/raid1/www/Hosts/bankrupt/TCR_Public/190307.mbx          T R O U B L E D   C O M P A N Y   R E P O R T E R

              Thursday, March 7, 2019, Vol. 23, No. 65

                            Headlines

10 HOMESTEAD AVENUE: Wants to Continue Using Cash Collateral
1515-GEENERGY: Seeks Authorization to Use Cash Collateral
160 ROYAL PALM: Seeks to Extend Exclusive Filing Period to April 29
40/40 ENTERPRISES: Shields Wins Bid for Final Summary Judgment
8800 LLC: Court Nixes Bid to Assume TMC Realty Lease

ACETO CORPORATION: Seeks to Hire Lowenstein Sandler as Counsel
ACHAOGEN INC: Will Trim Jobs to 40 as Part of Restructuring
AMC ENTERTAINMENT: Moody's Rates Proposed $2.22BB Secured Loans Ba2
ASARCO LLC: Ct. Tosses Montana Resources' Bid for Summary Judgment
ASP EMERALD: S&P Alters Outlook to Stable, Affirms 'B-' ICR

BEAVEX HOLDING: U.S. Trustee Forms 5-Member Committee
BK RACING: Front Row Attempt to Collect NASCAR Member Fees Denied
BRANWELL INC: Authorized to Use Cash Collateral on Final Basis
BRIDGEHEAD NETWORKS: Seeks Authorization to Use Cash Collateral
BUILDERS FIRSTSOURCE: Moody's Rates New Secured Notes Due 2027 'B3'

BUILDERS FIRSTSOURCE: S&P Assigns 'BB-' Rating on New Sec. Notes
CARIBBEAN REAL: To Pay Secured Claim by Cash on Hand
CELADON GROUP: Signs 14th Amended Loan Agreement with BofA, et al.
CENTERSTONE LINEN: May Obtain Financing, Use Cash on Final Basis
CENTRAL MOTORCYCLE: April 3 Plan and Disclosure Statement Hearing

CFO MANAGEMENT: U.S. Trustee Forms 5-Member Committee
COMMUNITY HEALTH: Completes $1.6 Billion Senior Notes Offering
CUSTOM AIR DESIGN: Seeks Permission to Use Vehicle Sale Proceeds
CYTORI THERAPEUTICS: Reaches Agreement to Extend Loan Milestones
DANESHJOU FAMILY: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary

DANICA ASSOCIATES: Has Final Authority to Use Cash Collateral
DAVID SCHICK: Bid to Seal Certain Documents Junked
DEAN FOODS: S&P Lowers Issuer Credit Rating to CCC+, Outlook Neg.
DIE TECH SERVICES: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
DIESEL USA: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors

DOVETAIL GALLERY: Needs Access to Cash Collateral to Operate
EAGLE RIDGE ACADEMY, MN: S&P Affirms 'BB+' Rating on Revenue Bonds
ELISOL LLC: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
EP ENERGY: Approves Incentive and Retention Awards for Executives
F.A.S.S.T LLC: Continued Cash Collateral Use Beyond Feb. 13 Denied

FLAVORS HOLDINGS: S&P Cuts ICR to CCC on Elevated Refinancing Risk
FLO-TECH INC: Authorized to Use Cash Collateral on Final Basis
GERMAN SANTANA: Stay Remains Lifted in Favor of Creditor SFS
GIGA-TRONICS INC: Appoints New Corporate Controller and CAO
GLANSAOL HOLDINGS: Seeks to Hire Global Tax  as Accountant

GLOBAL HOTELS: Files Immaterially Modified Amended Plan Outline
GMI GROUP: Seeks Authorization to Use Cash Collateral
GMI GROUP: Seeks to Hire Steinfeld & Steinfeld as Counsel
GNC HOLDINGS: Posts $58.8 Million Net Income in Fourth Quarter
GOD'S HOUSE OF REFUGE: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee

GOODWILL INDUSTRIES: Gets Approval to Continue to Employ FTI
GREENPARTS INTERNATIONAL: Case Summary & 9 Unsecured Creditors
GROUP GOLF: May 6 Plan Confirmation Hearing
HG VENTURES: U.S. Trustee Objects to Disclosure Statement
HILL ENTERPRISES: Taps Professional Management as Accountant

HOME BOUND HEALTHCARE: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
HORIZON PHARMA: Moody's Puts B2 CFR under Review for Upgrade
HOUSTON TRANSPORTATION: Gets Final Nod on Financing, Use Cash
INNOVATIVE MATTRESS: Gets Final Approval on $14-Mil Loan, Cash Use
INSCOPE INTERNATIONAL: U.S. Trustee Forms 5-Member Committee

INTERNATIONAL IRON: Seeks to Hire Byrd Campbell as Special Counsel
J.C. PENNEY: S&P Cuts ICR to CCC+ on Weak Performance, Outlook Neg
JAGUAR HEALTH: All Seven Proposals Approved at Special Meeting
JLT HOLDINGS: Seeks Authority to Use McCormick Cash Collateral
JME TRUCKING: Court Approves Disclosures, Confirms Plan

KAIROS HOMES: May Use Sales Proceeds for Post-Petition Expenses
KAISER GYPSUM: Suit vs AWI Subject to Withdrawal of Reference
KOI DESIGN: Seeks to Hire Brutzkus Gubner as Legal Counsel
KPH CONSTRUCTION: May Use Cash Collateral on Interim Basis
LANDING AT BRAINTREE: Wants to Continue Using Cash Collateral

M&P COLLECTIONS: Seeks to Hire Kaplan Johnson as Legal Counsel
M.E. SMITH: Seeks Access to Cash to Fund Ongoing Operations
MAXAR TECHNOLOGIES: S&P Lowers ICR to 'B', Outlook Negative
MAYFLOWER COMMUNITIES: Seeks to Hire Ankura Consulting, Appoint CRO
MCP REAL ESTATE: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee

MICROVISION INC: Incurs $11.9 Million Net Loss in Fourth Quarter
MIKE TAMANA: Allowed to Use Cash Collateral Through April 5
MOBILITY SALES: Seeks to Hire Joyce W. Lindauer as Legal Counsel
NATIONAL RADIOLOGY: Seeks Authority to Use Chase Cash Collateral
NATIONAL RADIOLOGY: Seeks to Hire Jennis Law Firm as Counsel

NOBLE REY: Seeks Court Approval to Hire Accountant
OAKLAND PARK: Ch. 11 Trustee Taps KapilaMukamal as Accountant
OAKLAND PARK: Ch. 11 Trustee Taps Stearns Weaver as Counsel
PANTHER BF 2: S&P Assigns B+ Issuer Credit Rating, Outlook Stable
PAYLESS HOLDINGS: U.S. Trustee Forms 7-Member Committee

PEM FAMILY LIMITED: Case Summary & 2 Unsecured Creditors
PERNIX SLEEP: U.S. Trustee Forms 5-Member Committee
PHILLIP TARVER: Peoples National Bank Automatic Stay Lifted
PHUONG NAM VIETNAMESE: May Use Cash to Pay Prepetition Wages
PRAGAT PURSHOTTAM: Cash Collateral Use Continued to March 21

PURE AGROBUSINESS: Court Tosses Bid for Stay Pending Appeal
RCH LAWN: Wants to Extend Exclusive Plan Filing Period to May 28
RCJM INC: Has Authorization on Interim Use of Cash Collateral
ROYAL T ENERGY: Court Grants ENGS Bid for Summary Judgment
RYNIC INC: Continued Cash Collateral Use Authorized on Final Basis

SCIENTIFIC GAMES: Moody's Rates Proposed $1.1BB Unsec. Notes 'Caa1'
SCIENTIFIC GAMES: Proposes to Offer $1.1 Billion of Senior Notes
SENIOR CARE GROUP: Plan Solicitation Period Extended Until May 6
SIT-CO LLC: Seeks Approval on Interim Use of Cash Collateral
SKYMARK PROPERTIES SPE: Bid to Use Cash Collateral Denied

SOLID LANDINGS: Perry Loses Summary Judgment Bid vs Capstar
SONOMA VALLEY HCD: Moody's Cuts GO Debt Rating to 'Ba1'
ST. JOHN PENTECOSTAL: Seeks to Hire DelBello Donnellan as Counsel
SUNGLO HOME: Seeks Authorization to Use Cash Collateral
SYNERGY PHARMACEUTICALS: Panel Opposes Independent Director Appt.

SYNERGY PHARMACEUTICALS: Taps Togut Segal as Co-Counsel
TM VILLAGE: Court OK's Bid to Assume Prepetition Sales Contracts
TRANSMONTGAINE PARTNERS: Moody's Cuts CFR to 'B1', Outlook Stable
TRIDENT HOLDING: Seeks to Hire Epiq as Administrative Agent
TRIDENT HOLDING: Seeks to Hire Togut Segal as Co-Counsel

TRUGREEN LP: S&P Affirms 'B' Issuer Credit Rating, Outlook Stable
TSC SNOWDEN: Seeks to Hire NAI as Real Estate Broker
TWO STREETS: Plan Not Financially Feasible, Court Rules
USA GYMNASTICS: Taps APCO Worldwide as Communications Advisor
USA GYMNASTICS: Taps Barnes as 'Ordinary Course' Counsel

USA GYMNASTICS: Taps Pierce Atwood as 'Ordinary Course' Counsel
USA GYMNASTICS: Taps Zuckerman as 'Ordinary Course' Counsel
VEROBLUE FARMS: Taps CliftonLarsonAllen to Provide Tax Services
WALTER SCHWAB: Order Dismissing Suit vs T. Jackson, et al., Flipped
WINDSOR MARKETING: 20th Interim Cash Collateral Use Approved

WINDSOR MARKETING: Unsecureds Get $53K for 28 Quarters
WINDSTREAM HOLDINGS: Egan-Jones Lowers Sr. Unsec. Ratings to D
WORLD ACCEPTANCE: S&P Alters Outlook to Stable, Affirms 'B+' ICR
WORLD LIQUIDATORS: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
XENETIC BIOSCIENCES: Prices $3.1-Mil. Registered Direct Offering

ZAKINTOS & PLATANOS: Taps Alla Kachan as Legal Counsel
[*] P. Tomasco & D. Newman Joins Quinn Emmanuel's New York Office
[^] Recent Small-Dollar & Individual Chapter 11 Filings

                            *********

10 HOMESTEAD AVENUE: Wants to Continue Using Cash Collateral
------------------------------------------------------------
10 Homestead Avenue, LLC, seeks authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the District of Massachusetts to use the cash collateral
of its secured creditors, including but not limited to Northeast
Bank, Endeavor Capital Finance, and Atlantic Mortgage.

Homestead is the Developer of 4 separate condominium units in a 4
unit building located at 10 Homestead Avenue, Quincy, MA 02169.
Unit one was subject to a Purchase and Sale Agreement on the
Petition Date and is subject to Motion to Sell filed on Dec. 17,
2018. Two Units are currently rented. The proposed Buyer of Unit 1
is an occupant of one of the 2 occupied units. The Debtor receives
rent with regard to the Property.

The Debtor is not aware of any other liens on the Quincy Property
except that the Debtor owes property taxes. The Northeast Mortgage
and Assignment secures rents, accounts, accounts receivables,
contract rights and rents and profits. The Quincy Property is
currently insured in the amount of $1,642,500.

