 square feet, to improve the
portability of the brand in both U.S. and international markets,"
he concluded.

A full-text copy of the Form 10-Q is available for free at:

                     https://is.gd/gxpuww

                       About Kona Grill

Kona Grill, Inc., headquartered in Scottsdale, Arizona, Kona Grill,
Inc. -- http://www.konagrill.com/-- currently owns and operates 46
restaurants in 23 states and Puerto Rico.  The Company's
restaurants offer freshly prepared food, attentive service, and an
upscale contemporary ambiance.  Additionally, Kona Grill has three
restaurants that operate under a franchise agreement in Dubai,
United Arab Emirates; Vaughan, Canada and Monterrey, Mexico.

Kona Grill incurred a net loss of $23.43 million in 2017 and a net
loss of $21.62 million in 2016.  As of Dec. 31, 2017, Kona Grill
had $91.79 million in total assets, $86.13 million in total
liabilities and $5.66 million in total stockholders' equity.

The Company has incurred losses resulting in an accumulated deficit
of $79.7 million, has a net working capital deficit of $7.6 million
and outstanding debt of $37.8 million as of Dec. 31, 2017.  The
Company said in its 2017 Annual Report that these conditions
together with recent debt covenant violations and subsequent debt
covenant waivers and debt amendments, raise substantial doubt about
its ability to continue as a going concern.


KONA GRILL: Stockholders Elect Two Directors
--------------------------------------------
Kona Grill, Inc., held its annual meeting of stockholders on May 8,
2018, at which the stockholders elected each of James R. Jundt and
Steven W. Schussler as a Class I director to serve for a three-year
term expiring in 2021.  The stockholders approved amendments to the
2012 Stock Award Plan to increase the number of shares of common
stock reserved for issuance by 1,500,000 and impose a limitation on
awards to non-employee directors.  The stockholders also ratified
the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as the independent registered
public accounting firm for the fiscal year ending Dec. 31, 2018.

                       About Kona Grill

Kona Grill, Inc., headquartered in Scottsdale, Arizona, Kona Grill,
Inc. -- http://www.konagrill.com/-- currently owns and operates 46
restaurants in 23 states and Puerto Rico.  The Company's
restaurants offer freshly prepared food, attentive service, and an
upscale contemporary ambiance.  Additionally, Kona Grill has three
restaurants that operate under a franchise agreement in Dubai,
United Arab Emirates; Vaughan, Canada and Monterrey, Mexico.

Kona Grill incurred a net loss of $23.43 million in 2017 and a net
loss of $21.62 million in 2016.  As of March 31, 2018, Kona Grill
had $87.01 million in total assets, $83.84 million in total
liabilities and $3.16 million in total stockholders' equity.

The Company has incurred losses resulting in an accumulated deficit
of $79.7 million, has a net working capital deficit of $7.6 million
and outstanding debt of $37.8 million as of Dec. 31, 2017.  The
Company said in its 2017 Annual Report that these conditions
together with recent debt covenant violations and subsequent debt
covenant waivers and debt amendments, raise substantial doubt about
its ability to continue as a going concern.


LAURITSEN FIREWOOD: Unsecured Creditors' Claims Increased to $223K
------------------------------------------------------------------
Lauritsen Firewood & Rental, Inc., filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Western District of Wisconsin a disclosure statement
in connection with its proposed plan of reorganization dated April
20, 2018.

The latest plan amends the treatment of the allowed other
creditors' claims in Classes 8 and 10. The claims are estimated to
total approximately $223,726.33. The Plan provides for these claims
to be paid in full in 60 equal monthly payments starting on the
distribution date.

The Troubled Company Reporter previously reported that the allowed
other creditors' claims are estimated to total approximately
$22,232.90. The Plan provides for thee claims to be paid over a
five-year period.

A full-text copy of the Latest Disclosure Statement is available
at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/wiwb1-17-11785-190.pdf

A full-text copy of the Chapter 11 plan is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/wiwb1-17-11785-189.pdf

               About Lauritsen Firewood & Rental

Lauritsen Firewood & Rental Inc. is a firewood delivery company.
Based in Cushing, Wisconsin, it provides wood heating, firewood
chopping, and flat roofing.

Lauritsen Firewood sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D. Wis. Case No. 17-11785) on May 17,
2017.  Derek Lauritsen, president, signed the petition.  At the
time of the filing, the Debtor disclosed $6.67 million in assets
and $3.47 million in liabilities.

Judge Catherine J. Furay presides over the case.

Joshua D. Christianson, Esq., Christianson & Freund, LLC, in Eau
Claire, WI, serves as counsel to the Debtor.

An official committee of unsecured creditors has not yet been
appointed in the Chapter 11 case.


LAWRENCE D. FROMELIUS: W.K. Buying Lisle Vacant Land for $60K
-------------------------------------------------------------
Lawrence D. Fromelius asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Northern District of Illinois to authorize the sale of a vacant lot
known as Lot 10 on Lisle Place in Lisle, Illinois to W.K. Building
& Development, Inc., for $60,000.

The Debtor's Plan contemplates an orderly sale of real estate to
generate funds to pay the Anne Marie Barry Trust, among others.
One of the parcels to be sold is the Property.  The Debtor has
sought and received authority from the Court to sell the Property
twice before: once via a traditional sale for $60,000 and once via
a contract for deed for $65,000 plus 5% interest.  Unfortunately,
both deals fell through after approval.

The current offer is a cash offer for $60,000, with $1,500 earnest
money deposit, subject to a 30-day contingency for due diligence
with the Village of Lisle and with closing to occur 14 days after
village approval.  The sale will be free and clear of all liens,
claims, interests, and encumbrances.

A copy of the Multi-Board Residential Real Estate Contract 6.1
attached to the Motion is available for free at:

    http://bankrupt.com/misc/Lawrence_Fromelius_329_Sales.pdf

Based upon his own knowledge of the Property and discussions with
others, the Debtor believes the purchase price is fair and
reasonable.  The Anne Marie Barry Trust also has consented to the
sale price.  The Debtor will not receive any benefit from the sale
other than the consideration being paid, which will be used to
further implement his Plan.  Last, adequate notice of the sale will
be provided.  The Debtor sent notice of the Motion and the proposed
sale to all creditors and parties in interest.

The Debtor asks that the Court shortens the notice to seven days.

                    About Lawrence Fromelius

Lawrence D. Fromelius filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. N.D. Ill.
Case No. 15-22373) on June 29, 2015.  The Debtor tapped William J.
Factor, Esq., Ariane Holtschlag, Esq., and Jeffrey K. Paulsen,
Esq., at FactorLaw, as counsel.

L. Fromelius Investment Properties LLC filed a Chapter 11 petition
(Bankr. N.D. Ill. Case No. 15-22943) on July 2, 2015, and Golden
Marina Causeway LLC filed for relief under Chapter 11 (Bankr. N.D.
Ill. Case No. 16-03587) on Feb. 5, 2016.

Mr. Fromelius is the sole member of Investment Properties.  He is
also the sale member of East Greenfield Investors LLC, which in
turn is the sole member of Golden Marina Causeway LLC.  On Nov. 24,
2015, Lawrence Fromelius filed his initial plan of reorganization
and on Dec. 1, 2016, Investment Properties filed its initial plan
of reorganization.  Both of the plans have been amended to
incorporate changes requested by creditors, including the Ann Marie
Barry Trust, which has filed a claim of approximately $6 million.
Currently, the Debtors and the Ann Marie Barry Trust are
negotiating the terms of a disclosure statement to accompany the
plans.  On Oct. 3, 2017, the Court confirmed the Debtor's Third
Amended Plan of Reorganization dated Feb. 7, 2017, as amended May
12, 2017.

Golden Marina owns two parcels of real estate, located at 302 and
311 East Greenfield Avenue in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.  The parcel at
311 E. Greenfield consists of 47 acres and the smaller parcel at
302 E. Greenfield is approximately 1 acre.

On Aug. 8, 2017, the Court appointed At World Properties, LLC, as
broker for the Debtor.


LAYFIELD & BARRETT: Court Rejects Former Member's Stay Motion
-------------------------------------------------------------
In the bankruptcy case in re: Layfield & Barrett, APC, Chapter 11,
Debtor, Case No. 2:17-bk-19548-NB (Bankr. C.D. Cal.), Bankruptcy
Judge Neil W. Bason denies the Motion for Determination of
Violation of the Automatic Stay, or, in the Alternative, to Enjoin
Related Proceeding filed by Joseph M. Barrett, Esq.

Mr. Barrett is a former named member of the debtor who also asserts
claims against the debtor. The Stay Motion concerns an action by
secured creditor Wellgen Standard, LLC (successor in interest to
Advocate Capital, Inc.) against Mr. Barrett and others in Tennessee
-- initially that action was pending in State court, but Mr.
Barrett has removed it to Federal court (the "TN Action"). The Stay
Motion is opposed both by Wellgen and by the Chapter 11 Trustee,
Richard M. Pachulski.

As pointed out by Wellgen and the Trustee, the Ninth Circuit has
broadly expressed the concept that creditors lack standing to seek
relief under 11 U.S.C. section 362.

Mr. Barrett cites several cases, including the Pecan Groves case,
that at first seem contrary. But on closer inspection all of those
cases arise under a portion of the statute that expressly grants
standing for a particular type of enforcement of the automatic
stay:

[A]n individual injured by any willful violation of a stay provided
by this section shall recover actual damages, including costs and
attorneys' fees, and, in appropriate circumstances, may recover
punitive damages…

No such specific authorization applies to Mr. Barrett's more
generalized request for relief in the Stay Motion. He does not
allege that he was "injured" by a willful violation of the stay,
and his motion does not seek damages.

It is true that Pecan Groves has been distinguished on various
grounds. But the Bankruptcy Court is not persuaded that it can
disregard the pronouncements in Pecan Groves, especially when there
is some logic to distinguishing between a creditor who has
personally been damaged by a violation of the automatic stay (and
has statutory standing under section 362(k)) and another creditor
who seeks to enforce the stay more generally. In the latter
situation there is no statutory standing and, as Pecan Groves
points out, permitting a creditor to seek remedies for violation of
the automatic stay on behalf of the bankruptcy estate could
interfere with the decision of the trustee (or debtor in
possession) not to pursue such remedies for tactical or strategic
reasons (e.g., as part of a compromise with the person who violated
the automatic stay). Therefore, Pecan Groves is binding.

In sum, under Pecan Groves Mr. Barrett would only have standing to
seek relief for violation of the automatic stay if he were
proceeding under section 362(k). But his Stay Motion does not seek
damages under section 362(k), so he lacks standing to seek any
remedy for any violation of the automatic stay by Wellgen.

Mr. Barrett has also not established that the automatic stay
presently applies to any aspect of the TN Action. Even if it did,
the Chapter 11 Trustee has stated his willingness to stipulate to
relief from the automatic stay.

A full-text copy of the Court's Order dated April 23, 2018 is
available at https://bit.ly/2rHFXuT from Leagle.com.

Layfield & Barrett, APC, Debtor, pro se.

The Dominguez Firm, Petitioning Creditor, represented by Alan J.
Watson -- alan.watson@hklaw.com -- Holland & Knight LLP.

Mario Lara, Nayazi Reyes & Maria A Rios, Petitioning Creditors,
represented by Patricia Salcedo, The Dominguez Firm & Alan J.
Watson, Holland & Knight LLP.

Evanston Insurance Company, Plaintiff, represented by Michael F.
Perlis -- mperlis@lockelord.com -- Locke Lord LLP.

Richard Pachulski, Trustee, represented by James K.T. Hunter --
jhunter@pszlaw.com -- Pachulski Stang Ziehl & Jones LLP & Malhar S.
Pagay -- mpagay@pszlaw.com -- Pachulski Stang Ziehl & Jones LLP.

United States Trustee, U.S. Trustee, represented by Dare Law,
Office of the United States Trustee.

               About Layfield & Barrett APC

Certain creditors of Layfield & Barrett, APC, filed an involuntary
Chapter 7 case on August 3, 2017.  The Debtor moved for conversion
of the case to one under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code.  On
August 11, 2017, the case was converted to a Chapter 11 case
(Bankr. C.D. Calif. Case No. 17-19548).

Judge Neil W. Bason presides over the case.  Havkin & Shrago,
Attorneys at Law represents the Debtor as bankruptcy counsel.


LELAND CONSULTING: Hires Jan L. Hammerman as Co-Counsel
-------------------------------------------------------
Leland Consulting Group, Inc. d/b/a Ricker Cunningham seeks
authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of
Colorado to employ Jan L. Hammerman, Esq. as co-counsel.

The professional services that Counsel is to render are:

     a. provide the Debtor with legal advice with respect to its
powers and duties;

     b. aid the Debtor in the development of a plan of
reorganization under Chapter 11;

     c. file the necessary petitions, pleadings, reports, and
actions that may be required in the continued administration of the
Debtor's property under Chapter 11;

     d. take necessary actions to enjoin and stay until a final
decree herein the continuation of pending proceedings as may be
provided under 11 USC Section 362;

     e. assist the Debtor with the filing of all necessary reports
and documents with the United States Trustee;

     f. perform all other legal services as may be necessary.

Mr. Hammerman's hourly rate for this matter is $175 per hour.

Jan L. Hammerman, Esq. assures this court that he does not
represent any party in interest adverse to the Debtor's estate and
that he is a disinterested person as defined by 11 U.S.C. Sec.
101(14).

The counsel can be reached through:

     Jan L. Hammerman, Esq.
     Law Office of Jan L. Hammerman
     PO Box 3446
     Englewood, CO 80155
     Tel: (720) 261-8013
     E-Mail: jlhammerman111@msn.com

                 About Leland Consulting Group

Leland Consulting Group -- https://www.lelandconsulting.com/ -- is
a team of strategic advisors focused on urban real estate, economic
development, and public-private partnerships.

Leland Consulting Group filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. D.
Colo. Case No. 18-13522) on April 26, 2018, listing under $1
million in assets and liabilities.  Stuart J. Carr, Esq. at Stuart
J. Carr, P.C., is the Debtor's counsel.  Jan L. Hammerman, Esq. at
Law Office of Jan L. Hammerman is co-counsel.


LELAND CONSULTING: Hires Stuart J. Carr, PC as Attorney
-------------------------------------------------------
Leland Consulting Group, Inc., d/b/a Ricker Cunningham, seeks
authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of
Colorado to hire Stuart J. Carr, P.C., as its attorneys.

The professional services that Counsel is to render are:

     a. provide the Debtor with legal advice with respect to its
powers and duties;

     b. aid the Debtor in the development of a plan of
reorganization under Chapter 11;

     c. file the necessary petitions, pleadings, reports, and
actions that may be required in the continued administration of the
Debtor's property under Chapter 11;

     d. take necessary actions to enjoin and stay until a final
decree the continuation of pending proceedings as may be provided
under 11 U.S.C. Section 362;

     e. assist the Debtor with the filing of all necessary reports
and documents with the United States Trustee;

     f. perform all other legal services as may be necessary.

Mr. Carr's hourly rate is $175 per hour.

Stuart J. Carr, Esq. of Stuart J. Carr, P.C. attests that his firm
does not represent any party in interest adverse to the Debtor's
estate and that the firm is disinterested as defined by 11 U.S.C.
Sec. 101(14).

The counsel can be reached through:

     Stuart J. Carr, Esq.
     Stuart J. Carr, P.C.
     2851 South Parker Road, Suite 710
     Aurora, CO 80014
     Tel: (303) 369-1915
     Fax: (303) 369-0277
     E-Mail: stuartjcarr@hotmail.com

               About Leland Consulting Group

Leland Consulting Group -- https://www.lelandconsulting.com/ -- is
a team of strategic advisors focused on urban real estate, economic
development, and public-private partnerships.

Leland Consulting Group filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. D.
Colo. Case No. 18-13522) on April 26, 2018, listing under $1
million in both assets and liabilities.  Stuart J. Carr, Esq., at
Stuart J. Carr, P.C., is the Debtor's counsel.


LIBERTY INDUSTRIES: U.S. Trustee Forms Five-Member Committee
------------------------------------------------------------
Daniel M. McDermott, U.S. Trustee for Region 21, on May 1, 2018,
appointed five creditors to serve on the official committee of
unsecured creditors in the Chapter 11 case of Liberty Industries,
L.C.

The committee members are:

     (1) Hodge Design Associates, P.C.
         Attn: W. Gray Hodge
         22 Chestnut Street
         Evansville, IN 47713
         Tel: (812) 422-2558
         E-mail: ghodge@hodgestructural.com

     (2) O'Neal Steel, LLC
         Attn: Darrell Johnson
         841 N. Michigan Road
         Shelbyville, IN 46176
         Tel: (317) 421-1252
         Fax: (205) 599-8392
         E-mail: djohnson13@onealsteel.com

     (3) Bairstow Lifting Products Co.
         Attn: Robert Bairstow
         1785 Ellsworth Industrial Blvd.
         Atlanta, GA 30318-3747
         Tel: (404) 351-2600
         Fax: (404) 355-2046
         E-mail: robert@bairstow.com

     (4) GGG Partners, LLC
         Attn: Richard Kazmier
         3155 Roswell Road, N.E., Suite 120
         Atlanta, GA 30305
         Tel: (678) 438-7553
         Fax: (509) 561-3535
         E-mail: rkazmier@gggmgt.com

     (5) JMS Russel Metal Corp.
         Attn: Justin Brown
         25 College Park Cove
         Jackson, TN 38301
         Tel: (731) 984-8157
         Fax: (731) 984-8126
         E-mail: jubrown@jmsmetal.com

Official creditors' committees have the right to employ legal and
accounting professionals and financial advisors, at a debtor's
expense.  They may investigate the debtor's business and financial
affairs.  Importantly, official committees serve as fiduciaries to
the general population of creditors they represent.

                   About Liberty Industries

Liberty Industries, L.C., d/b/a Tower Innovations --
http://towerinnovations.net-- is a manufacturer of communication
towers, specializing in broadcast and wireless structures.  Tower
Innovations is a privately held company and a unit of Liberty
Industries.  It was founded in Newburgh, Indiana in 2006 after
acquiring Kline Towers, established in 1953, and Central Tower,
established in 1984.  Tower Innovations is a multi-functional
provider of communication systems and has thousands of quality
structures in service around the world.  These include towers for
DTV/NTSC, AM and FM broadcasting, two-way, WiFi, cellular and PCS
communications.  The Company offers complete innovative engineering
solutions, design and fabrication services. Liberty Properties
operates a commercial manufacturing facility in Newburgh, Indiana.

On Sept. 9, 2016, a voluntary petition under Chapter 11 was filed
by Liberty Industries under Case No. 16-22332.  On Sept. 7, 2016, a
voluntary petition under Chapter 11 was filed by Liberty Properties
under Case No. 16-22333.  On Sept. 12, 2012, Liberty Industries
sought bankruptcy protection (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No. 12-32843).
Liberty Properties filed a Chapter 11 petition on Sept. 25, 2012
(Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No. 12-32882).

Liberty Industries, L.C. dba Tower Innovations and Liberty
Properties At Newburgh, L.C., filed separate Chapter 11 petitions
(Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case Nos. 18-14231 and 18-14232), on April 11,
2018.  The Petition was signed by William Gates, manager.  The case
is assigned to Judge Erik P. Kimball.  The Debtor is represented by
Robert C. Furr, Esq., at Furr & Cohen.  

At the time of filing, Liberty Industries had total assets and
liabilities at $4,480,000 each, and Liberty Prop At Newburgh had
$3,710,000 in total assets and $3,330,000 in total liabilities.


LIFELINE SLEEP: SMLHC et al., File Limited Objection to Disclosures
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Sleep Medicine and Lung Health Consultants, LLC, Lifeline Center,
PC, and Brian Carlin, M.D., submit a limited objection and
reservation of rights in connection with the order setting a
hearing on the disclosure statement to accompany the amended
chapter 11 plan of Debtor Lifeline Sleep Center, LLC.

The Debtor has professional service contracts with Sleep Medicine
and with Dr. Carlin.

Dr. Carlin and Sleep Medicine are owed significant pre-petition
fees for services they provided, inter alia, as medical director
for the Debtor. The debtor proposes in the proposed plan to treat
the pre-petition fees as a Class 6 claim. Neither Dr. Carlin nor
Sleep Medicine has an objection to this treatment.

The Debtor, however, has not paid any of the post-petition fees
related to the professional service contracts despite Dr. Carlin
and Sleep Medicine's agreement to remain as medical director for
the Debtor. Moreover, despite demand, the Debtor has not provided
adequate assurances that the medical director fees will be paid in
the future, including post-plan confirmation.

Equally if not more critically, the Debtor has a management
services agreement with Lifeline Center, PC. The Debtor’s
continued operation of its business will cease or be severely
hampered without the services provided by the Objectors.
Specifically, without a professional service contract the Debtor
will be without a medical director and without a management
services agreement, the Debtor will not be able to bill insurers
and Medicare/Medicaid for services rendered.

The Disclosure Statement, at page 5, identifies that new agreements
with Objections will be assumed by the Debtor. The Objectors
assert, however, these agreements have not been finalized. Without
the finalized revised and amended agreements between the Debtor and
the Objectors, the Amended Plan does not appear to be viable and
confirmation of the Amended Plan is likely to be followed by
liquidation, or the need for further financial reorganization of
the Debtor.

Accordingly, the Objectors expressly reserve all of their rights to
assert any and all objections they may have with respect to the
Disclosure Statement and/or Amended Plan, and any order(s) with
respect to the approval and/or confirmation of the same.

The Troubled Company Reporter previously reported that the
Administrative Claims to be paid on the effective date of the plan
will be funded in part by a capital contribution of the President
of the Debtor, Mark Kegg, in the approximate amount of $18,000.

A full-text copy of the Latest Disclosure Statement is available
at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/pawb16-24201-172.pdf

A full-text copy of the Objection is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/pawb16-24201-85.pdf

Counsel for Sleep Medicine and Lung Health Consultants, LLC,
Lifeline Center, PC, and Brian Carlin, M.C.:

     John R. Gotaskie, Jr.
     Pa. ID No. 81143
     BNY Mellon Center
     500 Grant Street, Suite 2500
     Pittsburgh, PA 15219
     jgotaskie@foxrothschild.com
     Telephone: (412) 391-1334
     Facsimile: (412) 391-6984

                  About Lifeline Sleep Center

Lifeline Sleep Center, LLC, operates several specialty outpatient
sleep centers, with a principal place of business at 2030 Ardmore
Boulevard, Suite 251, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Lifeline Sleep Center sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D. Pa. Case No. 16-24201) on Nov. 10,
2016.  In the petition signed by Mark Kegg, owner.  At the time of
the filing, the Debtor estimated assets of less than $50,000 and
liabilities of less than $1 million.

Judge Jeffery A. Deller presides over the case.  Brian C. Thompson,
Esq., at Thompson Law Group, P.C., serves as the Debtor's legal
counsel.

No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Debtor's case.


LONGVIEW POWER: S&P Affirms 'CCC' Secured Debt Rating
-----------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings affirmed its 'CCC' rating on Longview Power
LLC's senior secured debt. The outlook is negative. The recovery
rating on the debt remains '3', indicating S&P's expectations for
meaningful (50%-70%; rounded estimate: 50%) recovery if a default
occurs.

The affirmation of the 'CCC' rating stems from the project's
better-than-expected performance in the fourth quarter of 2017 and
the first quarter of 2018, largely driven by unseasonably cold
weather. With capacity factors in the low 90 percentile, the
project generated about $46 million in cash in 2017, with $30
million being used to service debt. This led to an improved
liquidity position, with $26 million of cash on hand. S&P said, "We
believe that the project will continue to generate low yet positive
cash flows, stemming from stable forward energy curves as well as
cheaper procurement of coal. We expect that the project will
maintain debt service coverage ratios (DSCRs) above 1x and will
remain in compliance with its 1.1x DSCR covenant over the next 12
months given the project's available liquidity ($26 million of cash
on hand and about $22 million of discretionary liquidity at the
holding company)."

S&P said, "The negative outlook reflects our view that the project
is vulnerable and is dependent upon favorable business, financial,
and economic conditions to meet its financial commitments over the
next 12 months. Although we believe the project has marginally
sufficient liquidity to cover debt service (via cash on hand) and
meet the 1.1x covenant test through 2018, we continue to view the
issuer's capital structure to be unsustainable in the long term
given current market conditions and we view a restructuring to be
likely.

"A downgrade could occur if we believe that default is eminent
within the next six months without an unforeseen positive
development. This may occur if the project's liquidity position
deteriorates, operational issues increase forced outage rates, or
market prices continue to depress further.

"While unlikely at this time, an improvement in the rating could
occur if Longview's financial performance improved such that the
minimum DSCR was 1.2x over the tenor of the debt and our assumed
post-refinance phase. Since capacity prices are fixed through 2021,
financial improvement would require a significant increase in power
prices--which we think is unlikely right now. This would likely
require significant unforeseen market developments such that we no
longer view the capital structure as unsustainable."


LONMIN PLC: Bank Debt Trades at 4% Off
--------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which Lonmin Plc is a
borrower traded in the secondary market at 95.80
cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4, 2018,
according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM Pricing.
This represents an increase of 2.91 percentage points from the
previous week. Lonmin Plc pays 450 basis points above LIBOR to
borrow under the $1.933 billion facility. The bank loan matures on
January 27, 2023. Moody's rates the loan 'B2' and Standard & Poor's
gave a 'B+' rating to the loan. The loan is one of the biggest
gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted syndicated loans with
five or more bids in secondary trading for the week ended Friday,
May 4.

Lonmin plc, formerly the mining division of Lonrho plc, is a
British producer of platinum group metals operating in the Bushveld
Complex of South Africa. It is listed on the London Stock Exchange.


MARIE'S FAMILY: Plan Outline Gets Court's Conditional Approval
--------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Jeffrey P. Norman of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Western District of Louisiana issued an order conditionally
approving Marie's Family Healthcare & Sitter Services, Inc.'s
disclosure statement with respect to its proposed chapter 11 plan
filed on April 18, 2018.

May 24, 2018 is fixed as the last day for filing written
acceptances or rejections of the plan, and the last day for filing
and serving written objections to the disclosure statement and
confirmation of the plan.

May 31, 2018 at 9:30 a.m. at the U.S. Federal Building, 201 Jackson
Street, 3rd Floor Courtroom, Room #310, Monroe, LA 71201 is fixed
for the hearing on final approval of the Disclosure Statement and
for the hearing on confirmation of the plan.

                About Marie's Family Healthcare

Marie's Family Healthcare & Sitter Services, Inc., filed a Chapter
11 bankruptcy petition (Bankr. W.D. La. Case No. 17-31785) on Oct.
20, 2017, estimating under $1 million in both assets and
liabilities.  The Debtor is represented by J. Garland Smith, Esq.,
at J. Garland Smith & Associates.


MARTIN PEMSTEIN: Denial of Bid to Vacate Discharge Order Upheld
---------------------------------------------------------------
District Judge Fernando M. Olguin affirms the Oct. 30, 2017
Bankruptcy Court order denying Debtors Martin Pemstein and Diana
Pemstein's motion to vacate order of discharge in the appeals case
captioned MARTIN PEMSTEIN and DIANA PEMSTEIN, Appellants, v. UNITED
STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT, CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA, Appellee,
Case No. CV 17-8262 FMO (C.D. Cal.). The court concludes that oral
argument is not necessary to resolve the appeal.

The Pemsteins argue that the Bankruptcy Court's Order of Oct. 30,
2017 should be reversed because of, among other things, the lack of
due process, judicial misconduct, bias, and incompetence. The
Pemsteins also contend that the bankruptcy court "improperly
refused to comply" with the Pemsteins' belief that the "'SECOND
DISCHARGE' dated Sept. 11, 2017 should be vacated," and accuse the
bankruptcy court of "jump[ing] feet first into a cesspool of lies."


The Court holds that these contentions either lack merit or are not
cognizable on appeal. Constitutional due process guarantees the
right to fair notice and an opportunity to be heard. The Pemsteins
provide no evidence of any violations of due process. The
bankruptcy court heard and considered the Pemsteins' Motion to
Vacate, and the Pemsteins were afforded the opportunity to be
substantively heard. Next, "judicial rulings alone almost never
constitute a valid basis for a bias or partiality" claim, so the
mere fact that the bankruptcy court denied the Motion to Vacate
does not give rise to an inference of bias, misconduct,
incompetence, or impropriety. Finally, the court declines to
address the "cesspool" contention because it is inappropriate for
review.

Notwithstanding the Pemsteins' nominal allegations, their
fundamental dispute appears premised on the assumption that,
because the Order of Discharge, does not track verbatim the
language in the Bankruptcy Court's Order of Sept. 25, 2013, it
somehow constitutes either an illegal repeal of the Bankruptcy
Court's Order of Sept. 25, 2013, or a "second discharge." Neither
the Pemsteins' assumptions nor conclusions are correct.

Rule 4004 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure is titled,
"Grant or Denial of Discharge," and provides, among other things,
that "[a]n order of discharge shall conform to the appropriate
Official Form." Prior to Sept. 11, 2017, no order of discharge had
been entered using the Official Form, B3180RI, as required by Fed.
R. Bankr. P. 4004(e). The Bankruptcy Court's Order of Sept. 25,
2013 did not constitute the discharge order. Rather, it granted the
Pemsteins' Motion for Discharge and directed the court clerk to
enter the discharge order. Once it was discovered that a final
discharge order had not been entered as required by the Bankruptcy
Court's Order of Sept. 25, 2013 and in conformance to Fed. R.
Bankr. P. 4004(e), the bankruptcy court clerk proceeded to do so.

Nonetheless, the Pemsteins' confusion and concern upon receiving a
notice of the Order of Discharge, nearly four years after they
thought their discharge order had been entered, was understandable.
The bankruptcy court was technically correct in denying the Motion
to Vacate, as the Pemsteins provided no basis to vacate the
discharge order. Still, there is no question that the Pemsteins
were entitled to have their discharge order entered in 2013. Based
on the dialogue at the hearing on the Motion to Vacate, the
Pemsteins, who were then and are now proceeding pro se, did not
appear to comprehend the bankruptcy court's explanations and were
unwilling to accept its assurances that nothing was amiss.

Based on the foregoing, the Court affirms the Bankruptcy Court's
Order of Oct. 30, 2017. However, the case is remanded for the
bankruptcy court to take the necessary measures to ensure that the
entry of the Order of Discharge is nunc pro tunc as of Sept. 25,
2013, or any other date shortly thereafter the bankruptcy court may
determine is appropriate.

A full-text copy of the Court's Order dated April 23, 2018 is
available at https://bit.ly/2wG8ndD from Leagle.com.

Martin Pemstein, Appellant, pro se.

Diana Pemstein, Appellant, pro se.

Harold Pemstein, Appellee, represented by Christopher Lane Blank,
Christopher L Blank Law Offices.

                About Martin and Diana Pemstein

Martin Pemstein and Diana Pemstein, based in Newport Beach,
California, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy (Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case
No. 10-15552) on April 28, 2010.  Judge Robert N. Kwan oversees the
case.  Nancy Knupfer, Esq., at Fredman Knupfer Lieberman LLP,
serves as the Pemsteins' counsel.  In their petition, the Pemsteins
estimated $1 million to $10 million in assets, and under $1 million
in debts.  A list of the Company's 12 largest unsecured creditors
filed together with the petition is available for free at
http://bankrupt.com/misc/cacb10-15552.pdf


MARWILL PROPERTIES: Case Summary & 2 Unsecured Creditors
--------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Marwill Properties LLC
        14328 Victory Blvd Ste 202
        Panorama City, CA 91402

Business Description: Marwill Properties LLC is a privately held
                      company engaged in activities related to
                      real estate.  The Debtor sought creditor
                      protection under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy

                      Code on Jan. 31, 2018 (Bankr. C.D. Calif.
                      Case No. 18-10282).

Chapter 11 Petition Date: May 16, 2018

Case No.: 18-11258

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Central District of California (San Fernando Valley)

Judge: Hon. Martin R. Barash

Debtor's Counsel: Jonathan Hildalgo, Esq.
                  LAW OFFICES OF JONATHAN HIDALGO
                  619 Souht Olive St Ste 400
                  Los Angeles, CA 90014
                  Tel: 562-417-5829
                  Email: blaw.jh@gmail.com

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Jorge Gonzalez, member.

A full-text copy of the petition containing, among other items, a
list of the Debtor's two unsecured creditors is available for free
at:

                       http://bankrupt.com/misc/cacb18-11258.pdf


MCHYL ENTERPRISES: Ordered to File Plan, Disclosures Before July 19
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Michael G. Williamson of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Middle District of Florida directs MCHYL Enterprises, Inc., to file
a plan and disclosure statement on or before July 19, 2018.

The Disclosure Statement must, at the minimum, contain adequate
information pertaining to the Debtor in the following areas:

   (a) Pre- and post-petition financial performance;

   (b) Reasons for filing Chapter 11;

   (c) Steps taken by the Debtor since filing of the petition to
facilitate its reorganization;

   (d) Projections reflecting how the Plan will be feasibly
consummated;

   (e) A liquidation analysis; and

   (f) A discussion of the Federal tax consequences as described in
Section 1125(a)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code.

If the Debtor fails to file a Plan and Disclosure Statement by the
Filing Deadline, the Court will issue an order to Show Cause why
the case should not be dismissed or converted to a Chapter 7.

                    About MCHYL Enterprises

MCHYL Enterprises, Inc., is a privately-held company in Odessa,
Florida that provides printing and related support activities.
MCHYL Enterprises sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 18-01594) on March 1,
2018.  In its petition signed by Thomas A. McLaren, president and
chief executive officer, the Debtor disclosed $425,929 in assets
and $1.55 million in liabilities.


MICRO CONTRACT: New Plan to Pay Unsecureds 20% Over 7 Years
-----------------------------------------------------------
Micro Contract Manufacturing, Inc., filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Eastern District of New York an amended disclosure
statement explaining its chapter 11 plan of reorganization.

This latest filing discloses that the Debtor entered into an
agreement with its former landlord as it relates to its proof of
claim and resolves the issue of whether it is entitled to retain
the entire security deposit of $31,092.00 as a setoff against its
unsecured claim. The agreement provides a return to the Debtor of
$10,000 of the security deposit. This agreement was approved by the
Court.

Class V under the latest plan consists of the Allowed Unsecured or
Undisputed Claims of the remaining general unsecured creditors,
inclusive of the IRS, approximate $584,969. The creditors in this
class will be paid 20% of their allowed claims over a period of 7
years with distributions being made every month commencing one
month subsequent to the effective date. This class is impaired and
entitled to vote.

A full-text copy of the Latest Disclosure Statement is available
at:

    http://bankrupt.com/misc/nyeb8-17-71699-69.pdf

             About Micro Contract Manufacturing

Micro Contract Manufacturing, Inc., is a domestic corporation
existing under an by virtue of the laws of the State of New York
with its principal place of business located at 27E Industrial
Blvd., Medford, New York.  It is from this location that the
company conducts its manufacturing operations.

Micro Contract Manufacturing filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr.
E.D.N.Y. Case No. 17-71699) on March 23, 2017.  The petition was
signed by Thomas DeGasperi, president.  At the time of filing, the
Debtor estimated assets and liabilities to be between $1 million
and $10 million.

The case is assigned to Judge Robert E. Grossman.  

The Debtor's attorney is Harold M. Somer, Esq., at Harold M Somer,
P.C.

No trustee, examiner or official committee has been appointed in
the case.


MIDWEST PORTABLE: May 22 Amended Plan Outline Hearing
-----------------------------------------------------
Judge Basil H. Lorch III of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of Indiana is set to hold a hearing on May 22,
2018, at 10:30 a.m., to consider the amended disclosure statement
filed Midwest Portable Machine, Inc., on April 18, 2018.

Any objection to the disclosure statement must be filed and served
at least 5 days prior to the hearing date.

                  About Midwest Portable Machine

Midwest Portable Machine, Inc., is an Indiana Corporation organized
under the laws of the State of Indiana and conducting business
within the State of Indiana at its plant in Booneville, Indiana.
Its business relates to repairing heavy equipment and machinery
primarily for the coal industry.

Midwest Portable Machine, Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
protection (Bankr. S.D. Ind. Case No. 17-70587) on June 13, 2017.
John Andrew Goodridge, Esq., who has an office in Evansville,
Indiana, serves as the Debtor's bankruptcy counsel.
No committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in the case.


MILLER'S ALE: Moody's Assigns 'B3' Rating to $285MM Secured Loans
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service assigned a B3 rating to Miller's Ale
House, Inc.'s ("Miller's") proposed $250 million guaranteed senior
secured term loan B and $35 million guaranteed senior secured
revolver. In addition, Moody's assigned Miller's a B3 Corporate
Family Rating (CFR) and B3-PD Probability of Default Rating (PDR).
The outlook is stable.

Proceeds from the proposed $250 million term loan will be used to
repay approximately $195 million of outstanding debt as well as
fund a $51 million cash dividend to shareholders. Ratings are
subject to receipt and review of final documentation.

"The B3 CFR reflects Miller's weak interest coverage and high
leverage as a result of the proposed financing as well as its
modest scale and geographic concentration." stated Bill Fahy,
Moody's Senior Credit Officer. Pro forma leverage will increase to
around 6.2 times for the twelve month period ending December 31,
2017. "However, the ratings also recognize Miller's reasonable
level of brand awareness evidenced in part by its high average
restaurant volumes, good day-part distribution and product mix with
a relatively high alcohol percentage, good liquidity and our
expectation that credit metrics will gradually improve" stated
Fahy.