The fair market value of the Quincy Property, based on the proposed
sales value of each unit totals $1,058,700. The first mortgagee,
Northeast is fully secured based on the Refinance Balance of
approximately $600,000 and under secured based on the Guaranty
Balance of approximately $1,050,000. Endeavor is the holder of a
second mortgage with a balance of approximately $35,000. The
Atlantic Mortgage is for an undisclosed amount -- it secures a
guaranty made by the Debtor of a mortgage in the approximate amount
of $800,000.

The Debtor earns a total monthly rental income of $2,250, until
Jan. 15, 2019 when the monthly rental income decreases to $1,400.
The rent constitutes cash collateral. The Debtor has prepared a
Projected Income and Expense Accounting for the period Feb. 1, 2019
through May 1, 2019.

The Debtor intends to use cash collateral in the ordinary course of
business to pay the expenses indicated in the Accounting and for
the purpose of providing adequate protection to the mortgage
holder. The Debtor requests that said rents will be used to make
the insurance, property taxes and any other ordinary operating
expenses for the Property.

As adequate protection, the Debtor proposes the following:

      (a) To continue maintaining insurance on the Property;

      (b) To grant Northeast Bank a replacement lien on the same
type of postpetition property of the estate against which Northeast
Bank held lien as of the Petition Date. Said replacement lien will
maintain the same priority, validity and enforceability as
Northeast Bank's pre-petition lien. Said replacement lien will be
recognized only to the extent of the diminution in value of
Northeast Bank's pre-petition collateral after the petition date
resulting from the Debtors' use of cash collateral during the
pendency of the case;

      (c) To set aside on a monthly basis and to pay when due the
real estate taxes accruing on the property;

      (d) To pay the utilities of the Quincy property including,
electricity and gas;

      (e) To pay the water and sewer; and

      (f) To pay the quarterly U.S. Trustee fees.

The Debtor is also requesting periodic monthly post-petition of
principal and interest payments of approximately $4,000 a month to
Northeast be waived given a Buyer is located for Unit One, and a
closing has been continued to Feb. 28, 2019. The Debtor is offering
a replacement lien. Said offer will satisfy the Debtor's
requirement regarding adequate protection given the large equity
cushion, and that the Property will be sold in a short period of
time.

A full-text copy of the Cash Collateral Motion is available at

http://bankrupt.com/misc/mab18-14158-89.pdf

                     About 10 Homestead Avenue

10 Homestead Avenue, LLC, is the developer of 4 separate
condominium units in a 4-unit building located at 10 Homestead
Avenue, Quincy, MA 02169.

Landing at Braintree, LLC, is the owner of all 10 separate
condominium units that occupy a 10 unit building located at 125-141
Commercial Street, Braintree, MA 02184.

10 Homestead Avenue, LLC, and affiliate Landing at Braintree, LLC,
filed voluntary petitions seeking relief under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Mass. Case No. 18-14158 and Bankr. D.
Mass. Case No. 18-14159, respectively) on Nov. 6, 2018.  In the
petitions signed by William T. Barry, manager, the Debtors
estimated $1 million to $10 million in assets and liabilities.

Judge Frank J. Bailey oversees Case No. 18-14158 while the Hon.
Christopher J. Panos oversees Case No. 18-14159.

The Ann Brennan Law Offices serves as the Debtors' counsel.  The
Law Office of Lipman & White, is special counsel.


1515-GEENERGY: Seeks Authorization to Use Cash Collateral
---------------------------------------------------------
1515-GEEnergy Holding Co. LLC, and BBPC LLC, doing business as
Great Eastern Energy seek authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court
for the District of Delaware to use cash collateral in the ordinary
course of its business.

The Debtors require immediate access to (i) finance their working
capital needs and for any other general corporate purposes; and
(ii) pay related transaction costs, fees, liabilities and expenses
(including all professional fees and expenses) and other
administration costs incurred in connection with and for the
benefit of these Chapter 11 Cases (including the Adequate
Protection Payments), in each case solely to the extent consistent
with the Budget.

The Debtors believe Macquarie Investments US Inc. and Macquarie
Energy LLC, in its individual capacity and in its capacity as
collateral agent, may have an interest in cash collateral.

As of the Petition Date, BBPC's Obligations to Prepetition Secured
Creditors included, without limitation, (i) obligations in the
amount of not less than $60,222,117 under the ISDA Master
Agreement; (ii) in the amount of not less than $677,740.66 in
respect of Reimbursement Obligations and Working Capital Fees, and
(iii) the obligation to post cash or credit support to Macquarie in
the form of letters of credit acceptable to Macquarie in its sole
discretion, an amount of not less than $30,689,086 as
collateralization for 105% of the full undrawn amount of all
outstanding Letters of Credit.

The Prepetition Secured Obligations are secured by valid, binding,
perfected first-priority security interests in and liens on the
collateral, including substantially all of the assets of BBPC,
including cash, and the equity interests in BBPC. All of BBPC's
cash as of the Petition Date constitutes Cash Collateral of the
Prepetition Secured Creditors.

The Debtors propose to grant Macquarie, for the benefit of itself
and the Prepetition Secured Creditors, an additional and
replacement continuing valid, binding, enforceable, non-avoidable,
and automatically perfected postpetition security interests in and
liens on all of each Debtors' presently owned or hereafter acquired
property and assets, whether such property and assets were acquired
by such Debtor before or after the Petition Date, of any kind or
nature, whether real or personal, tangible or intangible, wherever
located.

Macquarie, on behalf of itself and the Prepetition Secured
Creditors, will also be granted an allowed superpriority
administrative expense claim pursuant to sections 503(b), 507(a),
and 507(b) of the Bankruptcy Code to the extent of any Diminution
in Value of the interests of the Prepetition Secured Creditors in
the Prepetition Collateral, which claim will be an allowed claim
against each of the Debtors (jointly and severally).

The Debtors will pay to Macquarie, for the benefit of itself and
the Prepetition Secured Creditors, monthly adequate protection
payments, in an amount resulting from applying a per annum rate
equal to the non-default contract interest rate set forth in the
Prepetition Credit Agreement to the aggregate outstanding amount of
Prepetition Secured Obligations as of the Petition Date in respect
of such relevant periods ending after the Petition Date. The
Adequate Protection Payments will be calculated on a monthly basis,
and be due and payable on the first business day of each month.

A full-text copy of the Debtor's Motion is available at

             http://bankrupt.com/misc/deb19-10303-5.pdf

                    About Great Eastern Energy

With its headquarters in Brooklyn, New York, BBPC LLC, doing
business as Great Eastern Energy, provides energy commodities to
retail customers.  BBPC began serving natural gas customers in New
York, New Jersey and Massachusetts in 2000, and later expanded to
serve electricity customers in New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts,
and Connecticut in 2013.

1515-GEEnergy Holding Co. LLC owns 100% of the equity in BBPC.

1515-GEEnergy Holding Co. LLC and BBPC LLC sought Chapter 11
protection (Bankr. D. Del. Case Nos. 19-10303 and 19-10304) on Feb.
14, 2019.

The Debtors estimated $50 million to $100 million in assets and the
same range of liabilities as of the bankruptcy filing.

The Hon. Kevin J. Carey is the case judge.

The Debtors tapped Klehr Harrison Harvey Branzburg LLP as
bankruptcy counsel; McLaughlin & Stern, PLLC as co-counsel;
Glassratner Advisory & Capital Group, LLC as financial advisor; and
Omni Management Group, Inc., as claims and noticing agent.


160 ROYAL PALM: Seeks to Extend Exclusive Filing Period to April 29
-------------------------------------------------------------------
160 Royal Palm, LLC asked the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of Florida to extend the period during which it
has the exclusive right to file a Chapter 11 plan to April 29, and
to solicit acceptances for the plan to June 28.

The company also proposed to move the deadline for filing a
bankruptcy plan and disclosure statement to April 29.

The extension, if granted by the court, would give the company more
time to formulate a plan based on the sale of its assets which are
scheduled for auction on March 8, and on the court's recent ruling
on various contested matters involving KK-PB Financial, LLC,
according to court filings.

                       About 160 Royal Palm

160 Royal Palm, LLC is a Florida limited liability company, which
owns prime real property consisting of a partially constructed
hotel/condominium located at 160 Royal Palm Way, Palm Beach,
Florida.  The property is under state court receivership.

160 Royal Palm filed a voluntary petition for relief under chapter
11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No.
18-19441) on Aug. 2, 2018.  In the petition signed by Cary
Glickstein, sole and exclusive manager, the Debtor disclosed
$16,447,759 in total assets and $114,926,976 in total liabilities.

The case has been assigned to Judge Erik P. Kimball.  

The Debtor tapped Philip J. Landau, Esq., at Shraiberg, Landau &
Page, P.A., as its counsel; and Greenberg Traurig, P.A. as its
special counsel and title agent.  

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


40/40 ENTERPRISES: Shields Wins Bid for Final Summary Judgment
--------------------------------------------------------------
The only issue remaining to be decided in the adversary proceeding
captioned SHIELDS LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, Plaintiff, v. BOO NATHANIEL
BRADBERRY AND 40/40 ENTERPRISES, INC., Defendants, Adversary Case
No. 18-04033 (Bankr. E.D. Tex.) is the request by the plaintiff,
Shields Limited Partnership, for an award of its attorneys' fees
and expenses incurred in connection with pre-petition litigation.
The plaintiff seeks a final summary judgment in its favor and
against the defendants, jointly and severally.

Upon careful analysis, Bankruptcy Judge Brenda T. Rhoades granted
the plaintiff's motion.

The dispute between the parties involved a commercial lease.
Shields was the landlord, Boo Nathaniel Bradberry was a subtenant,
and Debtor 40/40 Enterprises, Inc. was a sub-subtenant pursuant to
written lease agreements. After the lease expired, the Debtor
remained in the premises on a month-to-month basis for a period of
time. Thereafter, Shields sent a notice of termination of the lease
on Oct. 30, 2013, terminating the Debtor's right of possession
effective Dec. 1, 2013.

When the Debtor did not vacate the premises, Shields filed an
eviction lawsuit in the justice court. The justice court found in
favor the Debtor. Shields appealed for a de novo trial in the
county court at law, which also found in favor of the Debtor.
Shields then appealed to the Dallas Court of Appeals, which
affirmed. Shields then filed a petition for review with the Texas
Supreme Court, which was granted.

On May 12, 2017, the Texas Supreme Court issued a unanimous opinion
and judgment reversing the lower courts and rendering judgment that
Shields had a right to immediate possession of the premises. The
Court further found there was no dispute that Shields owns that
property and that Shields gave proper notice terminating the
Debtor's right of possession and the Debtor must vacate the
premises.

In support of its motion for final summary judgment, Shields
submitted the affidavit of Dylan B. Russell. The uncontroverted
affidavit and the exhibits establish that Shields incurred
reasonable and necessary attorney's fees and other legal fees and
expenses in connection with the underlying cases and disputes among
Shields, the Debtor, and Bradberry in the amount of $218,393.71,
which consists of $201,681.75 in attorney's fees, paralegal fees,
and law clerk fees and $16,711.96 in expenses.

Additionally, in the event the Debtor or Bradberry appeal to the
district court, the uncontroverted affidavit and the exhibits
establish that Shields would incur an additional $8,760 in
reasonable and necessary attorney's fees in responding to such an
appeal. If the Debtor or Bradberry were to appeal thereafter to the
Fifth Circuit, Shields would incur an additional $18,250 in
reasonable and necessary attorney's fees in responding to such an
appeal and additional $14,600 in reasonable and necessary
attorney's fees in the event the Fifth Circuit requests oral
arguments and oral argument is presented in New Orleans.

The Court concludes that there is no genuine dispute as to any
material fact, and that the plaintiff, Shields Limited Partnership,
is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Thus, Shields' motion
is granted.

A copy of the Court's Memorandum Opinion dated Jan. 22, 2019 is
available at https://bit.ly/2Xyr7VU from Leagle.com.

Shields Limited Partnership, Plaintiff, represented by Deirdre
Carey Brown -- brown@hooverslovacek.com -- Hoover Slovacek LLP.

                About 40/40 Enterprises Inc.

40/40 Enterprises, Inc. sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E.D. Texas Case No. 17-42244) on October
12, 2017.


8800 LLC: Court Nixes Bid to Assume TMC Realty Lease
----------------------------------------------------
Bankruptcy Judge Robert Kwan issued a ruling denying Debtor 8800
LLC's motion to assume lease entered into between TMC Realty, LLC
and 8800 Sunset, LLC.

On June 22, 2018, Debtor filed a voluntary petition for relief
under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. Debtor is a
California limited liability company operating its business,
managing its financial affairs and operating its bankruptcy estate
as a debtor in possession.

TMC is a Delaware limited liability company, and it owns and
operates an office building located at 8800 Sunset Boulevard, West
Hollywood, California.

The Lease contains several provisions prohibiting amendments,
changes, or modifications, as well as assignments or transfers,
without, among other things, a written amendment signed by both
parties.

The Lease also contains a provision for the Landlord TMC to
"recapture" and terminate the Lease, but only upon the satisfaction
and occurrence of several conditions required therein. Under the
Recapture Provision, if the tenant under the Lease requests TMC's
consent to assign or transfer the tenant's interest under the
Lease, TMC, "in the exercise of its sole and absolute discretion,"
has the option to terminate the Lease and recapture the Premises.

After careful consideration, the Court determines that Debtor
cannot assume the Lease because it was terminated under California
law before the date of the filing of the bankruptcy petition, and
Debtor is not entitled to relief from forfeiture as a matter of
law. Accordingly, the court need not decide the issue whether the
Debtor is not the Tenant under the Lease and thus would be
precluded from assuming the Lease. If it was necessary for the
court to determine this issue in order to resolve the Motion, the
court would find that Debtor is the Tenant under the Lease because,
among other reasons, (i) TMC (through its agents) induced Debtor
and Debtor's principal, Mr. Alan Nathan, to "change its name" and
is estopped from asserting otherwise, (ii) Debtor's principal, Mr.
Nathan, believed creation of the Debtor entity was the equivalent
of what TMC was directing (i.e., changing the name), (iii) Debtor
and 8800 Sunset, LLC have all the same attributes, i.e., the same
assets, the same liabilities, the same principals and the same
business, (iv) TMC waived its objection to the assignment of the
Lease to Debtor by, among other things, sending invoices in the
name of and receiving rent payments from Debtor from the Lease
commencement date of Dec.  1, 2015 to April 2018, and (v) the
unauthorized assignment of the Lease from 8800 Sunset to Debtor
would constitute an "Event of Default" under Section 14.1(g) of the
Lease, and Debtor could likely get relief from such a forfeiture
caused by Debtor's default.

The bankruptcy case is In re: 8800 LLC, Chapter 11, Debtor, Case
No. 2:18-bk-17263-RK (Bankr. C.D. Cal.).

A copy of the Court's Findings dated Jan. 18, 2019 is available at
https://bit.ly/2Uiywqj from Leagle.com.

8800 LLC, Debtor, represented by Martin J. Brill , David B.
Golubchik , Levene Neale Bender Yoo & Brill LLP & Jeffrey S. Kwong
, Levene Neale Bender Yoo & Brill LLP.

United States Trustee, U.S. Trustee, represented by Hatty K. Yip ,
Office of the UST/DOJ.

                      About 8800 LLC

8800 LLC is a privately held company whose principal assets are
located at 8800 Sunset Blvd. West Hollywood, CA 90069.  8800 LLC
filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 18-17263) on
June 22, 2018.  In the petition signed by Alan Nathan, managing
member, the Debtor estimated assets and liabilities at $1 million
to $10 million.  The case is assigned to Judge Robert N. Kwan.  The
Debtor is represented by lawyers at Levene, Neale, Bender, Yoo &
Brill L.L.P.


ACETO CORPORATION: Seeks to Hire Lowenstein Sandler as Counsel
--------------------------------------------------------------
ACETO Corporation and its debtor-affiliates seek authority from the
U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Jersey to hire
Lowenstein Sandler LLP as their legal counsel.

As legal counsel, Lowenstein Sandler will be tasked to:

     (a) advise the Debtors of their rights, powers and duties in
the continued operation of their business during their Chapter 11
cases;

     (b) give legal advice regarding the conduct of the Debtors'
bankruptcy cases;

     (c) attend meetings and negotiate with representatives of
creditors and other parties in interest, including governmental
authorities;

     (d) take all necessary actions to protect and preserve the
bankruptcy estates, including prosecuting actions on the Debtors'
behalf and defending any action commenced against the Debtors;

     (e) assist the Debtors in obtaining authority to continue
using cash collateral or in connection with post-petition
financing;

     (f) advise the Debtors in connection with the sale of their
assets;

     (g) advise the Debtors concerning potential assumption,
assignment and rejection of executory contracts and unexpired
leases;

     (h) represent the Debtors in tax, litigation and general
corporate matters;

     (i) take any necessary action to pursue and obtain approval of
a disclosure statement and confirmation of a bankruptcy plan; and

     (j) provide other legal services in connection with the
Debtors' bankruptcy cases.

Lowenstein Sandler's standard hourly rates are:

     Partners                     $600 ‐ $1,350
     Senior Counsel and Counsel     $470 ‐ $790
     Associates                     $370 ‐ $640
     Paralegals, Practice Support
       and Assistants              $200 - $350

In accordance with Appendix B-Guidelines for reviewing fee
applications filed by attorneys in larger Chapter 11 cases, Kenneth
Rosen, Esq., a partner at Lowenstein Sandler, disclosed that:

     -- Lowenstein Sandler has not agreed to any variations from,
or alternatives to, its standard or customary billing arrangements
for its employment with the Debtors;

     -- no Lowenstein Sandler professional included in the
engagement has varied his rate based on the geographic location of
the Debtors' cases;

     -- Lowenstein Sandler represented the Debtors in the 12 months
prior to the petition date. The billing rates and material
financial terms in connection with such representation have not
changed before and after the Debtors' bankruptcy filing other than
due to annual and customary firm-wide adjustments to the firm's
hourly rates in the ordinary course of its business; and

     -- the Debtors and Lowenstein Sandler intend to develop a
prospective budget and staffing plan to comply with the U.S.
Trustee's requests for information and additional disclosures.

Mr. Rosen assured the court that the firm is a "disinterested
person" as the term is defined in Section 101(14) of the Bankruptcy
Code and does not represent any interest adverse to the Debtor and
its estates.

Lowenstein Sandler can be reached through:

     Kenneth A. Rosen, Esq.
     Jeffrey D. Prol, Esq.
     Andrew Behlmann, Esq.
     Lowenstein Sandler LLP
     One Lowenstein Drive
     Roseland, NJ 07068
     Tel: (973) 597-2500
     Fax: (973) 597-2400

                   About ACETO Corp.

ACETO Corporation (NASDAQ: ACET), incorporated in 1947, is focused
on the global marketing, sale and distribution of Human Health
products (finished dosage form generics and nutraceutical
products), Pharmaceutical Ingredients (pharmaceutical intermediates
and active pharmaceutical ingredients) and Performance Chemicals
(specialty chemicals and agricultural protection products).

The Company employs approximately 180 people.

With business operations in nine countries, ACETO distributes over
1,100 chemical compounds used principally as finished products or
raw materials in the pharmaceutical, nutraceutical, agricultural,
coatings and industrial chemical industries. ACETO's global
operations, including a staff of 25 in China and 12 in India, are
distinctive in the industry and enable its worldwide sourcing and
regulatory capabilities.

Aceto Corporation and 8 affiliates sought Chapter 11 protection
(Bankr. D.N.J. Case No. 19-13448) on Feb. 19, 2019.

ACETO disclosed assets of $753,159,000 and liabilities of
$702,848,000 as of Dec. 31, 2018.

The Hon. Vincent F. Papalia is the case judge.

The Debtors tapped Lowenstein Sandler LLP as counsel; Simmons &
Simmons as foreign counsel; PJT Partners LP is the investment
banker and financial advisor; AP Services LLC as restructuring
advisor and provider of the CRO; and Prime Clerk LLC is the claims
and noticing agent.


ACHAOGEN INC: Will Trim Jobs to 40 as Part of Restructuring
-----------------------------------------------------------
Achaogen, Inc. has commenced a restructuring of its organization to
focus its cash resources on (a) commercializing ZEMDRI primarily in
the outpatient setting and certain key geographies, (b) developing
its product candidate C-Scape, (c) reviewing strategic alternatives
to maximize stockholder value, (d) pursuing non-dilutive funding
opportunities and (e) pursuing licensing partnerships and
regulatory approvals for plazomicin outside the United States.  The
majority of the roles eliminated in the restructuring are
field-based sales and medical scientist positions.  The Company
estimates it will incur restructuring charges of approximately $4.2
million in the first quarter of 2019, consisting of one-time
employee benefits, employee severance and stock-based compensation
and fixed asset impairment, of which approximately 59% is expected
to result in cash expenditures.  Non-cash expenditures consist of
stock-based compensation and fixed asset impairments.  These
estimates are subject to a number of assumptions, and actual
results may differ.  The Company may also incur additional costs
not currently contemplated due to events that may occur as result
of or are associated with the restructuring.

Following the restructuring, which the Company expects to be
complete by the end of the second quarter of 2019, the Company
expects to have approximately 40 full-time employees, of which
approximately 25% are expected to be commercial and medical affairs
personnel.  The Company currently estimates ongoing quarterly cash
operating expenses of approximately $15 million to $17 million
following completion of the restructuring and associated charges,
and currently believes it has sufficient cash and cash equivalents
to support current planned operations through approximately the end
of the second quarter of 2019.

                     About Achaogen, Inc.

South San Francisco, California-based Achaogen, Inc. --
http://www.achaogen.com/-- is a biopharmaceutical company
committed to the discovery, development, and commercialization of
novel antibacterials to treat multi-drug resistant gram-negative
infections.  Achaogen's first commercial product is ZEMDRI, for the
treatment of adults with complicated urinary tract infections,
including pyelonephritis.  The Achaogen ZEMDRI program was funded
in part with federal funds from the Biomedical Advanced Research
and Development Authority (BARDA).  The Company is currently
developing C-Scape, an orally-administered
beta-lactam/beta-lactamase inhibitor combination, which is also
supported by BARDA.  C-Scape is investigational, has not been
determined to be safe or efficacious, and has not been approved for
commercialization.

Achaogen incurred a net loss of $125.6 million in 2017, a net loss
of $71.22 million in 2016, and a net loss of $27.09 million in
2015.  As of Sept. 30, 2018, Achaogen had $97.30 million in total
assets, $62.51 million in total liabilities, $10 million in
contingently redeemable common stock, and $24.78 million in total
stockholders' equity.