Assignments:

Issuer: Miller's Ale House, Inc

Probability of Default Rating, Assigned B3-PD

Corporate Family Rating, Assigned B3

Gtd Senior Secured Term Loan B, Assigned B3(LGD3)

Gtd Senior Secured Revolving Credit Facility, Assigned B3(LGD3)

Outlook Actions:

Issuer: Miller's Ale House, Inc

Outlook, Assigned Stable

RATINGS RATIONALE

Miller's (B3 stable) is constrained by its weak interest coverage
and high leverage, particularly in relation to its modest scale in
regards to number of restaurants, and high level of geographic
concentration in Florida. The company benefits from its reasonable
level of brand awareness evidenced by its high average restaurant
volumes, good day-part distribution and product mix and good
liquidity.

The stable outlook reflects Moody's view that debt protection
metrics will improve over the intermediate term as new restaurants
are added and management continues to focus on reducing operating
costs. The outlook also anticipates the company will maintain good
liquidity.

Factors that could result in an upgrade inlcude a measured progress
toward greater diversification outside of Florida as well as debt
to EBITDA below 5.5 times and EBIT coverage of gross interest of
over 1.5 on a sustained basis. An upgrade would also require good
liquidity.

A downgrade could occur if debt to EBITDA increased above 6.5 times
or EBIT to interest coverage was below 1.1 time on a sustained
basis. A deterioration in liquidity could also result in a
downgrade.

The B3 rating on the guaranteed senior secured $35 million revolver
and $250 million term loan, the same as the CFR, reflects the
majority position within Miller's capital structure that this debt
represents as well as the limited amount of other debt and non-debt
liabilities that are junior to the bank facility.

Miller's Ale House, with headquarters in Orlando, Florida, owns and
operates 84 casual dining restaurants in Florida and Eastern US.
Annual net revenues are approximately $400 million. Millers is
owned by affiliates of Roark Capital.

The principal methodology used in these ratings was Restaurant
Industry published in January 2018.


MMI HOLDINGS: Bank Debt Trades at 22% Off
-----------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which MMI Holdings Ltd.
is a borrower traded in the secondary market at 77.75
cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4, 2018,
according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM Pricing.
This represents an increase of 1.58 percentage points from the
previous week. MMI Holdings pays 775 basis points above LIBOR to
borrow under the $400 million facility. The bank loan matures on
September 30, 2025. Moody's rates the loan 'Caa2' and Standard &
Poor's gave a 'CCC' rating to the loan. The loan is one of the
biggest gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted syndicated loans
with five or more bids in secondary trading for the week ended
Friday, May 4.


MODERN VIDEOFILM: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
---------------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Modern VideoFilm, Inc.
        c/o Grobstein Teeple, LLP
        One Ventura Plaza, Suite 250
        Irvine, CA 92618

Business Description: Modern VideoFilm is a feature film and
                      television post-production company based in
                      California.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: May 16, 2018

Case No.: 18-11792

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Central District of California (Santa Ana)

Judge: Hon. Mark S Wallace

Debtor's Counsel: Garrick A Hollander, Esq.
                  WINTHROP COUCHOT GOLUBOW HOLLANDER, LLP
                  1301 Dove Street, Suite 500
                  Newport Beach, CA 92660
                  Tel: 949-720-4150
                  Fax: 949-720-4111
                  Email: ghollander@wcghlaw.com

Debtor's
Chief
Restructuring
Officer:          Howard Grobstein
                  GROBSTEIN TEEPLE LLP

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $50 million to $100 million

The petition was signed by Howard Grobstein, chief restructuring
officer.

A full-text copy of the petition containing, among other items, a
list of the Debtor's 20 largest unsecured creditors is available
for free at: http://bankrupt.com/misc/cacb18-11792.pdf


MOXIE LIBERTY: Bank Debt Trades at 3% Off
-----------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which Moxie Liberty LLC
is a borrower traded in the secondary market at 96.55
cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4, 2018,
according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM Pricing.
This represents an increase of 1.29 percentage points from the
previous week. Moxie Liberty pays 325 basis points above LIBOR to
borrow under the $2.049 billion facility. The bank loan matures on
August 16, 2023. Moody's rates the loan 'B2' and Standard & Poor's
gave a 'B' rating to the loan. The loan is one of the biggest
gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted syndicated loans with
five or more bids in secondary trading for the week ended Friday,
May 4.


MUSCLEPHARM CORP: Posts $2.3 Million Net Loss in First Quarter
--------------------------------------------------------------
MusclePharm Corporation reports financial results for the three
months ended March 31, 2018 and provides a business update.

First quarter 2018 financial highlights include the following (all
comparisons are with the fourth quarter of 2017):

  * Revenue was $26.5 million, an increase of 4% from $25.6
    million

  * Operating loss was $926,000, a decrease of 1% from $936,000

  * Net loss was $2.3 million, a decrease of 8% from $2.5 million

  * Non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA was $85,000 compared with $1.2
    million

  * Cash and equivalents were $5.1 million as of March 31, 2018

"Today, I'm excited to report on several major customer wins with
recent commitments at national retail partners including Walmart
Canada, Circle K, Wegmans, Giant Eagle and Gateway Newstands," said
Ryan Drexler, chairman, president and CEO of MusclePharm. "These
commitments are indicative of our strategic intent to diversify our
customer base and effectively capitalize on a meaningful shift that
is happening in sports nutrition.  We expect to begin generating
revenues from these new customers in the second half of 2018.
"Q1 represents our second consecutive quarter of sequential revenue
growth and narrowed operating loss, demonstrating progress toward
our goal of sustained, profitable growth.  We continue to manage
costs and expenses diligently.  To further illustrate, our gross
margin for 1Q 2018 improved to 31% from 25% for the prior-year
period.

"Furthermore, we're experiencing solid growth via the strategic
ecommerce and international channels, and are continuing to invest
in the relationships with our largest customers," he added.  "We
remain committed to reinvigorating relationships with legacy
customers by working to understand their needs and to provide
suitable product solutions, while also seeking to expand business
through the continuing development of our Natural Series product
line."

                   First Quarter Financial Results

Net revenue for the first quarter of 2018 was $26.5 million, a 2%
increase from $26.0 million for the first quarter of 2017.  The
increase was primarily due to higher international sales, as well
as a decrease in discounts and sales allowances reflecting a shift
away from traditional discounts and allowances and toward
partnership advertising and marketing efforts with key customers.

Gross profit margin for the first quarter of 2018 was 31%, an
improvement from 25% for the first quarter of 2017.  Gross profit
margin was positively impacted by the decrease in traditional
discounts and sales allowances noted above, combined with improved
per unit pricing and lower whey protein costs.

Advertising and promotion expenses for the first quarter of 2018
were $3.7 million compared with $1.9 million for the first quarter
of 2017, with the increase primarily related to costs associated
with in-store support and advertising initiatives with key partners
as the Company continues to invest in the relationships with its
largest customers.  Salaries and benefits expenses for the first
quarter of 2018 were $2.2 million, down 33% from $3.3 million for
the first quarter of 2017, with the decrease due primarily to lower
stock-based compensation expense and a reduction in headcount.
Selling, general and administrative expenses for the first quarter
of 2018 were $2.5 million, down 14% from $2.9 million for the first
quarter of 2017, with the decrease related to lower office and
freight expenses, lower depreciation and amortization, and lower
board of directors and information technology expenses.  Research
and development expenses were $212,000 and $137,000 for the first
quarters of 2018 and 2017, respectively.  Professional fees for the
first quarter of 2018 of $572,000 declined from $882,000 for the
prior-year period, due mainly to lower legal fees.

The Company did not record a gain on settlement of accounts payable
for the first quarter of 2018 compared with a gain of $449,000 for
the first quarter of 2017.  Other expense, net, for the first
quarter of 2018 was $1.3 million compared with $978,000 for the
first quarter of 2017, with the increase primarily due to
interest-related expenses and the amortization of debt discount.

Net loss for the first quarter of 2018 was $2.3 million, or $0.16
per share, compared with a net loss of $3.1 million, or $0.23 per
share, for the first quarter of 2017.  Adjusted EBITDA for the
first quarter of 2018 was $85,000, compared with adjusted EBITDA
loss of $1.0 million for the first quarter of 2017, with the
improvement primarily related to operating results.

Cash and cash equivalents as of March 31, 2018 were $5.1 million
compared with $6.2 million as of Dec. 31, 2017.  The Company used
$232,000 of cash to fund operations during the first quarter of
2018, an improvement compared with $1.0 million of cash used during
the first quarter of 2017.

           First Quarter and Recent Business Highlights

  * Received distribution commitments from several national
    retailers including Walmart Canada, Circle K, Wegmans, Giant
    Eagle and Gateway Newstands

  * Received notification from Shoppers Drug Mart -- Canada's
    largest drugstore chain -- that the number of points of
    distribution within the chain will increase

  * Conducted qualitative focus group research to more deeply
    understand the needs and perceptions of core consumer segments

  * Participated in a major Costco promotion, which produced
    favorable results and led to strong post-promotional
    velocities

  * Invested in advertising to expand our Amazon presence and
    optimize placement within the Amazon search ecosystem

  * Showcased the MP Natural Series product line at the 83rd
    Annual Natural Products Expo in Anaheim, the world's largest
    natural, organic and health products event

  * Hosted a Supplier Led Innovation Summit, whereby more than a
    half-dozen co-manufacturers were invited to present new
    product concepts and prototypes

A full-text copy of the press release is available for free at:

                     https://is.gd/AM0ug5

                       About MusclePharm

Headquartered in Denver, Colorado, MusclePharm Corporation
(OTCQB:MSLP) -- http://www.muslepharm.com/-- develops,
manufactures, markets and distributes branded nutritional
supplements.  Its portfolio of recognized brands includes
MusclePharm Sport Series, Essential Series and FitMiss, as well as
Natural Series, which was launched in 2017.  These products are
available in more than 100 countries worldwide.  MusclePharm is an
innovator in the sports nutrition industry with clinically proven
supplements that are developed through a six-stage research process
utilizing the expertise of leading nutritional scientists,
physicians and universities.

MusclePharm incurred a net loss of $10.97 million in 2017 and a
net loss of $3.47 million in 2016.  As of Dec. 31, 2017,
MusclePharm had $33.82 million in total assets, $46.36 million in
total liabilities and a total stockholders' deficit of $12.53
million.


NATURE'S BOUNTY: Bank Debt Trades at 16% Off
--------------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which Nature's Bounty is
a borrower traded in the secondary market at 84.39
cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4, 2018,
according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM Pricing.
This represents an increase of 1.33 percentage points from the
previous week. Nature's Bounty pays 475 basis points above LIBOR to
borrow under the $1.5 billion facility. The bank loan matures on
December 10, 2022. Moody's rates the loan 'B2' and Standard &
Poor's gave a 'B-' rating to the loan. The loan is one of the
biggest gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted syndicated loans
with five or more bids in secondary trading for the week ended
Friday, May 4.


NEXION HEALTH: Plan to Wind Up Bogata Operations
------------------------------------------------
Nexion Health at Lancaster, Inc., Nexion Health at Garland, Inc.,
Nexion Health at McKinney, Inc. and Nexion Health at Bogata, Inc.,
filed a plan of reorganization and accompanying disclosure
statement that seek to successfully reorganize the Lancaster,
Garland, and McKinney Debtors, while winding up the operations of
the Bogata Debtor following the Bogata Transition.

The execution and consummation of the Plan will be facilitated by
the use of the Debtors' collective cash on hand, and back-stopped
by a $250,000 cash commitment from Nexion Health Management, Inc.
to fund any potential shortfall of distributions due under the
Plan.  Aside from the Bogata Debtor, the remaining Debtors intend
to maintain operations, assume pertinent executory contracts, and
pay substantially all pre-petition debts.

General Unsecured Creditors will be paid in full on the later of
the Effective Date of the Plan, or the date on which the claim in
question is deemed Allowed.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement is available at:

          http://bankrupt.com/misc/txnb17-34025-137.pdf

                        About Nexion Health

Nexion Health operates skilled nursing & rehabilitation facilities
in Colorado, Louisiana, and Texas dedicated to providing quality
and compassionate nursing care.  It also offers comprehensive
rehabilitation services.

Nexion Health at Lancaster, Inc. and its debtor-affiliates filed
separate Chapter 11 bankruptcy petitions: Nexion Health at
Lancaster, Inc. (Bankr. N.D. Tex. Case No. 17-34025); Nexion Health
at Garland, Inc. (Bankr. N.D. Tex. Case No. 17-34028); Nexion
Health at McKinney, Inc. (Bankr. N.D. Tex. Case No. 17-34031); and
Nexion Health at Bogata, Inc. (Bankr. N.D. Tex. Case No. 17-34034)
on October 30, 2017. The petition was signed by Francis P. Kirley,
president and chief executive officer.

The Hon. Harlin DeWayne Hale presides over the case. Joseph M.
Coleman, Esq. at Kane Russell Coleman Logan PC represents the
Debtor as counsel.

At the time of filing, the Debtors estimate $500,000 to $1 million
in assets and $1 million to $10 million in liabilities.


NORTHERN OIL: Moody's Hikes 'Caa1' Corp. Family Rating
------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service upgraded Northern Oil and Gas, Inc.'s
(NOG) Corporate Family Rating (CFR) to Caa1 from Caa2 and
Probability of Default Rating (PDR) to Caa1-PD/LD from Caa2-PD.
Moody's affirmed the Caa3 rating on the senior unsecured notes and
SGL-3 Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating. The rating outlook is
stable.

NOG recently completed the exchange of $497 million of its 8% notes
due 2020 for $344 million of new second lien secured notes due 2023
(unrated) and $155 million of common stock. Moody's considers the
transaction, which extends the maturity of the debt and exchanges
debt for equity to be a distressed exchange, which is a default
under Moody's definition of default. Moody's appended the PDR with
an "/LD" designation indicating a limited default, which will be
removed after three business days.

"NOG's notes exchange and equity raise is a credit positive
resulting in lower debt, an improved maturity profile and increased
liquidity," stated James Wilkins, Moody's Vice President. "This
will allow the company to outspend its operating cash flows as it
increases its drilling and completion expenditures and potentially
engages in additional modest-sized acquisitions."

The following summarizes the ratings activity.

Issuer: Northern Oil and Gas, Inc.

Ratings upgraded:

Corporate Family Rating, Upgraded to Caa1 from Caa2

Probability of Default Rating, Upgraded to Caa1-PD/LD from Caa2-PD

Ratings affirmed:

Senior Unsecured Notes, Affirmed Caa3 (LGD5) from (LGD4)

Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating, Affirmed SGL-3

Outlook:

Outlook, Remains Stable

RATINGS RATIONALE

The upgrade of NOG's CFR to Caa1 reflects its improved leverage
profile, reduced refinancing risk associated with the remaining
$203 million of notes due June 2020, and Moody's expectation that
the company will grow production and operating cash flows. The
notes exchange eliminated $152 million of debt, leaving the company
with $908 million balance sheet debt comprised of $203 million of
notes due June 1, 2020, $360 million of term loans and $344 million
of second lien secured notes due 2023. The company also had a cash
balance in excess of $260 million following the transactions,
giving it ample resources to pursue capital expenditures and
modest-sized acquisitions.

NOG's Caa1 CFR reflects its high leverage, modest asset coverage of
debt, limited scale and Moody's expectation that NOG's cash flows
will modestly improve into mid-2019. Despite the improved oil price
environment, Moody's expects the company to generate negative free
cash flow in 2018 that will be partially funded by existing cash
balances and leave debt balances unchanged. However, NOG's
increased capital expenditures will result in higher production
volumes and cash flows. NOG hedges expected oil production three
years in the future as required under its term loan credit
agreement, which will limit the volatility in its revenue, as well
as limit the benefit NOG realizes from the improvement in oil
prices. Notwithstanding its oil-weighted production mix, a heavy
interest burden and basis differentials are a drag on NOG's
profits. Moody's projects NOG's retained cash flow to debt ratio
will improve to around 15% in 2018, assuming WTI crude oil prices
of $55/bbl. Moody's estimates that the PV-10 value of the company's
reserves is now greater than its net debt. The rating is supported
by NOG's strong acreage position, considerable well diversity for a
company of its size and the diversity and operational track record
of its operating partners.

The SGL-3 Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating reflects adequate
liquidity, supported by cash flow from operations, cash balances
and availability under a delayed draw term loan facility. The
company has $40 million available under its committed $100 million
delayed-draw term loan facility available until May 2019 ($60
million was drawn at the time the debt exchange was completed). NOG
had $89 million of cash as of March 31, 2018, but the balance grew
to more than $260 million in mid-May after the company raised $93
million of gross proceeds through an equity issuance in April 2018,
as well as $52 million realized from additional shares sold through
subscription agreements and $60 million borrowed under the delayed
draw term loan when the notes exchange offer closed. Moody's
expects the cash balance will be sufficient to fund continued
negative free cash flow through 2019, as NOG operates under an
increased drilling program. NOG's first lien senior secured term
loan facility agreement has three financial covenants: a minimum
PDP coverage ratio (PDP PV-10 plus cash to secured debt) of 1.3x; a
maximum net secured debt to EBITDAX ratio of 3.75x; and a minimum
liquidity requirement of $20 million (consisting of cash and
undrawn delayed draw commitments). Moody's expects that NOG will
maintain compliance with the covenants through mid-2019, although
with a limited cushion. The company's next debt maturity is June 1,
2020, when the remaining $203 million of senior notes that did not
participate in the debt exchange mature. The $360 million of term
loans mature in November 2022, but have a springing maturity of
March 1, 2020, if more than $30 million principal amount of the
notes due June 1, 2020, are outstanding. Substantially all of the
company's assets are pledged as security under the term loan
facility, which limits the extent to which asset sales could
provide a source of additional liquidity, if needed.

NOG's $203 million of senior unsecured notes are rated Caa3, two
notches below the company's Caa1 CFR, consistent with Moody's Loss
Given Default Methodology, reflecting the more senior priority
claim on assets of the secured debt that consists of $360 million
of first lien secured term loans (unrated) and the $344 million
second lien secured notes (unrated). The rating on the senior
unsecured notes was not upgraded in line with the CFR upgrade as a
result of the addition to the capital structure of the second lien
notes, which have a more senior priority claim on assets.

The stable outlook reflects Moody's expectation that NOG will grow
its production and reduce leverage through improving its
profitability. The ratings could be upgraded if NOG generates
retained cash flow to debt in excess of 15%, makes progress towards
refinancing or repaying the remaining notes due 2020 and maintains
adequate liquidity. A downgrade may be considered if liquidity
deteriorates or interest coverage declines below 1.5x.

The principal methodology used in these ratings was Independent
Exploration and Production Industry published in May 2017.

Northern Oil and Gas, Inc., based in Minnetonka, Minnesota, owns
non-operated working interests in oil and gas wells and acreage
primarily in the Bakken and Three Forks formations within the
Williston Basin in North Dakota and Montana.


NORTHERN OIL: S&P Junks CCR to 'SD' on Distressed Note Exchange
---------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings lowered its corporate credit rating on Northern
Oil & Gas Inc. to 'SD' (selective default) from 'CC'. At the same
time, S&P lowered the issue-level rating on the company's senior
unsecured debt to 'D' from 'CC'.

S&P will review its recovery ratings on the company's debt,
including recovery ratings, when it views the likelihood of further
exchanges to be low.  

The downgrade follows the announcement by Northern Oil & Gas that
it has completed its exchange, which includes the exchange of about
$500 million in unsecured debt for new second-lien secured notes
and equity. S&P views the exchange as distressed given that the
maturity was extended on the new second-lien notes from what was
originally promised on the senior unsecured notes.



NORTHFIELD 30: Case Summary & 2 Unsecured Creditors
---------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Northfield 30 Corp.
        230 Tompkins Ave
        Brooklyn, NY 11216-1024

Business Description: Northfield 30 Corp. is in the business of
                      owning a single unit rental property located
                      at 230 Tompkins Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11216.
                      The Property, valued by the Company at
                      $800,000, is currently vacant and has
                      been vandalized and damaged.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: May 15, 2018

Case No.: 18-42802

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Eastern District of New York (Brooklyn)

Judge: Hon. Nancy Hershey Lord

Debtor's Counsel: Eric H Horn, Esq.
                  VOGEL BACH & HORN, LLP
                  30 Broad Street, 14th Floor
                  New York, NY 10004
                  Tel: 212-242-8350
                  Fax: 646-607-2075
                  Email: ehorn@vogelbachpc.com

Total Assets: $800,000

Total Liabilities: $743,117

The petition was signed by Ilan Avitsedek, owner.

A full-text copy of the petition containing, among other items, a
list of the Debtor's two unsecured creditors is available for free
at:

                 http://bankrupt.com/misc/nyeb18-42802.pdf


NOVABAY PHARMACEUTICALS: Incurs $2.2-Mil. Net Loss in 1st Quarter
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Novabay Pharmaceuticals, Inc., filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission its Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q reporting a
net loss and comprehensive loss of $2.15 million on $2.94 million
of net total sales for the three months ended March 31, 2018,
compared to a net loss and comprehensive loss of $4.01 million on
$3.70 million of net total sales for the three months ended March
31, 2017.

As of March 31, 2018, Novabay had $13.82 million in total assets,
$4.95 million in total liabilities and $8.87 million in total
stockholders' equity.

As of March 31, 2018, the Company's cash and cash equivalents were
$8.3 million, compared to $3.2 million as of Dec. 31, 2017.  The
Company has sustained operating losses for the majority of its
corporate history and expects that its 2018 expenses will exceed
its 2018 revenues, as it continues to invest in our Avenova
commercialization efforts.  The Company expects to continue
incurring operating losses and negative cash flows until revenues
reach a level sufficient to support ongoing growth and operations.
The Company said that its planned operations raise substantial
doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern.

The Company's liquidity needs will be largely determined by the
success of operations in regard to the commercialization of
Avenova.  The Company's plans to alleviate the doubt regarding its
ability to continue as a going concern, which are being implemented
to mitigate these conditions, primarily include its ability to
control the timing and spending on its sales and marketing programs
and raising additional funds through equity financings.  According
to the Company, it also may consider other plans to fund operations
including: (1) out-licensing rights to certain of its products or
product candidates, pursuant to which the Company would receive
cash milestones or an upfront fee; (2) raising additional capital
through debt financings or from other sources; (3) reducing
spending on one or more of its sales and marketing programs; and/or
(4) restructuring operations to change its overhead structure.  The
Company may issue securities, including common stock and warrants
through private placement transactions or registered public
offerings, which would require the filing of a Form S-1 or Form S-3
registration statement with the SEC.  The Company's future
liquidity needs, and ability to address those needs, will largely
be determined by the success of the commercialization of Avenova.

A full-text copy of the Form 10-Q is available for free at:

                      https://is.gd/cW823f

                 About NovaBay Pharmaceuticals

Based in Emeryville, California, NovaBay Pharmaceuticals --
http://www.novabay.com/-- is a medical device company
predominately focused on eye care.  The Company is currently
focused primarily on commercializing Avenova, a prescription
product sold in the United States for cleansing and removing
foreign material including microorganisms and debris from skin
around the eye, including the eyelid.

Novabay reported a net loss and comprehensive loss of $7.40 million
in 2017, a net loss and comprehensive loss of $13.15 million in
2016, and a net loss and comprehensive loss of $18.97 million in
2015.  As of Dec. 31, 2017, Novabay had $10.07 million in total
assets, $7.48 million in total liabilities, and $2.59 million in
total stockholders' equity.

As of Dec. 31, 2017, the Company's cash and cash equivalents were
$3.2 million, compared to $9.5 million as of Dec. 31, 2016.  The
Company has sustained operating losses for most of its corporate
history and expects to continue incurring operating losses and
negative cash flows until revenues reach a level sufficient to
support ongoing growth and operations.


OJER TELEKOMUNIKASYON: Bank Debt Trades at 6% Off
-------------------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which Ojer
Telekomunikasyon AS is a borrower traded in the secondary market at
94.10 cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4,
2018, according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM
Pricing. This represents an increase of 1.98 percentage points from
the previous week. Ojer Telekomunikasyon pays 300 basis points
above LIBOR to borrow under the $800 million facility. The bank
loan matures on April 12, 2024. Moody's rates the loan 'Ba2' and
Standard & Poor's gave a 'BB' rating to the loan. The loan is one
of the biggest gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted
syndicated loans with five or more bids in secondary trading for
the week ended Friday, May 4.

Ojer Telekomunikasyon A.S. provides telecommunication services in
Turkey. The company offers fixed-line and mobile communications,
and Internet access services.


OLIVABEL LLC: Case Summary & 17 Unsecured Creditors
---------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Olivabel LLC
        432 Captain Circle
        Destin, FL 32541

Business Description: Founded in 2010, Olivabel LLC is
                      an e-commerce company based in Destin,
                      Florida.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: May 14, 2018

Case No.: 18-30459

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Northern District of Florida (Pensacola)

Judge: Hon. Jerry C. Oldshue Jr.

Debtor's Counsel: Robert C. Bruner, Esq.
                  2810 Remington Green Circle
                  Tallahassee, FL 32308
                  Tel: 850-385-0342
                  Fax: 850-270-2441
                  Email: rbruner@brunerwright.com

                    - and -

                  Byron Wright, III, Esq.
                  BRUNER WRIGHT, P.A.
                  2810 Remington Green Circle
                  Tallahassee, FL 32308
                  Tel: 850-385-0342
                  Email: twright@brunerwright.com
                         rbruner@brunerwright.com

Estimated Assets: $0 to $50,000

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Christopher Unangst, owner.

A full-text copy of the petition containing, among other items, a
list of the Debtor's 17 unsecured creditors is available for free
at:

                          
http://bankrupt.com/misc/flnb18-30459.pdf


OREXIGEN THERAPEUTICS: June 26 Auction of All Assets Set
--------------------------------------------------------
Orexigen Therapeutics, Inc., filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court
for the District of Delaware to authorize a notice of its sale of
substantially all assets to Nalpropion Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
subject to overbid.

On March 16, 2018, the Debtor filed the Sale Motion asking entry of
two orders, in stages: (i) first, the Bidding Procedures Order (a)
approving the Bidding Procedures Relief, and (ii) second, the Sale
Order authorizing the Sale of the Purchased Assets.

On April 23, 2018, the Court entered the Bidding Procedures Order,
thereby approving the Bidding Procedures Relief and designating
Nalpropion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. as the Stalking Horse Bidder
pursuant to the Stalking Horse Bidder Purchase Agreement dated
April 23, 2018.  In order for a Potential Bidder's bid to be
considered to participate in the Auction, it must comply with the
Bidding Procedures, including that its bid must be delivered, so as
to be received on or before 4:00 p.m. (ET), on June 21, 2018.  In
order for Potential Bidders to obtain access to the Debtor's
dataroom, each Potential Bidder must first sign and deliver a
confidentiality agreement to the Debtor and provide certain
financial data, which must be acceptable to the Debtor.

The Sale Hearing is scheduled for June 28, 2018, at 10:00 a.m.
(ET).  The Sale Hearing is being held to approve the highest or
otherwise best offer received for the Purchased Assets at the
Auction, which, if any, will take place at the offices of Hogan
Lovells US, LLP, 875 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10022 on June 26,
2018, commencing at 10:00 a.m. (ET).  The Sale Hearing may be
adjourned or rescheduled with prior notice filed on the docket of
the Debtor's Case or without prior notice by an announcement of the
adjourned date at the Sale Hearing.  The closing on the Sale with
the Successful Bidder will occur not later than July 13, 2018.

The Sale Objection Deadline is June 11, 2018 at 4:00 p.m. (ET).

The Sale Order, if approved, will authorize the assumption and
assignment of the Transferred Contracts of the Debtor and the
rejection by the Debtor of certain other designated executory
contracts and unexpired leases.  In accordance with the Bidding
Procedures Order, individual notices setting forth the specific
Transferred Contracts to be assumed by the Debtor and assigned to
the Successful Bidder, or sold and transferred to the Successful
Bidder, and the proposed Cure Amounts for such contracts will be
given to all counterparties to the Transferred Contracts.  Such
counterparties will be given the opportunity to object to the
assumption and assignment, or sale and transfer, of a Transferred
Contract and the proposed Cure Amount.

The Notice is subject to the full terms and conditions of the
Bidding Procedures and the Bidding Procedures Order, which will
control in the event of any conflict.

                  About Orexigen Therapeutics

Based in La Jolla, California, Orexigen Therapeutics, Inc. --
http://www.orexigen.com/-- is a biopharmaceutical company focused
on the treatment of weight loss and obesity.  It is a publicly
traded company with its shares listed on The NASDAQ Global Select
Market under the ticker symbol "OREX".  The company has 111
employees in the U.S.
                  
Orexigen Therapeutics sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Del. Case No. 18-10518) on March 12,
2018.  In its petition signed by Michael A. Narachi, president and
CEO, the Debtor disclosed $265.1 million in assets and $226.4
million in liabilities.

Judge Kevin Gross presides over the cases.

The Debtor tapped Hogan Lovells US LLP as bankruptcy counsel;
Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell LLP as Delaware counsel; Ernst &
Young LLP as financial advisor; Perella Weinberg Partners as
investment banker; and Kurtzman Carson Consultants LLC as claims
and noticing agent.

Andrew R. Vara, Acting U.S. Trustee for Region 3, appointed three
creditors to serve on the official committee of unsecured
creditors.


ORTHO-CLINICAL DIAGNOSTICS: S&P Rates Secured Credit Facility 'B-'
------------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings assigned its 'B-' issue-level rating to the
proposed senior secured credit facility co-issued by Ortho-Clinical
Diagnostics S.A. and Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics Inc., two
subsidiaries of parent company Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics Bermuda
Co. Ltd. (Ortho-Clinical) The credit facility includes a $2.325
billion senior secured term loan maturing in 2025 and a $350
million revolving credit facility maturing in 2023. Proceeds will
be used to refinance Ortho-Clinical's existing term loan and
revolver.

The recovery rating on the proposed senior secured facility is '3',
reflecting our expectation for meaningful (50%-70%; rounded
estimate: 65%) recovery in the event of payment default. Our 'CCC'
issue-level rating on the company's senior unsecured debt is
unchanged. The recovery rating on this debt remains '6', reflecting
our expectation for negligible (0%-10%, rounded estimate: 5%)
recovery in the event of a payment default.

S&P said, "Our 'B-' corporate credit rating on parent
Ortho-Clinical continues to reflect our expectation that the
company's leverage will improve to 7.7x in 2018 from 8.0x in 2017
and discretionary cash flow generation will improve to a $60
million in 2018 from a $70 million deficit in 2017, as the
separation costs and transition capital expenditures roll off and
working capital management for the recently integrated
international operations becomes more efficient.

"The rating also continues to reflect our view that the company
operates in a very mature sector with modest growth prospects and
elevated pricing pressures. These weaknesses are partially offset
by Ortho-Clinical's significant scale and market presence in the in
vitro diagnostics market and its strong revenue visibility because
of significant consumable sales.

"The positive outlook reflects the prospect that Ortho-Clinical's
credit measures will further strengthen in 2018 as the company
starts its first full year as a stand-alone entity. At the same
time, we note the risk that the improvement in 2018 credit measures
may be more modest than expected, given the magnitude of the
projected turnaround, and we would like to see a sustained track
record of operating improvement before considering an upgrade."

RECOVERY ANALYSIS

Key analytical factors:

-- S&P said, "Our simulated default scenario contemplates a
default occurring in 2020 stemming from increased competition and a
weak operating performance. We estimate that if EBITDA declines to
about $303 million, Ortho-Clinical would be unable to service its
debt and fund nondiscretionary capital expenditures."

-- S&P said, "We believe the company would reorganize as a going
concern in the event of default because of its established customer
base and because a high percentage of recurring revenues come from
consumables. We believe lenders would achieve greater recovery
value through reorganization, rather than a liquidation of the
business.

-- S&P said, "Consequently, we used an enterprise value
methodology to gauge recovery prospects, applying a 6.5x multiple
to estimated EBITDA at emergence. We use a 6.5x multiple for
Ortho-Clinical, in contrast to a 6.0x multiple we use for most
medical equipment companies, reflecting a higher level of revenue
recurrence and visibility demonstrated by the life sciences
companies."

Simplified waterfall:

-- EBITDA at emergence: $303 million
-- EBITDA multiple: 6.5x
-- Gross recovery value: $1,969 million
-- Net recovery value (after 5% administrative costs): $1,871
million
-- Valuation split in % (obligors/nonobligors): 83/17
-- Estimated priority claims: $76 mil.
-- Value available to first-lien debt claims: $1,684 million
-- Secured first-lien debt claims: $2,538 million
    --Recovery expectations: 50%-70%; rounded estimate: 65%
-- Total value available to unsecured claims: $111 million
-- Senior unsecured debt/pari passu unsecured claims: $2,197
million
    --Recovery expectations: 0%-10%; rounded estimate: 5%
All debt amounts include six months of prepetition interest.

  RATINGS LIST

  Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics Bermuda Co. Ltd.
   Corporate Credit Rating                      B-/Positive/--

  New Ratings

  Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics Inc.
  Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics S.A.
   Senior Secured Credit Facility
    $2.325 bil. Term Loan Due 2025              B-
     Recovery Rating                            3 (55%)
    $350 mil. Revolving Credit Fac. Due 2023    B-
     Recovery Rating                            3 (55%)


OUTBACK DEVELOPMENT: June 20 Hearing on Plan and Disclosures
------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Cynthia A. Norton of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Western District of Missouri conditionally approved Outback
Development, LLC's disclosure statement, dated April 5, 2018, to
accompany its chapter 11 plan.

June 20, 2018 at 11:00 a.m. is fixed for the hearing on final
approval of the disclosure statement and for the hearing on
confirmation of the plan.

June 5, 2018 at 11:00 a.m. by telephone is the date for status
hearing to discuss any confirmation issues that should arise.

May 29, 2018 is the deadline for:

  a. Filing with the Court objections to the disclosure statement
or plan confirmation; and

  b. Submitting to counsel for the plan proponent ballots accepting
or rejecting the plan.

The Troubled Company Reporter previously reported that under the
plan, creditors holding Class 3 general unsecured claims will be
paid a pro rata share of all remaining cash generated by the sale
of the company's assets after payment of administrative costs,
secured claims and priority claims.  No interest will be paid to
unsecured creditors.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement is available for free
at:

            http://bankrupt.com/misc/mowb17-61215-61.pdf

                     About Outback Development

Based in Branson, Missouri, Outback Development, LLC, is a
privately-held company engaged in real estate development and
management.  Outback Development sought protection under Chapter 11
of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D. Mo. Case No. 17-61215) on Nov.
9, 2017.  Steve R. Wood, its managing member, signed the petition.
At the time of the filing, the Debtor estimated assets and
liabilities of $1 million to $10 million.  Judge Cynthia A. Norton
presides over the case.  David Schroeder Law Office, P.C., is the
Debtor's legal counsel.


OWENS & MINOR: Fitch Cuts IDR to 'B+' Following Halyard Deal
------------------------------------------------------------
Fitch Ratings has downgraded the long-term Issuer Default Rating
(IDR) of Owens & Minor, Inc. (OMI) to 'B+' from 'BB'. The rating
action resolves the Rating Watch Negative that examined the final
financing plan for OMI's recently completed acquisition of the S&IP
business of Halyard Health, Inc. and the outlook for OMI's core
business. The Rating Outlook is Stable.

Fitch has also assigned a new long-term IDR of 'B+' to O&M Halyard,
Inc. along with new 'BB-'/'RR3' senior secured ratings to new Term
Loans at O&M Halyard Inc. / Owens & Minor Distribution, Inc. /
Owens & Minor Medical, Inc. / Barista Acquisition I, LLC / Barista
Acquisition II, LLC.

KEY RATING DRIVERS

Steady Market Share Albeit with Customer and Supplier
Concentration: OMI holds a strong share of the steady market for
the distribution of medical-surgical (med-surg) products to U.S.
acute care providers. Fitch believes OMI's strategy, which is based
on organic and acquisition growth, positions it to grow modestly
over the forecast period through 2021. OMI's core med-surg business
is expected to experience weaker margins over the medium term
compared with the past several years particularly in light of
ongoing expansion initiatives among large integrated care delivery
networks (IDNs) in the U.S and the concentration of purchasing
power among group purchasing organizations (GPOs).

Competitive Environment; Shrinking Pricing and Purchasing Power
contribute to Weaker Operating Results: The med-surg supply
distribution industry in the United States and Europe is highly
competitive and characterized by pricing pressure, which
accelerated in 2017 and continues to persist in early 2018 creating
margin pressure. Fitch expects this margin pressure will continue
over the next several years. OMI competes with other national
distributors (for example, McKesson, Cardinal Health, Medline,
Inc.) and a number of regional and local distributors, as well as
customer self-distribution models and, to a lesser extent, certain
third-party logistics companies. OMI's success depends on its
ability to compete on price, product availability, delivery times
and ease of doing business while managing internal costs and
expenses.

Customer Concentration: OMI reported in its annual report on Form
10-K that its top-10 customers in the United States represented
approximately 23% of its consolidated net revenue. In addition, in
2017, approximately 78% of its consolidated net revenue was from
sales to member hospitals under contract with its largest GPOs:
Vizient, Premier and HPG. As a result of this concentration, OMI
could lose a significant amount of revenue as a result of the
termination of a key customer or GPO relationship. For example, in
April 2016, OMI announced the loss of its largest IDN customer,
which had accounted for approximately $525 million of revenue in
2015. The termination of its relationship with a given GPO would
not necessarily result in the loss of all of the member hospitals
as customers, but the termination of a GPO relationship, or a
significant individual healthcare provider customer relationship
could adversely affect OMI's debt servicing capabilities.

Supplier Concentration: In 2017, OMI reported that sales of
products of its 10-largest domestic suppliers accounted for
approximately 54% of consolidated net revenue. In the domestic
segment, sales of products supplied by Medtronic, Johnson & Johnson
and Becton Dickinson accounted for approximately 11%, 9% and 9% of
consolidated net revenue for 2017, respectively. OMI's ability to
sustain adequate operating earnings has depended, and will continue
to depend on its ability to obtain favorable terms and incentives
from suppliers, as well as suppliers continuing use of third-party
distributors to sell and deliver their products.

Entering Home Health Distribution: Fitch views the home health
segment that OMI has entered through the Byram acquisition as a
logical extension of its relationship with existing supplier
customers and should benefit from more favorable tailwinds and
customer concentration than in other post-acute settings.
Nonetheless, this segment has limited overlap with OMI's business,
and introduces new operational and financial risks; Fitch has not
incorporated any cost or revenue synergies into its projections
related to the Byram acquisition.

Acquisition of Halyard Health business: The acquisition of the
surgical and infection prevention business of Halyard Health offers
OMI the opportunity to increase its scale and profitability by
expanding the portfolio of products it can distribute through its
existing markets and to open new channels. However, the acquisition
materially raises the company's gross leverage and integration risk
at a time when the company is also attempting to attain improved
operational efficiencies of core businesses. Fitch has assumed that
revenues of the S&IP business will grow at 2% over the medium term
and OMI will realize synergies of approximately $50 million over
the same period.

Modest FCF Relative to Pro Forma Debt, Future Acquisitions in
Focus: Fitch expects OMI will maintain dividends at the current
rate and will eliminate share repurchases. Fitch views the Halyard
transaction as a shift in strategy to emphasize leveraged
acquisitions in response to accelerating pricing pressure; as a
result, Fitch believes OMI's credit profile carries significantly
higher financial risk. If OMI can successfully integrate its recent
acquisitions and stabilize the revenue and EBITDA margins in its
core business, Fitch believes the rating outlook could become
positive. However, if OMI cannot achieve either of the
aforementioned milestones, the Rating Outlook could be revised to
Negative or the ratings could be downgraded.

DERIVATION SUMMARY

OMI's 'B+' IDR/Outlook Stable reflects the company's recent
significant increase in financial risk following the leveraged
acquisitions of Byram Healthcare and the S&IP business of Halyard
Health, as well as heightened competition and accelerating pricing
pressure in its core business. These risks are somewhat offset by
OMI's good competitive position as a leading healthcare
distribution company and customer loyalty, albeit at low absolute
margins. In the past year, OMI has completed two acquisitions for
approximately $1.1 billion -- Byram Healthcare for approximately
$367 million and the Surgical and Infection Prevention business of
Halyard Health, Inc. for approximately $710 million. The result is
that OMI's leverage is expected to remain at or above 5x through
year-end 2019. The material increase in financial risk along with
continued pressure on revenue and margins supports an IDR of 'B+'.
OMI's smaller scale in an industry with high fixed costs, where
scale influences leverage with suppliers and customers, and
modestly higher leverage all lead Fitch to rate the company below
AmerisourceBergen Corp. (A-/ Stable), Cardinal Health, Inc.
(BBB+/Negative) and McKesson Corp. (BBB+/Stable). OMI competes with
other regional and local distributors, as well as customer
self-distribution models and, to a lesser extent, certain
third-party logistics companies. In contrast to other larger
distributors, Fitch considers OMI to be less diversified by
customer, revenues and suppliers.

KEY ASSUMPTIONS

Fitch's Key Assumptions Within Its Rating Case for the Issuer

  --Total revenues grow at a 2% CAGR through 2021, which is driven
principally by the contributions of Byram and Halyard.

  --Operating EBITDA margins increase to approximately 3.5% through
2021 consistent with the contributions from acquisitions and
improved cost management as well as a lower base of revenues.

  --The Byram acquisition generates annualized revenue growth of
approximately 4% with a high single digit margin.

  --The Halyard acquisition generates annualized revenue growth of
2% with a high single digit margin over the forecast period.

  --Fitch assumes OMI will fund the S&IP business acquisition with
new bank and term loan financing of approximately $750 million.

  --Fitch assumes OMI spends $55 million-$60 million on capex
annually through the forecast period. Fitch has also assumed OMI
continues to pay common dividends and ceases share repurchase
activity.

RATING SENSITIVITIES

Future Developments That May, Individually or Collectively, Lead to
Positive Rating Action

  --Positive rating momentum is unlikely over the next couple of
years because of the company's shift to growing through leveraged
acquisitions and the expectation of a heightened competition. Fitch
believes that OMI's debt/EBITDA may exceed 5x through 2019. If the
addition of the Byram and Halyard acquisitions contribute to both
revenue and EBITDA growth, along with stable growth in the core
business resulting in debt/EBITDA approaching 4.5x, the ratings
outlook could become positive or an upgrade could be supported.

Future Developments That May, Individually or Collectively, Lead to
Negative Rating Action

  --A downgrade is possible if the OMI is unable to generate
sufficient revenue and EBITDA growth to support its significantly
higher debt load following the Byram and Halyard acquisitions.
Fitch will monitor whether OMI can successfully integrate both
acquisitions and reduce its debt load. Also, if consolidated EBITDA
and cash generation have not improved sufficiently to offset the
weakness in OMI's core business by year-end 2018 leading to a
debt/EBITDA approaching 5.5x, the rating outlook could become
negative or the ratings could be downgraded.

LIQUIDITY

OMI has an adequate source of liquidity, which is principally
comprised of a $600 million revolving credit facility; as of March
31, 2018, there was approximately $104 million of borrowings under
the facility, which is substantially unchanged from year end 2017.
The company experienced significant deterioration in its operating
cash flow in 2017 principally due to heightened competition and
accelerating pricing pressure; weakened operating cash flow
combined with increased capex and maintenance of common stock
dividends generated negative FCF. Fitch believes that OMI may be
forced to reduce its common dividends to conserve cash for debt
service unless its financial and operating performance improves
relative to FY17.

OMI has added approximately $750 million of additional indebtedness
in second-quarter 2018 in order to complete the acquisition of the
Surgical and Infection Prevention business of Halyard Health, Inc.
The additional leverage will place even greater pressure on the
company's liquidity position.

Rating Recovery

For issuers with IDRs at 'B+' and below, Fitch performs a recovery
analysis for each class of obligations of the issuer. The issue
ratings are derived from the IDR and the relevant Recovery Rating
(RR) and notching.

The recovery analysis has been prepared using a going concern
approach and that the company would be reorganized rather than
liquidated. Fitch has assumed 10% for administrative claims.

Fitch assumes OMI going concern EBITDA based on Fitch's stress case
2019-2020 Operating EBITDA after associate and minority
distributions is assumed to be 15% lower than the Fitch 2019
forecasted level, which assumes ongoing deterioration in the core
business that is then arrested by actions to stabilize the
operations after a restructuring.

Fitch assumes OMI will receive a going-concern recovery multiple of
5x EBITDA under this scenario. This multiple represents a discount
to OMI's current Enterprise Value to reflect the expectation of an
erosion of the equity value of the firm in a bankruptcy. Given the
slower growth prospects within OMI's core business and the threat
of alternative competition, the 5x multiple is considered
reasonable. Recent enterprise values/EBITDA ratios of drug/medical
supply companies range of 8x-12x. A distressed value of OMI is
unlikely to achieve a multiple approximating the company's high
level EV during the past 12 months or close to its competitors,
because of the headwinds affecting the core business and the added
financial risk assumed with two leveraged acquisitions.

Fitch applies a waterfall analysis to the post-default enterprise
value (EV) based on the relative claims of the debt in the capital
structure. Fitch estimates going concern EV of approximately $1.4
billion and that OMI would fully draw $600 million under its
revolving credit facility in advance of a bankruptcy scenario, and
includes that amount in the claims waterfall.

The secured credit facility and senior notes are secured by the
assets of the guarantors, which consist of substantially all
wholly-owned domestic subsidiaries, and a pledge of 65% of the
voting equity of foreign subsidiaries. The Credit Agreement and
senior notes rank pari passu on a senior secured basis and contain
cross-default provisions, which could result in the acceleration of
payments due in the event of default of either agreement. Since
substantially all of the company's indebtedness is senior secured,
the EBITDA value of the company includes the 35% of the foreign
subsidiaries and is assumed to be 100% available to settle claims
of senior secured creditors.


FULL LIST OF RATING ACTIONS

In connection with the acquisition of the Halyard S&IP acquisition,
OMI entered into a Second amendment to its July 2017 credit
agreement. The amendment provided for a new term A-2 loan of
approximately $196 million with a four year maturity and a total of
$500 million term B loans with seven year maturities. Additionally,
O&M Halyard, Inc. has been added as a new co-borrower to the
existing revolving credit facility, term A loans and term B loans.
Following the amendment, OMI's revolving credit facility, term
loans and existing notes will become secured and will rank pari
passu.

The following ratings have been downgraded:

Owens & Minor, Inc.

  --Issuer Default Rating (IDR) to 'B+' from 'BB'; Outlook Stable;

  --Senior secured notes to 'BB-'/'RR3' from 'BB'.

Owens & Minor Distribution, Inc. / Owens & Minor Medical, Inc. /
Barista Acquisition I, LLC / Barista Acquisition II, LLC

  --IDR to 'B+' from 'BB'; Outlook Stable;

  --Senior secured revolving credit facility to 'BB-'/'RR3' from
'BB';

  --Senior secured term loan A-1 to 'BB-'/'RR3' from 'BB'.

The following ratings have been assigned:

O&M Halyard, Inc.

  --IDR 'B+'; Outlook Stable;

  --Senior secured revolving credit facility 'BB-'/'RR3';

  --Senior secured term loan A-1 'BB-'/'RR3'.

O&M Halyard, Inc. / Owens & Minor Distribution, Inc. / Owens &
Minor Medical, Inc. / Barista Acquisition I, LLC / Barista
Acquisition II, LLC

  --Senior secured term loan A-2 'BB-'/'RR3';

  --Senior secured term loan B 'BB-'/'RR3'.


PATRIOT NATIONAL: Provision Added in Treatment of 510(b) Claimants
------------------------------------------------------------------
Patriot National, Inc., and affiliates filed with the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware a fourth amended
joint chapter 11 plan of reorganization dated April 20, 2018.

The Debtor amends the plan to add a provision in the treatment of
Class 6 510(b) Claims.

The plan now provides that each holder of a 510(b) Claim will not
receive or retain any distribution under the Plan on account of
such 510(b) Claim, and all such 510(b) Claims wll be eliminated and
discharged. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Plan Administrator
will maintain a record of any Class 6 Claims as of the Distribution
Record Date for purposes of making distributions, if any, pursuant
to Section VI.D.(iv) of the Plan.

A full-text copy of the Fourth Amended Plan is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/deb18-10189-632.pdf

                      About Patriot National

Fort Lauderdale, Florida-based Patriot National, Inc., also known
as Old Guard Risk Services, Inc., through its subsidiaries,
provides agency, underwriting and policyholder services to its
insurance carrier clients, primarily in the workers' compensation
sector.  Patriot National -- http://www.patnat.com/-- provides  
general agency services, technology outsourcing, software
solutions, specialty underwriting and policyholder services, claims
administration services and self-funded health plans to its
insurance carrier clients, employers and other clients.  Patriot
was incorporated in Delaware in November 2013.

The Company completed its initial public offering in January 2015
and its common stock is listed on the New York Stock Exchange under
the symbol "PN."

Patriot National, Inc., and affiliates sought Chapter 11 protection
(Bankr. D. Del. Lead Case No. 18-10189) on Jan. 30, 2018.  In the
petitions signed by CRO James S. Feltman, the Debtors disclosed
$159.4 million in total assets and $242.2 million in total debt as
of Dec. 31, 2017.

The Debtors have tapped Laura Davis Jones, Esq., James E. O'Neill,
Esq., and Peter J. Keane, Esq., at Pachulski Stang Ziehl & Jones
LLP and Kathryn A. Coleman, Esq., Christopher Gartman, Esq., and
Jacob Gartman, Esq., at Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP as bankruptcy
counsel; Pachulski Stang Ziehl & Jones LLP as co-counsel and
conflicts counsel; Duff & Phelps, LLC, as financial advisor; and
Conway Mackenzie Management Services, LLC, as provider of EVP of
Finance and related advisory services.  Prime Clerk LLC --
https://cases.primeclerk.com/patnat -- is the Debtors' claims,
noticing and balloting agent.

James S. Feltman of Duff & Phelps, LLC, has been tapped as chief
restructuring officer to the Debtors.

The Office of the U.S. Trustee has named two creditors -- Jessica
Barad and MCMC LLC -- to serve on an official committee of
unsecured creditors in the Debtors' cases.


PEPPERELL MILLS: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
--------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Pepperell Mills Limited Partnership
        502 Bedford Street
        Fall River, MA 02722

Business Description: Pepperell Mills Limited Partnership
                      is a privately held company in Fall River,
                      Massachusetts.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: May 15, 2018

Case No.: 18-11804

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       District of Massachusetts (Boston)

Judge: Hon. Joan N. Feeney

Debtor's Counsel: John M. McAuliffe, Esq.
                  JOHN MCAULIFFE & ASSOCIATES, P.C.
                  430 Lexington Street
                  Newton, MA 02466
                  Tel: (617) 558-6889
                  E-mail: john@jm-law.net

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Christine Laudon, president of Pepperell
Mills Associates, general partner.

The Debtor failed to incorporate in the petition a list of its 20
largest unsecured creditors.

A full-text copy of the petition is available for free at:

          http://bankrupt.com/misc/mab18-11804.pdf


PERMIAN PRODUCTION: Moody's Gives B3 CFR & Senior Term Loan Rating
------------------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service assigned first-time ratings to Permian
Production Partners, LLC (PPP), including a B3 Corporate Family
Rating (CFR), a B3-PD Probability of Default Rating (PDR) and a B3
rating to the company's $300 million senior secured term loan due
2024. The rating outlook is stable.

Net proceeds will be used to repay existing bank debt, pay a
dividend to its private equity owners, send cash to PPP's ultimate
parent - FCP II Holdings, LLC (FCP, unrated), and place $10 million
of cash on PPP's balance sheet. PPP is a newly incorporated
wholly-owned indirect subsidiary of FCP, a private exploration and
production (E&P) company backed by Edge Natural Resources LLC and
RedBird Capital Partners LLC. PPP's sole asset is the North Ward
Estes field in the Central Basin Platform, which the company
acquired from Whiting Petroleum Corporation (B2 positive) in July
2016 for $300 million.

Assignments:

Issuer: Permian Production Partners, LLC

Corporate Family Rating, Assigned B3

Probability of Default Rating, Assigned B3-PD

$300 Million Gtd Senior Secured Term Loan, Assigned B3 (LGD3)

Outlook, Stable

RATINGS RATIONALE

PPP's B3 CFR reflects its small production and reserves in the
Permian Basin, mature asset base, high financial leverage, heavy
reliance on elevated oil prices to support its high fixed cost
enhanced oil recovery infrastructure, and short operating track
record with the acquired North Ward Estes field. The company will
need to consistently hedge a high proportion of its production to
sufficiently cover capital spending and scheduled debt
amortizations. PPP also has to invest approximately $20-$25 million
annually through 2020 to maintain current production levels. The B3
rating is supported by PPP's low-risk assets that have been in
production for several decades, long reserve life and high
proportion of proved developed reserves, relatively low maintenance
capital expenditure requirements, excellent projected hedge
protection through 2021, and the anticipated debt amortization
through the excess cash flow sweep feature in the term loan
agreement. Moody's expects the company will enter into the required
hedges quickly, and the assigned ratings are contingent on review
of final documentation.

PPP's initial $300 million debt burden is high given its mature and
declining assets, high breakeven costs, and limited growth
prospects. PPP's leverage as measured by ~$38,500 debt to average
net daily production is among the highest within Moody's rated E&P
universe. The company's cash flow is highly leveraged to oil prices
and therefore, if the company is unable to hold production near the
7,800 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boe/d) level and sell oil
above $50/barrel, deleveraging will take longer leaving the company
exposed to potentially lower future oil prices. While management
has been successful in decelerating the natural decline rate since
taking over operatorship in November 2016 demonstrating its
technical and operational expertise, whether the company can
maintain production over a longer period remains to be seen given
PPP's limited financial resources and operating history.

The $300 million senior secured term loan facility is the only debt
issued by PPP and hence the term loan is rated at the B3 CFR level,
under the Moody's Loss Given Default Methodology. Moody's has
reviewed only a preliminary draft term sheet for the proposed term
loan and the assigned ratings assume that there will be no material
variation from the draft reviewed.

PPP should have adequate liquidity supported by its strong hedge
book and projected free cash flow generation. Under the proposed
term loan agreement, the company will be required to hedge a
significant portion (80%+) of its projected PDP production in the
first five years of the term loan with an additional annual rolling
requirement through the remaining term of the loan. This hedge
protection will allow the company to generate free cash flow and
amortize the term loan balance substantially in the first three
years. PPP does not have a revolving credit facility, but will hold
$10 million of cash to cover any unforeseen funding needs. The term
loan agreement requires PPP to maintain a 1x PDP coverage ratio,
which should not present any near-term compliance challenges. The
company's alternate liquidity is limited given that all of its oil
and gas assets are encumbered.

The stable outlook assumes the company will maintain the required
hedge position through mid-2021. PPP's ratings are unlikely to be
upgraded absent a significant reduction in leverage along with an
improvement in scale and diversification. However, if the company
could sustain production above 15,000 boe/day, the debt/average
daily production ratio below $30,000 per boe or increase the
RCF/debt ratio above 25%, an upgrade could be considered. A rating
downgrade is most likely to stem from weak liquidity. A downgrade
could also result if the EBITDA/interest ratio falls below 2.5x or
the RCF/debt ratio falls below 10%.

Permian Production Partners, LLC's is a Golden, Colorado based
private exploration and production company that derives the
majority of its production through enhanced oil recovery methods in
the Central Basin Platform in West Texas.


PITTSBURGH ATHLETIC: PA DOR Opposes Confirmation of Amended Plan
----------------------------------------------------------------
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania Department of
Revenue objects to the confirmation of Pittsburgh Athletic
Association and Pittsburgh Athletic Association Land Company's
joint plan of March 13, 2018, as revised March 16, 2018 and April
15, 2018 and to the approval of Debtors' impaired class joint
amended disclosure statement to accompany the joint plan of
reorganization.

The PA DOR is a party in interest having filed a Proof of Claim
asserting a Secured Claim, a Priority Claim, and an Unsecured
Claim. PA DOR is also a prospective Administrative Creditor, since
the Plan provides for a taxable sale of real property of either the
Joint Debtors, or of one of the Debtors, Pittsburgh Athletic
Association Land Company (PAA LC), is now a profit corporation, and
any gain from such sale will, therefore, be subject to Pennsylvania
Corporate Net Income, Capital Stock and Franchise Taxes.

The Current Plan claims the Debtors to be exempt from Pennsylvania
Corporate Net Income, Capital Stock and Franchise Taxes because the
Debtors are completely exempt from Federal Tax based on the
characterization of the Debtor Pittsburgh Athletic Association as a
nonprofit corporation. However, PAA LC, the Debtor that owns the
real estate asset being sold, is presently a taxable entity and is
not a qualified Non-Profit entity.

PA DOR objects to any confirmation order applicable to the Current
Plan to the effect that PA DOR is not and will not become a holders
of an Allowed Administrative Expense Claims arising out of the sale
of the Sale Assets since that order: (1) would be contrary to the
relevant facts and law applicable to such taxation; (2) there is no
present case or controversy to currently adjudicate since the
closing has not and may not occur, and the post-petition tax period
has not ended; and (3) the requested confirmation order cannot make
an advance determination for a post-confirmation period.

Both the Current Plan and the Current Disclosure Statement continue
to assert the non-taxable nature of the transaction without proof
of any of the predicate facts necessary to establish that legal
finding.

PA DOR also complaints that the Current Plan as described in the
Current Disclosure is not feasible because it does not assure that
the surviving debtors are not likely to suffer a subsequent
bankruptcy. If the Administrative Claims of the IRS and PA DOR are
not paid in full, the surviving Debtor will have no ability to pay
any deficiency, and the Current Plan will fail.

Thus, the PA DOR requests that the Current Plan not be confirmed,
and further that no Plan be confirmed that includes any finding of
fact or conclusion of law that supports the Debtors' contention
that the prospective sale of assets as set forth in such plan does
not create a taxable event under either the Internal Revenue Code
or the tax laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and which does
not include clear provisions for payment of the appropriate Taxes
on the real estate transaction in full, either by the escrow or the
surviving Debtor.

The Troubled Company Reporter reported on May 10, 2018 that members
of the PAA under the amended plan as revised are entitled to vote
to accept or reject the Debtors' amended plan because some of the
benefits of PAA membership may be altered or reduced under the
amended plan.

A full-text copy of the Redlined Version of the Latest Disclosure
Statement is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/pawb17-22222-673-1.pdf

A full-text copy of PA DOR's Objection is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/pawb17-22222-681.pdf

Counsel to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania
Department of Revenue:

     T. Lawrence Palmer
     Senior Deputy Attorney General
     Office of Attorney General
     Manor Complex
     564 Forbes Avenue
     Pittsburgh, PA 15219
     (412) 565-2575
     PA Attorney I.D. # 001333

               About Pittsburgh Athletic Association

Pittsburgh Athletic is a private social club and athletic club in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. Its clubhouse is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places.  Pittsburgh Athletic is a
nonprofit membership club chartered in 1908.  It ran into financial
difficulties and had its liquor license temporarily suspended for
not paying Allegheny County drink taxes.

Affiliated debtors Pittsburgh Athletic Association (Bankr. W.D. Pa.
Case No. 17-22222) and Pittsburgh Athletic Association Land Company
(Bankr. W.D. Pa. Case No. 17-22223) filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
protection on May 30, 2017. The Debtors each estimated their assets
and liabilities at between $1 million and $10 million each.

The petitions were signed by James A. Sheehan, president.

Judge Jeffery A. Deller presides over the case.

Jordan S. Blask, Esq., at Tucker Arensberg, P.C., serves as the
Debtors' bankruptcy counsel.  Gleason & Associates, P.C., is the
Debtors' financial advisor.  Holliday Fenoglio Fowler, L.P., is the
Debtors' real estate advisors.

Andrew R. Vara, Acting U.S. Trustee for Region 3, appointed seven
creditors to serve on an official committee of unsecured creditors.
The Committee hired Leech Tishman Fuscaldo & Lampl, LLC, as
counsel.


PITTSBURGH ATHLETIC: Revises Plan to Classify Membership Interests
------------------------------------------------------------------
Pittsburgh Athletic Association and Pittsburgh Athletic Association
Land Company filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western
District of Pennsylvania a revised impaired class joint amended
disclosure statement regarding its joint amended disclosure
statement dated March 13, 2018 as revised on April 22, 2018.

The Debtor revised the plan to add the PAA Membership Interests in
Class 11. The PAA Members in this class have Interests that may be
impaired by the Amended Plan. As the membership rights and benefits
of PAA Members may be reduced or altered under the Amended Plan,
the PAA Members may vote to accept or reject the Plan and have been
classified as holders of Interests in Class 11. PAA Members have no
readily ascertainable economic interest in the Debtors and are not
entitled to a distribution under the Amended Plan.

A full-text copy of the Revised Amended Disclosure Statement is
available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/pawb17-22222-703.pdf

A full-text copy of the Third Revised Amended Plan is available
at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/pawb17-22222-702-1.pdf

             About Pittsburgh Athletic Association

Pittsburgh Athletic is a private social club and athletic club in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. Its clubhouse is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. Pittsburgh Athletic is a
nonprofit membership club chartered in 1908. It ran into financial
difficulties and had its liquor license temporarily suspended for
not paying Allegheny County drink taxes.

Affiliated debtors Pittsburgh Athletic Association (Bankr. W.D. Pa.
Case No. 17-22222) and Pittsburgh Athletic Association Land Company
(Bankr. W.D. Pa. Case No. 17-22223) filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
protection on May 30, 2017.  The Debtors each estimated their
assets and liabilities at between $1 million and $10 million each.

The petitions were signed by James A. Sheehan, president.

Judge Jeffery A. Deller presides over the case.

Jordan S. Blask, Esq., at Tucker Arensberg, P.C., serves as the
Debtors' bankruptcy counsel.  Gleason & Associates, P.C., is the
Debtors' financial advisor.  Holliday Fenoglio Fowler, L.P., is the
Debtors' real estate advisors.

Andrew R. Vara, Acting U.S. Trustee for Region 3, appointed seven
creditors to serve on an official committee of unsecured creditors.
The Committee hired Leech Tishman Fuscaldo & Lampl, LLC, as
counsel.


PLAYHOUSE SQUARE: S&P Assigns BB+ Rating on 2018 Fixed-Rated Bonds
------------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings assigned its 'BB+' long-term rating to
Cleveland-Cuyahoga County Port Authority, Ohio's $80 million series
2018 fixed-rate cultural facility revenue and refunding bonds,
issued for Playhouse Square Foundation (PSF) and subsidiaries. The
outlook is stable.

"The rating reflects the large size and the residential scope of
the upcoming project and the significant total debt issuance that
PSF is undertaking relative to the available resources of the
organization, which in our view are slim," said S&P Global Ratings
credit analyst Gauri Gupta.

In addition to the $80 million series 2018 fixed-rate bonds, PSF is
also planning to issue a direct placement construction loan for $65
million under a separate indenture for which PSF is the guarantor.
"In our view, this adds an element of contingent liquidity risk in
the event of acceleration, though remote, which further reflects
our rating," added Ms. Gupta.

S&P said, "The stable outlook reflects the strength of Playhouse
Square's enterprise profile and our expectation that management
will successfully translate that strength into a stronger financial
profile over time such that over the next few years, PSF will
maintain its operating performance and generate full accrual
surpluses and will grow its balance sheet resources. We also expect
the upcoming residential project to progress on time and on budget
with no additional support from PSF beyond what is guaranteed. We
do not expect any additional debt issuance beyond current plans
without significant growth in balance sheet resources."


PREZZO PLC: Bank Debt Trades at 35% Off
---------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which Prezzo Plc. is a
borrower traded in the secondary market at 65.50
cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4, 2018,
according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM Pricing.
This represents a decrease of 3.15 percentage points from the
previous week. Prezzo Plc pays 800 basis points above LIBOR to
borrow under the $200 million facility. The bank loan matures on
July 1, 2022. Moody's rates the loan 'Caa3' and Standard & Poor's
gave a 'CCC' rating to the loan. The loan is one of the biggest
gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted syndicated loans with
five or more bids in secondary trading for the week ended Friday,
May 4.

Prezzo Holdings Limited is a chain restaurant operator in the
United Kingdom.


PROMETHEUS & ATLAS: Court Approves Third Amended Plan Outline
-------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Mike K. Nakagawa of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Nevada approved Prometheus & Atlas Real Estate
Development, LLC's third amended disclosure statement describing
its chapter 11 plan of liquidation.

The deadline for filing objections to confirmation of the Plan is
May 23, 2018.

The deadline for filing replies to any objections to confirmation
of the Plan is May 30, 2018.

The confirmation hearing is set for June 13, 2018 at 11:00 a.m.

              About Prometheus & Atlas Real Estate

Based in Las Vegas, Nevada, Prometheus & Atlas Real Estate
Development, LLC owns and manages a real estate development
company.

Prometheus & Atlas Real Estate sought protection under Chapter 11
of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Nev. Case No. 17-12699) on May
19, 2017.  James Kalhorn, managing member, signed the petition.  At
the time of the filing, the Debtor disclosed $2.6 million in assets
and $1.75 million in liabilities.

Ghandi Deeter Blackham is the Debtor's bankruptcy counsel.  David
J. Merrill P.C. is the special counsel.

The Debtor tapped Mark Holten of Signa Realty Group as real estate
broker to sell the property located at NW4 SEC 12 20 59, City of
Las Vegas, County of Clark, Nevada.


PUERTO RICO: Baxter Sales Appointed as New Committee Member
-----------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Trustee for Region 21 on May 14 appointed Baxter Sales and
Distribution Puerto Rico Corp. as new member of the official
committee of unsecured creditors in the Chapter 9 cases of the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and three other debtors.

Meanwhile, Houston-based Vitol, Inc. has resigned from the
committee, according to a court filing.

The members of the committee are now:

     (1) The American Federation of Teachers (AFT)  
         Mark Richard
         Counsel to the President of the AFT
         555 New Jersey Ave., N.W., 11th Floor  
         Washington, DC 20001

     (2) Doral Financial Corporation
         c/o Drivetrain LLC
         630 Third Avenue, 21st Floor
         New York, NY 10017   

     (3) Genesis Security       
         5900 Ave. Isla Verde
         L-2 PMB 438 Carolina, PR 00979

     (4) Puerto Rico Hospital Supply  
         Call Box 158  
         Carolina, PR 00986-0158

     (5) Service Employees International Union (SEIU)
         1800 Massachusetts Avenue N.W.
         Washington, D.C. 20036  

     (6) Total Petroleum Puerto Rico Corp.
         Citi View Plaza Tower I
         48 Road 165 Oficina 803
         Guaynabo, PR 00968-8046

     (7) Unitech Engineering  
         c/o Ramón Ortiz Carro    
         Urb Sabanera  
         40 Camino de la Cascada
         Cidra, Puerto Rico 00739

     (8) Peerless Oil & Chemicals  
         671 Road 337  
         Penuelas PR 00624-7513

     (9) Baxter Sales and Distribution Puerto Rico Corp.  
         Rexco Industrial Park # 200
         Calle B Guaynabo, P.R. 00968

                         About Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico is a self-governing commonwealth in association with
the United States that's facing a massive bond debt of $70 billion,
a 68% debt-to-GDP ratio and negative economic growth in nine of the
last 10 years.

The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico has sought bankruptcy protection,
aiming to restructure its massive $74 billion debt-load and $49
billion in pension obligations.

The debt restructuring petition was filed by Puerto Rico's
financial oversight board in U.S. District Court in Puerto Rico
(Case No. 17-01578) on May 3, 2017, and was made under Title III of
2016's U.S. Congressional rescue law known as the Puerto Rico
Oversight, Management, and Economic Stability Act ('PROMESA').

The Financial Oversight and Management Board later commenced Title
III cases for the Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corporation
(COFINA) on May 5, 2017, and the Employees Retirement System (ERS)
and the Puerto Rico Highways and Transportation Authority (HTA) on
May 21, 2017. On July 2, 2017, a Title III case was commenced for
the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority ("PREPA").

U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts has appointed U.S. District Judge
Laura Taylor Swain to oversee the Title III cases. The Honorable
Judith Dein, a United States Magistrate Judge for the District of
Massachusetts, has been designated to preside over matters that may
be referred to her by Judge Swain, including discovery disputes,
and management of other pretrial proceedings.

Joint administration of the Title III cases, under Lead Case No.
17-3283, was granted on June 29, 2017.

The Oversight Board has hired as advisors, Proskauer Rose LLP and
O'Neill & Borges LLC as legal counsel, McKinsey & Co. as strategic
consultant, Citigroup Global Markets, as municipal investment
banker, and Ernst & Young, as financial advisor.

Martin J. Bienenstock, Esq., Scott K. Rutsky, Esq., and Philip M.
Abelson, Esq., of Proskauer Rose; and Hermann D. Bauer, Esq., at
O'Neill & Borges are on-board as attorneys.

McKinsey & Co. is the Board's strategic consultant, Ernst & Youngis
the Board's financial advisor, and Citigroup Global Markets Inc. is
the Board's municipal investment banker.

Prime Clerk LLC is the claims and noticing agent. Prime Clerk
maintains a case web site at
https://cases.primeclerk.com/puertorico

Epiq Bankruptcy Solutions LLC is the service agent for ERS, HTA,
and PREPA.

O'Melveny & Myers LLP is counsel to the Commonwealth's Puerto Rico
Fiscal Agency and Financial Advisory Authority (AAFAF), the agency
responsible for negotiations with bondholders.

The Oversight Board named Professor Nancy B. Rapoport as fee
examiner and to chair a committee to review professionals' fees.

                    Bondholders' Attorneys

Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP and Toro, Colon, Mullet, Rivera
& Sifre, P.S.C. and serve as counsel to the Mutual Fund Group,
comprised of mutual funds managed by Oppenheimer Funds, Inc., and
the First Puerto Rico Family of Funds, which collectively hold over
$4.4 billion of GO Bonds, COFINA Bonds, and other bonds issued by
Puerto Rico and other instrumentalities.

White & Case LLP and Lopez Sanchez & Pirillo LLC represent the UBS
Family of Funds and the Puerto Rico Family of Funds, which hold
$613.3 million in COFINA bonds.

Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, Robbins, Russell,
Englert, Orseck, Untereiner & Sauber LLP, and Jimenez, Graffam &
Lausell are co-counsel to the ad hoc group of General Obligation
Bondholders, comprised of Aurelius Capital Management, LP, Autonomy
Capital (Jersey) LP, FCO Advisors LP, and Monarch Alternative
Capital LP.

Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP and Reichard & Escalera are
co-counsel to the ad hoc coalition of holders of senior bonds
issued by COFINA, comprised of at least 30 institutional holders,
including Canyon Capital Advisors LLC and Varde Investment
Partners, L.P.

Correa Acevedo & Abesada Law Offices, P.S.C., is counsel to Canyon
Capital Advisors, LLC, River Canyon Fund Management, LLC, Davidson
Kempner Capital Management LP, OZ Management, LP, and OZ Management
II LP (the QTCB Noteholder Group).

                          Committees

The U.S. Trustee formed an official committee of retirees and an
official committee of unsecured creditors of the Commonwealth. The
Retiree Committee tapped Jenner & Block LLP and Bennazar, Garcia &
Milian, C.S.P., as its attorneys. The Creditors Committee tapped
Paul Hastings LLP and O'Neill & Gilmore LLC as counsel.


PUERTO RICO: Congress Waived Oversight Board's Sovereign Immunity
-----------------------------------------------------------------
The case captioned CENTRO DE PERIODISMO INVESTIGATIVO, Plaintiff,
v. FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO RICO,
Defendant, Civil No. 17-1743 (JAG)(D.P.R.), is about the
applicability of Puerto Rico law to the Financial Oversight and
Management Board for Puerto Rico (the "Board"), and the extent of
federal congressional power to make "needful rules and regulations"
regarding the territories of the United States.  Although an
emotionally charged subject, the Puerto Rico Oversight, Management,
and Economic Stability Act ("PROMESA" or the "Act") exemplifies
Congress's broad powers to pass laws that affect territories where
more than four million American citizens live.

Plaintiff Centro de Periodismo Investigativo sued the Oversight
Board to obtain access to documents within the Board's control
pursuant to the First Amendment of the Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.

The Board has asked the U.S. District Court for the District of
Puerto Rico to dismiss the lawsuit based on two grounds:

   (1) The Board argues that under Pennhurst State Sch. & Hosp. v.
Halderman, 465 U.S. 89, 92 (1984), it is immune in federal court
from claims seeking injunctive relief pursuant to Puerto Rico law.

   (2) The Board contends that the right to access and inspect
public documents pursuant to Puerto Rico law is preempted by
PROMESA.

U.S. District Judge Judge Jay A. Garcia-Gregory ruled that: (1)
pursuant to its plenary powers, Congress waived, or in the
alternative abrogated, the Board's sovereign immunity; and (2)
PROMESA does not preempt Puerto Rico law granting access to public
documents under the Board's control.

According to Judge Garcia-Gregory, generally, a state can consent
to be sued in federal court and waive its Eleventh Amendment
immunity by passing a "state or constitutional provision."  A
waiver of sovereign immunity "must be stated by the most express
language or by such overwhelming implications from the text as [to]
leave no room for any other reasonable construction."

In this case, Judge Garcia-Gregory held, Congress exercised its
plenary powers to act on behalf of Puerto Rico and waived the
Board's Eleventh Amendment immunity.  The Territorial Clause gives
Congress the power to enact statutes on behalf of the territories.
Here, Congress, in its function as administrator of the territories
enacted PROMESA, which created an oversight board subject to suit
in federal court.  This needful legislation is within Congress's
power as it can directly legislate for the territories, and in the
rarest of cases, act as their legislature.

It is evident from Section 106(a) of PROMESA that Congress meant to
subject the Board to suits in federal court.  Section 106(a)
states, in relevant part, that "any action against the Oversight
Board . . . shall be brought in a United States district court for
the covered territory. . . ."  Congress, therefore, clearly
indicated that any action against the Board must be litigated in
this Court. The congressional record supports this interpretation.

When enacting PROMESA, Congress knew of Puerto Rico's dual system
of federal and territorial courts.  Thus, Congress, knowing the
Eleventh Amendment implications in creating an entity within the
government of Puerto Rico, decided under its plenary powers to give
this Court exclusive jurisdiction over cases, like this one,
brought against the Board.  Accordingly, the Court held that
Congress waived the Board's Eleventh Amendment immunity.

Assuming arguendo that Congress did not waive the Board's Eleventh
Amendment immunity on behalf of the Commonwealth, the Court finds
that Congress abrogated the Board's immunity to suit through
PROMESA.

For these reasons, the Court denied the Board's Motion to Dismiss
and referred the case to a Magistrate Judge to establish case
management deadlines for the production of the documents requested
by CPI.