As of Sept. 30, 2018, the Company had working capital of $41.0
million and unrestricted cash, cash equivalents and short-term
investments of $58.2 million.  On Nov. 5, 2018, the Company
announced that it has begun a review of strategic alternatives to
maximize shareholder value, including but not limited to the
potential sale or merger of the Company or its assets.  The Company
may be unable to identify or execute such strategic alternatives
for it, and even if executed such strategic alternatives may not
enhance stockholder value or its financial position.  The Company
also announced on Nov. 5, 2018 a restructuring of its organization
to preserve cash resources which is expected to reduce total
operating expenses by approximately 35-40 percent, excluding
one-time charges. The restructuring is expected to be largely
completed before the end of 2018.  The restructuring is designed to
focus the Company's cash resources on the continued successful
launch of ZEMDRI and advancing C-Scape.  These estimates are
subject to a number of assumptions, and actual results may differ.
The Company may also incur additional costs not currently
contemplated due to events that may occur as a result of, or that
are associated with, the restructuring.

"Based on our available cash resources, which exclude restricted
cash and $25.0 million which will be collateralized in connection
with the SVB Loan Agreement if our cash balance falls below a
certain threshold, we believe we have sufficient funds to support
current planned operations through the middle of the first quarter
of 2019.  This condition results in the assessment that there is
substantial doubt about our ability to continue as a going
concern," the Company said in its Quarterly Report for the period
ended Sept. 30, 2018.


AMC ENTERTAINMENT: Moody's Rates Proposed $2.22BB Secured Loans Ba2
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service assigned a Ba2 rating to AMC
Entertainment Holdings, Inc.'s proposed credit facilities
consisting of a $225 million revolving credit facility (RCF)
maturing 2024 and $2 billion senior secured term loan maturing
2026. AMC's B2 Corporate Family Rating (CFR) and stable outlook
remain unchanged.

AMC has launched an amendment to its existing credit agreement to
increase the size of its senior secured term loans to $2 billion
from roughly $1.4 billion outstanding, extend their maturity to
March 2026 from December 2022 and December 2023, and extend the
maturity of the RCF to March 2024 from December 2020. In addition
to these proposed changes, certain other terms and conditions in
the credit agreement, including the financial covenant for the RCF,
will be modified. The revised RCF covenant will be a springing
maximum first-lien leverage covenant. Proceeds from the upsized
term loans will be used to retire the $230 million 6% Carmike
Cinemas, Inc. senior secured notes due 2023 and $375 million 5.875%
senior subordinated notes due 2022.

Assignments:

Issuer: AMC Entertainment Holdings, Inc.

  - Senior Secured Revolving Credit Facility, Assigned Ba2 (LGD2)

  - Senior Secured Term Loan, Assigned Ba2 (LGD2)

The assigned ratings are subject to review of final documentation
and no material change in the size, terms and conditions of the
transaction as advised to Moody's. Upon transaction close, Moody's
will withdraw the ratings on the existing senior secured credit
facilities, 6% Carmike senior secured notes due 2023 and 5.875%
senior subordinated notes due 2022.

RATINGS RATIONALE

The transaction is credit neutral since the proceeds from the
capital raise will repay approximately a like amount of existing
debt. Pro forma financial leverage as measured by total debt to
EBITDA on a Moody's adjusted basis is estimated at 5.8x (as of 31
December 2018). Moody's views the transaction favorably given the
expected reduction in interest expense and the weighted average
maturity increase to 6.8 years from 5.5 years.

AMC's B2 CFR reflects an aggressive financial policy that tolerates
dividends and share purchases despite high capital intensity,
elevated financial leverage projected in the 5.7x-6.5x band
(Moody's adjusted) and adjusted free cash flow to debt in the -1%
to -2% range. AMC is also challenged by a mature and cyclical North
American box office, contributing approximately 45% of revenue in
fiscal 2018. Though domestic theatre attendance increased 5.7% to
1.3 billion in 2018 and produced record box office receipts of
$11.9 billion (up 7.4% yoy), attendance is in secular decline from
its 2002 peak of 1.58 billion. This has been offset by annual
increases in average ticket prices, producing steady box office
sales growth. Further, AMC is exposed to emerging competitive
threats. Dependence on a small number of film distributors owned by
the major movie studios also poses risk if AMC's access to motion
pictures were to become limited or delayed.

AMC's rating is supported by its position as the largest movie
theatre operator in the world, with fiscal 2018 revenue of $5.46
billion produced by approximately 359 million tickets sold
worldwide across a vast circuit of 1,006 theatres and 11,071
screens. Revenue is diversified across admissions (approximately
62% of total) and higher margin concessions (roughly 31%), as well
as diversified across 15 countries with international operations
now representing roughly 26.5% of revenue, following recent
expansions into Europe and the regions of Scandinavia, the Nordics,
and Baltics. In addition to scale and diversity, AMC benefits from
entry barriers into the first-run window for theatrical
distribution, a strong value proposition and consumer experience
that is hard to replicate in-home. This allows AMC to maintain
pricing power evidenced by a steady rise in ticket prices, stable
and strong margins, and a dominant market share in most of its
markets (#1 or #2 in 11 countries).

Rating Outlook

The stable rating outlook reflects Moody's view AMC will maintain
elevated financial leverage in the 5.7x-6.5x band (Moody's
adjusted) and steady adjusted EBITDA margins in the low 30% range
over the next 12-18 months driven by low-single digit organic
revenue growth. Moody's expects free cash flow to be negative
primarily due to a high interest expense burden, high capex levels
(to upgrade seating and renovate theatres, albeit at lower spend in
2019 vs. 2018) and high dividend payments. Moody's expects AMC's
market share of the North American box office to remain stable in
the 20-22% range. Moody's also expects no material and unfavorable
changes in competition, financial policy, capital structure, or the
business model. Moody's anticipates good liquidity.

Factors That Could Lead to an Upgrade

Given the maturity of the industry, there are limited opportunities
for growth in the US, AMC's primary market. The secular decline in
attendance and rise in competitive threats makes an upgrade
unlikely. However, Moody's would consider an upgrade if:

  - Financial leverage as measured by total debt to EBITDA was
sustained below 5.5x (Moody's adjusted); and

  - Free cash flow as a percentage of total debt rose above 2.5%
(Moody's adjusted) on a sustained basis.

A positive rating action would also be conditional on one or more
of the following factors: sustained positive growth in US box
office attendance, significantly improved scale, greater market
share, better margins, or enhanced liquidity that translates into
an improved credit profile. There would also need to be a low
probability of near term event risks or material and unfavorable
changes in competition, financial policy, capital structure, and
the business model.

Factors That Could Lead to a Downgrade

  - Financial leverage as measured by total debt to EBITDA
sustained above 6.75x (Moody's adjusted); or

  - Free cash flow as a percentage of total debt fell below -2.5%
(Moody's adjusted) on a sustained basis.

A negative rating action would also be considered if there was a
material decline in liquidity, attendance, margins, market share,
or scale and diversity. Moody's would also consider a downgrade if
there were material and negative changes in competition, financial
policy, capital structure, or the business model such that credit
risk rose meaningfully.

The principal methodology used in these ratings was Business and
Consumer Service Industry published in October 2016.

AMC, which is 50% owned by Dalian Wanda Group Co. Ltd. (Wanda), and
headquartered in Leawood, Kansas, operates 1,006 movie theatres
with 11,071 screens across the US and Europe. Revenue totaled $5.46
billion for the twelve months ended December 31, 2018.



ASARCO LLC: Ct. Tosses Montana Resources' Bid for Summary Judgment
------------------------------------------------------------------
District Judge Andrew S. Hanen denied Defendants Montana Resources,
Inc. and Montana Resources, LLP's Post-Discovery Motion for Summary
Judgment in the case captioned ASARCO, LLC, et al., Plaintiffs, v.
MONTANA RESOURCES, INC., et al., Defendants, Civil Action No.
1:12-CV-137 (S.D. Tex.).

On May 31, 1989, AR Montana Corporation the alleged predecessor to
ASARCO Master, Inc. and a special purpose subsidiary of ASARCO,
LLC, entered into a Partnership Agreement with Montana Resources,
Inc. to create Montana Resources, a general partnership. Montana
Resources operated and developed certain mining facilities in
Butte, Montana. MRI initially possessed a 50.1% interest in the
partnership, while AR Montana received the remaining 49.9%.

According to the terms of the Agreement, the partners would be
liable for "Cash Calls," if necessary, to cover the partnership's
expenses. If one of the partners did not pay a Cash Call when due
and failed to remedy the nonpayment within 30 days, it would be in
default. Additionally, the filing of a bankruptcy petition was an
event of default.

Plaintiffs' suit are based on the November 2011 alleged breach of
contract, for which Plaintiffs request declaratory and equitable
relief.

The Defendants filed their Post-Discovery Motion for Summary
Judgment, alleging three new grounds for summary judgment.

First, Defendants argue that "neither Plaintiff [ASARCO Master or
ASARCO, LLC] had any actual rights to assert when they sent the
Nov. 15, 2011 letter demanding reinstatement" because ASARCO, LLC
has never been a partner under the Agreement. Defendants argue that
ASARCO Master did not obtain rights from its predecessor for two
reasons: AR Montana did not seek MRI's consent to transfer its
rights to ASARCO Master, a requirement under the Agreement and
under Montana partnership law, and neither AR Montana nor ASARCO
Master complied with the prerequisites for transfer under the
Partnership Agreement, so any purported transfer was invalid.
Further, Defendants allege that ASARCO Master was wound down
according to the terms of the Bankruptcy Plan and that wound-down
entities cannot receive assets post-bankruptcy.

Defendants also allege that when ASARCO Master filed for
bankruptcy, it defaulted under Section 11(d) of the Agreement;
thus, even if the Court permitted Plaintiffs to cure the Cash
Calls, Defendants allege that default under Section 11(d) is
incurable and would still prohibit Plaintiffs' reinstatement. Last,
Defendants contend that two newly discovered drafts of the
Partnership Agreement make the meaning of the default clause "clear
and unambiguous" and compel a judgment in their favor as a matter
of law.

Upon careful analysis of the facts presented, the Court holds that
Defendants have failed to show that there is no genuine dispute as
to any material fact or that they are entitled to judgment as a
matter of law. While Defendants are no doubt correct that by filing
for bankruptcy, AR Montana/ASARCO Master defaulted under Section
11(d) of the Partnership Agreement, the consequences that result
due to default depend upon the interpretation of the ambiguous
default and reinstatement provisions. Notwithstanding the newly
discovered drafts of the Partnership Agreement and the affidavit of
MRI lawyer Dennis E. Lind, fact issues remain as to the meaning of
the default and cure provisions, and whether Plaintiffs have a
right to reinstatement under the terms of the Agreement. Fact
issues also remain concerning whether AR Montana and ASARCO Master
merged prior to bankruptcy and whether, as a result of this merger,
ASARCO Master is able to be reinstated under the terms of the
Partnership Agreement. Relatedly, Defendants' own filings have
created questions with regard to whether ASARCO, LLC or ASARCO
Master are similarly able to be reinstated under the terms of the
Partnership Agreement. Finally, issues remain as to what type of
interest, if any, must be reinstated--a 1.23% partnership
(ownership) interest or a 1.23% interest of a different kind.

A copy of the Court's Memorandum and Order dated Jan. 15, 2019 is
available at https://bit.ly/2Tiq6Tl from Leagle.com.

Asarco, LLC, a Delaware Corporation, Plaintiff, represented by
Brian R. Holland -- bholland@crowleyfleck.com -- CROWLEY FLECK,
Gregory L. Evans -- gevans@mcguirewoods.com -- McGuireWoods LLP,
Kenneth K. Lay, CROWLEY FLECK, Tanya Guerrero, INTEGER LAW
CORPORATION, pro hac vice, Thomas M. Farrell --
tfarrell@mcguirewoods.com -- McGuirewoods LLP, William Adam Duerk,
IV, Milodragovich, Dale & Steinbrenner, PC, Daphne Hsu, Integer Law
Corporation, pro hac vice, Dion William Hayes, McGuireWoods LLP,
James R. Burrell -- jburrell@mcguirewoods.com -- McGuire Woods LLP,
James G. Warren, Kramer deBoer & Keane, Kris A. McLean, Kris A
McLean Law Firm, PLLC, Laura G. Brys, Integer Law Corporation, pro
hac vice & Patrick L. Hayden -- phayden@mcguirewoods.com -- McGuire
Woods LLP.

ASARCO Master, Inc., a Delaware Corporation, Plaintiff, represented
by Brian R. Holland, CROWLEY FLECK, Gregory L. Evans, McGuireWoods
LLP, Kenneth K. Lay, CROWLEY FLECK, Tanya Guerrero, INTEGER LAW
CORPORATION, pro hac vice, Thomas M. Farrell, McGuirewoods LLP,
William Adam Duerk, IV, Milodragovich, Dale & Steinbrenner, PC,
William R. Pletcher, INTEGER LAW CORPORATION, pro hac vice, Daphne
Hsu, Integer Law Corporation, Dion William Hayes, McGuireWoods LLP,
James R. Burrell, McGuire Woods LLP, James G. Warren, Kramer deBoer
& Keane, Kris A. McLean, Kris A McLean Law Firm, PLLC, Laura G.
Brys, Integer Law Corporation, pro hac vice & Patrick L. Hayden,
McGuire Woods LLP.

Montana Resources, Inc., a Montana corporation & Montana Resources,
LLP, a Montana limited liability partnership, Defendants,
represented by A. Christopher Edwards, EDWARDS FRICKLE CULVER, pro
hac vice, A. Clifford Edwards, EDWARDS FRICKLE AND CULVER, Eric M.
English, KING & SPALDING LLP, pro hac vice, Glenn A. Ballard, Jr.
-- glenn.ballard@dentons.com -- Dentons US LLP, John William
Edwards, EDWARDS FRICKLE CULVER, pro hac vice, Mark W. Wege --
mark.wege@dentons.com -- Dentons US LLP, Richard J. Angell, Parsons
Behle & Latimer, Penn C. Huston, Mouer Huston PC, Richard David
Salgado, Dentons US LLP & Triel Culver, EDWARDS FRICKLE
ANNER-HUGHES AND COOK.

                      About Asarco LLC

Based in Tucson, Arizona, ASARCO LLC -- http://www.asarco.com/--
is an integrated copper mining, smelting and refining company.
Grupo Mexico S.A. de C.V. is ASARCO's ultimate parent.

ASARCO LLC filed for Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. S.D. Tex. Case
No. 05-21207) on Aug. 9, 2005.  Attorneys at Baker Botts L.L.P.,
and Jordan, Hyden, Womble & Culbreth, P.C. represented the Debtor
in its restructuring efforts.

On Dec. 9, 2009, Asarco Incorporated and Americas Mining
Corporation's Seventh Amended Plan of Reorganization for the
Debtors became effective and the ASARCO Asbestos Personal Injury
Settlement Trust was created and funded with nearly $1 billion in
assets, including more than $650 million in cash plus a $280
million secured note from Reorganized ASARCO.  The Plan, which was
confirmed both by the bankruptcy and district courts, reintegrated
ASARCO LLC back to parent Grupo Mexico concluding the four-year
Chapter 11 proceeding.


ASP EMERALD: S&P Alters Outlook to Stable, Affirms 'B-' ICR
-----------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings on March 5 affirmed its 'B-' issuer credit
rating on ASP Emerald Holdings LLC and revised the outlook to
stable from negative.

S&P took the rating actions after Emerald signed an amendment to
its credit agreement that extends the maturity date of the $75
million revolving credit facility to April 20, 2021, from Aug. 1,
2019. This action resolves S&P's concerns regarding near-term
liquidity, which it now views as adequate.

"The outlook revision to stable reflects our view that near-term
liquidity concerns are resolved by Emerald extending the maturity
of its revolving credit facility to 2021 from 2019. The stable
outlook reflects our expectations that credit measures will
modestly improve, with adjusted debt to EBITDA of 6x-7x over the
next 12 months," S&P said. "That is due to modest volume growth,
fewer planned restructuring initiatives, and fewer operational
disruptions than in 2018."

The stable outlook reflects S&P's view that leverage is appropriate
for the ratings. S&P's base-case scenario assumes modest margin
expansion in 2019 from increased volumes, supported by GDP growth,
and fewer operational disruptions, leading to weighted-average
funds from operations (FFO) of 8%-10% and debt to EBITDA of 6x-7x
over the next 12 months. S&P's base case also assumes no further
dividend recapitalization transactions.

S&P could lower ratings over the next year if credit measures
weaken further, potentially due to unplanned plant outages, gross
margin compression from raw material price swings, or weakness in
sales volumes. It could lower ratings if these conditions lead to
EBITDA margins 500 basis points (bps) below its expectations,
weighted-average FFO to debt below 6%, and debt to EBITDA above 8x
on a sustained basis. S&P could also lower ratings if financial
policy decisions lead to a sudden increase in leverage to fund a
large acquisition or dividend.

"We could raise ratings over the next year if credit measures
improve over the next 12 months in a manner we believe is
sustainable," S&P said. This could occur if the company
demonstrates a more consistent operational track record, with
EBITDA margins expanding by at least 300 bps, leading to FFO to
debt approaching 12% and debt to EBITDA below 6x on
weighted-average sustainable basis. This could occur due to a
combination of volume gains, fewer operational disruptions, lower
raw material costs, or passing more raw material costs to
customers, according to S&P.


BEAVEX HOLDING: U.S. Trustee Forms 5-Member Committee
-----------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Trustee for Region 3 on March 1 appointed five creditors
to serve on the official committee of unsecured creditors in the
Chapter 11 cases of BeavEx Holding Corporation and its affiliates.


The committee members are:

     (1) Priority Express
         Attn: Donald Wauters
         8341 NE 50th Ave.
         Altoona, IA 50009  
         Phone: 515-577-7722
         Fax: 515-243-4900   

     (2) Alliant Insurance Services, Inc.
         Attn: Patrick Muldowney
         353 North Clark Street
         Chicago, IL 60654
         Phone: 312-595-7192

     (3) Osama Daoud
         c/o Siegel & Dolan, Ltd.
         150 N. Wacker Drive, Suite 3000
         Chicago, IL 60606
         Phone: 312-878-3210
         Fax: 312-878-3211

     (4) United Transport Services, Inc.
         Attn: Mark Eisenberg
         7920 Tar Bay Drive
         Jessup, MD 20794
         Phone: 410-799-6162
         Fax: 410-889-0113

     (5) APG Shadowood, LLC
         Attn: James R. Holden, Jr.
         3500 Piedmont Road, Suite 610
         Atlanta, GA 30305
         Phone: 404-442-6114

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 Beavex Holding Corporation

Founded in 1989, BeavEx Incorporated -- https://beavex.com/ -- and
its affiliates are providers of ground and air transportation,
warehousing and courier services, providing "last mile" delivery
services, often consisting of controlled substances or otherwise
highly sensitive materials to over 800 customers nationwide. The
Company is headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia and employ 369
people.

BeavEx Holding Corporation and four of its affiliates filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy (Bankr. D. Del. Lead Case No. 19-10316) on
Feb. 18, 2019.  In the petitions signed by CRO Donald Van der Wiel,
BeavEx estimated $10 million to $50 million in assets and $50
million to $100 million in estimated liabilities.

The Hon. Laurie Selber Silverstein over the cases.

The Debtors tapped Young Conaway Stargatt & Taylor, LLP as counsel,
and Stretto as claims and noticing agent.  Donald Van der Wiel of
S3 Advisors, LLC, serves as the Debtors' chief restructuring
officer.


BK RACING: Front Row Attempt to Collect NASCAR Member Fees Denied
-----------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. J. Craig Whitley of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Western District of North Carolina order denying Front Row
Motorsport's Motion to Compel Immediate Payment of Pre-Sale Charter
Member Fees Invoice, and directing Matthew Smith, the Chapter 11
trustee for BK Racing, LLC, to remit $6,428 to Front Row.

The Court notes that on Aug. 27, 2018, the Trustee closed on the
sale of the Charter and certain related assets to Front Row and
paid NASCAR its cure amount of $68,046. At Closing, Front Row
assumed racing operations under the Charter.

However, on Aug. 28, 2018, NASCAR sent Front Row an invoice dated
that same date, in the amount of $66,139, with a due date of Sept.
1, 2018 for Charter Member Fees, a significant portion of which
were incurred prior to Closing and while the Debtor, subject to the
Trustee's control, was racing under the Charter. The Charter Member
Fees set forth in the Invoice were in addition to the Charter
Member Fees due NASCAR described in the Cure Statement. Also, the
Trustee received a reimbursement of $6,428 from a beneficiary of
one of the credentials reflected on the Invoice, which funds were
deposited into the Debtor's operating account.

In the its Motion, Front Row argues that: (a) pursuant to
applicable law and/or the APA between the Trustee and Front Row,
the Trustee was required to pay the Invoice out of cash collateral
in that it was due and owing to NASCAR under the Charter at
Closing; and (b) the Trustee's failure to pay the Invoice or
expressly disclose it to Front Row prior to Closing constituted a
breach of the APA or the representations and warranties therein.

While the APA required the Trustee to satisfy any amounts that were
both due and payable (or in some sections of the APA, "due and
owing") to NASCAR under the Charter at Closing, the Court points
out that the only amount that was due and owing or due and payable
at the time of Closing was the cure amount of $68,046, and the
Trustee paid that amount to NASCAR at Closing. At the time of
Closing, not only was the Invoice neither due nor payable under the
Charter, but also the Invoice had not even been issued.
Accordingly, the Trustee did not breach any of the representations
or warranties in the APA.

The Court concludes the Debtor was not in default under the Charter
at Closing with respect to the Invoice because the Invoice had not
then been issued and would not become due and owing until on or
after Sept. 1, 2018. Rather, the only monetary default under the
Charter immediately prior to Closing was the amount of $68,046 due
NASCAR as set forth in the Cure Statement and in the Sale Order.
However, the $6,428 refund received by the Trustee in connection
with certain Charter Member Fees billed in the Invoice is not
property of the estate, and the Trustee should remit $6,428 to
Front Row.

                        About BK Racing

BK Racing, LLC, is a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Toyota Racing
team headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina.  The team was
founded in 2012 after owners Ron Devine and Wayne Press acquired
Red Bull Racing.

BK Racing sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code
(Bankr. W.D.N.C. Case No. 18-30241) on Feb. 15, 2018.  In its
petition signed by Kathy Burch, power of attorney for managing
member Brenda Devine, the Debtor estimated assets and liabilities
of $10 million to $50 million.  

Judge Craig J. Whitley oversees the case.  

The Debtor hired The Henderson Law Firm PLLC as its legal counsel.

Matthew W. Smith was appointed to serve as Chapter 11 trustee for
the Debtor.  The trustee hired Grier Furr & Crisp, PA as his legal
counsel, and The Finley Group, Inc. as his financial advisor.