A full-text copy of the Opinion & Order dated May 4, 2018, penned
by Judge Jay A. Garcia-Gregory is available at:

            http://bankrupt.com/misc/prb17-01743-36.pdf

                     Conflicting Rulings

Bill Rochelle, in his column for the American Bankruptcy Institute,
pointed out that two district judges in Puerto Rico starkly
disagree about the applicability of the automatic stay to "ordinary
course"
litigation against commonwealth officials.

On April 30, District Judge William G. Young of Boston, sitting in
Puerto Rico by designation, held that the automatic stay under the
Puerto Rico Oversight, Management, and Economic Stability Act
barred a suit against a commonwealth governmental official in his
individual capacity, even though Puerto Rico itself was not named
as a defendant.

Before Judge Young was a civil rights complaint alleging that the
Defendants violated their Fourth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendment
rights under the United States Constitution, as well as violated
their rights under Article 1802 of the Puerto Rico Civil Code,
stemming from wrongful incarceration.  According to Judge Young,
the Defendants are a combination of prosecutors and law enforcement
officials of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.  The Defendants asked
Judge Young to reconsider its decision to deny the automatic stay
imposed by the PROMESA.

"This motion for reconsideration presents the Court with a
difficult, though now recurrent, problem, viz. administering the
stay occasioned by the quasi-bankruptcy status now being endured by
the people of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.  The Plaintiffs,
claiming violations of their civil rights and seeking money
damages, bring this action against the Defendants, who are
government prosecutors and law enforcement officials.  Mindful of
the bankruptcy-like stay of damages claims against the Commonwealth
itself, the Plaintiffs carefully frame their complaint to seek
redress from the Defendants solely in their personal capacities
even though the actions of which the Plaintiffs complain are
alleged to have taken place under color of law," Judge Young
stated.

"After careful reflection -- while the issue is difficult and
either course is unfair -- this Court reconsiders its earlier
ruling and administratively closes this case pending resolution of
the bankruptcy proceeding," Judge Young held.

The case before Judge Young is NELSON RUIZ-COLON, NELSON
RUIZ-CORREA, EVANGELISTA COLON, LEINELMAR RUIZ-CACERES, Plaintiffs,
v. ANDRES RODRIGUEZ ELIAS, individually and as member of the
conjugal partnership existing with Jane Doe; RAMON PEREZ CRESPO,
individually and as member of the conjugal partnership existing
with Jane Roe; ANTONIO MALDONADO TRINIDAD, individually and as
member of the conjugal partnership existing with Carla Coe; PEDRO
GOYCO AMADOR, individually and as member of the conjugal
partnership existing with Dona Doe; FRANCISCO CARBO MARTI,
individually and as member of the conjugal partnership existing
with Grace Goe; ERNESTO FERNANDEZ, individually and as member of
the conjugal partnership existing with Jackie Joe; VICTOR BURGOS
BARROSO, individually and as member of the conjugal partnership
existing with Jane Poe; ELBA GONZALEZ, individually and as member
of the conjugal partnership existing with John Doe, Defendants,
Civil Action No. 17-02223-WGY (D.P.R.).

A full-text copy of Judge Young's Memorandum & Order dated April
30, 2018, is available at https://tinyurl.com/y9xqwnmj from
Leagle.com.

                      About Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico is a self-governing commonwealth in association with
the United States that's facing a massive bond debt of $70 billion,
a 68% debt-to-GDP ratio and negative economic growth in nine of the
last 10 years.

The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico has sought bankruptcy protection,
aiming to restructure its massive $74 billion debt-load and $49
billion in pension obligations.

The debt restructuring petition was filed by Puerto Rico's
financial oversight board in U.S. District Court in Puerto Rico
(Case No. 17-01578) on May 3, 2017, and was made under Title III of
2016's U.S. Congressional rescue law known as the Puerto Rico
Oversight, Management, and Economic Stability Act ("PROMESA").

The Financial Oversight and Management Board later commenced Title
III cases for the Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corporation
(COFINA) on May 5, 2017, and the Employees Retirement System (ERS)
and the Puerto Rico Highways and Transportation Authority (HTA) on
May 21, 2017. On July 2, 2017, a Title III case was commenced for
the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority ("PREPA").

U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts has appointed U.S. District Judge
Laura Taylor Swain to oversee the Title III cases. The Honorable
Judith Dein, a United States Magistrate Judge for the District of
Massachusetts, has been designated to preside over matters that may
be referred to her by Judge Swain, including discovery disputes,
and management of other pretrial proceedings.

Joint administration of the Title III cases, under Lead Case No.
17-3283, was granted on June 29, 2017.

The Oversight Board has hired as advisors, Proskauer Rose LLP and
O'Neill & Borges LLC as legal counsel, McKinsey & Co. as strategic
consultant, Citigroup Global Markets, as municipal investment
banker, and Ernst & Young, as financial advisor.

Martin J. Bienenstock, Esq., Scott K. Rutsky, Esq., and Philip M.
Abelson, Esq., of Proskauer Rose; and Hermann D. Bauer, Esq., at
O'Neill & Borges are on-board as attorneys.

McKinsey & Co. is the Board's strategic consultant, Ernst & Youngis
the Board's financial advisor, and Citigroup Global Markets Inc. is
the Board's municipal investment banker.

Prime Clerk LLC is the claims and noticing agent. Prime Clerk
maintains a case web site at
https://cases.primeclerk.com/puertorico

Epiq Bankruptcy Solutions LLC is the service agent for ERS, HTA,
and PREPA.

O'Melveny & Myers LLP is counsel to the Commonwealth's Puerto Rico
Fiscal Agency and Financial Advisory Authority (AAFAF), the agency
responsible for negotiations with bondholders.

The Oversight Board named Professor Nancy B. Rapoport as fee
examiner and to chair a committee to review professionals' fees.

                   Bondholders' Attorneys

Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP and Toro, Colon, Mullet, Rivera
& Sifre, P.S.C. and serve as counsel to the Mutual Fund  Group,
comprised of mutual funds managed by Oppenheimer Funds,  Inc., and
the First Puerto Rico Family of Funds, which collectively hold over
$4.4 billion of GO Bonds, COFINA Bonds, and other bonds issued by
Puerto Rico and other instrumentalities.

White & Case LLP and Lopez Sanchez & Pirillo LLC represent the UBS
Family of Funds and the Puerto Rico Family of Funds, which hold
$613.3 million in COFINA bonds.

Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, Robbins, Russell,
Englert, Orseck, Untereiner & Sauber LLP, and Jimenez, Graffam &
Lausell are co-counsel to the ad hoc group of General Obligation
Bondholders, comprised of Aurelius Capital Management, LP, Autonomy
Capital (Jersey) LP, FCO Advisors LP, and Monarch
Alternative Capital LP.

Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP and Reichard & Escalera are
co-counsel to the ad hoc coalition of holders of senior bonds
issued by COFINA, comprised of at least 30 institutional holders,
including Canyon Capital Advisors LLC and Varde Investment
Partners, L.P.

Correa Acevedo & Abesada Law Offices, P.S.C., is counsel to Canyon
Capital Advisors, LLC, River Canyon Fund Management, LLC, Davidson
Kempner Capital Management LP, OZ Management, LP, and OZ Management
II LP (the QTCB Noteholder Group).

                          Committees

The U.S. Trustee formed a nine-member Official Committee of
Retirees and a seven-member Official Committee of Unsecured
Creditors of the Commonwealth. The Retiree Committee tapped Jenner
& Block LLP and Bennazar, Garcia & Milian, C.S.P., as its
attorneys. The Creditors Committee tapped Paul Hastings LLP and
O'Neill & Gilmore LLC as counsel.


QEP RESOURCES: Egan-Jones Hikes Senior Unsecured Ratings to BB
--------------------------------------------------------------
Egan-Jones Ratings Company, on May 11, 2018, upgraded the foreign
currency and local currency senior unsecured ratings on debt issued
by QEP Resources Inc. to BB from BB-.

QEP Resources, Inc., incorporated on May 17, 2010, is an
independent crude oil and natural gas exploration and production
company. The Company focuses on two regions of the United States:
the Northern Region (primarily in North Dakota, Wyoming and Utah)
and the Southern Region (primarily in Texas and Louisiana).



REVLON INC: S&P Alters Outlook to Negative & Affirms 'CCC+' CCR
---------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings affirmed its 'CCC+' corporate credit rating on
Revlon Inc. and revised the outlook to negative from stable.

S&P said, "At the same time, we affirmed our 'CCC+' issue level
rating on the company's $1.8 billion term loan B. The '3' recovery
rating is unchanged, indicating our expectation for meaningful
(50%-70%; rounded estimate: 50%) recovery in the event of a payment
default.

"Concurrently, we affirmed our 'CCC' issue-level ratings on the
company's $500 million notes due 2021 and $450 million notes due
2024. The recovery rating on both notes remains '5', reflecting our
expectation for modest (10%-30%; rounded estimate: 15%) recovery of
principal in the event of a payment default."

The company had $2.9 billion of funded debt outstanding as of March
31, 2018.

S&P said, "Our ratings affirmation reflects our expectations that
Revlon will strengthen profitability and cash flow generation in
fiscal 2019. Revlon remains focused on restoring growth in its
mass-market channel, including product innovation, as well as on
the growth of e-commerce; relaunch of its Almay brand; and
expanding its presence in specialty retail (mainly Ulta). These
initiatives should slowly enable the company to strengthen its
liquidity and deleverage below 10x.

"The negative outlook reflects our belief that the company's
performance will remain volatile throughout 2018 and the company
may fail to strengthen its operations and restore its liquidity
given operational challenges and ongoing weakness in the retail
industry.  

"We could lower the ratings if the company is not able to turn
around its operations, revive its organic sales growth, and expand
its margins such that cash flows strengthen and liquidity stops
eroding. In addition, we could lower the rating if we believe the
company will pursue a restructuring or we can envision a specific
default scenario over the next year.

"We could consider a revision of the outlook to stable if the
company strengthens its cash flow generation and its liquidity
position. Longer term, we could consider a higher rating if debt
leverage is trending toward 8x while free operating cash flows are
consistently positive. This could occur if the company improves
EBITDA by over 20% from 2017 levels and reduces outstanding debt by
about $100 million. This could occur if consumers respond
positively to its new products and Revlon gains shelf space with
retailers or increases its sales in the e-commerce channel."


ROBERT SPENLINHAUER: Bankr. Ct. Junks Bid for Stay Pending Appeal
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Bankruptcy Judge Joan N. Feeney entered an order denying Debtor
Robert J. Spenlinhauer's motion for stay pending appeal.

The Debtor filed a motion for stay pending appeal of the Court's
order dated Feb. 27, 2018, denying his Motion to Vacate Document
No. 1312, Schedule Evidentiary Hearing Relative to Storage of
Vehicles Owned by the Debtor and Jackson Hole Classic Cars, LLC and
Request for Expedited Consideration. Specifically, through his Stay
Motion, the Debtor seeks a stay of this Court's order refusing to
vacate the allowance of the Chapter 11 Trustee's "Expedited Motion
to Secure and Store Vehicles to Preserve Estate Property in the
Face of Eviction" which required him and Jackson Hole Classic Cars,
LLC to turn over vehicles to the Trustee for storage. The Chapter
11 Trustee opposes the Debtor's Stay Motion.

The Debtor maintains that he has a strong and substantial
likelihood of success on the merits of his appeal. In so doing, he
relies on information that was not presented to the Court at the
time of the original hearing on Jan, 24, 2018.  The Debtor argues
that he will be irreparably harmed if his vehicles are damaged
during the towing and storage process, that the balance of harms
favors him, and the public interest is advanced by enabling an
individual Chapter 11 debtor to be allowed to maintain his vehicles
in a safe and secure location, "not subject to possible damage at a
location where public auction sales are held."

The Trustee rejects the Debtor's assertion of a likelihood of
success on the merits pointing to the Court's reasoning and "dress
rehearsal" observation in its Feb. 27, 2018 order and noting that
"to support that assertion, he makes new factual allegations as to
why he should be allowed to keep and use the estate property at
issue, rather than turn the vehicles over to the Trustee per the
Court’s [Jan. 24, 2018] Turnover Order. In so doing, he
undermines, rather than supports, the appeal of the [Feb. 27, 2018]
Order Denying the Motion to Vacate." The Trustee also points out
that the Debtor ignores the legal basis for the Court's denial of
the Motion to Vacate.

As Jackson Hole did not file a Notice of Appeal of this Court's
order dated Jan. 24, 2018 and did not file its own motion to
vacate, it is bound by the Court’s order of Jan. 24, 2018. The
Debtor's Stay Motion is inapplicable to it.

In its Feb. 27, 2018 order, the Court concluded that the Debtor had
failed to establish in his Motion to Vacate that the Court made a
manifest error of law or fact in its Jan. 24, 2018 ruling.
Accordingly, it was incumbent upon the Debtor in his Stay Motion to
establish that this Court wrongly decided the Motion to Vacate in
order to sustain his burden with respect to a likelihood of success
on the merits of his appeal from the Feb. 27, 2018 order. As the
Court noted in its Feb. 27, 2018 ruling, the Debtor did not request
an evidentiary hearing on Jan. 24, 2018, which was conducted three
weeks after the Trustee filed her Motion to Secure Vehicles. The
Debtor and Jackson Hole had more than sufficient time to gather
information about the Parsonsfield, Maine property so as to
properly address the numerous issues raised by the Chapter 11
Trustee, as well as the questions posed by Court to Debtor's
counsel at the Jan. 24, 2018 hearing that were unanswered.
Moreover, even were this Court to reconsider the safety of the
storage location in Parsonsfield, Maine, the undisputed facts
remain that the barn itself is not insured (only the vehicles) and
Parsonsfield is a remote location such that, if the Court were to
authorize the sale of the vehicles, the location would likely
jeopardize obtaining the maximum price for the vehicles.

With respect to the Debtor's argument that he will be irreparably
harmed if the vehicles were damaged when towed to and stored at the
storage facility of Paul E. Saperstein Co., whom the Trustee's
contemplates engaging to recover and store the vehicles, the Court
concludes that the Debtor's argument is speculative at best. Paul
E. Saperstein Co. is an experienced liquidator, is licensed, bonded
and insured, and has the professional capabilities to move and
store the vehicles. In any event, were the vehicles to be damaged,
the Debtor's estate could be compensated with money damages.

A full-text copy of the Court's Memorandum dated April 24, 2018 is
available at:  

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/mab13-17191-1228.pdf

                   About Robert J. Spenlinhauer

Robert J. Spenlinhauer sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E. D. Mass. Case No. 13-17191) on Dec. 16,
2013.

The Debtor is represented by Gary W. Cruickshank, Esq., who has an
office in Boston, Massachusetts.


ROCKPORT COMPANY: Case Summary & 30 Largest Unsecured Creditors
---------------------------------------------------------------
Affiliates that concurrently filed voluntary petitions for relief
under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code:

      Debtor                                   Case No.
      ------                                   --------
      The Rockport Company, LLC (Lead Case)    18-11145
      1220 Washington Street
      West Newton, MA 02465

      Rockport Blocker, LLC                    18-11146
      The Rockport Group Holdings, LLC         18-11147
      TRG 1-P Holdings, LLC                    18-11148
      TRG Intermediate Holdings, LLC           18-11149
      TRG Class D, LLC                         18-11150
      The Rockport Group, LLC                  18-11151
      Drydock Footwear, LLC                    18-11152
      DD Management Services LLC               18-11153
      Rockport Canada ULC                      18-11154

Business Description: The Rockport Company, LLC and its
                      subsidiaries are global designers,
                      distributors, and retailers of comfort
                      footwear in more than 50 markets worldwide.
                      Founded in 1971 and headquartered in West
                      Newton, Massachusetts, the Debtors offer a
                      wide array of men's and women's casual and
                      dress style shoes, boots, and sandals, under
                      their namesake Rockport brand.  The Debtors
                      also offer premium footwear for comfort-
                      conscious customers through their women's-
                      oriented Aravon and outdoor-inspired Dunham
                      brands.  The Debtors' comprehensive
                      assortment of footwear products incorporates
                      industry-leading sports technology to
                      provide customers with superior comfort
                      without compromising style.  The Debtors'
                      business in the United States is operated by
                      Rockport, and the Debtors' Canadian business

                      is operated by Debtor Rockport Canada ULC, a
                      British Columbia unlimited liability
                      company.  

                      http://www.rockport.com/

Chapter 11 Petition Date: May 14, 2018

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       District of Delaware (Delaware)

Judge: Hon. Laurie Selber Silverstein

Debtors'
Bankruptcy
Counsel:          Mark D. Collins, Esq.
                  Michael J. Merchant, Esq.
                  Amanda R. Steele, Esq.
                  Brendan J. Schlauch, Esq.
                  Megan E. Kenney, Esq.
                  RICHARDS, LAYTON & FINGER, P.A.
                  One Rodney Square
                  920 North King Street
                  Wilmington, Delaware 19801
                  Tel: 302-651-7700
                  Fax: 302-651-7701
                  Email: collins@rlf.com
                         merchant@rlf.com
                         steele@rlf.com
                         schlauch@rlf.com
                         kenney@rlf.com

Debtors'
Canadian
Bankruptcy
Counsel:          BORDEN LADNER GERVAIS LLP

Debtors'
Investment
Banker:           HOULIHAN LOKEY CAPITAL, INC.

Debtors'
Restructuring
and Interim
Management
Advisor:          ALVAREZ & MARSAL NORTH AMERICA LLC

Debtors'
Claims, Noticing
Agent and
Administrative
Advisor:          PRIME CLERK LLC
                  www.primeclerk.com
                  830 Third Avenue, 9th Floor
                  New York, NY 10022
                  Tel: 212-257-5450

Estimated Assets: $100 million to $500 million

Estimated Liabilities: $100 million to $500 million

The petition was signed by Paul Kosturos, interim chief financial
officer.

A full-text copy of The Rockport Company's petition is available
for free at http://bankrupt.com/misc/deb18-11145.pdf

Consolidated List of Debtors' 30 Largest Unsecured Creditors:

   Entity                          Nature of Claim    Claim Amount
   ------                          ---------------    ------------
Cortland Capital Management       9.5% Senior Notes   Undetermined
Services LLC, as Collateral           Due 2022
Agent
Attn: Chris Capezuti, Director
225 West Washington Street,
21st Floor
Chicago, IL 60606
United States

Adidas AG                           Contract Claim     $58,111,983
Attn: Kasper Bo Rorsted             & Trade Claim
Chief Executive Officer
Adi-Dassler-Platz 1-2
Herzogenaurach, 91074
Germany

Reebok International Ltd.           Trade Claim &      $12,505,208
Attn: Matthew H. O'Toole           Unsecured Notes
Chief Executive Officer                 Claim
25 Drydock Ave, Suite 110E
Boston, MA 02210
United States

Stella International Trading (Macao   Trade Claim       $9,159,974
Commercial Offshore) Limited
Attn: Lawrence Chen Li-Ming
Chief Executive Officer
Flat C, 20/F, Mg Tower,
133 Hoi Bun Road
Kowloon, Hong Kong

Farida Shoes Private Limited (FSLP)   Trade Claim       $4,936,524
Attn: Irshad Ahmed Mecca
Managing Director
Ramapuram, Chennai 600 089
Tamil Nadu, 600089
India

Attune Consulting USA Inc           Litigation Claim  Undetermined
Attn: Vajira De Silva
Chief Executive Officer
200 Summit Drive,
Suite 230 2nd Floor South
Burlington, MA 01803
United States

Link Worldwide Holdings Ltd            Trade Claim      $2,372,939
Attn: Frances Lin
No 88 Sec 4 Chung Ching Rd, Ta Ya S
Taichung, 123, Taiwan

Precious Gold Holdings Limited         Trade Claim      $1,172,033
Attn: Susie Zhou
No. 628 Sec 4 Chung Ching Rd
Taichung, Taiwan

International Business Machines        Trade Claim        $820,172
Attn: Ginni Rometty
Chief Executive Officer
1 New Orchard Road
Armonk, NY 10504-1722
United States

Shoe Majesty Trading Co, Ltd           Trade Claim        $604,863
Attn: Betty Choi
338 Kings Road
Hong Kong, 999077
Hong Kong

Earth Inc.                             Trade Claim        $564,617
Attn: Philippe Meynard
Chief Executive Officer
41 Seyon St, Ste 400
Waltham, MA 02453-8384
United States

Aston Shoes Private Limited            Trade Claim        $432,268
Attn: Rafeeque Ahmed Mecca
Managing Director
No.151/4 Mount Poonamallee Road,
Ramapuram
Chennai, 600089
India

TradeGlobal, LLC                      Trade Claim         $395,693
Attn: Blake Vaughn
President & Chief Operating Officer
5389 E Provident Dr
Cincinnati, OH 45246
United States

Aptos Inc.                            Trade Claim         $386,060
Attn: Noel Goggin
Chief Executive Officer
945 East Paces Ferry Road, Suite 2500
Atlanta, GA 30326
United States

Adidas America Inc.                   Trade Claim         $365,492
Attn: Kasper Rorsted
Chief Executive Officer
5055 N Greeley Avenue
Portland, OR 97217
United States

Deloitte LLP                          Trade Claim         $295,575
Attn: Cathy Engelbert
Chief Executive Officer
30 Rockefeller Plaza, 41st Floor
New York, NY 10112-0015
United States

Stella International Design Service   Trade Claim         $291,385
Attn: Lawrence Chen Li-Ming
Chief Executive Officer
Suites 3003/04 Tower 2 The Gateway
Hong Kong, KLN
Hong Kong

Hemisphere Design & Manufacturing     Trade Claim         $231,567

BSF Consulting LLC                    Trade Claim         $209,850

Adidas International Trading B.V.     Trade Claim         $202,865

Google Inc.                           Trade Claim         $186,750

Prisma Construction                   Trade Claim         $178,338

Systems Plus Technologies             Trade Claim         $173,702

Hayroad Productions LLC               Trade Claim         $159,913

Alberto Del Biondi Spa                Trade Claim         $142,562

The Soapbox Studio LLC                Trade Claim         $137,000

Xzact Solutions Inc                   Trade Claim         $112,748

Intune Logistics                      Trade Claim         $109,656

Cheetah Digital, Inc.                 Trade Claim         $107,371

Dama Construction                     Trade Claim          $97,447


ROCKPORT GROUP: Files Chapter 11, Wins OK of 1st Day Motions
------------------------------------------------------------
The Rockport Group, LLC, a leader in men's and women's footwear
since 1971, on May 16 disclosed that the Company has received
approvals from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for Delaware for all of
its First Day motions, which will support Rockport's business
operations as the Company completes its previously announced
court-supervised sale process.

The Court has granted Rockport interim approval to access up to $10
million in new debtor-in-possession ("DIP") financing from its
existing noteholders, in addition to its existing $60 million
credit facility.  Among other First Day orders, the Company also
received authorization to continue to pay employee wages and
benefits, honor customer commitments and otherwise manage its
day-to-day operations in the ordinary course through the sale
process.

All of the Company's businesses around the world are open and
operating in the normal course, including the Company's wholesale
operations and retail stores in Japan, Korea, China and Hong Kong,
as well as in Europe, Canada and the U.S.  Customers can continue
to shop Rockport's exceptional quality brands and diverse
assortment of footwear at leading department stores and specialty
retailers around the world, as well as through the Company's
e-commerce platform and retail locations.

As previously announced, Rockport has entered into an asset
purchase agreement ("the agreement") with CB Marathon Opco, LLC an
affiliate of Charlesbank Equity Fund IX, Limited Partnership
("Charlesbank"), pursuant to which Charlesbank will acquire
substantially all of Rockport's assets.  The agreement with
Charlesbank includes Rockport's global wholesale assets,
e-commerce platform and retail operations in Asia and Europe.

To facilitate the sale, Rockport and its U.S. and Canadian
subsidiaries have filed voluntary petitions under Chapter 11 of the
U.S. Bankruptcy Code in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for Delaware.
The transaction is being undertaken pursuant to Section 363 of the
U.S. Bankruptcy Code.  Accordingly, Charlesbank is serving as the
"stalking horse bidder" in a court-supervised sale process, and the
agreement is subject to higher and better offers, among other
conditions.

Rockport intends to pay for all goods and services delivered on or
after May 14, 2018 in the normal course.  Payment for goods and
services delivered to the U.S. and Canadian entities prior to the
filing will be addressed through the Chapter 11 process.  Under the
terms of the agreement, Charlesbank will assume responsibility for
payment of certain pre-petition obligations to product suppliers of
the acquired assets.

Additional Information

Additional information regarding Rockport's sale process and
restructuring is available at www.rockportrestructuring.com.  Court
filings and information about the claims process are available at
https://cases.primeclerk.com/rockport, by calling Rockport's claims
agent, Prime Clerk, at 844-224-1137 (or 917-962-8896 for
international calls) or sending an email to
rockportinfo@primeclerk.com.

Richards, Layton & Finger PA is serving as legal counsel to
Rockport.  Alvarez & Marsal is serving as restructuring advisor and
Houlihan Lokey, Inc. is serving as investment banker and financial
advisor.

                     About The Rockport Group

The Rockport Group -- http://www.rockport.com-- is home to the
Aravon, Dunham and Rockport brands and the popular Rockport Cobb
Hill Collection.  With its diverse assortment of men's and women's
footwear, products from The Rockport Group can be found in various
retail channels in more than 60 countries worldwide.  Headquartered
in the greater Boston area, The Rockport Group is committed to its
history of innovation and a consumer-centric approach to style, fit
and comfort.


ROJESIE INC: Amends Treatment of Condado Secured Claim
------------------------------------------------------
Rojesie, Inc., amended its plan of reorganization and accompanying
disclosure statement to disclose stipulations it entered into with
some of its creditors, including secured creditor Condado 5, LLC,
and the Internal Revenue Service.

As adequate protection payment, the Debtor agreed to make the
following monthly payments to Condado, via certified and/or
manager's check issued by a federally issued financial institution,
as follows:

   (i) Beginning on January 20, 2017, and until June 20, 2017, the
Debtor will make six consecutive monthly payments to Condado for
the amount of $5,000 each; and

  (ii) Beginning on July 20, 2017, and until July 20, 2018, the
Debtor will make 12 consecutive monthly payments to Condado for the
amount of $9,000 each.

The Debtor will make a lump sum payment to Condado in the amount of
$1,250,000, on or before August 1, 2018.  If the Debtor requires an
additional extension of six months: (a) the pay-off will increase
to $1,300,000; (b) the Debtor will comply with an extension fee of
$25,000 on or before August 31, 2018; (c) plus monthly additional
payments of $10,000 beginning August 20, 2018, to February 20,
2019.  Although the payments are fixed, for Condado's purposes, the
interest rate that Condado will allocate for these payments will be
the prime rate plus 2%.

For the IRS claim, the Debtor will comply with regular monthly
payments to the United States in the amount of $2,260 per month on
the 15th day of each month at 4% interest; beginning on February
15, 2017, until the secured and priority portions of the IRS's
claim is paid in full.  Of the $2,260 monthly payment, $2,200 will
be allocated to providing adequate protection for the IRS's secured
claim and $40 will be allocated to payment of the unsecured
priority claim.

A full-text copy of the Amended Disclosure Statement is available
at:

            http://bankrupt.com/misc/prb16-08296-148.pdf

                       About Rojesie Inc.

Adjuntas, P.R.-based Rojesie, Inc., d/b/a Parador Villas Sotomayor,
filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection (Bankr. D.P.R. Case No.
16-08296) on Oct. 17, 2016, estimating assets and liabilities
between $1 million and $10 million.

The petition was signed by Jesus R. Ramos Puente, president.  Judge
Edward A. Godoy presides over the case.  The Debtor is represented
by Justiniano Law Offices.


RONALD GOODWIN: Moore Offers $44K for Two Sedgwick County Parcels
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Ronald A. Goodwin and Michelle L. Goodwin filed with the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the District of Kansas a combined notice of
their proposed sale of two parcels of real property located in
Sedgwick County, Kansas: (i) Lots 10 and 12, on Washington Avenue,
in Moore's Addition to Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kansas; and (ii)
Lots 14, 16, 18, 20, 22 and 24 on Washington Avenue, in Moore's
Addition to Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kansas, to Willis Moore for
$44,000.

The Real Estate has not been claimed as exempt by the Debtors.  It
will be sold in its present, "as is" condition with no express or
implied warranties.  The Real Estate will be sold subject to rights
of way and easements of record.

The Real Estate will be sold free and clear of these liens and
encumbrances of record against the Real Estate:

     a. Federal Tax Lien recorded Sept. 1, 2015 as DOC#/FLM-PG:
29552219 and DOC#/FLM-PG: 29552220, against Ronald A. Goodwin and
Michelle Goodwin in the amount of $248,572 and any other amounts
due thereunder;

     b. Federal Tax Lien recorded April 19, 2016 as DOC#/FLM-PG:
29602309 and DOC#/FLM-PG: 29602310, against Ronald A. Goodwin and
Michelle Goodwin in the amount of $210,983 and any other amounts
due thereunder;

     c. Federal Tax Lien recorded Nov. 7, 2016 as DOC#/FLM-PG:
29650197 and DOC#/FLM-PG: 29650198, against Ronald A. Goodwin in
the amount of $9,704 and any other amounts due thereunder;

     d. Federal Tax Lien recorded April 11, 2017 as DOC#/FLM-PG:
29682611 and DOC#/FLM-PG: 29682612, against Innovative Recycling,
LLC, Ronald A. Goodwin, Sole Mbr. in the amount of $12,695 and any
other amounts due thereunder;

     e. Federal Tax Lien recorded May 10, 2017 as DOC#/FLM-PG:
29688911 and DOC#/FLM-PG: 29688912, against Ronald A. Goodwin in
the amount of $15,004, and any other amounts due thereunder;

     f. Federal Tax Lien recorded May 15, 2017 as DOC#/FLM-PG:
29689846 and DOC#/FLM-PG: 29689847, against Michelle Goodwin in the
amount of $23,883 and any other amounts due thereunder;

     g. Federal Tax Lien recorded May 15, 2017 as DOC#/FLM-PG:
29689848 and DOC#/FLM-PG: 29689849, against Michelle Goodwin in the
amount of $14,762.58 and any other amounts due thereunder;

     h. State of Kansas Withholding Tax Lien, recorded Aug. 29,
2016 as 16-ST-2461, against Ronald A. Goodwin, et al., in the
amount of $2,154 and any other amounts due thereunder;

     i. State of Kansas Withholding Tax Lien, recorded September
19, 2016 as 16-ST-2573, against DBA Enterprises and Ronald A.
Goodwin in the amount of $9,788 and any other amounts due
thereunder;

     j. State of Kansas Withholding Tax Lien, recorded Jan. 5, 2017
as 2017-ST-000017, against Innovative Recycling, LLC and Ronald A.
Goodwin, et al., in the amount of $764 and any other amounts due
thereunder;

     k. State of Kansas Withholding Tax Lien, recorded May 17, 2017
as 2017-ST-000974, against Innovative Recycling LLC and Ronald A.
Goodwin, in the amount of $1,788.72 plus interest and costs;

     l. State of Kansas Withholding Tax Lien, recorded July 14,
2017 as 2017-ST-001232, against Ronald A. Goodwin, et al., in the
amount of $3,662 and any other amounts due thereunder;

     m. State of Kansas Withholding Tax Lien, recorded July 25,
2017 as 2017-ST-001280, against DBA Enterprises and Ronald A.
Goodwin in the amount of $1,129 and any other amounts due
thereunder;

     n. Judgment lien entered in Sedgwick County Case No.
15-CV-1191 in the case styled Ronald Aaron Goodwin vs. Steve Hull,
Journal Entry of Judgment filed Nov. 18, 2016 in favor of Defendant
in the amount of $73,909 and any other amounts due thereunder;
     o. Judgment lien entered in Sedgwick County Case No. 16-CV-899
in the case styled Leonard E. Heller, Dorothy R. Harris and John D.
Harris, in their capacities as Trustees of the John B. and Dorothy
Ruth Harris AB Living Trust vs. Goodwin Properties, LLC, et al.,
Journal Entry of Judgment filed Nov. 18, 2016 in favor of
Plaintiffs in the amount of $1,236,823; Notice of Transfer and
Assignment of Judgment filed Nov. 7, 2017, wherein the Plaintiffs'
interest in the aforesaid judgment was transferred to JBHDRH, LLC;
and any other amounts due thereunder;

     p. Lis pendens arising from Sedgwick County Case No.
17-CV-1075 styled Dwight M. Diefenbach and Margie Diefenbach vs.
Goodwin Properties, L.L.C. et al., Petition filed May 3, 2017;

     q. Lis pendens arising from Sedgwick County Case No.
17-CV-2164 styled Chisholm Trail State Bank vs. Ronald A. Goodwin,
also known as Ronald Aaron Goodwin and Michelle L. Goodwin, also
known as Michelle Goodwin, et al., Petition filed Sept. 20, 2017;

     r. Federal Tax Lien recorded Oct. 11, 2017 as DOC#/FLM-PG:
29724268 and DOC#/FLM-PG: 29724269, against Innovative
Recycling,LLC, Ronald A. Goodwin, Sole Mbr. in the amount of
$7,808, and any other amounts due thereunder; and

     s. Federal Tax Lien recorded December 5, 2017 as DOC#/FLM-PG:
29735913 and DOC#/FLM-PG: 29735914, against Aaron's Recycling, LLC,
Ronald A. Goodwin, Mbr. in the amount of $13,123, and any other
amounts due thereunder.

From the sale proceeds, the Debtors will pay:

     a. the Debtors' share of the unpaid real estate taxes
attributable to the Real Estate prorated to the date of closing;

     b. the Debtors' share of closing expenses for title insurance,
recording fees, closing fees and inspections;

     c. Brokerage fee of 6% of the Purchase Price to be paid to ERA
Great American Realty; and

     d. The remainder to the Internal Revenue Service per its tax
liens set forth.

The Debtors also ask pursuant to Fed.R.Bankr.P. 6004(c) for
authority to sell the Real Estate free and clear of the liens and
encumbrances enumerated.  If their Motion is granted, the sale will
be free and clear of all liens and encumbrances.  Any encumbrances
or liens will attach to the proceeds.

Objections to the Motion should be filed and served in the manner
set out.  If an objection is timely filed, a hearing on said
objection will be scheduled for June 14, 2018 at 10:30 a.m.
Objections to the intended sale, allowance and payment of the
expenses of sale, and distribution of the sale proceeds will be
made no later than May 16, 2018.  If no objections are filed, the
Court may enter an Order allowing the sale and authorizing
disbursement of the sale proceeds as set forth above without
further notice.

Ronald A. Goodwin and Michelle L. Goodwin sought Chapter 11
protection (Bankr. D. Kan. Case No. 16-12205) on Nov. 8, 2017.  The
Debtors tapped Mark J. Lazzo, Esq., as counsel.


ROSSER RESERVE: June 21 Plan Confirmation Hearing
-------------------------------------------------
Judge Cynthia Jackson of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle
District of Florida has conditionally approved the disclosure
statement explaining Rosser Reserve, LLC's plan of reorganization
and scheduled an evidentiary hearing for June 21, 2018, at 02:45
PM, to consider and rule on the disclosure statement and any
objections or modifications and, if the Court determines that the
disclosure statement contains adequate information within the
meaning of Section 1125 of the Bankruptcy Code, to conduct a
confirmation hearing, including hearing objections to confirmation,
Section 1129(b) motions, applications of professionals for
compensation, and applications for allowance of administrative
claims.

Any party desiring to object to the disclosure statement or to
confirmation must file its objection no later than seven days
before the date of the Confirmation Hearing.

                     About Rosser Reserve

Rosser Reserve is the fee simple owner of nine real properties in
Windermere, Florida, valued by the company at $9.83 million.

Rosser Reserve, based in Oakland, Florida, filed a Chapter 11
petition (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 17-07730) on Dec. 12, 2017.  In
the petition signed by Sue R. Prosser, its managing member, the
Debtor disclosed $9.83 million in assets and $8.20 million in
liabilities.  The Law Offices of L. William Porter III, P.A.,
serves as bankruptcy counsel to the Debtor.  S. Avery Smith, Esq.,
is the Debtor's special real estate counsel.

No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Chapter 11 case of Rosser Reserve, LLC as of March 5, according
to a court docket.


RUBY RED: Gadaskin Buying All Assets for $1.5 Million
-----------------------------------------------------
Ruby Red Dentata, LLC, asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Minnesota to authorize the sale of substantially all
assets to Roman Gadaskin for $1.5 million.

A hearing on the Motion is set for May 29, 2018 at 10:00 a.m.  The
objection deadline is May 24, 2018.

The Debtor and the Buyer have entered into the Commercial Purchase
Agreement.  The Assets sold and transferred are the Debtor's
primary assets, the two buildings located at 20 and 28 N. 4th
Street, Minneapolis, Minnesota and legally described as Lots 10,
11, and 12, Auditors Subd. No. 152.

One of the Buildings is a two-story building with approximately
6,000 square feet above ground and the other is a three-story
building with approximately 6,000 feet above ground.  The Buildings
are located in the Minneapolis North Loop/Warehouse District.  The
principal creditor is Harvest Bank.  Harvest Bank holds the first
mortgage on the Buildings.  Harvest Bank commenced a foreclosure
action and the Debtor filed for Chapter 11 protection to stop the
foreclosure process.