BRANWELL INC: Authorized to Use Cash Collateral on Final Basis
--------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Mindy A. Mora, of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of Florida has entered an agreed fifth and final
order authorizing Branwell, Inc., to use Valley National Bank's
cash collateral in accordance with the budget.

The Debtor is authorized to cash collateral to pay the monthly
expenses in the budget and all fees required by the United States
Trustee and Clerk of the Court.  The Debtor will operate strictly
in accordance with the Budget and will not exceed 10% above the
amount of any line item shown in the Budget.

Valley National Bank will have a first priority postpetition
security interest in, and lien upon, all of the Debtor's personal
property, and all cash and non-cash proceeds thereof, which are or
have been acquired, generated or received by the Debtor after the
filing of the petition commencing this case, to the same extent
that Valley National Bank held a properly perfected prepetition
security interest or lien in assets immediately prior to the filing
of the petition commencing this case.

In addition, on the first day of each month, the Debtor will
deliver to Valley National Bank, through its counsel, monthly
payments in the amount of $1,400 (for loan #8632) and $2,700 (for
loan #0544), totaling $4,100.

As additional adequate protection for the Debtor's use of cash
collateral, the Debtor will promptly furnish Valley National Bank
with such financial and other information as required by the
underlying loan documents and such other information, documents and
reports as Valley National Bank may reasonably request.

A full-text copy of the Agreed Fifth and Final Order is available
at

           http://bankrupt.com/misc/flsb18-12478-59.pdf

                       About Branwell, Inc.

Branwell, Inc., f/d/b/a Danica Ventures, Inc., filed a Chapter 11
petition (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No. 18-12478) on March 2, 2018.  In
the petition signed by Rite K. Weller, president, the Debtor
estimated at least $50,000 in assets and $500,000 to $1 million in
liabilities.  The case is assigned to Judge Paul G. Hyman, Jr.  The
Debtor is represented by David Lloyd Merrill, Esq., at Merrill PA.


BRIDGEHEAD NETWORKS: Seeks Authorization to Use Cash Collateral
---------------------------------------------------------------
Bridgehead Networks, Inc., seeks authorization from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Texas to use cash and
cash proceeds on the condition that all such expenditures will be
consistent with the Budget.

The Debtor asserts that the expenses it proposes to pay from the
cash collateral are necessary and important for the protection of
the bankruptcy estate. The Debtor requests that actual amounts may
not vary from the applicable Budget by more than 20% on a monthly
basis, to be tested monthly and 20% on a cumulative basis for the
Budget period.

The Debtor's operations have been financed, in part, through
secured debt issued by Commerce Bank Texas ("CBT") through two loan
facilities: (1) loan number 59091, in the original principal amount
of $210,556; and (2) loan number 59017, in the original principal
amount of $464,507.71.

The CBT Debt is secured by blanket liens on Debtor's assets. The
Debtor's sole shareholder and president, Harry A. Nass, III,
personally guaranteed the CBT Debt. CBT asserts a lien on the Cash
Collateral. As of the Petition Date, the Debtor was current on all
obligations to CBT.

As adequate protection for the use of Cash Collateral, CBT will
retain its liens, and will be granted an administrative claim and
replacement liens upon any post-petition receivables, and other
proceeds of their pre-petition collateral, to the extent that the
proposed used of Cash Collateral results in a decrease, if any, in
the value of CBT's collateral interests. No liens will be or are
proposed to be granted to CBT upon any chapter 5 causes of action
or commercial tort claims of the Debtor.

Alternatively, CBT will be paid a monthly adequate protection
payment in an amount to be negotiated between the Debtor and CBT.
The Debtor will also provide a comparison of budget-to-actual
figures throughout the time of any use of Cash Collateral.

A full-text copy of the Debtor's Motion is available at

            http://bankrupt.com/misc/txwb19-50320-6.pdf

                     About Bridgehead Networks

Bridgehead Networks -- http://www.bridgeheadnetworks.com--
provides many different managed website hosting solutions,
including IT outsourcing and managed services, network assessments
and system compliance, security, cloud computing, disaster
discovery and business continuity, structured cabling, and data
recovery services.  The Company is headquarted in San Antonio,
Texas.

Bridgehead filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. W.D. Tex. Case No.
19-50320) on Feb. 13, 2019.  In the petition signed by Harry Nass,
president, the Debtor estimated up to $50,000 in assets and $1
million to $10 million in liabilities.  The case is assigned to
Judge Craig A. Gargotta.  The Debtor is represented by Kell C.
Mercer, PC.


BUILDERS FIRSTSOURCE: Moody's Rates New Secured Notes Due 2027 'B3'
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service assigned a B3 rating to Builders
FirstSource, Inc.'s ("BLDR") proposed 6.625% senior secured notes
due 2027. The company announced an exchange offer for its existing
$750 million ($675.9 million currently outstanding) 5.625% senior
secured notes due 2024 for a like amount (or for up to $400
million) of the new 6.625% Notes due 2027. Cash on hand will be
used to pay related fees and expenses. All other terms and
conditions of proposed notes will be similar to BLDR's existing
Notes due 2024, and will rank pari passu to the remaining amount of
Notes due 2024 and to the company's senior secured term loan
maturing in 2024, both of which are rated B3. BLDR's B2 Corporate
Family Rating, B2-PD Probability of Default Rating, and SGL-2
Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating, and B3 rating assigned to its
senior secured term loan maturing in 2024 and Notes due 2024 are
not impacted by this transaction. The Loss Given Default
Assessments for the senior secured term loan and Notes due 2024
have been changed to LGD5 from LGD4. Rating outlook is stable.

Moody's views the notes exchange as a credit positive despite
modest increase of interest payments and upfront costs for related
fees and expenses. The notes exchange extends BLDR's maturity
profile and reduces refinancing risk in 2024. The company now has
about $734 million of maturing debt in 2024, when its term loan
matures and existing notes come due, down from $1.15 billion from
year-end 2018.

The following ratings/assessments are affected by Moody's action:

Assignments:

Issuer: Builders FirstSource, Inc.

  - Gtd Senior Secured Regular Bond/Debenture, Assigned B3 (LGD5)

RATINGS RATIONALE

Builders FirstSource, Inc.'s B2 Corporate Family Rating is not
impacted by the notes issuance in a leverage-neutral transaction.
BLDR's adjusted debt-to-EBITDA remains approximately 4.0x at FYE18.
Higher cash interest payments of $4 million for proposed notes will
not materially impact interest coverage, measured as adjusted
EBITA-to-interest expense, of about 3.2x for 2018. Generally good
fundamentals for new home construction, the main driver of BLDR's
revenues and resulting earnings and cash flows, support growth.
Moody's projects total US new housing starts could reach 1.27
million in 2019, representing a 1.6% increase from an estimated
1.25 million in 2018. Moody's maintains a stable outlook for the US
homebuilding industry.

The B3 rating assigned to the proposed senior secured notes due
2027, senior secured notes due 2024, and $458.3 million senior
secured term loan maturing 2024, one notch below the Corporate
Family Rating, results from the subordination of its lien on
collateral to the asset-based revolver, putting each in a
first-loss position. Term loan and both notes are pari passu to
each other in a recovery scenario. Each has a first-priority on
substantially all domestic, non-current assets, and second-lien on
assets securing the company's revolving credit facility (ABL
priority collateral). Residual value of second-lien collateral will
not be sufficient in a distressed scenario to make holders of term
loan and notes whole.

The principal methodology used in this rating was Distribution &
Supply Chain Services Industry published in June 2018.

Builders FirstSource, Inc., headquartered in Dallas, TX, is a
national distributor of lumber, trusses, millwork, and other
building products, and provider of construction services.
Residential new construction generates about 71% of total sales.
Revenues for 2018 approximate $7.7 billion.


BUILDERS FIRSTSOURCE: S&P Assigns 'BB-' Rating on New Sec. Notes
----------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings assigned its 'BB-' issue-level rating (same as
the issuer credit rating) to proposed secured notes of up to $400
million issued by building materials distributor Builders
FirstSource Inc.'s (BB-/Stable/--). The recovery rating is '3',
reflecting S&P's expectation for meaningful (50%-70%; rounded
estimate: 60%) recovery for noteholders in the event of a payment
default.

Builders has announced a partial exchange offer for its existing
$750 million ($675.9 million outstanding)5.625% senior secured
notes due in 2024 for up to $400 million 6.625% of new notes, which
will be due in 2027.

Given that the proposed notes will replace existing notes at par
value under the exchange, S&P views the transaction as leverage
neutral, and its issuer ratings on the company are not affected.


CARIBBEAN REAL: To Pay Secured Claim by Cash on Hand
----------------------------------------------------
Caribbean Real Estate Holdings filed a small business single-asset
Chapter 11 plan and accompanying disclosure statement.

Under the Plan, Secured Claim of Grow America Fund, classified in
Class 1, is impaired.
The Claim is secured by the property located at 225 Hempstead
Turnpike, in West Hempstead, New York.  The Debtor has provided a
proposed break down of payments, and will only impair Grow America
Fund to the extent that it respectfully request that Grow America
Fund waive all past due interest, penalties, and legal fees.

Payments and distributions under the Plan will be funded by cash on
hand within the Debtor in Possession checking account with TD
Bank.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement dated February 27,
2019, is available at https://tinyurl.com/y2cwescd from
PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

Caribbean Real Estate Holdings, Inc., filed a voluntary Chapter 11
petition (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 18-77164) on October 23, 2018,
and is represented by:

     Isaac Myers III, Esq.
     68 Jay Street, Suite 503
     Brooklyn, NY 11201
     Ph: 212-804-8655
     Email: Imyers@IsaacMyersIII.com


CELADON GROUP: Signs 14th Amended Loan Agreement with BofA, et al.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Celadon Group, Inc. entered into a Fourteenth Amendment to Amended
and Restated Credit Agreement on Feb. 28, 2019, by and among the
Company, certain subsidiaries of the Company as guarantors, Bank of
America, N.A., as lender and Administrative Agent, Wells Fargo
Bank, N.A., and Citizens Bank, N.A., both as lenders, which amends
the Company's existing Amended and Restated Credit Agreement dated
Dec. 12, 2014, among the same parties.  The primary purpose of the
Amendment was to eliminate the automatic $110 million reduction to
the aggregate lender commitments, maximum amount of outstanding
indebtedness (including loans and letters of credit), and loan
sub-limit, which was scheduled to take effect on Feb. 28, 2019. The
previously disclosed levels for the aggregate lender commitments,
total indebtedness, and loan sub-limit scheduled to take effect on
March 31, 2019 were not changed.

Among other changes, the Amendment also (i) increased the required
thresholds for the lease-adjusted total debt to EBITDAR ratio
financial covenant, for the period ending Feb. 28, 2019, and the
maximum disbursements financial covenant, for the period of Jan.
27, 2019 through March 30, 2019; (ii) decreased the required asset
coverage ratio from 1.0:1.0 to 0.97:1.0 for the period beginning on
March 1, 2019 and ending on March 21, 2019; and (iii) deferred the
due date for the approximately $1.1 million monthly commitment fee
due March 1, 2019 to March 31, 2019.