After the Debtor filed for bankruptcy protection on the Petition
Date, it retained Edina Realty, Inc. as its real estate broker to
market and to sell the Buildings.  The Debtor filed its Plan of
Reorganization and Disclosure Statement on Feb. 19, 2018.  It filed
its Amended Plan of Reorganization and Amended Disclosure Statement
on Feb. 26, 2018.  A hearing is presently set to be held on May 2,
2018 to consider confirmation of the Debtor's Amended Plan of
Reorganization.  Pursuant to its Amended Plan of Reorganization,
the Debtor intends to sell the Buildings.

The Agreement proposes to sell and transfer all of the Debtor's
right, title and interest in and to the Debtor's Buildings, as
defined in the Purchase Agreement, free and clear of all liens,
claims, encumbrances and interests.  All liens, claims, encumbrance
and any interests in the Buildings will attach to the proceeds from
the sale.

As of Jan. 31, 2018, the Debtor's primary assets consist of cash in
the amount of $3,773 and the Buildings.  The total principle
balance of the secured claim held by Harvest Bank is approximately
$553,794.  The secured claim of Hennepin County for owed and unpaid
real estate taxes is approximately $78,100.

The Buyer agrees to purchase the Buildings for $1.5 million with
$10,000 as earnest money deposit.  After payment to Harvest Bank,
Hennepin County, and closing costs including fees to Edina Realty,
the Debtor estimates it will have approximately $750,000 to pay its
administrative expenses and to fund payments under its Amended Plan
of Reorganization.

A copy of the Agreement attached to the Motion is available for
free at:

   http://bankrupt.com/misc/RUBY_RED_115_Sales.pdf

In its business judgment, the Debtor believes that the sale and
transfer of the Buildings to the Buyer is the best way to maximize
the value and benefit to creditors and all parties in interest.  It
believes that the proposed transfer as outlined in the Motion
produces a result that is superior to any other options that are
currently available.

                   About Ruby Red Dentata

Headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Ruby Red Dentata, LLC, is
in the business of owning, developing, and leasing commercial real
estate.  It has been operated by Ms. Toby Brill since August 2007.

Ruby Red Dentata filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection (Bankr.
D. Minn. Case No. 17-41184) on April 24, 2017, estimating its
assets at between $1 million and $10 million and its liabilities at
between $500,001 and $1 million.  Steven B. Nosek, P.A., is the
Debtor's counsel.

No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Chapter 11 case.


SCG MADILL: Proposes Auction Sale of All Assets
-----------------------------------------------
SCG Madill Brookside, LLC, SCG Durant Four Seasons, LLC, and SCG
Oak Ridge, LLC, ask the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of
Delaware to authorize the sale of substantially all assets at
auction.

Initially, the cases of the Debtors and of SCG Lake Country, LLC,
SCG Red River, LLC, and SCG Red River Management, LLC ("Oklahoma
Debtors") were jointly administered.  However, the United States
Trustee made an ore tenus motion to sever the Oklahoma Debtors' and
the Original Debtors' cases.  On Jan. 18, 2018, the Court entered
the Amended Joint Administration Order, which, among other things,
severed the joint administration of the Oklahoma Debtors' cases
from the Original Debtors' cases.

Four Seasons, Oak Ridge, Brookside, and Lake Country ("Operators")
operate skilled nursing homes ("Facilities") in Oklahoma.  Four
Seasons is licensed to operate a 122-bed facility located at 1212
Four Seasons Dr., Durant, Oklahoma.  Oak Ridge is licensed to
operate a 104-bed facility located at 1100 Oak Ridge Dr., Durant,
Oklahoma.  Brookside is licensed to operate a 140-bed facility
located at 310 Brookside Dr., Madill, Oklahoma.  Lake Country
Nursing Center is licensed to operate a 68-bed facility located at
301 C E Colston Dr., Marietta, Oklahoma.

The Debtors lease real estate owned by non-debtors ("Oklahoma
TICs") who have filed a motion to sell the real estate in the
bankruptcy cases filed by certain of the Oklahoma TICs.  The
Debtors determined that it would be in the best interests of their
creditors and their estates to maximize value of their assets
through a sale of substantially all of their assets in connection
with the sale of the real estate by the Oklahoma TICs.  The
Oklahoma TICs have filed a Motion to reject the Debtors' leases for
the Facilities.  The Oklahoma TICs have deferred consideration of a
sale.  Absent a sale and the rejection of the lease, the Debtors
would most likely be facing a liquidation under Chapter 7 of the
Bankruptcy Code which would achieve far less for creditors than a
sale as a going concern.

The Debtors have filed an application to employ SOLDNOW LLC, doing
business as Tranzon Driggers to conduct the auction of the Debtors'
assets and non-debtor assets.  They propose to sell all of their
assets, other than items listed as Excluded Assets.  The Purchased
Assets will be sold, transferred and conveyed by the Debtors to the
Purchaser at Closing free and clear of all Encumbrances, excepting
any liabilities specifically assumed by the Purchaser.

To establish a fair and competitive process for submission of
competing bids for their assets, on May 1, 2018, the Debtors filed
their Auction Procedures Motion asking approval of auction
procedures to ensure the highest and best offer for their assets.
The Auction Procedures Motion asks the approval of procedures in
connection with the submission of bids for the purchase of the
Purchased Assets at the auction.

By the Sale Motion, the Debtors also ask authority to assume and/or
assign to the Buyer all of their right, title and interest in and
to the executory contracts, leases, and agreements as set forth in
the Successful Bidder's bid free and clear of all Encumbrances.

The sale of the Purchased Assets and the Parcels, as contemplated
by the Successful Bidder's bid, may be accomplished pursuant to and
in contemplation of the confirmation of a plan of reorganization.
If sold in connection with a confirmed plan, the Debtors ask that
the making or delivery of an instrument or instruments of transfer,
any or all of which include the vesting, transfer and/or the sale
of any real or personal property or any direct or indirect interest
therein, including, without limitation, all documents relating to
or referred to in the sale agreements, not be taxed under any law
imposing any recording, registration, transfer or stamp tax or fee,
or any similar tax or fee, including any applicable transfer taxes
or fees, sales taxes, or mortgage recording taxes or fees.

The Debtors, in the sound exercise of their business judgment, have
concluded that consummation of the sale will best maximize the
value of the Debtors' estates for the benefit of their creditors.
In order to ensure the highest possible recovery for their estates,
the Debtors propose a competitive auction for the sale of the
Purchased Assets, as contemplated by the Auction Procedures Motion.
Accordingly, the Debtors respectfully assert that ample business
justification exists for the sale.

At the Sale Hearing, the Debtors will ask that the Court enters an
order waiving the 14-day stays set forth in Rules 6004(g) and
6006(d) of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure and providing
that the orders granting the Sale Motion be immediately enforceable
and that the closing under the sale agreements may occur
immediately.

                  About SCG MADILL BROOKSIDE

Based in Tampa, Florida, SCG Madill Brookside, LLC, d/b/a Brookside
Nursing Center and its affiliates, operate skilled nursing
facilities.  SCG Madill Brookside, et al., provide residents and
patients with a full spectrum of skilled nursing and long-term
health care services and offer a wide range of direct care services
like therapy, hospice care, Alzheimer's, and dementia care within
their portfolio of facilities.

SCG Madill Brookside (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 17-10101) and
affiliates SCG Durant Four Seasons, LLC (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No.
17-10103), SCG Lake Country, LLC (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No.
17-10104), SCG Oak Ridge, LLC (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 17-10107),
SCG Red River, LLC (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 17-10108), and SCG
Red River Management, LLC (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 17-10109)
filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy petitions on Dec. 5, 2017, estimating
its assets and liabilities at between $1 million and $10 million
each.  The petition was signed by David Vaughan, chairman of the
Board.

These affiliated cases previously filed on July 27, 2017 in the
Middle District of Florida, Tampa Division, with Judge Catherine
Peek McEwen as bankruptcy judge:

     Entity                                        Case No.
     ------                                        --------
     Senior Care Group, Inc.                       17-06562
     SCG Laurellwood, LLC                          17-06576
     SCG Gracewood, LLC                            17-06574
     SCG Harbourwood, LLC                          17-06572
     SCG Baywood, LLC                              17-06563
     Key West Health and Rehabilitation Center     17-06580
     The Bridges Nursing and Rehabilitation, LLC   17-06579

Scott A. Stichter, Esq., at Stichter, Riedel, Blain & Postler,
P.A., serves as the Debtors' bankruptcy counsel.

On Jan. 18, 2018, the Court entered the Amended Joint
Administration Order, which, among other things, severed the joint
administration of the Oklahoma Debtors' cases from the Original
Debtors' cases.

No trustee or examiner has been appointed in the Debtors' cases.


SEVEN TOWER: Taps Cozen O'Connor as Special Counsel
---------------------------------------------------
Seven Tower Bridge Associates, LP, seeks approval from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania to hire
Cozen O'Connor as special zoning, land use and real estate tax
assessment appeal counsel.

Ross Weiss, Esq., a partner at the law firm of Cozen O'Connor,
attests that neither he nor his firm represents or holds any
interest adverse to the interests of the Debtor's estate with
respect of the zoning, land use and real estate tax assessment
appeal matters.

Cozen has incurred fees totaling $10,044.00 from the petition date
through April 26, 2018.

The counsel can be reached through:

     Ross Weiss, Esq.
     Cozen O'Connor
     One Oxford Centre
     301 Grant Street, 26th Floor
     Pittsburgh, PA 15219
     Phone: +1 (412) 620-6500
     Fax: (412) 275-2390

             About Seven Tower Bridge Associates

Seven Tower Bridge Associates listed its business as a single asset
real estate (as defined in 11 U.S.C. Section 101(51B)) whose
principal assets are located at 110 Washington Street Conshohocken,
Pennsylvania.

Seven Tower Bridge Associates sought protection under Chapter 11 of
the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E.D. Pa. Case No. 18-11903) on March
22, 2018.  In the petition signed by Donald W. Pulver, president of
Seven Oliver Tower Corp., the Debtor estimated assets and
liabilities of $10 million to $50 million.  

Judge Jean K. FitzSimon presides over the case.  

The Debtor hired Ciardi Ciardi & Astin, PC, as its bankruptcy
counsel.


SHARINN & LIPSHIE: Hires Barnes & Co as Accountant
--------------------------------------------------
Sharinn & Lipshie, P.C., seeks authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Eastern District of New York to hire Barnes & Co,
CPA, P.C. as its accountant.

Barnes & Co. will review the financial statements of the Debtor;
prepare the Debtor's monthly operating reports, accounting
statements, cash flow reports; prepare tax returns, and overall
assist in the preparation of financial reports for the Debtor's
plan of reorganization and related work.

The firm will charge a monthly rate of $675.00, plus reimbursement
of all reasonable and necessary out of pocket expenses.

Steven Barnes, CPA, Principal of Barnes & Co., CPA, P.C., attests
that his firm does not represent any interest adverse to the Debtor
and is a "disinterested person" as defined in the Bankruptcy Code.

The accountant can be reached through:

     Steven Barnes, CPA
     Barnes & Co., CPA, P.C.
     646 Long Island Ave.
     Deer Park, NY  11729
     Phone: 631-586-2830
     Fax: 631-586-2833
     Email: barnes407@att.net

                   About Sharinn & Lipshie

Sharinn & Lipshie P.C. sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 18-70853) on Feb. 8,
2018.  In the petition signed by Harvey Sharinn, president, the
Debtor estimated assets of less than $500,000 and liabilities of
less than $1 million.  Judge Robert E. Grossman presides over the
case.  Berger, Fischoff & Shumer, LLP, is the Debtor's bankruptcy
counsel.


SOMNANG REALTY: Wilmington Buying Orlando Property for $15K
-----------------------------------------------------------
Somnang Realty, LLC, asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle
District of Florida to authorize the sale of sale of the real
property located at 2137 Lake Vilma Drive, Orlando, Florida outside
the ordinary course of business to Wilmington Savings Fund Society,
FSB, doing business as Christiana Trust as Owner Trustee of the
Residential Credit Opportunities Trust III, for $15,000.

The Property is encumbered by a first mortgage held by Wilmington.
On Jan. 26, 2017, Wilmington obtained an in rem judgment in the
amount of $599,489.

There is no equity in the Property.

The Debtor proposes to execute a quitclaim deed transferring the
Property to Wilmington in exchange for a payment of $15,000.  It
avers that the proposed transfer is in its best interest of the
Debtor, its creditors and the bankruptcy estate.  The Debtor and
Wilmington are contemporaneously filing a Joint Motion to Approve
Settlement and Compromise.  The negative notice for the 9019 Motion
will run on May 25, 2018.

The Debtor asks an expedited hearing on the Motion on May 25,
2018.

The Purchaser:

          WILMINGTON SAVINGS FUND SOCIETY
          500 Delaware Avenue
          Wilmington, DE 19801-7405

                     About Somnang Realty

Based in Jacksonville, Florida, Somnang Realty LLC is the fee
simple owner of properties located at: (a) 2137 Lake Vilma Drive,
Orlando, Florida; (b) 11209 Spinning Reel Cir., Orlando, Florida;
(c) 12352 N. Sondra Cove Trail, Jacksonville, Florida; and (d) 3970
Pine High Road, Jacksonville, Florida.  In the aggregate, the
properties are valued at $952,934.  Somnang Realty has a checking
account balance of $3,247 at Wells Fargo.

Somnang Realty sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 17-01850) on May 22, 2017.  The
petition was signed by Sophal Kheng, authorized member.

At the time of the filing, the Debtor indicated $956,181 in total
assets and $1.07 million in total liabilities.  The Debtor is
represented by Taylor J. King, Esq. of Mickler & Micler.


SOUTH SHORE PAINTING: Hatcher Buying Equity Interest for $3K
------------------------------------------------------------
Shore Painting & Waterproofing, LLC, filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Middle District of Florida a notice of its private
sale of the Reorganized Debtor's equity interest to Greg Hatcher
for $3,000, subject to higher and better offers.

Objections, is any, must be filed within 21 days from the date of
Notice.

The sale will be an "as is" sale of the equity interest of the
Reorganized Debtor, free and clear of all liens, claims and
interests of any persons, pursuant to the Debtor's Plan of
Reorganization and Section 363 of the Bankruptcy Code.  The Debtor
will conduct the sale pursuant to Local Rule 6004-1, and pursuant
to that rule, no order approving the sale will be entered by the
Bankruptcy Judge.

The manner of the sale will be private sale between the Debtor and
the highest bidder, unless written objections are filed within the
time specified, the Debtor will make the sale on the terms set
forth herein without further notice or hearing.

The Debtor will entertain any higher bids for purchase of the
equity interest of the Reorganized Debtor.  Such bids will be in
increments of $1,500 and interested parties must deposit $1,500 to
the Debtor's counsel (payable to McIntyre Thanasides Trust Account)
five days prior to the continued confirmation hearing.  Currently,
the Confirmation hearing is rescheduled to be held on June 20, 2018
at 9:30 a.m.

                   About South Shore Painting

Based in Brandon, Florida, South Shore Painting and Waterproofing
LLC filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No.
17-09416) on Nov. 6, 2017, estimating under $1 million in assets
and liabilities.  James W. Elliot, Esq. at McIntyre Thanasides
Bringgold Elliott Grimaldi & Guito, P.A., is the Debtor's counsel.


SOUTHCROSS ENERGY: Reports First Quarter Results
------------------------------------------------
Southcross Energy Partners, L.P., announced first quarter financial
and operating results.

Southcross' net loss was $16.8 million for the quarter ended March
31, 2018, compared to $15.4 million for the same period in the
prior year and $17.3 million for the quarter ended Dec. 31, 2017.
Adjusted EBITDA was $15.1 million for the quarter ended March 31,
2018, compared to $18.0 million for the same period in the prior
year and $17.3 million for the quarter ended December 31, 2017.
Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter was lower than the prior
quarter primarily due to lower processed gas volumes resulting from
lower volumes delivered by producers.  This was partially offset by
lower operating and general and administrative expenses.

Processed gas volumes during the quarter averaged 234 MMcf/d, a
decrease of 9% compared to 256 MMcf/d for the same period in the
prior year and a decrease of 8% compared to 255 MMcf/d for the
quarter ended Dec. 31, 2017.

Capital Expenditures

For the quarter ended March 31, 2018, growth and maintenance
capital expenditures were $3.4 million and were related primarily
to various projects to connect new production to our assets.

Capital and Liquidity

As of March 31, 2018, Southcross had total outstanding debt of $530
million, including $83 million under its revolving credit facility,
as compared to total outstanding debt of $527 million as of Dec.
31, 2017.
  
In accordance with the amendment to Southcross' revolving credit
agreement executed Dec. 29, 2016, Southcross issued $15 million of
senior unsecured notes to certain funds managed by EIG Global
Energy Partners and Tailwater Capital in January 2018.  At May 4,
2018, Southcross had more than $24 million in available liquidity.

Cash Distributions and Distributable Cash Flow

Distributable cash flow for the quarter ended March 31, 2018 was
$5.0 million, compared to $8.9 million for the same period in the
prior year and $5.8 million for the quarter ended Dec. 31, 2017.
The Partnership did not make a cash distribution for the quarter
ended March 31, 2018 and is not allowed to make any cash
distributions until the Partnership's consolidated total leverage
ratio, as defined under its credit agreement, is at or below 5.0x
to 1.  At March 31, 2018, the Partnership's consolidated total
leverage ratio was approximately 8.6x to 1 compared to
approximately 8.1x to 1 for the quarter ended Dec. 31, 2017.  In
addition, under the terms of the Agreement and Plan of Merger,
dated as of Oct. 31, 2017, with American Midstream Partners, LP,
its general partner, and a certain wholly owned subsidiary of AMID
pursuant to which Southcross will merge with AMID's wholly owned
subsidiary, the Partnership is not permitted, without the prior
written consent of AMID, to declare or pay any distribution or
dividends on its common units during the pendency of the merger.

A full-text copy of the press release is available for free at:

                     https://is.gd/xKwiBm

                    About Southcross Energy

Southcross Energy Partners, L.P. --
http://www.southcrossenergy.com/-- is a master limited partnership
that provides natural gas gathering, processing, treating,
compression and transportation services and NGL fractionation and
transportation services.  It also sources, purchases, transports
and sells natural gas and NGL.  Its assets are located in South
Texas, Mississippi and Alabama and include two gas processing
plants, one fractionation plant and approximately 3,100 miles of
pipeline.  The South Texas assets are located in or near the Eagle
Ford shale region.  Southcross is headquartered in Dallas, Texas.

As of Dec. 31, 2017, Southcross Energy had $1.10 billion in total
assets, $604.6 million in total liabilities and $499.6 million in
total partners' capital.  Southcross Energy incurred a net loss
attributable to partners of $67.65 million in 2017 following a net
loss attributable to partners of $94.99 million in 2016.

                          *     *     *

In February 2017, S&P Global Ratings said that it affirmed its
'CCC+' corporate credit and senior secured issue-level ratings on
Southcross Energy Partners L.P.  The outlook is stable.  The rating
action reflects S&P's view that the recent credit agreement
amendment limits the likelihood of a default in the next two years
as the partnership will have an improved liquidity position and
need no longer adhere to its leverage covenants.

The TCR reported on Jan. 13, 2016, that Moody's Investors Service
downgraded Southcross Energy's Corporate Family Rating to 'Caa1'
from 'B2'.  Southcross' Caa1 CFR reflects its high financial
leverage, limited scale, concentration in the Eagle Ford Shale and
Moody's expectation of continued high leverage and challenging
industry conditions into 2017.


SOUTHEASTERN GROCERS: Selling Underperforming Store 5419 for $100K
------------------------------------------------------------------
Southeastern Grocers, LLC and its debtor-affiliates filed a notice
with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware of
their intent to enter into a Lease Sale Transaction with respect to
underperforming store 5419 with Publix Super Markets, Inc. for
$100,000, and assign associated leases pursuant to their Lease Sale
Agreement, dated April 25, 2018.

On April 2, 2018, the Court entered the Discrete Procedures Order,
it authorized the Debtors to, among other things, sell the Stores
free and clear of all liens, claims, encumbrances, and interests.

The Assets consist of the Lease and the Additional Assets
referenced:

        -- Lease:      

          a. Landlord Name and Address: Seneca 130, LLC, P.O. Box
1929, Easley, SC 29641

          b. Store Number and Banner: 5419 BI-LO

          c. Real Property Address: 115 Rochester Hwy., Seneca, SC
29672

          d. Lease Expiration Date: Nov. 30, 2021

          e. Description: Permits/Licenses, FF&E

          f. Location: Store 5419

The Debtors propose to sell or dispose of the Assets to
Counterparty on an "as is" basis, free and clear of all liens,
claims, encumbrances and other interests therein.  

They're aware of remaining liens and/or encumbrances on the Assets
granted under: (1) Interim Order Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. Sections
105, 361, 362, 363, 364 and 507, Fed. R. Bankr. P. 2002, 4001 and
9014, and Del. Bankr. L.R. 4001-2 (I) Authorizing the Debtors to
Use Cash Collateral of the Prepetition Secured Parties, (II)
Granting Adequate Protection to the Prepetition Secured Parties,
(III) Prescribing Form and Manner of Notice of and Scheduling Final
Hearing, and (IV) Granting Related Relief; (2) Amended and Restated
ABL Credit Agreement, dated as of May 21, 2014, among BI-LO
Holding, LLC, as holdings, BI-LO, LLC, as borrower, the lenders
party thereto and Deutsche Bank AG New York Branch, as
administrative agent and collateral agent; and (3) Indenture (as
amended, supplemented, or otherwise modified prior to the
Commencement Date), dated as of Feb. 3, 2011, pursuant to which
BILO, LLC and BI-LO Finance Corp. issued Senior Secured Notes due
2019.  To the extent that any party has liens and encumbrances on
or interests in the Assets, the Debtors believe that any such
liens, encumbrances or interests would be subject to monetary
satisfaction, and such liens, encumbrances or interests will attach
to the proceeds of the sale in their same order of priority.

In connection with the Transaction, the Debtors ask to assume and
assign the Lease to Counterparty.  Pursuant to the Discrete
Procedures Order, the Debtors provide these Assumption and
Assignment Information:

   -- Store No. 5419

     a. Proposed Effective Date of Assumption and Assignment: May
18, 2018

     b. Proposed Cure Amount: $0

     c. Counterparty's Name, Address, and Email Address: Publix
Super Markets, Inc., 3300 Publix Corporate Parkway, Lakeland, FL
33811, Attn: Robert S. Balcerak, E-mail: bob.balcerak@publix.com

Objections, if any, must be filed within 14 calendar days after the
date of service of the Sale Notice.

A copy of the Agreements attached to the Notice is available for
free at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/Southeastern_Grocers_376_Sales.pdf

                   About Southeastern Grocers

Southeastern Grocers, LLC, (SEG), the parent company and home of
BI-LO, Fresco y Mas, Harveys Supermarket and Winn-Dixie grocery
stores, is one of the largest conventional supermarket companies in
the U.S. SEG grocery stores, liquor stores and in-store pharmacies
serve communities throughout the seven southeastern states of
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina
and South Carolina. BI-LO, Fresco y Mas, Harveys Supermarket and
Winn-Dixie are well known and well-respected regional brands with
deep heritages, strong neighborhood ties, proud histories of giving
back, talented and caring associates and strong commitments to
providing the best possible quality and value to customers.  Their
Web sites are http://www.bi-lo.com/, http://www.frescoymas.com/,
http://www.harveyssupermarkets.com/and http://www.winndixie.com/


BI-LO and its affiliates filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
on March 23, 2009 (Bankr. D. S.C. Case No. 09-02140).  BI-LO
emerged from bankruptcy in May 2010 with Lone Star Funds remaining
as majority owner.

Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc., sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr.
S.D.N.Y. Case No. 05-11063, transferred April 14, 2005, to Bankr.
M.D. Fla. Case Nos. 05-03817 through 05-03840) on Feb. 21, 2005.

In December 2011, BI-LO Holdings signed a deal to acquire all of
the outstanding shares of Winn-Dixie Stores stock in a merger.
Holdings was later renamed Southeastern Grocers.

On March 27, 2018, Southeastern Grocers, LLC and 26 affiliated
debtors sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. D. Del. Lead Case No.
18-10700).  SEG commenced Chapter 11 cases to seek confirmation of
a prepackaged chapter 11 plan that will cancel their unsecured
notes in exchange for 100% of the equity of the reorganized
company.

The Debtors have requested joint administration of the cases.  The
Honorable Mary F. Walrath oversees the cases.

Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP is serving as legal counsel to the
Debtors, Evercore is serving as their investment banker, and FTI
Consulting Inc. as restructuring advisor.  Prime Clerk LLC is the
claims and noticing agent and administrative advisor.

Morrison & Foerster LLP is serving as legal counsel and Moelis &
Company LLC is serving as financial advisor to an ad hoc group of
holders of Unsecured Notes and 9.25% Senior Secured Notes due 2019.


SPENCER GIFTS: Bank Debt Trades at 13% Off
------------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which Spencer Gifts LLC
is a borrower traded in the secondary market at 86.75
cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4, 2018,
according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM Pricing.
This represents a decrease of 3.89 percentage points from the
previous week. Spencer Gifts pays 350 basis points above LIBOR to
borrow under the $1.5 billion facility. The bank loan matures on
September 30, 2024. Moody's rates the loan 'B3' and Standard &
Poor's gave a 'B-' rating to the loan. The loan is one of the
biggest gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted syndicated loans
with five or more bids in secondary trading for the week ended
Friday, May 4.


STAR PERFORMANCE: Must File Plan and Disclosures Before July 2
--------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Michael G. Williamson of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Middle District of Florida ordered Star Performance Realty, Inc.,
d/b/a ReMax South Shore Realty, to file a plan and disclosure
statement on or before July 2, 2018.

The Disclosure Statement must, at the minimum, contain adequate
information pertaining to the Debtor in the following areas:

(a) Pre- and post-petition financial performance;
(b) Reasons for filing Chapter 11;
(c) Steps taken by the Debtor since filing of the petition to
facilitate its reorganization;
(d) Projections reflecting how the Plan will be feasibly
consummated;
(e) A liquidation analysis; and
(f) A discussion of the Federal tax consequences as described in
section 1125(a)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code.

If the Debtor fails to file a Plan and Disclosure Statement by the
filing deadline, the Court will issue an Order to Show Cause why
the case should not be dismissed or converted to a Chapter 7 case.

                About Star Performance Realty

Star Performance Realty, Inc., d/b/a ReMax South Shore Realty,
filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No.
18-01791) on March 9, 2018.  In the petition signed by Janelle M.
Duncan, president, the Debtor estimated assets and liabilities at
$500,000 to $1 million.  The Debtor hired Buddy D. Ford, Esq., at
Buddy D. Ford, P.A., as counsel.


STEINHOFF INTERNATIONAL: Bank Debt Trades at 5% Off
---------------------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which Steinhoff
International Holdings Ltd is a borrower traded in the secondary
market at 94.67 cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday,
May 4, 2018, according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM
Pricing. This represents a decrease of 1.22 percentage points from
the previous week. Steinhoff International pays 600 basis points
above LIBOR to borrow under the $1.5 billion facility. The bank
loan matures on June 30, 2022. Moody's rates the loan 'Caa2' and
Standard & Poor's gave a 'B-' rating to the loan. The loan is one
of the biggest gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted
syndicated loans with five or more bids in secondary trading for
the week ended Friday, May 4.


STERNSCHNUPPE LLC: Plan Outline Okayed; June 13 Plan Hearing
------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Mike K. Nakagawa of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Nevada approved Sternschnuppe LLC's disclosure
statement describing its chapter 11 plan of reorganization filed on
Jan. 23, 2018.

The deadline for Debtor to serve the Solicitation Packages on the
appropriate parties is May 1, 2018.

The deadline for filing objections to confirmation of the Plan is
May 23, 2018.

The deadline for filing replies to any objections to confirmation
of the Plan is May 30, 2018.

The Confirmation Hearing is set for June 13, 2018 at 9:30 a.m.

The Troubled Company Reporter previously reported that Class 2
Allowed General Unsecured Claims under the plan will receive
payment equal to 100% of their allowed claim, paid pursuant to
Debtor's monthly payments over eight years after the Effective
Date. Each holder of a Class 2 claim will receive interest
calculated at the Federal Judgment Rate (estimated federal interest
rate is 1%).

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/nvb16-11242-202.pdf

                    About Sternschnuppe

Sternschnuppe LLC filed a chapter 11 petition (Bankr. D. Nev. Case
No. 16-11242) on March 10, 2016.  The petition was signed by
Kimberly Michaelis, managing member.  The case is assigned to Judge
Mike K. Nakagawa.  The Debtor estimated assets and liabilities at
$1 million to $10 million at the time of the filing.  The Debtor is
represented by Nedda Ghandi, Esq., at Ghandi Deeter Law Offices.


STEWART DUDLEY: Magnify Trustee's Sale of Condo Unit 1925 Approved
------------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Tamara O. Mitchell of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Northern District of Alabama authorized Jeffery J. Hartley, Chapter
11 Trustee for Magnify Industries, LLC, to sell the condominium
Unit 1925, located at Emerald Beach Resort in Panama City Beach,
Florida to Otis Lofton Jr. and Myla Lofton for a gross sales price
of $295,000.

The net sales proceeds will be placed in the escrow account of
Engel, Hairston & Johanson P.C., to be held pending further order
of the Court.

                   About Stewart Ray Dudley

Stewart Ray Dudley filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. N.D. Ala.
Case No. 16-01842) on May 5, 2016, and is represented by R. Scott
Williams, Esq. from Rumberger, Kirk & Caldwell, P.C.

In January 2017, Buffalo Rock Company and James C. Lee, III,
creditors of Stewart Ray Dudley, filed a motion for order directing
the appointment of Peter W. Colmer as Chapter 11 Trustee for the
Debtor's bankruptcy estate.  They claimed that continuously acting
against the best interest of his estate, the Debtor caused numerous
assets to be transferred to Magnify Industries, LLC, including an
automobile collection previously valued at over $5,500,000; 100% of
his interest of an updated warehouse and event space commonly
referred to as Old Car Heaven previously valued at over $1,534,000;
and 17 beach front condominiums.

Buffalo Rock is represented by Burr & Forman LLP.  James C. Lee,
III, is represented by Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP.

The Court appointed Jeffery J. Hartley as Chapter 11 Trustee on
Feb. 24, 2017.

The Trustee:

          Mr. Jeffery Hartley
          P.O. Box 2767
          Mobile, AL 36652
          E-mail: jjh@helmsinglaw.com

The Trustee is represented by:

          Ogden S. Deaton, Esq.
          GRAHAM & CO.
          110 Office Park Drive
          Suite 200
          Birmingham, AL 35223
          E-mail: ogdend@grahamcompany.com


SUMMIT FINANCIAL: Committee Taps Rice Pugatch Robinson as Counsel
-----------------------------------------------------------------
The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors of Summit Financial
Corp. seeks authority from the U.S. Banktruptcy Court for the
Southern District of Florida, Fort Lauderdale Division, to retain
Craig A. Pugatch and Rice Pugatch Robinson Storfer & Cohen, PLLC as
its counsel.

Services to be rendered by RPRSC are:

     a) give advice to the Committee with respect to its powers and
duties as the Official Unsecured Creditors' Committee;

     b) advise the Committee with respect to its responsibilities
in complying with the U.S. Trustee's Guidelines and with the rules
of the Court;

     c) prepare motions, pleadings, orders, applications, adversary
proceedings, objections, and other legal documents necessary in the
administration of the case;

     d) conduct discovery;

     e) appear as needed and protect the interests of the Committee
on behalf of unsecured creditors in all matters pending before the
Court;

     f) represent the Committee in negotiation with the Debtor,
other Creditors, and other Interested Parties, in the preparation
and confirmation of a plan of reorganization or liquidation;

     g) represent and advise the Committee regarding claims
objections claims and other claims issues; and

     h) handle any and all matters on behalf of the Committee on an
as needed and requested basis.

Craig A. Pugatch, Esq., member of the law firm Rice Pugatch
Robinson Storfer & Cohen, PLLC, attests that RPRSC is a
"disinterested person" as defined in Section 101(14) of the
Bankruptcy Code.

The counsel can be reached through:

     Craig A. Pugatch, Esq.
     Rice Pugatch Robinson Storfer & Cohen PLLC
     101 NE 3rd Ave., Suite 1800
     Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301
     Phone: (954) 462-8000
     Fax: (954) 462-4300

                  About Summit Financial Corp

Summit Financial Corp -- https://www.summitfinancialcorp.org/ --
provides financing by purchasing and servicing retail installment
sales contracts originated at franchised automobile dealerships and
select independent used car dealerships located throughout Florida,
Alabama, and Georgia.  From its location in Plantation, Florida,
Summit Financial provides financing for automobile loans for
customers that fail to meet the standards of financing from
conventional sources, such as most banks, credit unions and other
national finance companies.  The Company was founded in 1984.  

Summit Financial filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case
No. 18-13389) on March 23, 2018.  In the petition signed by David
Wheeler, vice president, the Debtor estimated $100 million to $500
million in assets and liabilities.

Judge Raymond B Ray presides over the case.

Douglas J. Jeffrey, Esq., at the Law Offices of Douglas J. Jeffrey,
P.A. and Zach B. Shelomith at the law firm of Leiderman Shelomith
Alexander + Somodevilla, PLL, serve as the Debtor's counsel.


SUNPRO SOLAR: Seeks Authority on Interim Cash Collateral Use
------------------------------------------------------------
Sunpro Solar, Inc., seeks authorization from the United States
Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California for interim
use of cash collateral.

The Debtor's primary secured creditors are (1) JP Morgan Chase
Bank, NA, (2) On Deck Capital, Inc., and (3) other secured
creditors holding relatively small auto financing loans on the
Debtor's vehicles -- which the Debtor believes do not have a lien
on any other assets except for the vehicles they specifically
financed. The Debtor intends to negotiate stipulations with Chase
and On Deck to permit the use of cash collateral, subject to review
by the Court. However, the Debtor needs to use cash now.

The Debtor also asks the Court to set a hearing for the final
approval of the use of cash collateral through October 26, 2018,
with provision that such approval can be further extended upon the
submission to the Court of written stipulations (and accompanying
budgets) with both Chase and On Deck.

The Debtor asserts that its current assets are sufficient to fully
satisfy the claims of both Chase and On Deck. Nonetheless, in
return for the proposed use of cash collateral, the Debtor will
provide adequate protection to Chase and On Deck through (a) the
continued payment to Chase of all sums when due under its
promissory note with the Debtor, (b) the use of cash under a
proposed budget to preserve and enhance the Debtor's business
operations (and its ability to fully pay these creditors in dull
over time), and (c) the granting of replacement liens to those
parties, equal in priority to their prepetition status, for the
actual amount of cash collateral used by the Debtor subsequent to
the Debtor's Petition Date.

A full-text copy of the Debtor's Motion is available at

             http://bankrupt.com/misc/cacb18-13196-9.pdf

                      About Sunpro Solar

Sunpro Solar -- http://www.sunpro-solar.com/-- offers the newest
in solar module technology to residential and commercial clients.
Headquartered in Wildomar, California, the Company designs and
installs solar power system.

Sunpro Solar Inc. dba SunPro Solar filed a Chapter 11 petition
(Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 18-13196), on April 17, 2018.  The
petition was signed by Adam Joshua Evans, president. The case is
assigned to Judge Mark S Wallace.  The Debtor is represented by
Robert B. Rosenstein, Esq. at Rosenstein & Associates.  At the time
of filing, the Debtor had $1.04 million in total assets and
$937,475 in total debts.


SUNSHINE DAIRY: Taps Boverman & Associates as Business Consultant
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Sunshine Dairy Foods Management, LLC, also known as Sunshine Dairy
Foods, seeks authority from the United States Bankruptcy Court for
the District of Oregon to Daniel J. Boverman and Boverman &
Associates, LLC as business and turnaround consultants.

Professional services to be rendered by Boverman are:

     a. actively manage the business of SDFMLLC working closely
with other officers, managers and employees with respect to sales,
order entry and acceptance, production scheduling; hiring and
terminations; staffing and scheduling; contractual and other
commitments including placement of purchase orders, disbursements
and other matters;

     b. establish and communicate and a commitments and
disbursements policy designed to ensure that Mr.
Boverman approves all significant financial commitments of the
Companies prior to such commitments being made and all significant
disbursements prior to such disbursements being made;

     c. represent the interests of the Companies during
communications and negotiations with the Companies' customers,
suppliers, employees, lenders, consultants and advisors;

     d. attend Board Meetings and report progress on operations,
financial affairs, lender negotiations, asset
sales and other matters;

     e. analyze, develop and implement all aspects of the Company's
operational and financial restructuring
plans.

     f. assist the Companies' bankruptcy counsel with respect to
preparing various documentation required for the Bankruptcy Case,
including various motions such as for use of cash collateral;
statement of financial affairs and schedules; declarations and the
plan of reorganization;

     g. meet with and serve as contact with respect to the
Company's financial and operational matters for the
Company's creditors any committees formed during the Bankruptcy
Case.

Daniel J. Boverman as Consultant will charge $325.00/hour for his
services.

Daniel J. Boverman attests that Boverman & Associates, LLC, has no
interest materially adverse to the interest of the estate or of any
class of creditors or equity security holders.

The firm can be reached through:

     Daniel J. Boverman
     Boverman & Associates, LLC
     11285 SW Walker Rd.
     Portland, OR 97225
     Phone: 503 627 9905
     Fax: 503 319 7727
     E-mail: danboverman@boverman.biz

                  About Sunshine Dairy Foods

Sunshine Dairy Foods is family-owned dairy processor serving local
food service customers, local food manufacturer partners, local
retailers and co-pack customers in the Pacific Northwest.  All
Sunshine milk products are packaged in recyclable opaque white jugs
and paper cartons to protect the milk from light and prevent
oxidation. Sunshine's largest vendor is its milk supplier, Oregon
Milk Marketing Federation. OMMF members are almost universally
family farmers who manage small to mid-sized farms in the
Willamette Valley, Oregon and Yakima Valley and Chehalis,
Washington.

Sunshine Dairy Foods Management, LLC, and Karamanos Holdings, Inc.
concurrently filed voluntary petitions seeking relief under Chapter
11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Or. Case No. 18-31644 and
Bankr. D. Or. Case No. 18-31646, respectively) on May 9, 2018.  The
petitions were signed by Norman Davidson III, president of
Karamanos Holdings, Inc., managing member.

Nicholas J. Henderson, Esq. at MOTSCHENBACHER & BLATTNER, LLP and
Douglas R. Ricks, Esq. at VANDEN BOS & CHAPMAN, LLP, serve as the
Debtors' counsel.

At the time of filing, Sunshine Dairy Foods estimated $1 million to
$10 million in assets and $10 million to $50 million in
liabilities.


THE NEXT STEP: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
-------------------------------------------------------
No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Chapter 11 case of The Next Step, LLC, as of May 8, 2018.

Headquartered in Winter Park, Florida, The Next Step, LLC, filed
for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No.
18-01686) on March 27, 2018, estimating its assets at between
$500,001 and $1 million and its liabilities at between $100,001 and
$500,000.  Jeffrey Ainsworth, Esq., at Bransonlaw PLLC, serves as
the Debtor's bankruptcy counsel.


THOMAS A. FALKNER: Court to Continue Amended Plan Hearing on May 30
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Catherine Peek McEwen of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Middle District of Florida issues her preliminary findings and
conclusions of law with respect to the confirmation of Debtor
Thomas A. Falkner's amended chapter 11 plan of reorganization.

Having considered the Amended Plan, the Howard Objection, the
Howard Withdrawal, the CPS Objection, the CPS Withdrawal, the L&M
Objection, the UST Objection, the Bradenton Objection, the 2nd
Bradenton Objection, the Ballot Tabulation, the Confirmation
Affidavit, and the proffers and argument of counsel, and for the
reasons stated orally and recorded in open court which shall
constitute the decision, findings of fact, and conclusions of law
of the Court, the Court finds that the Amended Plan and the entire
record reveal that the transactions contemplated by the Amended
Plan will provide a significant benefit to all Creditors and will
provide for payments to be made on account of Allowed
Administrative Expense Claims, Priority Claims, Secured Claims, and
Unsecured Claims.

The Debtor has also proposed the Amended Plan in good faith and not
by any means forbidden by law, thereby satisfying Section
1129(a)(3) of the Bankruptcy Code.

The Amended Plan also satisfies Section 1129(a)(11) of the
Bankruptcy Code. The Disclosure Statement, Confirmation Affidavit,
and proffers made at the Confirmation Hearing: (a) are persuasive,
credible, and accurate as of the dates prepared, presented, or
proffered; (b) either have not been controverted by other
persuasive evidence or have not been challenged; (c) are based upon
reasonable and sound assumptions; and (d) establish that the
Amended Plan is feasible.

The principal purpose of the Amended Plan is not the avoidance of
taxes or the avoidance of the application of Section 5 of the
Securities Act of 1933, and there has been no objection filed by
any Governmental Unit asserting such avoidance. Accordingly, the
Amended Plan complies with Section 1129(d) of the Bankruptcy Code.

Having met the his burden of proving all of the elements of Section
1129(a) of the Bankruptcy Code except for 1129(a)(2), and the plan
satisfying the requirements of Section 1129(a)(1), and 1129(a)(3)
through (a)(16) of the Bankruptcy Code, the Court will conduct a
continued preliminary hearing May 30, 2018, at 9:30 a.m. to
determine whether the Plan meets the requirements of Section
1129(a)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code.

The UST Objection is sustained solely with respect to the objection
to Article 11.03 of the Plan such that Article 11.03 of the Plan is
stricken. The balance of the UST Objection is overruled. In lieu of
Article 11.03 of the Plan, the Debtor, the plan funder--John
Falkner, and Stichter, Riedel, Blain & Postler, P.A. and its
officers, directors, and employees will be entitled to the
protections set forth in Section section 1125(e) of the Bankruptcy
Code. Furthermore, no suit, action, complaint, claim, proceeding,
or the like may be commenced against the Debtor, the plan funder--
John Falkner, or Stichter, Riedel, Blain & Postler, P.A. or its
officers, directors, or employees without first obtaining an order
of this Court.

The Howard Objection and the CPS Objection were withdrawn prior to
the Confirmation Hearing. The L&M Objection and the Bradenton
Objection are overruled, except with respect to the argument that
the Amended Plan does not satisfy Section 1129(a)(2) of the
Bankruptcy Code because the Debtor failed to turn over the proceeds
of a BP Oil claim and the proceeds of a claim under the Perishable
Agricultural Commodities Act, which argument is preserved and will
be heard on May 30, 2018.

The bankruptcy case is in re: THOMAS A. FALKNER, Chapter 11,
Debtor, Case No. 8:16-bk-04019-CPM (Bankr. M.D. Fla.).

A full-text copy of the Court's Preliminary Findings and
Conclusions of Law is available at https://bit.ly/2Ikmre9 from
Leagle.com.

Thomas A Falkner, Debtor, represented by Mark F. Robens --
mrobens@srbp.com -- Stichter, Riedel, Blain & Postler, PA, Amy
Denton Harris -- aharris@srbp.com -- Stichter Riedel Blain &
Postler, P.A. & Mark P. Stopa , Stopa Law Firm.

United States Trustee - TPA7/13, U.S. Trustee, represented by
Denise E. Barnett -- denise.barnett@usdoj.gov -- United States
Trustee.


THORNTON & THORNTON: Synergy Already Paid in Full from Assets Sale
------------------------------------------------------------------
Thornton & Thornton Enterprises, Inc. filed with the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Texas a first amended
disclosure statement, dated April 17, 2018, to accompany its
proposed plan of reorganization.

The Debtor has liquidated all assets belonging to the company by
enhanced price sale and transfer upon previous order of the Court.
The remaining funds have been deposited into the IOLTA Trust
Account of Debtor's counsel. The funds are to be disbursed by (i)
Order of the Bankruptcy Court and (ii) the terms and conditions of
the Plan of Reorganization upon confirmation. There is the amount
of $700,000 remaining from the Sale of All Assets of the company.

The Plan will be funded from the liquidation of the Debtor and all
assets will be distributed in cash. Several companies owned by the
principal of the Debtor will subordinate their claims allowed for
all unsecured claims (other than the subordinated claims) to
receive a 100% distribution on their Allowed Claim.

The Debtor asserts that their Plan is feasible based on the
availability of existing funds from the sale of all hard assets of
the company currently available for paying claim.

Class 3 under the plan consists of the Allowed Secured Claim of
Synergy Bank, SSB, in the estimated amount of $1,047,282.  The
Class 3 Claim has been paid in full under this plan by the sale of
the assets of the Debtor. There are no remaining unsatisfied Class
3 claims.

A full-text copy of the First Amended Disclosure Statement is
available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/txeb17-40759-61.pdf

                   About Thornton & Thornton

Thornton & Thornton Enterprises, Inc., doing business as, Twin Oaks
Private School, is a small business debtor.  It owns Twin Oaks
Private School in the City of Allen, Collin County, State of Texas,
valued at $712,009.  It also owns a fee simple interest in a
property located at 109 Fountaingate, Allen, Texas, 109
Fountaingate Blk A, Lot 2 with a valuation of $215,360.

Thornton & Thornton Enterprises sought Chapter 11 protection
(Bankr. E.D. Tex. Case No. 17-40759) on April 7, 2017.  Misty
Thornton, president, signed the petition.

The Debtor disclosed assets at $1.22 million and liabilities at
$2.10 million.

The Debtor tapped Gary G. Lyon, Esq., at Bailey and Lyon, Attorneys
at Law, as counsel.


TMX FINANCE: Moody's Places Caa2 CFR Under Review for Upgrade
-------------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service placed the corporate family and senior
secured ratings of TMX Finance LLC ("TMX") under review for
upgrade.

On Review for Upgrade:

Issuer: TMX Finance LLC

Corporate Family Rating, Placed on Review for Upgrade, currently
Caa2 Developing

Senior Secured Regular Bond/Debenture, Placed on Review for
Upgrade, currently Caa2 Developing

Outlook Actions:

Issuer: TMX Finance LLC

Outlook, Changed To Rating Under Review From Developing

RATINGS RATIONALE

The review for upgrade follows TMX's announcement of its offering
to issue new five year senior secured notes which will be used to
repay existing notes scheduled to mature in September 2018. The
completion of this offering at manageable terms would remove near
term refinancing risk thereby allowing the company sufficient time
to continue with its initiatives to diversify its product
offerings, improve store-level profitability, improve portfolio
credit quality and continue to optimize system-wide functions to
more effectively position the company going forward.

TMX's first quarter was profitable allowing the company to build
capital and cash to retire and refinance existing debt. Tangible
common equity to tangible managed assets as of March 31, 2018 was a
solid 14.1%, while cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash
totaled $238.5 million. The balance of the 2018 senior secured
notes, including an $8.7 million April 2018 repurchase, totaled
$530.1 million. This has placed the company in a position to retire
a portion of the debt using cash, refinance $450 million of debt
and operate the company into 2018 at more favorable leverage.

Significant challenges remain for TMX upon the completion of this
refinancing which will likely temper further upgrade prospects
without more favorable developments. Origination volumes have been
on a multi-year decline given the industry-wide availability of
non-prime auto credit that has diminished consumers with free and
clear vehicle titles, a requirement for a potential title loan.
Origination volume declines are decelerating but TMX has not
reached a point of stabilization to date. Secondly, asset quality
has been under pressure for TMX the last few years which the
company is working to address with new centralized underwriting.
Last, the Final Small Dollar Rule which governs title lending
brings into question whether TMX will be able to retain its
existing portfolio in total should the rule become effective as
planned.

The ratings for TMX could be upgraded if the company successfully
completes the announced refinancing at terms which are manageable
to the company. The ratings for TMX could be downgraded if its
unsuccessful in completing the announced refinancing or reaches
terms that brings into question the ability to continue to
stabilize the company.

The principal methodology used in these ratings was Finance
Companies published in December 2016.


TMX FINANCE: S&P Affirms 'B-' Issuer Credit Rating, Outlook Stable
------------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings said it affirmed its issuer credit rating on TMX
Finance LLC at 'B-'. The outlook remains negative.

S&P said, "At the same time, we assigned a 'B-' issue rating on the
company's new senior secured notes due 2023. The recovery rating on
the new notes is '4', indicating our expectation of an average
(40%) recovery in the event of default."  

The negative outlook reflects the firm's weak financial performance
and exposure to the final Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
(CFPB) rules, which are slated to go into effect in August 2019 and
could meaningfully affect the firm's earnings in Georgia, where
state law currently does not allow for viable high-cost lending
alternatives.

On May 16, 2018, TMX announced its plan to use balance sheet cash
and $450 million in new senior secured notes due 2023 to payoff its
existing $532 million of senior secured notes due September 2018.
TMX reported cash of $220 million as of March 2018. Pro forma, we
expect leverage to remain above 5.0x and EBITDA coverage to remain
below 2.5x.

For the first quarter of 2018, the firm reported adjusted EBITDA of
$63.9 million compared to adjusted EBITDA of $57.2 million for
first-quarter 2017, an increase of about 12%. For first-quarter
2018, interest and fee income declined by about 1% to $201.7
million from $203.6 million in first-quarter 2017 because of a
lower balance of combined loan receivables. S&P expects the firm's
total receivables to decline as it transitions to longer-duration
products and tightens its underwriting standards. For three months
ending March 2018, the firm's annualized net charge-offs as a
percent of average combined receivables improved by 50 basis points
to 30.5%.

TMX operates in a highly regulated consumer finance industry. TMX
is regulated by the CFPB at the federal level and states at the
local level. Currently, the state law of Georgia prohibits an
alternative high-cost installment product offering, which will
invariably affect the firm's earnings because 20% of its
receivables are derived from Georgia. TMX continues to participate
in efforts to amend the Georgia law to support a viable high-cost
installment product. Further affecting the firm's stability could
be its transition to long-term, installment receivables that
conform to the final CFPB rules, as over 60% of the book is still
short-term.

S&P said, "We have revised our view on TMX's capital structure to
neutral from negative, as the firm announced its offering of new
senior secured notes to redeem its existing $532 million of senior
secured notes due September 2018.

"The negative outlook on TMX reflects our expectations of CFPB
regulations to result in lower originations, higher loan losses,
higher collection expenses, and increased compliance costs. The
outlook also incorporates a lack of alternative product offering in
the state of Georgia that could affect the firm's long-term
stability. We expect leverage, measured as debt to adjusted EBITDA,
to remain above 5.0x and EBITDA coverage to remain below 2.5x with
net charge-offs as a percentage of average receivables to remain
below 40% over the next 12 months.

"We could lower our rating over the next 12 months to the 'CCC'
range if we believe the company lacks a clear path to transition
its product offering to longer-term installment loans that conform
to the final CFPB rules. We would also downgrade the company if the
state law in Georgia prohibits an alternative high-cost installment
product offering or if EBITDA coverage stays below 1.5x on a
sustained basis. We would likely lower the rating if the firm is
unable to refinance its existing senior notes due 2018.

"An upgrade is unlikely over the next 12 months. We could revise
our outlook to stable if there is a resolution on alternative
high-cost installment product in Georgia and if the firm
transitions to longer-term receivables that abides with the final
CFPB rules. An upgrade would be contingent on firm sustaining
leverage between 4.0x-4.5x and EBITDA coverage staying well above
2.5x."


TRIDENT TPI: Moody's Affirms 'B3' CFR Amid $65MM Add-On to Loans
----------------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service affirmed the B3 Corporate Family Rating
and B3-PD Probability of Default Rating of Trident TPI Holdings,
Inc. ("Trident") following their announcement to issue a proposed
$65 million add-on to the existing Senior Secured Credit
Facilities. All instrument ratings have been affirmed. The ratings
outlook has been changed to negative from stable. The proceeds will
be used to help fund an acquisition (company undisclosed) as well
as pay fees and expenses associated with the transaction. The
sponsor will contribute $25 million in equity to help fund the
proposed acquisition.

Outlook Actions:

Issuer: Trident TPI Holdings, Inc.

Outlook, Changed To Negative From Stable

Affirmations:

Issuer: Trident TPI Holdings, Inc.

Probability of Default Rating, Affirmed B3-PD

Corporate Family Rating, Affirmed B3

Senior Secured Bank Credit Facilities, Affirmed B2(LGD3)

Senior Unsecured Regular Bond/Debenture, Affirmed Caa2(LGD6 from
LGD5)

RATINGS RATIONALE

The revision of the outlook to negative reflects the increased
integration and operating risk and elevated leverage resulting from
the recently announced trio of acquisitions. At the close of the
proposed acquisition, Tekni-Plex will have completed three
acquisitions within 90 days which represent approximately 20% of
LTM revenue and EBITDA. Pro forma leverage is approximately 7.5
times (excluding synergies). Targeted synergies are significant and
include consolidation and capacity rationalization. Additionally,
each of the three companies has a high customer concentration of
sales. Moody's also considers the revolver small for the company's
pro forma revenue and annual interest expense. Approximately 75% of
the pro forma capital structure is variable rate debt. Tekni-Plex
will need to show significant progress on its operating and
integration plan over the next 12 months to avoid a downgrade.

Tekni-Plex benefits from a concentration of sales in relatively
stable end-markets and some long-term customer relationships. The
company has a high concentration of sales in food and beverage and
health care end markets.

Tekni-Plex is constrained by its relatively small scale (revenue),
competitive and fragmented industry, and the lack of contractual
cost pass-throughs on the majority of business. The company also
has a concentration of sales in certain product lines and generates
approximately 33% of revenue from the top ten customers. Pro forma
leverage is also high at over 7.0 times.

The ratings could be upgraded if the company sustainably improves
credit metrics within the context of a stable operating and
competitive environment while also maintaining good liquidity.
Specifically, the ratings could be upgraded if:

Debt/EBITDA declines below 5.5 times

EBITDA to interest expense increases above 3.0 times

Funds from operations to debt increases above 8.5%

Adequate backup liquidity is obtained

The ratings could be downgraded if the company fails to show
significant progress on its integration and operating plans. The
ratings could also be downgraded if the operating and competitive
environment or liquidity deteriorate or if the company undertakes
another large debt-financed acquisition. Specifically, the ratings
could be downgraded if:

Debt/EBITDA remains above 6.5 times

EBITDA to interest expense declines below 2.0 times

Funds from operations to debt declines below 6.0%

Moody's expects Tekni-Plex to maintain adequate liquidity over the
next 12 months. Pro forma free cash flow is projected to be
positive. The company is also expected to have full availability
under its $60 million asset-based revolver at the close of the
transaction. The revolver expires in May 2022 and is subject to a
borrowing base limitation. The peak working capital occurs in the
first and fourth calendar quarters. The revolver has a springing
fixed charge covenant of 1.0 time if availability falls below
either 10% of the commitment or $5 million. Covenant cushion is
expected to be good over the next 12 months. The term loan
amortization is approximately $9 million annually. The nearest
significant debt maturities is the revolving credit facility which
expires in May 2022. All domestic assets are fully encumbered by
the secured capital structure, leaving only assets of foreign
subsidiaries as a source of alternative liquidity.

The negative outlook reflects the elevated leverage and heightened
integration and operating risk inherent in the recently announced
trio of acquisitions and targeted synergies. Additionally, Moody's
also considers the revolver small for the company's pro forma
revenue and annual interest expense.

The principal methodology used in these ratings was Packaging
Manufacturers: Metal, Glass, and Plastic Containers published in
May 2018.

Headquartered in Wayne, Pennsylvania, Tekni-Plex is a manufacturer
of plastic packaging and materials as well as tubing products for
the food, healthcare and consumer goods markets. The healthcare
business segment (35% of sales) manufactures medical compounds,
films and medical tubing. The food packaging business segment (30%
of sales) manufactures polystyrene thermoformed foam packaging,
such as egg cartons and foam food trays. The specialty packaging
segment (35% of sales) produces aerosol gasket, pump components,
closure liners, medical pouches and industrial specialty films. The
majority of revenue is generated in the U.S. (65% of sales), but
Tekni-Plex also has operations in Europe (30% of sales), Asia (3%
of sales), and Latin America (combined 2% of sales). For the twelve
months ended March 31, 2018, sales were approximately $731 million.
Tekni-Plex is a portfolio company of Genstar Capital and does not
publicly disclose financial information.


TRINET GROUP: S&P Hikes Corp Credit Rating to 'BB-', Outlook Pos.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings raised its corporate credit rating on Dublin,
Calif.-based human resources (HR) service provider TriNet Group
Inc. to 'BB-' from 'B+'. The outlook is positive.

S&P said, "At the same time, we raised our issue-level rating on
the company's first-lien credit facility to 'BB+' from 'BB'. The
recovery rating remains '1', indicating our expectation for very
high recovery (90%-100%; rounded estimate: 95%) in the event of a
payment default."

The upgrade reflects TriNet's significantly improved credit
protection measures compared to our previous expectations, largely
due to strong net insurance growth, which increased revenues 22%
year over year for the 12 months ended March 31, 2018. During this
time, better-than-expected insurance yield performance and lower
operating costs resulted in an S&P Global Ratings adjusted
debt-to-EBITDA in the low 2x area compared to the high 2x area
previously. In S&P's view, stronger-than-expected credit metrics
primarily contributed to improved better assessment of the
company's financial risk profile, even when incorporating the
expected high volatility of its insurance segment and cash flows
throughout an entire economic cycle.

S&P said, "The positive outlook reflects our expectation that
credit metrics will continue to improve over the next 12 months
based on strong insurance yield performance and worksite employee
growth, supporting an adjusted leverage metric that remains in the
low 2x area through 2019. We expect the company's material weakness
in internal controls will be fully remediated as it returns to
sequential worksite employee growth.

"We would likely raise our rating over the next 12 months if the
company continues to perform as expected, becomes close to
resolving its weak internal controls, successfully refinances its
July 2019 maturities without any meaningful increase in leverage,
and abstains from engaging in any large debt-funded shareholder
returns or acquisitions. In this scenario, we would expect leverage
to remain in the low 2x area.

"We could revise the outlook back to stable if adjusted leverage
increases to around 3x. This scenario would likely occur if the
company engages in large debt-funded shareholder returns or
acquisitions, but could also occur as a result of an unexpected
economic downturn, increase in client attrition, or higher workers'
compensation and health insurance claims. Under this scenario,
EBITDA would need to decline at least 25% from our base case."


TSAWD HOLDINGS: Bid to Dismiss CAC Malpractice Suit Denied
----------------------------------------------------------
Judge Shlomo S. Hagler entered an order denying the defendant's
motion to dismiss the legal malpractice action captioned CASTLEWOOD
APPAREL CORP., Plaintiff, v. DAVIDOFF HUTCHER & CITRON LLP,
Defendant, Docket No. 150167/2017 (N.Y. Sup.).

The plaintiff moved to dismiss the complaint of plaintiff
Castlewood Apparel Corp. in its entirety based on documentary
evidence and for failure to state a cause of action.

The Complaint alleges that "Castlewood hired defendant Davidoff
Hutcher & Citron LLP and Klein [Charles Klein, a partner in DHC] to
negotiate a multi-party arrangement whereby Castlewood obtained
approval from [nonparty] ABG-Prince, LLC to manufacture and consign
to The Sports Authority certain Prince apparel," a principal of
Castlewood. Plaintiff alleges that it planned to sell Prince
apparel to Sports Authority on consignment, and that "the License
Agreement was primarily motivated by Castlewood's contemplated
consignment agreement with [Sports Authority]."

Plaintiff's legal malpractice claim is based on the allegation that
defendant should have informed it of the need to file Uniform
Commercial Code financing statements in order to secure its
interest in the consigned goods. The parties dispute whether DHC
was retained solely to negotiate the License Agreement or to also
represent plaintiff with respect to the subsequent consignment
transaction with Sports Authority. It is undisputed that plaintiff
never signed a retainer agreement with DHC. Rather, by email dated
May 1, 2014, from Sutton to Klein, Sutton requested that Klein
review an attached proposed license agreement with Prince.

In August 2014, plaintiff and Sports Authority entered into a
Vendor Agreement, pursuant to which plaintiff consigned goods to
Sports Authority for sale. The Vendor Agreement specifically
identified the arrangement as a consignment under Colorado and
Delaware Uniform Commercial Code statutes, and provided that
plaintiff "shall be entitled to file UCC-1 Financing Statements to
reflect the consignment."

Defendant maintains it never represented plaintiff in connection
with the Vendor Agreement or in plaintiff's capacity as a consignor
and that the Complaint makes no such allegations. Although the
Complaint alleges there was a "multi-party arrangement", defendant
maintains that it represented plaintiff only in connection with the
License Agreement which was a two-party agreement. Defendant avers
that plaintiff's own admissions establish that defendant did not
represent plaintiff in connection with the Vendor Agreement. Sutton
states in his Affidavit that (1) "DHC was not involved in the
negotiation of the Vendor Agreement," (2) "Castlewood did not send
[Klein] the Vendor Agreement to review," and (3) from the summer of
2014 to early 2016, plaintiff "never used the term `vendor
agreement' and . . . did not discuss what were then-ongoing
consignment sales to [Sports Authority]. Plaintiff's counsel
admitted during oral argument that plaintiff did not consult with
defendant on the final form of the Vendor Agreement.

In opposition, plaintiff argues that DHC's representation of
Castlewood included rendering advice and legal services to
Castlewood as a consignor to Sports Authority. Plaintiff avers that
there is no retainer agreement, and as such, no evidence that the
scope of DHC's representation would be limited.4 Plaintiff contends
defendant had knowledge that plaintiff was intending to enter into
a consignment deal with Sports Authority given that (1) Klein
drafted the Letter Agreement; (2) Sutton and Nicholas Koles, a
principal of plaintiff, told Klein that a consignment relationship
with Sports Authority was the reason plaintiff was interested in
entering into a license agreement with Prince; (3) Sutton and Klein
met with Sports Authority about the possibility of a consignment;
and (4) an "Out Clause" allegedly added to the License Agreement by
Klein, permitted plaintiff to terminate that agreement if Sports
Authority notified plaintiff that it will not place any more orders
with plaintiff resulting in plaintiff's breach of its minimum sales
obligations to Sports Authority.

As a movant of a motion to dismiss pursuant to CPLR 3211(a)(1);
defendant must "provide documentary evidence which conclusively
establishe[s] a defense to the asserted claims as a matter of law."
Here, defendant has failed to do so. Defendant proffers (1) the
email from Sutton to Klein, dated May 1, 2014, requesting that
Klein review an attached license agreement; (2) the executed
License Agreement, effective May 1, 2014; and (3) the Vendor
Agreement, executed by Castlewood and Sports Authority in August
2014.

For purposes of a CPLR 3211(a)(1) motion, said documentary evidence
fails to conclusively establish a defense to plaintiff's claim that
defendant committed legal malpractice by failing to advise
plaintiff to file UCC-1 Financing Statements in connection with
plaintiff's consignment arrangement with Sports Authority.

Defendant's motion to dismiss pursuant to CPLR 3211(a)(7) is based
on the premise that plaintiff failed to sufficiently allege that
defendant had a duty to advise plaintiff to file UCC-1 Financing
Statements, and that in any event, any damages sustained by DHC
were proximately caused by DHC's own actions not to file said UCC-1
Financing Statements at the latest in June 2014 when defendant
forwarded to plaintiff a draft Letter Agreement.

Here, the Complaint and the evidentiary material submitted by
plaintiff, is sufficient to state a cause of action for purposes of
this pre-discovery CPLR 3211(a)(7) motion. The Complaint alleges
that defendant's negligent conduct in failing to advise plaintiff
of the need to file UCC-1 Financing Statements caused plaintiff to
suffer damages. The Sutton Affidavit submitted by plaintiff in
opposition, avers that several discussions took place between the
parties regarding the eventual consignment deal with Sports
Authority, and it is undisputed that defendant drafted the proposed
Letter Agreement between plaintiff and the Sports Authority. Said
Letter Agreement drafted by Klein specifically addresses a
consignment deal between plaintiff and Sports Authority.
Furthermore, the "Out Clause" in the License Agreement, referred to
an arrangement with Sports Authority. Taken together, the averments
in plaintiff's affidavits and the allegations in the Complaint
regarding the issue of the scope of the defendant's representation
and the duty flowing thereto "are sufficient to state a claim for
legal malpractice."

A full-text copy of the Court's Decision and Order dated April 23,
2018 is available at https://bit.ly/2rFWbVq from Leagle.com.

                     About TSAWD Holdings

TSAWD Holdings Inc., formerly known as Sports Authority Holdings,
and its affiliates are sporting goods retailers with roots dating
back to 1928.  The Debtors currently operate 464 stores and five
distribution centers across 40 U.S. states and Puerto Rico.  The
Debtors offer a broad selection of goods from a wide array of
household and specialty brands, including Adidas, Asics, Brooks,
Columbia, FitBit, Hanesbrands, Icon Health and Fitness, Nike, The
North Face, and Under Armour, in addition to their own private
label brands.  The Debtors employ 13,000 people.

TSAWD and six of its affiliates filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy
petitions (Bankr. D. Del. Case Nos. 16-10527 to 16-10533) on March
2, 2016.  The petitions were signed by Michael E. Foss as chairman
and chief executive officer.

The Debtors have engaged Robert A. Klyman, Esq., Matthew J.
Williams, Esq., Jeremy L. Graves, Esq., and Sabina Jacobs, Esq., at
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP as general counsel; Michael R. Nestor,
Esq., Kenneth J. Enos, Esq., and Andrew L. Magaziner, Esq., at
Young Conaway Stargatt & Taylor, LLP as co-counsel; Rothschild Inc.
as investment banker; FTI Consulting, Inc., as financial advisor;
and Kurtzman Carson Consultants LLC as notice, claims,
solicitation, balloting and tabulation agent.

Andrew Vara, Acting U.S. trustee for Region 3, appointed seven
creditors of Sports Authority Holdings Inc. to serve on the
official committee of unsecured creditors.  Lawyers at Pachulski
Stang Ziehl & Jones LLP represent the Official Committee of
Unsecured Creditors.

                         *     *     *

In May 2016, the Delaware Court allowed Sports Authority to proceed
with the liquidation of all of its roughly 450 stores across the
country after the Debtors resolved or beat out about 100 objections
to the sale.  Judge Mary F. Walrath approved an agreement for a
joint venture of Gordon Brothers Retail Partners LLC, Hilco
Merchant Resources LLC and Tiger Capital Group LLC to conduct going
out of business sales.  The Joint Venture won an auction for the
Debtors' inventory.  The Debtors failed to obtain a winning
going-concern bid at a May 17, 2016 auction.

In July 2016, Judge Walrath approved the sale of the Debtors'
intellectual property and more than two dozens of property leases
to Dick's Sporting Goods Inc.  Dick's bid was reportedly for $15
million.


VANSCOY CHIROPRACTIC: To Sell Business Assets Within 120 Days
-------------------------------------------------------------
Vanscoy Chiropractic Corporation Holistic Health Center filed with
the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of West
Virginia its small business amended disclosure statement describing
its proposed plan of reorganization.

In this filing, the Debtor provides that the sale of the business
assets will be conducted within 120 days, and will be supervised by
debtor's counsel. In the event that a sale is not successful,
including submission of a credit bid under section 363(k) of the
bankruptcy code, then the case will be immediately converted to a
chapter 7 liquidation case.

The Troubled Company Reporter previously reported that the Debtor's
plan is based upon a sale of the company's chiropractic practice or
negotiation with First Bank of Charleston for a workable repayment
compromise.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement is available for free
at:

    http://bankrupt.com/misc/wvsb3-17-30271-85.pdf

            About VanScoy Chiropractic Corporation

VanScoy Chiropractic Corporation Holistic Health Center sought
protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D.
W.Va. Case No. 17-30271) on June 12, 2017, disclosing under $1
million in both assets and liabilities. Judge Frank W. Volk,
presides over the case.  Joseph W. Caldwell, Esq., at Caldwell &
Riffee, serves as the Debtor's legal counsel.  No committee of
unsecured creditors has been appointed.


VANTAGE CORP: Hires Nelson Mullins Riley as Bankruptcy Counsel
--------------------------------------------------------------
Vantage Corp. and its debtor-affiliate seek authority from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Georgia, Atlanta
Division, to hire Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP as
bankruptcy counsel.

Professional Services to be rendered by Nelson Mullins are:

     (a) advise the Debtors with respect to their powers and duties
as a debtors-in-possession in the continued management and
operation of their businesses;

     (b) take all necessary action to protect and preserve the
estates of the Debtors, including the prosecution of actions on the
Debtors' behalves, the defense of any actions commenced against the
Debtors, the negotiation of disputes in which the Debtors are
involved, and the preparation of objections to claims filed against
the Debtors' estates;

     (c) prepare on behalf of the Debtors all applications,
motions, answers, orders, reports, memoranda of law and other
papers in connection with the Chapter 11 cases;

     (d) negotiate and prepare on behalf of the Debtors a plan of
reorganization, a disclosure statement, and all related documents;

     (e) negotiate and prepare documents relating to the
disposition of assets, as requested by the Debtors;

     (f) advise the Debtors, where appropriate, with respect to
federal and state regulatory matters;

     (g) advise the Debtors on finance, and finance-related matters
and transactions, and matters relating to the sale of the Debtors'
assets; and

     (h) perform such other legal services for the Debtors as may
be necessary and appropriate.

The Nelson Mullins 2018 fee rates for attorneys expected to work on
this case range from $325 to $750 per hour.

Lee B. Hart, partner in the firm of Nelson Mullins Riley &
Scarborough LLP,

attests that his firm and each of its attorneys is a "disinterested
person" as defined in section 101(14) of the Bankruptcy Code and it
does not hold or represent an interest adverse to the Debtors'
estates.

The firm can be reached through:

     Lee B. Hart, Esq.
     NELSON MULLINS RILEY
     & SCARBOROUGH, LLP
     201 17th Street, Suite 1700
     Atlanta, GA 30363
     Tel: (404) 322-6349
     Fax: (404) 322-6050
     Email: Lee.hart@nelsonmullins.com

                  About Vantage Corporation

Vantage Corporation and Vantage Advisory Management LLC comprise a
family of entities that develop and utilize proprietary software
and technology to trade and invest in publicly traded securities
and commodities.  The Debtors were formed in 2014 after an
approximately 30 year partnership between the Debtors' founders
developing software in the trading business for the purposes of
obtaining investors and raising sufficient equity capital to grow
and reach the scale necessary to succeed.

Vantage Corporation and its affiliates concurrently filed voluntary
petitions seeking relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on
May 4, 2018 (Bankr. N.D. Ga. Lead Case No. 18-57728).  In the
petitions signed by Brian Askew, president, Vantage Corporation
estimated less than $500,000 in assets and liabilities, and Vantage
Advisory Management estimated up to $50,000 in assets and less than
$500,000 in liabilities.

Lee B. Hart, Esq., at NELSON MULLINS RILEY & SCARBOROUGH, LLP, is
the Debtor's counsel.


VH VENTURE: Selling Interest in CCG Personal Property for $1.7M
---------------------------------------------------------------
VH Venture, LLC and VHI, Inc. Enterprises filed with the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia a notice of
their private sale of their right, title and interest in Commercial
Credit Group, Inc. ("CCG")'s personal property for $1.7 million.

CCG holds a perfected first priority security interest in the
property described on Exhibit A, a copy of which is available for
free at:

         http://bankrupt.com/misc/VH_Venture_40_Sales.pdf

They propose to sell all of their right, title and interest in and
to the property on or after May 10, 2018.

Those who have any questions concerning the Notice may call Robert
Hart, VP - Collections, at (704) 731-0031.

CCG can be reached at:

          COMMERCIAL CREDIT GROUP, INC.
          227 West Trade St., Ste. 1450
          Charlotte, NC 28202

                         About VHI Inc.

Based in Manassas, Virginia, VHI, Inc., Enterprises, provides waste
collection services within the Washington metropolitan area:
Fairfax county, Loudoun county, Prince William county, Stafford
county, City of Alexandria, Arlington, District of Columbia,
Montgomery and Prince George county.  It owns 20 trucks and has
over 2,500 commercial, residential and government clients.  VHI
Inc. also provides temporary container services perfect for
construction and remodeling projects, demolition jobs, special
events or any other short-term commercial endeavor.  Its temporary
container services include bins, roll-off containers and compactors
in a variety of sizes.

VHI, Inc., and its affiliate VH Venture LLC sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E.D. Va. Lead Case No.
17-13641) on Oct. 27, 2017.  In the petition signed by CEO Albert
O. Hodge, the Debtors estimated assets of less than $50,000 and
liabilities of $1 million to $10 million.  

Judge Klinette H. Kindred presides over the cases.

Odin Feldman & Pittleman PC is the Debtors' counsel.


VIDEOLOGY: Files Chapter 11 to Facilitate Amobee Sale Process
-------------------------------------------------------------
Videology, a software provider for converged TV and video
advertising, on May 10 announced the filing of voluntary petitions
for relief under Chapter 11 of the U.S. States Bankruptcy Code
(with ancillary proceedings to be commenced in the United Kingdom).
Concurrent with the filing, Videology announced that it has
entered into a conditional asset purchase agreement with Amobee.
Pursuant to the Chapter 11 sale process, all interested parties who
meet the requirements of court-ordered bidding procedures will be
able to submit competing offers to acquire Videology's assets.

Scott Ferber, Founder and CEO, Videology, stated, "We are confident
that today's transaction represents the best path forward for
Videology and is in the best interests of all our stakeholders.
Most importantly, we anticipate it being seamless for our valued
clients and partners, while providing Videology the financial
stability and strategic position to drive future growth."

Mr. Ferber continued, "Over the past decade Videology has
successfully established ourselves as a leading provider of the
software for the convergence of TV and video and have built a
client list comprised of some of the biggest names on both demand
and supply-side of the market.  However, the industry is only in
the early-stages of the TV and video advertising transformation
that we were built to power, and it will take resources, capital
and time to help transform a market as large as TV.  The bottom
line is that these moves put us in the best possible position to
achieve our ambitious goals, and we remain dedicated to our mission
of driving outstanding advertising results for our customers during
this process -- without interruption."

The transaction was unanimously approved by the Videology Board of
Directors.  The close of the transaction is subject to court
approval and other conditions.

Cole Schotz P.C. is serving as Videology's bankruptcy counsel.

                        About Videology

Videology -- http://www.videologygroup.com/-- is a software
provider for converged TV and video advertising.

Videology, Inc., is a privately-held, venture-backed company, whose
investors include Catalyst Investors, Comcast Ventures, NEA,
Pinnacle Ventures, and Valhalla Partners.  Videology is
headquartered in New York, NY, with key offices in Baltimore,
Austin, Toronto, London, Paris, Madrid, Singapore, Sydney, Tokyo
and sales teams across North America.


VISION INVESTMENT: Hires Haller & Colvin as Attorney
----------------------------------------------------
Vision Investment Group, Inc., seeks authority from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Fort Wayne
Division to employ Daniel J. Skekloff and Scot T. Skekloff and the
law firm of Haller & Colvin, PC, as attorneys.