The full-text copy of the Fourteenth Amendment to Amended and
Restated Credit Agreement dated Feb. 28, 2019 is available for free
at https://is.gd/kmdtLt

                         About Celadon

Celadon Group, Inc. -- http://www.celadongroup.com/-- provides
long haul, regional, local, dedicated, intermodal,
temperature-protect, and expedited freight service across the
United States, Canada, and Mexico.  The Company also owns Celadon
Logistics Services, which provides freight brokerage services,
freight management, as well as supply chain management solutions,
including logistics, warehousing, and distribution.  The Company is
headquartered in Indianapolis, Indiana.

In a press release dated April 2, 2018, Celadon stated that based
on issues identified in connection with the Audit Committee
investigation and management's review, financial statements for
fiscal years ended June 30, 2014, 2015, 2016, and the quarters
ended Sept. 30 and Dec. 31, 2016, will be restated.  Celadon's new
senior management team, led by the Company's new chief financial
officer and new chief accounting officer, commenced a review of the
Company's current and historical accounting policies and
procedures.  The internal investigation and management review have
identified errors that will require adjustments to the previously
issued 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2017 financial statements.

On April 18, 2018, Peter Elkins, lead analyst at the New York Stock
Exchange LLC, filed a Form 25 with the Securities and Exchange
Commission notifying the removal from listing or registration of
Celadon's common stock on the Exchange.


CENTERSTONE LINEN: May Obtain Financing, Use Cash on Final Basis
----------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Margaret Cangilos-Ruiz of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Northern District of New York has signed a final order
authorizing Centerstone Linen Services, LLC and its affiliates to
obtain postpetition financing on a senior secured, superpriority
basis and use cash collateral in the ordinary course of its
business.

Pursuant to the terms and conditions of that certain Senior Secured
Super-Priority DIP Loan and Security Agreement, HSBC Bank USA,
National Association, as administrative agent and collateral agent
for the DIP Lenders, indicated its willingness to provide
postpetition financing to the Debtors .

The proceeds of the DIP Facility (net of any amounts used to pay
fees, costs and expenses under the DIP Loan Agreement) will be used
in accordance with the Budget and for: (a) the payment of fees,
expenses and costs incurred in connection with the Chapter 11
Cases; (b) conversion of all letters of credit issued by any
Prepetition Lender under the Prepetition Loan Documents to letters
of credit under the DIP Facility; (c) the payment of transaction
expenses; and (d) working capital, capital expenditures, and other
general corporate purposes of the Debtors.

Debtor Centerstone Linen Services, LLC, as prepetition borrowing
agent, Atlas Health Care Linen Services, Co., LLC, Alliance Laundry
& Textile Service of Atlanta, LLC, Alliance LTS Winchester, LLC,
and Alliance Laundry & Textile Service, LLC, as the prepetition
borrowers, the Financial Institutions from time to time party
thereto, and HSBC Bank, as administrative agent and collateral
agent for the Prepetition Lenders are parties to that certain
Prepetition Loan Agreement which includes two term loans in the
aggregate amount of $6.189 million and an equipment loan in the
amount of $6 million.

As of the Petition Date, approximately $21,877,995 was outstanding
under the Prepetition Facility, plus letters of credit in the
approximate stated amount of not less than approximately
$1,080,000, plus interest accrued and accruing at the rates set
forth in the Prepetition Loan Documents. The Prepetition
Obligations are secured by first priority security interests and
liens on the Debtors' receivables, equipment, general intangibles,
inventory, investment property, leasehold interests, commercial
tort causes plus additional property set forth in the definition of
"Collateral"in the Prepetition Loan Agreement.

The Final Order mandates that from the Petition Date and until the
DIP Obligations are indefeasibly satisfied in full:

      (a) all cash, collections, and proceeds of the Prepetition
Collateral, other than Receivables collected in the ordinary course
of business, including any proceeds realized in connection with the
Proposed Sale, will be immediately paid first to the Prepetition
Agent for application in permanent reduction of the Prepetition
Obligations outstanding under the Prepetition Loan Agreement in
accordance with the Prepetition Loan Documents and second, paid to
the DIP Agent for application in reduction of the DIP Obligations
in accordance with the DIP Documents after the Prepetition
Obligations have been satisfied in full and fully and indefeasibly
paid; and

      (b) all cash, collections, and proceeds of the Receivables,
other than Receivables sold outside of the course of ordinary
business, will be immediately paid first to the DIP Agent in
reduction of the DIP Obligations, and second to the Prepetition
Agent for application in reduction of the Prepetition Obligations
outstanding under the Prepetition Loan Documents.

As security for the full and timely payment of the DIP Obligations,
the DIP Agent on its behalf and on behalf of the DIP Lenders is
hereby granted:

      (i) a first priority lien on and security interest in all
unencumbered assets of the Debtors (now or hereafter acquired and
all proceeds thereof), subject to the Carve Out, but specifically
excluding the Bankruptcy Recoveries;

     (ii) junior liens on and security interests in any encumbered
assets of the Debtors subject to the Carve Out and any validly
perfected unavoidable security interest or lien in existence on the
Petition Date or that is perfected subsequent thereto as permitted
by Section 546(b) of the Bankruptcy Code (including, without
limitation, the Permitted Encumbrances), but specifically excluding
Bankruptcy Recoveries;

    (iii) first priority priming liens on and security interests on
the Prepetition Collateral (in each case, now or hereafter acquired
and all proceeds thereof), junior only to the Carve-Out but senior
to the Existing Liens, and specifically excluding Bankruptcy
Recoveries.

In addition to the liens and security interests granted to the DIP
Agent on its behalf and on behalf of the DIP Lenders, all of the
DIP Obligations will constitute allowed superpriority
administrative expense claims with priority over any and all
administrative expenses of the Debtors, whether heretofore or
hereafter incurred, of the kind specified in, or ordered pursuant
to, sections 105, 326, 328, 330, 331, 364, 365, 503(b), 506(c),
507(a), 507(b), 726, 1113, 1114 or any other provisions of the
Bankruptcy Code, provided, however, such claims will not be
recoverable from the Bankruptcy Recoveries.

As adequate protection for the interest of the Prepetition Secured
Parties in the Prepetition Collateral, the Prepetition Secured
Parties will receive the following adequate protection:

      (a) The Prepetition Secured Parties will have, subject to the
terms and conditions set forth below, additional and replacement
security interests and liens in the DIP Collateral (including, for
the avoidance of doubt, pledges of 100% of the equity in each
direct subsidiary of any Debtor), which will be junior only to the
DIP Liens, the DIP Superpriority Claims, and the Carve-Out, and
which will be granted only to the extent in priority as the
replaced security interests and liens had as of the Petition Date.


      (b) The Prepetition Secured Parties will have an allowed
superpriority administrative expense claim which will have
priority, except with respect to (i) the DIP Liens, (ii) the DIP
Superpriority Claims, and (iii) the Carve-Out, in all of the
Chapter 11 Cases under sections 364(c)(1), 503(b) and 507(b) of the
Bankruptcy Code and otherwise over all administrative expense
claims and unsecured claims against the Debtors and their estates,
now existing or hereafter arising, of any kind or nature
whatsoever.

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

            http://bankrupt.com/misc/nynb18-31754-234.pdf

                  About Centerstone Linen Services

Centerstone Linen Services, LLC, is the corporate parent of four
subsidiary corporations: Atlas Health Care Linen Services Co., LLC,
Alliance Laundry & Textile Service LLC, Alliance Laundry and
Textile Service of Atlanta LLC, and Alliance LTS Winchester LLC.
These subsidiaries, all doing business as Clarus Linen Systems --
http://www.claruslinens.com/-- provide linen rental and commercial
laundry services to the healthcare industry.

Atlas operates two production facilities in New York while Alliance
Laundry operates two facilities in Georgia and one in South
Carolina, which provide daily pick-ups and deliveries to their
customers.

Centerstone Linen Services and its four subsidiaries filed
voluntary petitions seeking relief under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D.N.Y. Lead Case No. 18-31754) in
Syracuse, New York on Dec. 19, 2018.

At the time of the filing, Atlas Health estimated $10 million to
$50 million in assets and liabilities of the same range as of the
bankruptcy filing.  Centerstone Linen estimated $1 million to $10
million in assets and $10 million to $50 million in liabilities.

Bond, Schoeneck & King, PLLC, is the Debtors' counsel.

The U.S. Trustee for Region 2 appointed an official committee of
unsecured creditors on
Jan. 10, 2019.  CKR Law LLP is the committee's legal counsel.


CENTRAL MOTORCYCLE: April 3 Plan and Disclosure Statement Hearing
-----------------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas issued
an amended order conditionally approving Central Motorcycle
Roadracing Association, Inc.'s disclosure statement with respect to
its chapter 11 plan filed on Feb. 25, 2019.

April 1, 2019 is fixed as the last day for filing written
acceptances or rejections of the Debtor's proposed Chapter 11 Plan,
and the last day for filing and serving written objections to final
approval of the Debtor's Disclosure Statement; or confirmation of
the Debtor's proposed Chapter 11 plan.

The hearing to consider final approval of the Debtor's Disclosure
Statement and to consider the confirmation of the Debtor's proposed
Chapter 11 Plan is fixed and will be conducted on April 3, 2019 at
9:30 a.m.

  About Central Motorcycle Roadracing Association Inc.

Central Motorcycle Roadracing Association, Inc., sought protection
under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D. Tex. Case No.
19-40594) on Feb. 8, 2019.  At the time of the filing, the Debtor
estimated assets of less than $500,000 and liabilities of less than
$50,000.  The case is assigned to Judge Edward L. Morris.


CFO MANAGEMENT: U.S. Trustee Forms 5-Member Committee
-----------------------------------------------------
The Office of the U.S. Trustee on March 4 appointed five creditors
to serve on the official committee of unsecured creditors in the
Chapter 11 cases of CFO Management Holdings, LLC, and its
affiliates.

The committee members are:

     (1) Phillip Hokit  
         2204 Virginia Lane Haslet, TX 76052
         (817) 455-5047
         philhokit@yahoo.com

     (2) Douglas McLean  
         2705 Devonshire Dr.
         Carrollton, TX 75007
         (469) 766-9679
         plane700@verizon.net

     (3) Joyce Lasich
         2900 Foxboro Dr.
         Richardson, TX 75082
         (214) 448-4783
         joyce.lasich@hcahealthcare.com

    (4) Karen Wright
         510 Private Rd 206
         Bonham, TX 75418
         (214) 563-4829
         karendowright@yahoo.com
  
    (5) Don Frisbee, Jr.
         4540 FM 66
         Waxahachie, TX 75167
         (972) 937-4199
         quickspinner11@gmail.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 CFO Management Holdings

CFO Management Holdings, LLC, through its subsidiaries, engages in
developing and selling residential and commercial real estate in
Collin County, Texas, and owns and manages a wild game ranch in
Southern Oklahoma.  The subsidiaries are Carter Family Office, LLC,
Christian  Custom Homes, LLC, Double Droptine Ranch, LLC, Frisco
Wade Crossing Partners, LLC, Kingswood Development Partners, LLC,
McKinney Executive Suites at Crescent Parc Development Partners,
LLC, North-Forty Development LLC, and West Main Station
Development, LLC.

CFO Management Holdings and its subsidiaries sought Chapter 11
protection (Bankr. E.D. Tex. Case No. Lead Case No. 19-40426) on
Feb. 17, 2019.  In the petition signed by CRO Lawrence Perkins, CFO
Management estimated $50 million to $100 million in both assets and
liabilities.  Annmarie Chiarello, Esq. and Joseph J. Wielebinski,
Jr., Esq., at Winstead PC serves as bankruptcy counsel to the
Debtors.