Daniel J. Skekloff, a member of Haller & Colvin, PC, attests that
his firm has no connection with the creditors or any other party in
interest and has no interest adverse to the Debtor as
Debtor-in-Possession or the estate.

The counsel can be reached through:

     Daniel J. Skekloff, Esq.
     Scot T. Skekloff, Esq.
     Haller & Colvin, PC
     444 E. Main Street
     Fort Wayne, IN 46802
     Phone: (260) 426-0444
     Fax: (260) 422-0274
     Email: sskekloff@hallercolvin.com

                  About Vision Investment Group

Based in Bluffton, Indiana, Vision Investment Group, Inc., filed a
Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. N.D. Ind. Case no. 18-10864) on May 11,
2018, listing $100,001 to $500,000 in assets and $1,000,001 to $10
million in liabilities.  Daniel J. Skekloff at Haller & Colvin, PC,
is the Debtor's counsel.


VISTA OUTDOOR: S&P Alters Outlook to Developing & Affirms 'B+' CCR
------------------------------------------------------------------
U.S.-based Vista Outdoor Inc. reported its fiscal 2018 results and
provided guidance for fiscal 2019. The company also announced it is
exploring strategic options for its Sports Protection brands (e.g.
Bell, Giro, and Blackburn), Jimmy Styks paddle boards, and Savage
and Stevens firearms. These are in addition to its previously
announced eyewear business planned divestiture.

S&P Global Ratings affirmed its 'B+' corporate credit rating on
Farmington, Utah-based Vista Outdoor Inc. and revised the outlook
to developing from stable.

S&P said, "We affirmed our 'BB' issue-level rating on the company's
$200 million revolver due 2021 (reduced from $400 million) and $576
million outstanding term loan A due 2021 (original principal of
$640 million). The '1' recovery ratings indicate our expectation
for very high (90%-100%; rounded estimate: 95%) recovery in the
event of a payment default.

"We raised the issue-level rating on the company's $350 million
senior unsecured notes due 2023 to 'B' from 'B-'. We revised the
recovery rating to '5' from '6'. The '5' recovery rating indicate
our expectations for modest (10%-30%; rounded estimate: 20%)
recovery in the event of a payment default."

As of March 31, 2018, the company had $949 million in funded debt
outstanding.

S&P said, "The affirmation reflects our expectation that the
company could deleverage if it is successful with its announced
proposed asset sales, despite our expectation that operating
performance will remain weak during the fiscal year ending March
31, 2019. We forecast that leverage will likely remain elevated
throughout fiscal 2019 at around 6x as the company builds inventory
during the first half of the year. Leverage should decline to the
low-5x area by fiscal year end if the company generates at least
$55 million in free operating cash flow for the full year.

"The developing outlook reflects our belief that in fiscal 2019 the
company will experience a modest recovery in operating performance.
We also believe the company should be able to maintain adequate
liquidity. If the company achieves asset sales, we expect a sizable
portion of net cash proceeds will be applied to debt reduction,
which should aid in meaningful deleveraging. We also assume
management would not engage in a leveraging transaction such as
additional large, debt-financed acquisitions or leveraged sale of
the business.

"We could raise the ratings if ammunition business performance
improves modestly in conjunction with successful asset sales, which
enables the company to reduce debt leverage to below 4x while
maintaining a financial policy supportive of leverage at that level
or below. We believe the company would need to maintain EBITDA
margin above 9% from reducing general and administrative costs,
improving its fixed overhead absorption in its plants, restoring
revenue growth, and generating at least $50 million in FOCF.

"Alternatively, we could affirm the ratings with a stable outlook
if the company reduces and sustains leverage between 4x and 5x. We
believe this could occur if the company is successful with at least
one of its proposed asset sales within the next year.

We could lower the ratings if debt leverage is sustained above 5x
because the company is unable to sell its assets or realize
sufficient value to reduce leverage. We could also lower the
ratings if the company demonstrates a more aggressive financial
policy and does not apply asset sale proceeds to debt reduction,
but instead makes acquisitions or uses proceeds for share
repurchases, or if ammunition business profitability deteriorates
meaningfully."


VISTRA ENERGY: S&P Hikes Corp Credit Rating to BB, Outlook Stable
-----------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings raised its corporate credit rating on
diversified energy company Vistra Energy Corp. to 'BB' from 'BB-'.
The outlook is stable.

S&P said, "At the same time, we raised our senior secured ratings
at subsidiary Vistra Operations Co. LLC to 'BBB-' from 'BB+' (see
complete rating list). This rating action affects nearly $3.8
billion of rated term loan B-1 ($2.81 billion outstanding) and term
loan B-2 ($988 million outstanding). The recovery rating on the
term loans is '1', reflecting our expectation of very high
(90%-100%; rounded estimate: 95%) recovery in the event of
default."

Vistra Energy has an existing $860 million rated revolving credit
facility at Vistra Operations and an unrated $1.475 billion
revolver that it has assumed from Dynegy. These revolvers are being
combined and refinanced into a five-year secured revolver at Vistra
Operations and will be unrated.

The company is repaying its $500 million term loan C facility that
is backed by cash in L/C collateral accounts. This facility was
used to post letters of credit. The outstanding letters of credit
will move to the new revolver.

S&P said, "Finally, we have assigned our 'BBB-' ratings to Vistra
Operations Co.'s new $2.05 billion term loan B-3. This term loan
will be pari passu with the existing term loan Bs at Vistra
Operations. Vistra Energy will use proceeds from this issuance to
repay the $2.018 billion secured term loan that it assumed from
Dynegy upon close, together with related fees and expenses.

"Our business risk profile (BRP) assessment for the post-merger
Vistra Energy has improved to fair from weak (business risk is
assessed from excellent ('1') to vulnerable ('6'), with a fair
assessment toward the lower end of the scale at '4'). The BRP
factors in our evaluation of the company's competitive position,
which is predicated on its competitive advantage; scale, scope, and
diversity; operating efficiency; and profitability."

Vistra's ability to move away from an energy-only market has
improved its business risk profile to fair. S&P said, "The stable
outlook reflects our view that increased fuel, regional, and
revenue diversification combined with capacity payments, and retail
revenues that generate almost 50% of aggregate EBITDA should allow
the company to manage its adjusted debt to EBITDA in the 3x-3.25x
range and adjusted FFO to debt of about 25%. The stable outlook
also subsumes our view that the low capital intensive retail
business will continue to provide a countercyclical hedge when
wholesale margins decline, while also generating solid cash flow
conversion." Finally, the outlook factors in higher cash flow
expectation from the wholesale power business given significantly
higher forward power prices in ERCOT for summer 2018 and 2019.

S&P said, "We could lower the ratings if debt to EBITDA increased
to above 3.75x on a sustained basis, or if FFO to debt declined
below 20%. We note that our analysis has financial ratios weaker
than management's expectation because we forecast a slower
deleveraging than management's expectation and also impute
significant off-balance-sheet debt. Our assessment also assumes a
lesser level of net debt treatment for surplus cash. We think
expected deleveraging through 2019 could slow down if the company
chooses to deploy the cash for acquisitions instead.

"We will raise the ratings if we continue to gain confidence in the
sustainability and stability of Vistra's retail power business even
as that business continues to grow at projected levels. Given
materially higher summer prices, we see some risks to retail
margins given this business has not witnessed stressed conditions
since 2011. Specifically, we will raise ratings if adjusted debt to
EBITDA declines below 3x on a sustained basis or if adjusted FFO to
debt increases above 25% on a sustained basis. We will likely
monitor performance through 2019 and do not expect to raise ratings
before 2020."


WALKING CO: Unsecureds to Recover 18.8% to 22% Under Latest Plan
----------------------------------------------------------------
The Walking Company Holdings, Inc., and its debtor-affiliates filed
with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware their
first amended disclosure statement in support of their first
amended joint plan of reorganization dated April 17, 2018.

Under the latest plan, all of the outstanding equity interests in
the Parent will be extinguished. The Plan Sponsors will provide a
$10.2 million Consideration in Cash on the Effective Date and will
be issued all of the New Common Stock of the Reorganized Parent,
subject to dilution resulting from New Common Stock that may be
issued to applicable Prepetition Subordinated Noteholders upon
their exercise of the New Warrants. (The New Warrants may be
exercised for shares of New Common Stock initially representing in
the aggregate 7.5% of the New Common Stock.) On and after the
Effective Date, the Reorganized Subsidiaries will continue to be
wholly-owned subsidiaries of the Reorganized Parent. The
Reorganized Debtors will continue to operate post-confirmation in
the ordinary course of business, using cash generated by the
business and proceeds from a $57.25 million secured Exit Facility.

All Allowed Administrative Claims, DIP Facility Claims, Priority
Tax Claims, Priority Non-Tax Claims, and Prepetition Secured Loan
Agreement Claims (to the extent not previously satisfied) will be
paid in full. Allowed Other Secured Claims will be paid in full or
rendered Unimpaired. All Intercompany Claims will be canceled and
extinguished under the Plan.

With respect to the Prepetition Subordinated Notes Claims, such
Secured Claims will be amended, with the maturity date extended
three years (until March 31, 2022) and with unpaid interest and
fees due as of the Effective Date capitalized into the principal.
The Prepetition Subordinated Noteholders will also receive New
Warrants, to purchase up to an aggregate of 7.5% of the outstanding
New Common Stock on a fully diluted basis.

With respect to all General Unsecured Claims, each holder of an
Allowed General Unsecured Claim will receive its Pro Rata share of
the GUC Fund -- a $2.55 million fund. The Debtors estimate that
general unsecured creditors will receive a recovery of
approximately 18.8% - 22% under the Plan, based on various
assumptions.

Distributions under the Plan will be made from the proceeds of the
Exit Facility, the Consideration, and cash from operations.

A full-text copy of the First Amended Disclosure Statement is
available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/deb18-10474-240.pdf

A full-text copy of the First Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization
is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/deb18-10474-239.pdf

                   About The Walking Company

The Walking Company is the leading national specialty retailer of
high-quality, technically designed comfort footwear and
accessories, and offers a selection of premium comfort brands
including ABEO, Dansko, ECCO, Taos, and more.  The Walking Company
operates 208 stores in premium malls across the nation and the
company's website http://www.thewalkingcompany.com/

On March 6, 2018, The Walking Company Holdings, Inc., along with
affiliates The Walking Company, Big Dog USA, Inc., and FootStmart,
Inc., filed voluntary petitions for relief under Chapter 11 of the
United States Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Del. Lead Case No.
18-10474).  The cases are pending joint administration before the
Honorable Laurie Selber Silverstein.

Pachulski Stang Ziehl & Jones LLP is the Debtors' counsel.
Consensus Advisory Services LLC is the financial advisor.  Kurtzman
Carson Consultants LLC is the claims and noticing agent.

Choate, Hall & Stewart LLP, led by Kevin J. Simard, Esq., and
Womble Bond Dickinson, led by Matthew P. Ward, Esq., serve as
counsel to the DIP Agent, DIP Term Agent, the Prepetition Senior
Agent, and the Prepetition Term Agent.

Irell & Manella LLP, led by Jeffrey M. Reisner, Esq., is counsel to
the Prepetition Subordinated Creditors.


WESLEY HILLYARD: Bankston Buying Royalty Interests for $51K
-----------------------------------------------------------
Wesley M. Hillyard and Myra L. Hillyard ask the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court Southern District of Illinois to authorize the private sale
of the royalty interests of Mark Hillyard, Myra Hillyard, Hiltyard
Farm Services, LLC, also known as HFS, H & H Well Services, LLC,
also known as H&H, Hillyard Sales and Service, LLC, and K and K
Resources LLC in and to the Okerson D and the R.E. Okerson leases,
to Bankston Creek Land Trust for $48,800 plus $2,500 for the costs
of the estate.

Presently, the Debtors own the royalty interest/lease which is no
longer needed in their reorganization.  They propose to sell the
royalty interest/lease and all wells, machinery, material,
equipment, tanks, pumps, buildings, tools and supplies, rods and
pipelines located on the leases or used by the teases and severed
minerals stored or, produced from the leases and any logs or
reports, licenses or permits relating to the leases and any
receivables, records of payments, warranties, and contracts to the
Buyer for the sum of $48,800 plus $2,500 for the costs of the
estate, for a total of $51,300.

The Debtors believe it is in the best interest of creditors and the
bankruptcy estate that the royalty interest/lease be sold.  They
deem a private sale is beneficial to the estate to eliminate costs
of a public sale.  Their plan of reorganization provided for the
sale of the interest.  The Debtors believe that this bid may
solicit higher offers, and, if not, that this bid is the best offer
they will receive.

Previously, the Court ruled that Bankston Creek has a valid lien on
the oil interest in the amount of $48,810.  All costs and expenses
resulting from the sale will be paid first from the proceeds of the
sale.  From the remaining sale funds, Bankston Creek will be paid
$48,810 (lien amount) with the balance to the bankruptcy estate
assuming no additional liens are found prior to closing.

The Debtors believe the offer is the best offer they can receive
and recommend that the offer be accepted unless higher and better
bids are received by objection date of May 17, 2018.  Any
objections to the Motion or higher bids that are filed with the
Court within the objection period will be heard on June 13, 2018,
at 9:00 a.m.  The 21-day objection period pursuant to the Motion
will expire on May 17, 2018.

Counsel for Debtors:

          Douglas A. Antgni, Esq.
          ANTONIK LAW OFFICES
          3405 Broadway/P. O. Box 594
          Mt. Vernon, IL 62864
          Telephone: (618) 244-5739
          Facsimile: (618) 244-9633
          E-mail: antonikiaw@charter. net

Wesley M. Hillyard and Myra L. Hillyard sought Chapter 11
protection (Bankr. S.D. Ill. Case No. 17-40377) on May 1, 2017.
The Debtors tapped Douglas A. Antonik, Esq., as counsel.


WESLEY HILLYARD: Proposes Private Sale of Equipment
---------------------------------------------------
Wesley M. Hillyard and Myra L. Hillyard ask the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court Southern District of Illinois to authorize the private sale
of the following equipment: (i) Case 1570 tractor, S.N 8801843, for
not less than $4,000; (ii) John Deere 8630i-I tractor, S/N 009707R,
for not less than $6,000; (iii) John Deere 8820 combine, S/N
565058, for not less than $6,500; (iv) New Holiand TR70 combine,
S/N 300485, for not less than $3,000; (v) Massey Ferguson 165
tractor, S/N CDW643001197, for not less than $2,900; (vi) 32" IH
disk, S/N 0470000424185, for not less than $3,250; (vii) 34"
Briilion roller, S/N 104437, for not less than $3,000; (viii) 28"
John Deere field cultivator, 012650N, for not less than $750; (ix)
Biack Machine planter, for not less than $6,000; (x) Massey
Ferguson 1100 tractor, for not less than $2,500; (xi) 930 Platform,
S/N H00930F641218, for not less than $2,000; (xii) 220 Platform,
S/N 220363H, for not less than $250; (xiii) 630 Corn Head, for not
less than $375; and (xiv) 630 Corn Head, for not less than $375.

The Debtors believe it is in the best interest of creditors and the
bankruptcy estate that the equipment be sold.  They deem a private
sale is beneficial to the estate to eliminate costs of a public
sale.

Peoples National Bank has a first lien on the equipment and the
sale is being held in accordance with the settlement agreement
reached with Peoples National Bank.

The Debtors will advertise in fawn papers such as Tractor House,
Farm Week and Mid America Grower and on social media.  They will
also advise local interested parties of the items for sale.  All
costs and expenses resulting from the sale will be paid first from
the proceeds of the sale.  The remaining funds will be paid to the
secured lender, Peoples National Bank.

The Debtors believe the sale method will maximize the proceeds for
the equipment and is the best method they recommend that the sales
method be accepted unless higher and better bids are received by
objection date of May 17, 2018.  Any objections to the Motion or
higher bids that are filed with the Court within the objection
period will be heard on June 13, 2018, at 9:00 a.m.

The 21-day objection period pursuant to the Motion will expire on
May 17, 2018.

Wesley M. Hillyard and Myra L. Hillyard sought Chapter 11
protection (Bankr. S.D. Ill. Case No. 17-40377) on May 1, 2017.
The Debtors tapped Douglas A. Antonik, Esq., as counsel.


WESTERN HOST: Case Summary & 10 Unsecured Creditors
---------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Western Host Associates, Inc.
           dba Plaza De Armas Hotel
        PO Box 9024050
        Viejo San Juan
        San Juan, PR 00902

Business Description: Western Host Associates, Inc. owns a
                      four-story commercial hotel building
                      constructed in reinforced and concrete
                      blocks located at 202 San Jose Street, Old
                      San Juan, Puerto Rico with 487.0 square
                      meters.  The Hotel is currently non-
                      operational and is valued by the company at
                      $1.35 million.  The company previously
                      sought bankruptcy protection on Nov. 14,
                      2012 (Bankr. D. P.R. Case No. 12-09093) and
                      May 19, 2011 (Bankr. D. P.R. Case No. 11-
                      04152).

Chapter 11 Petition Date: May 15, 2018

Case No.: 18-02696

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       District of Puerto Rico (Old San Juan)

Judge: Hon. Brian K. Tester

Debtor's Counsel: Victor Gratacos Diaz, Esq.
                  GRATACOS LAW FIRM, PSC
                  PO Box 7571
                  Caguas, PR 00726
                  Tel: 787 746-4772
                  E-mail: bankruptcy@gratacoslaw.com

Debtor's
Accountant:       MARIE OLGA DE LA ROSA

Debtor's
Special
Counsel:          JOSE R. OLMO RODRIGUEZ  

Total Assets: $1.36 million

Total Liabilities: $4.82 million

The petition was signed by Luis Alvarez, president.

A full-text copy of the petition containing, among other items, a
list of the Debtor's 10 unsecured creditors is available for free
at:

               http://bankrupt.com/misc/prb18-02696.pdf


WHITING PETROLEUM: Egan-Jones Cuts Commercial Paper Ratings to 'B'
------------------------------------------------------------------
Egan-Jones Ratings Company, on May 8, 2018, downgraded the foreign
currency and local currency ratings on commercial paper by Whiting
Petroleum Corporation to B from A3.

Whiting Petroleum Corporation is a petroleum and natural gas
exploration and production company organized in Delaware and
headquartered in Denver, Colorado.



WILLIAM B. LAWTON: Plan and Disclosures Hearing Set for June 14
---------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Robert Summerhays of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Western District of Louisiana conditionally approved William B.
Lawton Company, L.L.C., River Oaks Exploration, L.L.C. and Rayville
Resources, L.L.C.'s small business disclosure statement with
respect to a chapter 11 plan filed on April 10, 2018.

June 7, 2018 is fixed as the last day for filing written
acceptances or rejections of the plan, and the last day for filing
and serving written objections to the disclosure statement and
confirmation of the plan.

June 14, 2018 at 10:30 a.m. is fixed for the hearing on final
approval of the disclosure and for the hearing on confirmation of
the plan.

As previously reported by the Troubled Company Reporter, under the
plan, the Liquidation Trustee will pay to each holder of an Allowed
General Unsecured Claim its Pro Rata share of any proceeds
available for distribution by the Liquidation Trust.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/lawb17-20948-86.pdf

                      William B. Lawton Co.

William B. Lawton Co., LLC, River Oaks Exploration, LLC, and
Rayville Resources, LLC, are engaged in the oil and gas extraction
business.

The Debtors sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. W.D. La. Case Nos. 17-20948 to 17-20950) on Oct. 10,
2017.  In the petitions signed by William T. Drost, its president,
the Debtor estimated assets of less than $500,000 and liabilities
of $1 million to $10 million.  Judge Robert Summerhays presides
over the cases.  Lisa M. Hedrick, Esq., at Adams and Reese LLP,
serves as Chapter 11 counsel to the Debtors.


WILLIAM B. LAWTON: Selling Shares of NRG & Principal Common Stock
-----------------------------------------------------------------
William B. Lawton Co., LLC and Rayville Resources, L.L.C., ask the
U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Louisiana to
authorize the Rayville's sale of 24 shares of NRG Energy, Inc.
common stock and Lawton's 116 shares of Principal Financial Group,
Inc. common stock at the market rate.

The Debtors' Joint Plan provides for the liquidation of their
assets in order to pay their creditors holding allowed claims.  

Rayville owns 24 shares of NRG Energy, Inc. common stock, which is
currently being held by the State of Louisiana Unclaimed Property
Division.  It listed the stock on Schedule B, Question 77
(Louisiana Unclaimed Property - Shares of Stock Returned by Post
Office) filed on Oct. 24, 2017.  At the time that the Schedules
were filed, Rayville was not aware of what type of stock was being
held by the Louisiana Unclaimed Property Division, and therefore,
was not aware of the value of the stock. Since filing the
Schedules, Rayville has learned the type and number of shares being
held by the State.

Rayville has applied to the Louisiana Unclaimed Property Division
for a return of the stock.  Upon receipt of the shares from the
Louisiana Unclaimed Property Division, Rayville asks to sell the
NRG Energy, Inc. common stock through The Northern Trust at the
market price for said stock after entry of the Order approving the
sale.  The expected costs are the minimum commission of $29.95,
plus an SEC charge of approximately $1.

The closing price for the NRG Energy, Inc. common stock as of the
date prior to the date of filing the Motion was $30.99 per share.
Due to fluctuations in the market price for the stock, Rayville is
unable to provide a precise amount for which the stock will be
sold, but asks approval to sell the stock at the market rate.

Lawton owns 116 shares of Principal Financial Group, Inc. common
stock.  It listed the stock on Schedule B filed on Nov. 7, 2017, as
amended on March 28, 2018.  As of Oct. 9, 2017 the stock had an
estimated market value of $7,724.  Lawton asks to sell the 116
shares of Principal Financial Group, Inc. common stock through
Computershare at the market price for said stock after entry of the
Order approving the sale.  The cost of selling through
Computershare is $15 plus $0.15 per share.  Thus, the total cost to
sell the 116 shares should be approximately $32.40.

The closing price for the Principal Financial Group, Inc. common
stock as of the date prior to the date of filing the Motion was
$61.05 per share.  Due to fluctuations in the market price for the
stock, Lawton is unable to provide a precise amount for which the
stock will be sold, but asks approval to sell the stock at the
market rate.

The Debtors believe, in the exercise of their business judgment,
that the sale of the stock as outlined is the most cost effective
and efficient way to sell the stock in order to recoup the proceeds
for their estates, which will be utilized in the distribution to
creditors under the Plan.

                    William B. Lawton Co.

William B. Lawton Co., LLC, River Oaks Exploration, LLC, and
Rayville Resources, LLC, are engaged in the oil and gas extraction
business.

The Debtors sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. W.D. La. Case Nos. 17-20948 to 17-20950) on Oct. 10,
2017.  In the petitions signed by William T. Drost, its president,
the Debtor estimated assets of less than $500,000 and liabilities
of $1 million to $10 million.  Judge Robert Summerhays presides
over the cases.  Lisa M. Hedrick, Esq., at Adams and Reese LLP,
serves as Chapter 11 counsel to the Debtors.

On April 9, 2018, the Debtors filed their Joint Plan of Liquidation
and Incorporated Disclosure Statement Pursuant to Chapter 11 of the
United States Bankruptcy Code.


WILLIAM B. LAWTON: Selling Shares of NRG & Principal Common Stock
-----------------------------------------------------------------
William B. Lawton Co., LLC and Rayville Resources, L.L.C., ask the
U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Louisiana to
authorize the Rayville's sale of 24 shares of NRG Energy, Inc.
common stock and Lawton's 116 shares of Principal Financial Group,
Inc. common stock at the market rate.

The Debtors' Joint Plan provides for the liquidation of their
assets in order to pay their creditors holding allowed claims.  

Rayville owns 24 shares of NRG Energy, Inc. common stock, which is
currently being held by the State of Louisiana Unclaimed Property
Division.  It listed the stock on Schedule B, Question 77
(Louisiana Unclaimed Property - Shares of Stock Returned by Post
Office) filed on Oct. 24, 2017.  At the time that the Schedules
were filed, Rayville was not aware of what type of stock was being
held by the Louisiana Unclaimed Property Division, and therefore,
was not aware of the value of the stock. Since filing the
Schedules, Rayville has learned the type and number of shares being
held by the State.

Rayville has applied to the Louisiana Unclaimed Property Division
for a return of the stock.  Upon receipt of the shares from the
Louisiana Unclaimed Property Division, Rayville asks to sell the
NRG Energy, Inc. common stock through The Northern Trust at the
market price for said stock after entry of the Order approving the
sale.  The expected costs are the minimum commission of $29.95,
plus an SEC charge of approximately $1.

The closing price for the NRG Energy, Inc. common stock as of the
date prior to the date of filing the Motion was $30.99 per share.
Due to fluctuations in the market price for the stock, Rayville is
unable to provide a precise amount for which the stock will be
sold, but asks approval to sell the stock at the market rate.

Lawton owns 116 shares of Principal Financial Group, Inc. common
stock.  It listed the stock on Schedule B filed on Nov. 7, 2017, as
amended on March 28, 2018.  As of Oct. 9, 2017 the stock had an
estimated market value of $7,724.  Lawton asks to sell the 116
shares of Principal Financial Group, Inc. common stock through
Computershare at the market price for said stock after entry of the
Order approving the sale.  The cost of selling through
Computershare is $15 plus $0.15 per share.  Thus, the total cost to
sell the 116 shares should be approximately $32.40.

The closing price for the Principal Financial Group, Inc. common
stock as of the date prior to the date of filing the Motion was
$61.05 per share.  Due to fluctuations in the market price for the
stock, Lawton is unable to provide a precise amount for which the
stock will be sold, but asks approval to sell the stock at the
market rate.

The Debtors believe, in the exercise of their business judgment,
that the sale of the stock as outlined is the most cost effective
and efficient way to sell the stock in order to recoup the proceeds
for their estates, which will be utilized in the distribution to
creditors under the Plan.

                    William B. Lawton Co.

William B. Lawton Co., LLC, River Oaks Exploration, LLC, and
Rayville Resources, LLC, are engaged in the oil and gas extraction
business.

The Debtors sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. W.D. La. Case Nos. 17-20948 to 17-20950) on Oct. 10,
2017.  In the petitions signed by William T. Drost, its president,
the Debtor estimated assets of less than $500,000 and liabilities
of $1 million to $10 million.  Judge Robert Summerhays presides
over the cases.  Lisa M. Hedrick, Esq., at Adams and Reese LLP,
serves as Chapter 11 counsel to the Debtors.

On April 9, 2018, the Debtors filed their Joint Plan of Liquidation
and Incorporated Disclosure Statement Pursuant to Chapter 11 of the
U.S. Bankruptcy Code.


WILLIAMS FINANCIAL: Arbitration Creditors Blocks OK of Plan Outline
-------------------------------------------------------------------
The Arbitration Creditors filed an objection to the amended
disclosure statement proposed by Williams Financial Group, Inc. and
affiliates.

The Arbitration Creditors complain that the disclosure statement
does not disclose that the amended joint plan of liquidation does
not have any provision for the resolution of the Arbitration
Creditors' claims in a consolidated FINRA arbitration. The
Arbitration Creditors cannot reasonably vote on the Liquidated
Plan, based on a disclosure in the Disclosure Statement regarding
their consolidated FINRA arbitration, which does not have any
corresponding provision in the actual plan.

The liquidation plan provides for only two methods for resolving
securities-related claims: determination by an arbitrator picked by
the Debtors or estimation by this Court. The Amended Disclosure
Statement does not disclose any additional information about who
the arbitrator would be. The identity of the arbitrator picked by
the Debtors is important information, because he or she could have
a history of rulings that are unfavorable to investors or could
have other disqualifying or inappropriate characteristics.

Further, the Disclosure Statement does not contain any information
about the procedure by which this arbitrator would conduct the
arbitration. It states only that the arbitrator might receive
evidence, the arbitration would be less formal than FINRA
arbitrations, and the arbitrator would have discretion to establish
procedures.

In addition, the Disclosure Statement does not disclose what
procedures the Court would use to estimate the Arbitration
Creditors' claims, whether an evidentiary hearing would be held, or
what methodology the Court would use to estimate these claims. A
proper evidentiary hearing in the Court for determining liability
and estimating the Arbitration Creditors' claims would take at a
minimum several days.

A full-text copy of the Arbitration Creditors' Objection is
available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/txnb17-33578-11-455.pdf

Counsel for the Arbitration Creditors:

     Kalju Nekvasil, Esq.
     Fla. Bar No. 0866946
     Stephen Krosschell, Esq.
     Goodman & Nekvasil, P.A.
     14020 Roosevelt Blvd., Suite 808
     P.O. Box 17709
     Clearwater, FL 33762
     Email: gnmain@gnfirm.com
     Telephone: (727) 524-8486
     Facsimile: (727) 524-8786

                About Williams Financial Group

Williams Financial Group, Inc. and its subsidiaries WFG Management
Services Inc., WFG Investments Inc. and WFG Advisors LP sought
protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D.
Tex. Case Nos. 17-33578 to 17-33581) on
Sept. 24, 2017.

At the time of the filing, Williams Financial Group estimated
assets and liabilities of $1,000,001 to $10 million.

Judge Harlin Dewayne Hale presides over the cases.

David William Parham, Esq., at Akerman LLP, serves as the Debtors'
Chapter 11 counsel.  Sessions, Fishman, Nathan & Israel LLC serves
as the Debtors' special counsel.  Baker & McKenzie LLP is the
special claims counsel.  Richard F. Amsberry P.C. is the Debtors'
accountant.


WINDSOR MARKETING: 6th Interim Cash Collateral Order Entered
------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. James J. Tancredi of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Connecticut has signed a sixth interim order
authorizing Windsor Marketing Group, Inc. to use cash collateral in
the ordinary course of its business, to be disbursed for payment of
the expenses as set forth on the budget.

As of the Petition Date, the Debtor's books and records reflect
that the Debtor was indebted and liable to People's United Bank
approximately as follows: (a) under the Revolver: $3,412,976.74;
(b) under first capex loan: $190,024.13; (c) under a term loan:
$642,857.28; and (d) under second capex loan $126,944.62. In order
to secure the payment and performance of the Revolver, the Debtor
granted People's United Bank a security interest in, a lien on and
pledge and assignment of substantially all present and future
personal property of the Debtor.

The Debtor believes that People's Capital Leasing Corp. and State
of Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development
("DECD") may assert interests in some portion of the cash
collateral.  

To the extent that any of the Other Lien Holders hold an interest
in the cash collateral, each such Other Lien Holder is granted (a)
a replacement lien on all of its Prepetition Collateral and its
Postpetition Collateral and (b) a superpriority claim under Section
503(b).

Such replacement liens and superpriority claims will be only for
the amount of any diminution in value (if any) of such Other Lien
Holder's interest (if any) in the cash collateral and that such
replacement liens or superpriority claim will be only to the same
validity, priority and extent of any prepetition interest in the
cash collateral held by such Other Lien Holder.

As adequate protection to People's United Bank and DECD for the
Debtor's use of cash collateral and for any actual diminution in
the value of the collateral, People's United Bank and DECD are
granted, nunc pro tunc to the Petition Date, the following, to be
accorded the same priority as between People's United Bank and DECD
as their respective liens and security interests had against the
prepetition collateral as of the Petition Date:

     (a) A continuing post-petition lien and security interest in
all pre-petition property of the Debtor as it existed on the
Petition Date, of the same type against which People's United Bank
and DECD held validly perfected liens and security interests as of
the Petition Date; and

     (b) A continuing post-petition lien in all property acquired
by the Debtor after the Petition Date of the same type against
which the People's United Bank and DECD held validly perfected
liens and security interests as of the Petition Date. However, the
Replacement Liens will not extend to any claims or causes of action
arising under chapter 5 of the Bankruptcy Code, including the
proceeds or property recovered in connection with the pursuit of
any such Avoidance Actions.

The replacement liens granted to People's United Bank and DECD
above will maintain the same priority, validity and enforceability
as People's United Bank's and DECD's liens had on the prepetition
collateral and will be recognized only to the extent of any actual
diminution in the value of the prepetition collateral resulting
from the use of cash collateral pursuant to the Order.

The Debtor has paid People's United Bank an adequate protection
payment of $61,000 on or about February 28, 2018, and a further
adequate protection payment of $41,000 on or about March 30, 2018.
In addition and to the extent not previously paid, the Debtor will
pay the DECD an adequate protection payment of $5,000 on or about
April 20, 2018.

To the extent the replacement liens granted to People's United Bank
and DECD are insufficient to compensate People's United Bank or
DECD for any actual diminution in value of the cash collateral,
People's United Bank and DECD will be entitled to a super-priority
administrative claim pursuant to 11 U.S.C. Section 503(b) of the
Bankruptcy Code, and Lender and DECD will be entitled to the
protections of and the priority set forth in 11 U.S.C. Section
507(b).

A full-text copy of the 6th Interim Cash Collateral Order is
available at

            http://bankrupt.com/misc/ctb18-20022-151.pdf

                    About Windsor Marketing Group

Headquartered in Suffield, Connecticut, Windsor Marketing Group,
Inc. -- https://windsormarketing.com/ -- is a privately held
company that develops and implements innovative in-store marketing
programs for more than 3,000 clients, including some of the
nation's top retailers.  Founded in 1976, Windsor Marketing helps
retailers make their stores easier to shop, reduce turnaround times
and lower production and fulfillment costs.

Windsor Marketing Group filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. D.
Conn. Case No. 18-20022) on Jan. 8, 2018.  In the petition signed
by Kevin F. Armata, president, the Debtor estimated assets and
liabilities at $10 million to $50 million.

The Debtor's counsel is James Berman, Esq., at Zeisler & Zeisler,
P.C.

The U.S. Trustee for Region 2 on Jan. 22, 2018, appointed three
creditors to serve on the official committee of unsecured creditors
in the Chapter 11 case. Lowenstein Sandler LLP, serves as counsel
to the Committee; Neubert, Pepe & Monteith, P.C., as its
Connecticut counsel.


WISEWEAR CORP: Proposes May 23 Auction Sale of 3D Printer
---------------------------------------------------------
WiseWear Corp. asks the US Bankruptcy Court, Western District of
Texas to authorize the sale of secured 3D printer for a minimum
sale price of $4,000 through the auction to be conducted on May 23,
2018.

The Debtor possesses a 3D Printer pursuant to a lease to own
agreement with Stratasys, Inc.  It Debtor owes Stratasys $14,235
under the lease which matures in June 2018.  The value of the
printer is not believe to be more than $14,235 and Debtor and
Stratasys desire the printer be sold at auction pursuant to agreed
terms.

The Court has authorized the Debtor to auction its personal
property on May 23, 2018.  The Debtor and Stratasys desire to have
the 3D Printer sold at auction on May 23, 2018, along with the
Debtor's other personal property. The terms of auction for the 3D
Printer will be the same as those for their other personal property
except the following:

     a. The minimum sale price will be $4,000.  If the 3D Printer
does not sell at auction, then the stay will automatically lift for
Stratasys to take possession of the printer.  Stratasys will remove
the printer from the Debtor's premises no later than May 30, 2018,
and the Debtor will not be liable for the printer if it is not
removed as of this date.  Any costs resulting from failure of
Stratasys to remove the printer will be borne by Stratasys.

     b. All sales proceeds from sale of the 3D Printer, excluding
buyer's premium, up to $14,235 will be paid to Stratasys with any
remaining sales funds (excluding the buyer's premium) transferred
in accordance with the May 23, 2018, auction terms.

     c. If the 3D Printer sells for more than $4,000, but less than
$14,235, (excluding buyer's premium) then Stratasys may file a
claim in the bankruptcy within 30 days of the sale and the claim
will be deemed timely.

     d. The Debtor will provide proof of the sale price within 3
days of the auction.

The Debtor contends no other creditor or party in interest
possesses a security interest in the 3D Printer.  It contends the
sale will benefit the estate by obtaining the largest sale amount
possible because of the interest create through the auction of the
remaining personal property.  The sale will either net a return to
the estate or reduce the debt to the estate.

A copy of the Master Lease Agreement attached to the Motion is
available for free at:

    http://bankrupt.com/misc/Wisewear_Corp_46_Sales.pdf

Stratasys can be reached at:

          STRATASYS, INC.
          7665 Commerce Way
          Eden Prairie, MN 56344-2020

                   About Wisewear Corp.

Wisewear Corp. -- https://wisewear.com -- specializes in the
design, creation, and manufacturing of smart, connected, and
beautiful internet of things (IoT) products for consumer, military,
and medical applications.  WiseWear "fuses fashion with threads of
technology" by seamlessly integrating proprietary biosensing and
wireless communication technologies into everyday items like
jewelry.  The Company's device connects to users' phone that
enables to receive real-time mobile notifications and updates on
users activity performance throughout the day.  The WiseWear
headquarters is located in the heart of the medical district in San
Antonio, Texas.

Wisewear Corp. sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. W.D. Tex. Case
No. 18-50403) on Feb. 28, 2018.  The case is assigned to Judge
Ronald B. King.  In the petition signed by Gerald Wilmink,
president/CEO, the Debtor estimated assets in the range of $500,000
to $1 million and $1 million to $10 million in debt.  

The Debtor tapped Ronald J. Smeberg, Esq., at The Smeberg Law Firm,
as counsel.

The Court appointed Heritage Global Partners and WFS, Inc., doing
business as Tranzon Asset Strategies, as auctioneers.


WOOTON GROUP: Sovena Buying Stockton Property for $9.3 Million
--------------------------------------------------------------
Wooton Group, LLC, asks approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Central District of California to sell the real property
located at 3001 Navone Road, Stockton, California to Sovena USA for
$9,250,000.

A hearing on the Motion is set for May 22, 2018 at 1:00 p.m.
Objections, if any, must be filed not later than 14 days before the
date set for hearing.

The Buyer will pay $9,250,000 for the Stockton Property, with a
$150,000 initial deposit, and the remainder ($9,100,000) to be paid
by close of escrow.  The escrow fees will be paid 50/50 by the
Debtor and the Buyer.  The recording fees and any documentary
transfer taxes will be paid by the Buyer, and the Debtor will pay
the title insurance.

The Buyer will have 35-45 days (depending on contingencies) from
the date of Sale Agreement to satisfy contingencies as described in
the Sale Agreement.  Except as set forth in the Motion, the sale
will be free and clear of all liens, claims, encumbrances, adverse
claims of ownership, and other interests, other than those
permitted by the Buyer, with such Encumbrances to attach to the net
proceeds of the sale with the same priority as they existed with
respect to the Stockton Property.

The Debtor will pay the Brokerage Fee of 3.24% to be divided 50/50
between the Buyer's and the Seller's brokers, as set forth in Sale
Agreement and certain other costs related to closing to be paid
through escrow.

The first deed of trust against the Stockton Property owed to
secured lender Transamerica Life Insurance, and its servicing agent
Aegon USA Realty Advisors, LLC Co. in the amount of $2,799,099
(plus accrued interest since Feb. 14, 2018) will be paid through
escrow from the sale proceeds.

The second deed of trust against the Stockton Property owed to
secured lender Citizens Business Bank in the amount of $1,977,290
(plus accrued interest since Feb. 23, 2018) will be paid through
escrow from the sale proceeds.

The secured real property taxes against the Stockton Property,
estimated at $37,114 will be paid through escrow from the sale
proceeds.

The disputed claims of Aegon (alleged 3rd deed of trust) Tal Hassid
and Southwest Guaranty Judgment Lien are disputed by the Debtor and
will not be paid through escrow unless and until the disputes are
resolved prior to close of escrow; rather, those disputed liens
will attach to the proceeds of sale pending Court determination of
their validity and amount.

The remainder of the proceeds after payment upon closing of secured
claims, commissions, closing costs, segregated funds for disputed
secured claims, and applicable real estate taxes will be deposited
in the Debtor's DIP account.

Upon Court approval of these terms, the Debtor and the Buyer will
execute any and all documents necessary to effectuate the sale of
the Stockton Property to the Buyer.  

The Debtor asks the Court to waive the 14-day stay provided by FRBP
6004(h).

A copy of the Agreement attached to the Motion is available for
free at:

    http://bankrupt.com/misc/Wooton_Group_106_Sales.pdf

The Purchaser:

          Jorge Pena
          Managing Director
          SOVENA USA
          Telephone: (315) 335-2183
          E-mail: jpen@sovenausa.com

                      About Wooton Group

Wooton Group, LLC, is a California limited liability company formed
in 1996 which owns and manages real property.  

Wooton Group first sought bankruptcy protection (Bankr. C.D. Cal.
Case No. 12-31323) in June 2012.

Wooton Group again sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 18-11727) on Feb. 16,
2018.  In its petition signed by Mark Slotkin, managing member, the
Debtor estimated assets and liabilities of $10 million to $50
million.  Judge Neil W. Bason presides over the case.  Leslie Cohen
Law, PC, is the Debtor's legal counsel.


WOOTON GROUP: Thomas Buying Fresno Property for $7.5 Million
------------------------------------------------------------
Wooton Group, LLC, asks for approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court
for the Central District of California to sell the real property
located at 2945-2965 S. Angus Avenue, Fresno, California to Richard
L. Thomas for $7.5 million.

A hearing on the Motion is set for May 22, 2018 at 1:00 p.m.
Objections, if any, must be filed not later than 14 days before the
date set for hearing.

The Buyer will pay $7.5 million for the Fresno Property, with a
$25,000 initial deposit, an additional $50,000 additional deposit
due after resolution of contingencies, and the remainder
($7,425,000) to be paid by close of escrow.  The escrow fees will
be paid 50/50 by the Debtor and the Buyer.  The recording fees and
any documentary transfer taxes will be paid by the Buyer, and the
title insurance will be paid by the Debtor.

The Buyer will have 60-75 days (depending on contingencies) from
the date of the Sale Agreement to satisfy contingencies as
described in the Sale Agreement.  Except as set forth in the
Motion, the sale will be free and clear of all liens, claims,
encumbrances, adverse claims of ownership, and other interests,
other than those permitted by the Buyer, with such Encumbrances to
attach to the net proceeds of the sale with the same priority as
they existed with respect to the Fresno Property.

The Debtor will pay the Brokerage Fee of 3% as set forth in Sale
Agreement and certain other costs related to closing to be paid
through escrow.

The secured claim against the Fresno Property owed to secured
lender Transamerica Life Insurance, and its servicing agent Aegon
USA Realty Advisors, LLC Co. in the amount of $2,845,521 (plus
accrued interest since Feb. 22, 2018) will be paid through escrow
from the sale proceeds.

The secured claim against the Fresno Property owed to secured
lender Strategic Emerging Economics in the amount of $2,428,214
will be paid through escrow from the sale proceeds.

The disputed claim of Tal Hassid is disputed by the Debtor and will
not be paid through escrow unless and until the dispute is resolved
prior to close of escrow; otherwise, the disputed lien of Tal
Hassid will attach to the proceeds of sale pending Court
determination of their validity and amount.

The remainder of the proceeds after payment upon closing of secured
claims, commissions, closing costs, segregated funds for disputed
secured claims, and applicable real estate taxes will be deposited
in the Debtor's DIP account.

Upon Court approval of these terms, the Debtor and the Buyer will
execute any and all documents necessary to effectuate the sale of
the Fresno Property to the Buyer.  

The Debtor asks the Court to waive the 14-day stay provided by FRBP
6004(h).

A copy of the Agreement attached to the Motion is available for
free at:

    http://bankrupt.com/misc/Wooton_Group_107_Sales.pdf

                      About Wooton Group

Wooton Group, LLC, is a California limited liability company formed
in 1996 which owns and manages real property.  

Wooton Group first sought bankruptcy protection (Bankr. C.D. Cal.
Case No. 12-31323) in June 2012.

Wooton Group again sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 18-11727) on Feb. 16,
2018.  In its petition signed by Mark Slotkin, managing member, the
Debtor estimated assets and liabilities of $10 million to $50
million.  Judge Neil W. Bason presides over the case.  Leslie Cohen
Law, PC, is the Debtor's legal counsel.


WORD INTERNATIONAL: Plan Confirmation Hearing Set for June 7
------------------------------------------------------------
Judge David R. Duncan of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District
of South Carolina entered an order approving Word International
Ministries' disclosure statement filed on Feb. 23, 2018 as amended
on April 18, 2018 referring to a chapter 11 plan.

May 31, 2018, is fixed as the last day for filing written
acceptances or rejections of the Plan.  Ballots accepting or
rejecting the Plan must be received by the Court on or before May
31, 2018.

May 31, 2018, is fixed as the last day for filing and serving
written objections to confirmation of the Plan.

June 7, 2018, at 11:00 a.m., at the J. Bratton Davis United States
Bankruptcy Courthouse, 1100 Laurel Street, Columbia, South Carolina
is fixed for the hearing on confirmation of the plan.

                About Word International Ministries

Word International Ministries is a religious organization based in
Sumter, South Carolina.  World International filed a Chapter 11
petition (Bankr. D.S.C. Case No. 17-04845) on Sept. 29, 2017.
Melody DuRant, its trustee manager, signed the petition.  At the
time of filing, the Debtor estimated $1 million to $10 million in
assets and $500,000 to $1 million in liabilities.  The Hon. David
R. Duncan presides over the case.  Reid B. Smith, Esq., of Bird &
Smith PA, is the Debtor's bankruptcy counsel.  No official
committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in the Chapter
11 case.


WRIGHT'S WELL: Motion to Terminate Ch.11 Reorganization Granted
---------------------------------------------------------------
Wright's Well Control Services, LLC (WWCS) on May 10, 2018,
disclosed that its motion to exit bankruptcy and terminate its
chapter 11 reorganization was granted on April 17, 2018.

WWCS's terms to exit chapter 11 include paying all of its priority
claims and exit costs including 100% of what is owed to all of its
unsecured creditors with undisputed claims.  Moving forward WWCS
plans to further develop its four (4) patents on Hydrate
Remediation including the New ROV belly pack skid for Chemical
Injection & Hydrate Remediation and the WWCS Open Water System for
Rigless and Riserless P&A.  

              About Wright's Well Control Services

Based in Lake Charles, Louisiana, Wright's Well Control Services,
LLC, provides oil and gas well control solutions.

The Debtor filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. W.D. La. Case No.
17-50354) on March 22, 2017.   In its petition, the Debtor
estimated less than $50,000 in assets and $1 million to $10 million
in liabilities.  The petition was signed by David Christopher
Wright, the Debtor's manager and member.

Judge Robert Summerhays presides over the case.

Kent H. Aguillard, Esq., at H. Kent Aguillard, is the Debtor's
bankruptcy counsel.  The Debtor hired a joint venture composed of
Hilco Industrial LLC, Myron Bowling Auctioneers and Cincinnati
Industrial Auctioneers as its asset marketing and sales agent.  The
Debtor taps Martin and Pellegrin as accountant.

On Sept. 12, 2017, the Debtor filed a disclosure statement and
Chapter 11 plan of reorganization.


YELLOW CAB COOP: Penalty Claimants to Get Nothing in Trustee's Plan
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Randy Sugarman, the duly-elected and acting Chapter 11 trustee for
Debtor Yellow Cab Cooperative, Inc. and the Official Committee of
Unsecured Creditors submit a combined disclosure statement and
joint plan of reorganization dated April 19, 2018.

In this filing, the Plan Proponents believe that their case against
the Debtor's directors is a strong one and that there is at least
$1 million of insurance coverage available. However, the policy is
a wasting policy, and there are many defendants to litigate
against. The costs of litigation could be substantial, and the
defendants would likely be entitled to be defended by the insurer
for free (thereby using up any available insurance coverage), while
the Liquidating Trustee will be paying counsel hourly rates to
prosecute claims against a diminishing amount of coverage. The
ability of the defendants to answer for any judgment is also
currently unknown. As a result, the projections included in the
Liquidation Analysis showing the likely recovery in this case are
extremely conservative. Thus, the Plan Proponents value the
potential recoveries in Sugarman v. Mellegard at just $500,000.

Class 4 under the plan, which consists of all Allowed Claims for
any fine, penalty, or forfeiture, or for multiple, exemplary, or
punitive damages, arising prior to the Petition Date, will receive
nothing under the plan.  

The previous version of the plan proposed to pay Class 4 penalty
claimants Pro Rata distributions from Available Cash in the Plan
Distribution Account up to the full amount their Allowed Claims
with interest at the Legal Rate.

A full-text copy of Disclosure Statement is available for free at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/canb16-30063-53.pdf

A full-text copy of the Plan of Reorganization is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/canb16-30063-753.pdf

                 About Yellow Cab Cooperative

Yellow Cab Cooperative, Inc. provides taxicab Transportation
services in the San Francisco, California area.  In San Francisco,
taxicab "color schemes" are licensed by the County of San Francisco
to provide services to taxi medallion owners, which color schemes
and medallion holders operate in a highly regulated environment.

Yellow Cab is a non-profit cooperative service company that
provides an operating base for approximately 400 San Francisco taxi
medallions (or permits), operating on a cooperative basis.  Yellow
Cab supports approximately 1,000 medallion owners and lessee
drivers in their individual taxi operations, and separately
employs
approximately 60 persons to provide those support services.  Yellow
Cab currently supports approximately one-third of the total
medallions operating in San Francisco.

Yellow Cab Cooperative filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. N.D.
Cal. Case No. 16-30063) on Jan. 22, 2016.  In the petition signed
by Pamela Martinez, president, the Debtor estimated assets of $1
million to $10 million, and debts of $10 million to $50 million.

The case is assigned to Judge Dennis Montali.

The Debtor has tapped Farella Braun and Martel LLP as its legal
counsel.

The U.S. Trustee for Region 17 has appointed five creditors of
Yellow Cab Cooperative, Inc., to serve on the official committee of
unsecured creditors.  The Committee is represented by John D.
Fiero, Esq., and Jason H. Rosell, Esq., at Pachulski Stang Ziehl &
Jones LLP, in San Francisco, California.

Randy Sugarman has been appointed the Chapter 11 Trustee for Yellow
Cab Cooperatives' bankruptcy estate.


YOCHANAN WALDMAN: Congregation Nachlas Buying Monsey Property
-------------------------------------------------------------
Yochanan Waldman and Rivkah Waldman ask the U.S. Bankruptcy Court
for the Southern District of New York to authorize the sale of the
real property located at 6 Thomas Court, Monsey, New York, to
Congregation Nachlas Moshe, Inc., for $370,000.

A hearing on the Motion is set for June 22, 2018, at 10:00 a.m.

At the time of the filing of the petition, the Debtors owned the
Property, which is their residence.  They asserted a homestead
exemption of $300,000.

At the time of the filing of the petition, the Property was
encumbered by a first mortgage, a second mortgage and numerous
judgments.  The second mortgage and the judgments have all
previously been vacated by Court Order, leaving only the First
Mortgage as a lien on the Property.

The First Mortgage emanates from a note and mortgage executed by
the Debtors in favor of MERS for HSBC.  This mortgage was then
assigned to HSBC Mortgage Corp. (USA), which assignment was
recorded in the Office of the Rockland County Clerk on Dec. 8,
2009.  Subsequently, HSBC Mortgage assigned its mortgage to HSBC
Bank (USA), N.A., which was recorded in the Office of the Rockland
County Clerk on Aug. 25, 2011.  On Nov. 1, 2011, the Debtors
executed a loan modification with HSBC, which loan modification was
approved by the Court.

Thereafter, upon information and belief, HSBC assigned the modified
mortgage to Federal National Mortgage Association ("FNMA"), which
assignment was recorded in the Office of the Rockland County Clerk
on Feb. 11, 2016.  FNMA then assigned the mortgage to U.S. Bank
Trust, N.A., as Trustee for LSF9 Master Participation Trust, which
assignment was recorded in the Office of the Rockland County Clerk
on Jan. 3, 2017.  Caliber Home Loans, Inc. appears to be the
servicing agent for U.S. Bank, but this has not been independently
verified.

On April 12, 2018, the Debtors entered into a Contract of Sale for
the Property with the Buyer for the sum of $370,000.  The Buyer is
in no way related to the Debtors and it is an arms-length
transaction.  This is an all cash sale with no mortgage
contingency.  The Buyer is prepared to close immediately upon
approval of the sale by the Court.

A copy of the Contract of Sale and Rider attached to the Motion is
available for free at:

    http://bankrupt.com/misc/Yochanan_Waldman_240_Sales.pdf

The Debtors did not actively market the Property and there is no
broker.  Because there is significant deferred maintenance required
for the Property, the Debtors believe that the price offered is the
highest and best offer for the Property.  Indeed, the Buyer has
agreed to accept the Property "as is" and has acknowledged that the
Property is in a "seriously degraded structural condition."

As noted, the mortgage has been assigned five times.  The Debtors
have not received a proper accounting for payments and believe that
the amount alleged by the holder of the First Mortgage to be owed
is erroneous and in excess of the sums actually due and owing.
This Court has issued an Order to permit the Debtors to obtain
information necessary to confirm the obligation owed to the First
Mortgage.  

Because it is possible that the Debtors and the holder of the First
Mortgage may not be able to resolve their dispute relating to the
amount owed before the closing and an evidentiary hearing may be
required, the Debtors ask that the net proceeds of the sale be
delivered to their bankruptcy counsel, Elizabeth A. Haas, Esq.,
PLLC, to be held in escrow pending further Order of the Court.

In order to clear title, if the obligation due to the First
Mortgage is not resolved by the time of the closing, the Debtors
also ask an Order that the holder of the First Mortgage execute a
satisfaction of mortgage in recordable form to be held in escrow
and released at the closing upon payment of the Contract Purchase
Price.

The Debtors further ask authority to pay their bankruptcy counsel,
Haas, to compensate her for the actual time expended and to
reimburse Haas for the actual and necessary out-of-pocket expenses
incurred in the review of the Contract of Sale, the filing and
serving of the Motion, and attendance at all hearings to obtain the
requested Order to sell the Property.  It is anticipated that the
fees to Haas will not exceed $5,000, plus actual and necessary
out-of-pocket expenses.

Although the Debtors have retained Marc Wohlgemuth & Associates,
P.C. as their Special Real Estate Counsel to negotiate the Contract
of Sale and close for an agreed sum of no more than $2,500, the
Buyer has agreed to pay this fee.  Additionally, pursuant to the
terms of the Contract of Sale, the Buyer has also agreed to pay the
usual and customary expenses surrounding any closing including, but
not limited to, tax adjustments, transfer taxes and recordation
fees.  The only other anticipated adjustment to the sale price is a
Property Condition Disclosure Credit of $500 to the Buyer.

The Debtors cannot afford this Property and are anxious to close as
quickly as possible.  The sale will permit them to remove
themselves from title in an orderly fashion to resolve accruing
expenses to the Lender and provide some certainty to them and their
family going forward.  The Debtors are very close to completion of
their Chapter 11 obligations and look forward to receiving their
discharge.

The Purchaser:

          CONGREGATION NACHLAS MOSHE, INC.
          4 Sands Point Road
          Monsey, NY l0952

Counsel for Debtors:

          Elizabeth A. Haas, Esq.
          ELIZABETH A. HAAS, ESQ., PLLC
          254 So. Main Street, Suite 302
          New City, N.Y. 10956-3363
          Telephone: (845) 708-0340

Yochanan Waldman and Rivkah Waldman sought Chapter 11 protection
(Bankr. S.D. N.Y. Case No. 10-23283-rdd) on June 23, 2010.  On May
30, 2014, the Debtors confirmed their Chapter 11 Plan.


YOUNG MEN'S: Hires Tucker Arensberg, P.C. as Attorney
-----------------------------------------------------
The Young Men's Christian Association of Greater Pittsburgh seeks
authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District
of Pennsylvania to hire Tucker Arensberg, P.C., as attorneys for
the Debtor.

Professional services Tucker Arensberg will render are:

     a. advise the Debtor with respect to its powers and duties as
debtor in possession in the continued management and operation of
its business and properties;

     b. prepare on behalf of the Debtor, as debtor in possession,
all necessary motions, applications, answers, orders, reports, and
other papers in connection with the administration of the Debtor's
estate;

     c. attend meetings and negotiating with representatives of
creditors and other parties-in-interest;

     d. take all necessary actions to protect and preserve the
Debtor's estate, including the prosecution of actions on the
Debtor's behalf, the defense of any actions commenced against the
Debtor, the negotiation of disputes in which the Debtor is
involved, and the preparation of objections to claims filed against
the Debtor's estate;

     e. negotiate and prepare on the Debtor's behalf any plan(s) of
reorganization, disclosure statement(s), and all related agreements
and/or documents, and take any necessary action on behalf of the
Debtor to obtain confirmation of such plan(s);

     f. represent the Debtor in connection with post-petition
financing;

     g. advise the Debtor in connection with any potential sale of
assets;

     h. appear before this Court, any appellate courts, and the
United States Trustee and protecting the interests of the Debtor's
estate before such courts and the United States Trustee;

     i. consult with the Debtor regarding non-bankruptcy
disciplines of law such as, by way of example only, tax, labor and
employment, real estate, corporate finance, securities, and certain
litigation matters; and

     j. perform all other necessary legal services and provide all
other necessary legal advice to the Debtor in connection with this
chapter 11 case.

Tucker Arensberg's current customary hourly rates for the
individuals expected to participate in these cases are typically
from $215 to $750 for attorneys and from $125 to $135 for
paraprofessionals.  As the Debtor is a non-profit, Tucker Arensberg
will apply at least a 20% discounted rate to its standard rates
(e.g., $172 to $600 for attorneys and $100 for all
paraprofessionals) to support the Debtor's charitable mission.

Michael A. Shiner, Esq., a shareholder of the law firm of Tucker
Arensberg, P.C., attests that his firm is a "disinterested person"
as that term is defined in Section 101(14) of the Bankruptcy Code.

The counsel can be reached through:

     Michael A. Shiner, Esq.
     Judith K. Fitzgerald, Esq.
     Beverly Weiss Manne, Esq.
     Jordan S. Blask, Esq.
     TUCKER ARENSBERG, P.C.
     1500 One PPG Place
     Pittsburgh, PA 15222
     Phone: 412-566-1212
     E-mail: mshiner@tuckerlaw.com
             jfitzgerald@tuckerlaw.com
             bmanne@tuckerlaw.com
             jblask@tuckerlaw.com

                   About Young Men's Christian
                Association of Greater Pittsburgh

The first YMCA in Pittsburgh was established in 1854.  Today, Young
Men's Christian Association of Greater Pittsburgh is a 501(c)(3)
charitable organization and guided and supported by hundreds of
talented volunteers and a committed and skilled internal leadership
team.  It is a nonsectarian institution committed to building
social services, closing the achievement gap, developing
interracial and intergenerational understanding, eliminating health
disparities and providing aid to financially struggling families
throughout the Pittsburgh region.

Young Men's Christian Association of Greater Pittsburgh filed a
voluntary petition in this Court for relief under chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E.D. Pa. Case No. 18-21898) on May 8, 2018,
listing $75 million in total assets and between $10 million and $50
million in liabilities.  Michael A. Shiner, Esq., at the law firm
of Tucker Arensberg, P.C., is the Debtor's counsel.



YOUNG MENS: Hires Schneider Downs Meridian as Financial Advisor
---------------------------------------------------------------
The Young Men's Christian Association of Greater Pittsburgh seeks
authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District
of Pennsylvania to hire Schneider Downs Meridian, LP, as financial
advisors.

SD Meridian's anticipated services are:

     a. assist in the evaluation of the Debtor's business and
prospects;

     b. assist in the development of the Debtor’s long-term
business plan and related financial projections;

     c. assist in financial reporting matters occurring
post-petition including but not limited to preparing cash flow
statements, balance sheets, monthly operating reports, tax
preparation and other financial and accounting documents;

     d. assist in the development of financial data and
presentations to the Debtor's Board of Directors, various creditors
and other third parties;

     e. analyze the Debtor's financial liquidity and evaluate
alternatives to improve such liquidity;

     f. analyze various restructuring scenarios and their potential
impact, and assist the Debtor in developing and proposing a
feasible and confirmable chapter 11 plan for reorganization;

     g. provide strategic advice with regard to restructuring or
refinancing the Debtor's obligations;

     h. evaluate the Debtor's debt capacity and alternative capital
structures;

     i. participate in negotiations among the Debtor and their
creditors, suppliers, lessors and other interested parties;

     j. advise the Debtor and negotiate with lenders with respect
to potential waivers or amendments of various credit facilities;

     k. assist in arranging financing for the Debtor, if
requested;

     l. provide expert witness testimony concerning any of the
subjects encompassed by the other services;

     m. assist the Debtor in preparing marketing materials in
conjunction with possible transactions;

     n. assist the Debtor in identifying potential buyers or
parties in interest to a transaction and assist in the due
diligence process;

     o. assist and advise the Debtor concerning the terms,
conditions and impact of any proposed transaction; and

     p. provide such other advisory services as are customarily
provided in connection with the analysis and negotiation of a
restructuring or a transaction, as requested and mutually agreed.

Margaret M. Good, CTP, Special Advisor with, and former Managing
Director and Head of Corporate Restructuring, of Schneider Downs
Meridian, LP, attests that SD Meridian is a "disinterested person"
as defined in section
101(14) of title 11 of the United States Code.  

The advisor can be reached through:

     Margaret M. Good, CTP
     Schneider Downs Meridian, LP
     One PPG Place, Suite 1700
     Pittsburgh , PA 15222
     Phone: 412-261-3644
     Fax: 412-261-4876
     Email: mgood@schneiderdowns.com

                   About Young Men's Christian
                Association of Greater Pittsburgh

The first YMCA in Pittsburgh was established in 1854.  Today, Young
Men's Christian Association of Greater Pittsburgh is a 501(c)(3)
charitable organization and guided and supported by hundreds of
talented volunteers and a committed and skilled internal leadership
team.  It is a nonsectarian institution committed to building
social services, closing the achievement gap, developing
interracial and intergenerational understanding, eliminating health
disparities and providing aid to financially struggling families
throughout the Pittsburgh region.

Young Men's Christian Association of Greater Pittsburgh filed a
voluntary petition in this Court for relief under chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E.D. Pa. Case No. 18-21898) on May 8, 2018,
listing $75 million in total assets and between $10 million and $50
million in liabilities.  Michael A. Shiner, Esq., at the law firm
of Tucker Arensberg, P.C., is the Debtor's counsel.



YPG FINANCE: Bank Debt Trades at 7% Off
---------------------------------------
Participations in a syndicated loan under which YPG Finance Ltd. is
a borrower traded in the secondary market at 93.00
cents-on-the-dollar during the week ended Friday, May 4, 2018,
according to data compiled by LSTA/Thomson Reuters MTM Pricing.
This represents a decrease of 2.20 percentage points from the
previous week. YPG Finance pays 1000 basis points above LIBOR to
borrow under the $100 million facility. The bank loan matures on
February 3, 2025. Moody's rates the loan 'Caa2' and Standard &
Poor's gave a 'CCC-' rating to the loan. The loan is one of the
biggest gainers and losers among 247 widely quoted syndicated loans
with five or more bids in secondary trading for the week ended
Friday, May 4.


YUMA ENERGY: Is Actively Seeking Strategic Alternatives
-------------------------------------------------------
Yuma Energy Inc. said in a press release it is currently exploring
strategic alternatives in order to enhance and maximize shareholder
value.  These strategic alternatives may include, but are not
limited to, a business combination, a merger, sale of assets, and
possible capital market transactions.  Yuma will thoroughly
evaluate all opportunities and third-party proposals, if any, and
will aggressively pursue options which are intended to add
incremental shareholder value relative to its continued standalone
activities.

                     First Quarter Results

Yuma filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission its
Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q reporting a net loss attributable to
common stockholders of $3.53 million on $5.64 million of revenues
for the three months ended March 31, 2018, compared to net income
attributable to common stockholders of $2.26 million on $7.14
million of revenues for the same period during the prior year.

As of March 31, 2018, Yuma had $89.48 million in total assets,
$55.89 million in total liabilities, and $33.58 million in total
equity.

Yuma incurred a net loss attributable to common stockholders of
$6.80 million in 2017 following a net loss attributable to common
stockholders of $42.65 million in 2016.

The Company expects to finance future acquisition, development and
exploration activities through available working capital, cash
flows from operating activities, sale of non-strategic assets, and
the possible issuance of additional equity/debt securities.  In
addition, the Company may slow or accelerate the development of its
properties to more closely match its projected cash flows.

During the three months ended March 31, 2018, the Company had net
cash used in financing activities of $1,399,954.  Of that amount,
$6,350,000 was borrowed on the Company's credit facility,
$7,000,000 was used for repayments on its credit facility, $409,279
of treasury stock was repurchased in connection with the
satisfaction of tax obligations upon the vesting of employees'
restricted stock awards, and $276,625 was used for payments on its
insurance financing.  In addition, the Company paid costs related
to a shelf registration statement of $64,050.

                          Liquidity

Due to operating losses the Company sustained during recent
quarters, which were partially a result of several events outside
the reasonable control of the Company, including the suspension of
production from several wells for a period of time and other
associated factors, at March 31, 2018, the Company was not in
compliance with its total debt to EBITDAX covenant for the trailing
four quarter period under its credit facility.  In addition, due to
this non-compliance and the Company's anticipated non-compliance at
June 30, 2018, the Company classified its bank debt as a current
liability in its consolidated financial statements as of and for
the three months ended March 31, 2018.  On May 8, 2018, the Company
received a waiver from its lenders to its compliance with the
fiscal period total debt to EBITDAX for the trailing four quarter
period financial ratio covenant for the period ended March 31,
2018, as long as it does not exceed 3.75 to 1.00.

As of March 31, 2018, the Company had outstanding borrowings of
$27.05 million under its credit facility, and its total borrowing
base was $40.5 million, leaving $13.45 million of undrawn borrowing
base.  As of May 8, 2018, the total borrowing base under the credit
facility was reduced to $35.0 million.  Since March 31, 2018, the
Company has borrowed an additional $7.2 million for working
capital, leaving $750,000 of undrawn borrowing base as of May 11,
2018.
    
A breach in the future of any of the terms and conditions of the
credit facility or a breach of the financial covenants thereunder
could result in acceleration of the Company's indebtedness, in
which case the debt would become immediately due and payable.  The
Company currently anticipates non-compliance with various financial
covenants at June 30, 2018.

The Company has initiated several strategic alternatives to remedy
its limited liquidity, its debt covenant compliance issues, and to
provide it with additional working capital to develop its existing
assets.  These may include, but are not limited to, reducing or
eliminating capital expenditures previously planned for 2018;
entering into commodity derivatives for a significant portion of
its anticipated production for 2018; reducing general and
administrative expenses; selling non-core assets; seeking merger
and acquisition related opportunities; and potentially raising
proceeds from capital markets transactions, including the sale of
debt or equity securities.  There can be no assurance that the
exploration of strategic alternatives will result in a
transaction.

Yuma said the significant risks and uncertainties described above
raise substantial doubt about the Company's ability to continue as
a going concern.  The Company has prepared its consolidated
financial statements for the three months ended March 31, 2018 on a
going concern basis of accounting, which contemplates continuity of
operations, realization of assets, and satisfaction of liabilities
and commitments in the normal course of business.  The Company's
consolidated financial statements for the three months ended March
31, 2018 do not include any adjustments that might result from the
outcome of the going concern uncertainty.

                       Operations Update

In 2017, the Company entered the Permian Basin through a joint
venture with two privately held energy companies and established an
Area of Mutual Interest covering approximately 33,280 acres in
Yoakum County, Texas, located in the Northwest Shelf of the Permian
Basin.  The primary target within the AMI is the San Andres
formation, which has been one of the largest producing formations
in Texas to date.  As of May 1, 2018, the Company held a 62.5%
working interest in approximately 4,823 gross acres (3,014 net
acres) within the AMI.  In November, 2017, the Company spudded a
salt water disposal well, the Jameson SWD #1.  Upon completion of
the salt water disposal well, the drilling rig was moved to the
Company's State 320 #1H horizontal San Andres well, which was
subsequently drilled and completed.  The Company opened the well on
March 1, 2018 to begin the dewatering process and establish
production.  As of May 6, 2018, the well was producing 31 barrels
of oil, 89 Mcf of natural gas, and 3,908 barrels of water per day.
While significant water production is typical and was expected from
the well, early production rates have not met management's
pre-drill expectations.  The Company will continue to evaluate well
performance and the commerciality of the prospect area, but given
the well performance to date, the ability to establish commercial
production in the prospect area is uncertain at this time.  As of
March 31, 2018, the salt water disposal well and the State 320 #1H
well were classified as unproved properties within the Company's
consolidated financial statements.

A full-text copy of the Form 10-Q is available for free at:

                     https://is.gd/C3Iu3n

                    About Yuma Energy, Inc.

Yuma Energy, Inc. -- www.yumaenergyinc.com -- is an independent
Houston-based exploration and production company focused on
acquiring, developing and exploring for conventional and
unconventional oil and natural gas resources.  Historically, the
Company's operations have focused on onshore properties located in
central and southern Louisiana and southeastern Texas where it has
a long history of drilling, developing and producing both oil and
natural gas assets.  More recently, the Company has begun acquiring
acreage in Yoakum County, Texas, with plans to explore and develop
oil and natural gas assets in the Permian Basin.  The Company has
operated positions in Kern County, California, and non-operated
positions in the East Texas Woodbine and the Bakken Shale in North
Dakota.  Its common stock is listed on the NYSE American under the
trading symbol "YUMA."


ZALER POP HOLDINGS: Unsecureds to Receive 25% of Claims Over 1 Year
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Zaler Pop Holdings of Wilkinsburg, LLC filed with the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania an
amended disclosure statement to accompany its amended plan dated
April 16, 2018.

The Debtor operated a franchised Popeye's Chicken & Biscuits
restaurant in the real estate located at 501 Penn Avenue,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (the "Property"). The Debtor has now
leased the Property to Cuddy ALR Realty, LLC.

The Debtor will receive $5,000 per month in rent from Cuddy, $4,000
of which will be allocated for payment to creditors under the
Amended Plan. The remaining $1,000 of monthly rent will be utilized
to pay administrative claims, insurance obligations and retention
for capital improvements. The Debtor has categorized the unsecured
priority taxes as well as secured tax claims which would otherwise
qualify as an unsecured priority claim where it not for the secured
status. Accordingly, Debtor proposes to pay the priority tax and
secured tax claims treated as priority on the same level, and then
pay the secured tax claims in full over an extended period of time.


Class 8 under the plan consists of the Allowed General Unsecured
claims of trade creditors which are comprised of the claims of
Peoples Gas and Duquesne Light as well as the unsecured portion of
the IRS and Revenue tax claims. Debtor projects that the Class 8
claimants will receive 25% of their claims subsequent to payment of
the priority and secured claims. Upon the payment and satisfaction
of the priority and secured claims, Debtor will make pro rata
semi-annual monthly payments for a period of one year on the
Allowed General Unsecured Claims.

A full-text copy of the Amended Disclosure Statement is available
at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/pawb17-20390-155.pdf

A full-text copy of the Amended Plan is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/pawb17-20390-153.pdf

                   About Zaler Pop Holdings

Zaler Pop Holdings of Wilkinsburg LLC sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D. Pa. Case No.
17-20390) on Feb. 3, 2017.  The petition was signed by Ronald
Johnson, authorized representative.  At the time of the filing, the
Debtor estimated assets and liabilities of less than $500,000.  No
official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in the
case.


[^] BOOK REVIEW: Long-Term Care in Transition
---------------------------------------------
Author:     David B. Smith
Publisher:  Beard Books
Paperback:  170 pages
List Price: US$34.95

Order your personal copy at
http://www.beardbooks.com/beardbooks/long-term_care_in_transition.html

This book is an invaluable reading for health care professionals
involved in the management of nursing homes.  It includes  lessons
learned from the regulatory experience for the health sector as a
whole.

Long-Term Care in Transition is a carefully documented case study
of the changes that took place in the regulation of nursing homes
in New York between 1975 and 1980.

It covers the history of the regulatory offensive in New York and
strategies of control and their effectiveness, touching on such
subjects as professional standards, rate setting, reimbursement,
criminal prosecution, and consumers.


                            *********

Monday's edition of the TCR delivers a list of indicative prices
for bond issues that reportedly trade well below par.  Prices are
obtained by TCR editors from a variety of outside sources during
the prior week we think are reliable.  Those sources may not,
however, be complete or accurate.  The Monday Bond Pricing table
is compiled on the Friday prior to publication.  Prices reported
are not intended to reflect actual trades.  Prices for actual
trades are probably different.  Our objective is to share
information, not make markets in publicly traded securities.
Nothing in the TCR constitutes an offer or solicitation to buy or
sell any security of any kind.  It is likely that some entity
affiliated with a TCR editor holds some position in the issuers
public debt and equity securities about which we report.

Each Tuesday edition of the TCR contains a list of companies with
insolvent balance sheets whose shares trade higher than $3 per
share in public markets.  At first glance, this list may look like
the definitive compilation of stocks that are ideal to sell short.
Don't be fooled.  Assets, for example, reported at historical cost
net of depreciation may understate the true value of a firm's
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equity securities trade in public market are determined by more
than a balance sheet solvency test.

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Chapter 11 cases involving less than $1,000,000 in assets and
liabilities delivered to nation's bankruptcy courts.  The list
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Each Friday's edition of the TCR includes a review about a book of
interest to troubled company professionals.  All titles are
available at your local bookstore or through Amazon.com.  Go to
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Monthly Operating Reports are summarized in every Saturday edition
of the TCR.

The Sunday TCR delivers securitization rating news from the week
then-ending.

TCR subscribers have free access to our on-line news archive.
Point your Web browser to http://TCRresources.bankrupt.com/and use
the e-mail address to which your TCR is delivered to login.

                            *********

S U B S C R I P T I O N   I N F O R M A T I O N

Troubled Company Reporter is a daily newsletter co-published
by Bankruptcy Creditors Service, Inc., Fairless Hills,
Pennsylvania, USA, and Beard Group, Inc., Washington, D.C., USA.  
Jhonas Dampog, Marites Claro, Joy Agravante, Rousel Elaine
Tumanda, Valerie Udtuhan, Howard C. Tolentino, Carmel Paderog,
Meriam Fernandez, Joel Anthony G. Lopez, Cecil R. Villacampa,
Sheryl Joy P. Olano, Psyche A. Castillon, Ivy B. Magdadaro, Carlo
Fernandez, Christopher G. Patalinghug, and Peter A. Chapman, Editors.

Copyright 2018.  All rights reserved.  ISSN: 1520-9474.

This material is copyrighted and any commercial use, resale or
publication in any form (including e-mail forwarding, electronic
re-mailing and photocopying) is strictly prohibited without prior
written permission of the publishers.  Information contained
herein is obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but is
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The TCR subscription rate is $975 for 6 months delivered via
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are $25 each.  For subscription information, contact Peter A.
Chapman at 215-945-7000.

                   *** End of Transmission ***