COMMUNITY HEALTH: Completes $1.6 Billion Senior Notes Offering
--------------------------------------------------------------
CHS/Community Health Systems, Inc., a direct, wholly owned
subsidiary of Community Health Systems, Inc., completed on March 6,
2019, its previously announced offering of $1,600,809,000 aggregate
principal amount of its 8.00% Senior Secured Notes due 2026.  The
terms of the Notes are governed by an indenture, dated as of March
6, 2019, among the Issuer, the Company, the subsidiary guarantors
party thereto, Regions Bank, as trustee and Credit Suisse AG, as
collateral agent.  The Notes bear interest at a rate of 8.00% per
year payable semi-annually in arrears on March 15 and September 15
of each year, commencing on Sept. 15, 2019.

The Notes are unconditionally guaranteed on a senior-priority
secured basis by the Company and each of the Issuer's current and
future domestic subsidiaries that provide guarantees under the
Issuer's senior secured credit facilities, the Issuer's ABL
facility, any capital market debt securities of the Issuer
(including the Issuer's outstanding senior notes) and certain other
long-term debt of the Issuer.

The Notes and the related guarantees are secured by (i)
first-priority liens on the collateral that also secures on a
first-priority basis the Credit Facilities and the Issuer's
existing senior-priority secured notes and (ii) second-priority
liens on the collateral that secures on a first-priority basis the
ABL Facility (and also secures on a second-priority basis the
Credit Facilities and the Existing Senior-Priority Secured Notes),
in each case subject to permitted liens described in the Indenture.
The Notes are subject to the terms of three intercreditor
agreements: (1) the intercreditor agreement which governs the
relative rights of the secured parties in respect of the ABL
Facility, the Credit Facilities, the Existing Senior-Priority
Secured Notes, the Issuer's existing junior-priority secured notes
and the Notes, (2) the intercreditor agreement which governs the
relative rights of the secured parties in respect of the Credit
Facilities, the Existing Senior-Priority Secured Notes, the
Existing Junior-Priority Secured Notes and the Notes and (3) the
intercreditor agreement which governs the relative rights of
holders of the Notes, lenders under the Credit Facilities, holders
of the Existing Senior-Priority Secured Notes and holders of any
future obligations secured on a pari passu basis with the Notes.
Each of the Intercreditor Agreements restrict the actions permitted
to be taken by the Collateral Agent with respect to the Collateral
on behalf of the holders of the Notes.

At any time prior to March 15, 2022, the Issuer may redeem some or
all of the Notes at a price equal to 100% of the principal amount
of the Notes redeemed plus accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to,
but excluding, the applicable redemption date plus a "make-whole"
premium, as described in the Indenture.  On or after
March 15, 2022, the Issuer may redeem some or all of the Notes at
any time and from time to time at the redemption prices set forth
in the Indenture, plus accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to, but
excluding, the applicable redemption date.  In addition, at any
time prior to March 15, 2022, the Issuer may redeem up to 40% of
the aggregate principal amount of the Notes with the proceeds of
certain equity offerings at the redemption price set forth in the
Indenture, plus accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to, but
excluding, the applicable redemption date.

If the Company or the Issuer experiences a Change of Control (as
defined in the Indenture), the Issuer is required to offer to
repurchase the Notes at 101% of the principal amount of such Notes
plus accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to, but excluding, the
date of repurchase.

The Indenture provides for customary events of default which
include (subject in certain cases to customary grace and cure
periods), among others, nonpayment of principal or interest, breach
of other agreements in the Indenture, failure to pay certain other
indebtedness, failure to pay certain final judgments, failure of
certain guarantees to be enforceable, failure to perfect certain
collateral securing the Notes and certain events of bankruptcy or
insolvency.  The Indenture contains covenants that, among other
things, limit the Issuer's ability and the ability of its
restricted subsidiaries to incur or guarantee additional
indebtedness, pay dividends or make other restricted payments, make
certain investments, incur restrictions on the ability of the
Issuer's restricted subsidiaries that are not guarantors to pay
dividends or make certain other payment, create or incur certain
liens, sell assets and subsidiary stock, impair the security
interests, transfer all or substantially all of the Issuer's assets
or enter into merger or consolidation transactions, and enter into
transactions with affiliates.

                      About Community Health

Community Health -- http://www.chs.net/-- is a publicly traded
hospital company and an operator of general acute care hospitals in
communities across the country.  As of Dec. 31, 2018, the Company
owned or leased 113 hospitals with an aggregate of 18,227 licensed
beds, comprised of 111 general acute care hospitals and two
stand-alone rehabilitation or psychiatric hospitals.  These
hospitals are geographically diversified across 20 states, with the
majority of our hospitals located in regional networks or in close
geographic proximity to one or more of our other hospitals.  The
Company's headquarters are located in Franklin, Tennessee, a suburb
south of Nashville.  Shares in Community Health Systems, Inc. are
traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "CYH."

Community Health reported a net loss attributable to the Company's
stockholders of $788 million for the year ended Dec. 31, 2018,
compared to a net loss attributable to the Company's stockholders
of $2.45 billion for the year ended Dec. 31, 2017.  As of Dec. 31,
2018, Community Health had $15.85 billion in total assets, $16.81
billion in total liabilities, $504 million in redeemable
non-controlling interests in equity of consolidated subsidiaries,
and a total stockholders' deficit of $1.46 billion.

                          *     *     *

As reported by the TCR on July 2, 2018, S&P Global Ratings raised
its corporate credit rating on Franklin, Tenn.-based hospital
operator Community Health Systems Inc. to 'CCC+' from 'SD'
(selective default). The outlook is negative.  "The upgrade of
Community to 'CCC+' reflects the company's longer-dated debt
maturity schedule, and our view that its efforts to rationalize its
hospital portfolio as well as improve financial performance and
cash flow should strengthen credit measures over the next 12 to 18
months."

In May 2018, Fitch Ratings downgraded Community Health Systems'
(CHS) Issuer Default Rating (IDR) to 'C' from 'CCC' following the
company's announcement of an offer to exchange three series of
senior unsecured notes due 2019, 2020 and 2022.


CUSTOM AIR DESIGN: Seeks Permission to Use Vehicle Sale Proceeds
----------------------------------------------------------------
Custom Air Design, Inc., seeks permission from the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Southern District of Florida to allow it to sell the
certain Vehicles, and use $3,000 of the sale proceeds to rebuild
another vehicle.

Wells Fargo Bank has a secured claim which arises from a Small
Business Administration loan currently in the approximate amount of
$677,156, secured by a blanket lien on the Debtor's assets and
proceeds therefrom.

The Debtor has an offer from Vinney Alverez, whose family owns a
small roofing company to purchase the following vehicles at the
following price:

              -- 2013 Chevrolet Express ($1,000);
              -- 2005 Ford Econoline E150 Van ($500);
              -- 2006 Ford Econoline E450 Super ($2,500); and
              -- 2005 Ford Econoline E150 Van ($500).

The Debtor is proposing to use $3,000 of this revenue to rebuild
another Transit Connect with a local dealer. The vehicle to be
rebuilt has 58,000 miles as opposed to the 100,000 on the existing
vehicle. The rebuilt vehicle would replace the cash collateral used
to rebuild the vehicle.

A full-text copy of the Debtor's Motion is available at

          http://bankrupt.com/misc/flsb18-23754-58.pdf

                      About Custom Air Design

Custom Air Design, Inc., is an air conditioning contractor in
Wellington, Florida.  Custom Air Design sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No.
18-23754) on Nov. 5, 2018.  In the petition signed by Robert
Anderson, president, the Debtor disclosed $416,521 in assets and
$1,445,051 in liabilities.  Judge Mindy A. Mora oversees the case.
The Debtor tapped Sue Lasky, PA, as its legal counsel.  No official
committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in the Chapter
11 case.


CYTORI THERAPEUTICS: Reaches Agreement to Extend Loan Milestones
----------------------------------------------------------------
Cytori Therapeutics, Inc. disclosed in a Form 8-K filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission that it has entered into an
amendment, effective as of Feb. 28, 2019, to its existing Loan and
Security Agreement, dated May 29, 2015, as amended, with Oxford
Finance LLC, as collateral agent, and the lenders party thereto,
including Oxford, pursuant to which, among other things, Oxford and
the Lenders agreed to extend requirements that the Company achieve
one of the following by March 29, 2019: enter into an asset sale
agreement with a minimum unrestricted net cash proceeds to the
Company of $4.0 million; enter into a binding agreement for the
issuance and sale of its equity securities or unsecured convertible
subordinated debt which would result in unrestricted gross cash
proceeds of not less than $7.5 million; or enter into a merger
agreement pursuant to which the obligations under the Loan
Agreement would be paid down to a level satisfactory to Oxford and
the Lenders.

                         About Cytori

Based in San Diego, California, Cytori -- http://www.cytori.com/--
is developing, manufacturing, and commercializing
nanoparticle-delivered oncology drugs and autologous
adipose-derived regenerative cell (ADRC) therapies within its
Nanomedicine and Cell Therapy franchises, respectively.  Cytori
Nanomedicine is focused on the liposomal encapsulation of
anti-neoplastic chemotherapy agents, which may enable the effective
delivery of the agents to target sites while reducing systemic
toxicity.  The Cytori Nanomedicine product pipeline consists of
ATI-0918 pegylated liposomal doxorubicin hydrochloride for breast
cancer, ovarian cancer, multiple myeloma, and Kaposi's sarcoma, a
complex/hybrid generic drug, and ATI-1123 patented
albumin-stabilized pegylated liposomal docetaxel for multiple solid
tumors.  Cytori Cell Therapy, prepared within several hours with
the proprietary Celution System and administered to the patient the
same day, has been shown in preclinical and clinical studies to act
principally by improving blood flow, modulating the immune system,
and facilitating wound repair.  As a result, Cytori Cell Therapy
may provide benefits across multiple disease states and can be made
available to the physician and patient at the point-of-care.

Cytori reported a net loss of $22.68 million for the year ended
Dec. 31, 2017, compared to a net loss of $22.04 million for the
year ended Dec. 31, 2016.  As of Sept. 30, 2018, Cytori had $25.53
million in total assets, $19.39 million in total liabilities and
$6.13 million in total stockholders' equity.

The audit report of the Company's independent registered public
accounting firm BDO USA, LLP, in San Diego, California, covering
the Dec. 31, 2017 consolidated financial statements contains an
explanatory paragraph that states that the Company's recurring
losses from operations, liquidity position, and debt service
requirements raise substantial doubt about its ability to continue
as a going concern.


DANESHJOU FAMILY: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
---------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Daneshjou Family Limited Partnership
        2300 Portofino Ridge Dr
        Austin, TX 78735

Business Description: Daneshjou Family Limited is engaged in
                      activities related to real estate.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: March 5, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Western District of Texas (Austin)

Case No.: 19-10289

Judge: Hon. Christopher H. Mott

Debtor's Counsel: Jeffrey S. Kelly, Esq.
                  THE KELLY LEGALGROUP, PLLC
                  4934 W. US 290
                  Sunset Valley, TX 78735
                  Tel: 512-505-0053
                  Fax: 512-505-0054
                  E-mail: jkelly@kellylegalgroup.com

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The Debtor failed to include 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/txwb19-10289.pdf


DANICA ASSOCIATES: Has Final Authority to Use Cash Collateral
-------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Mindy A. Mora of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of Florida has entered an Agreed Fifth and Final
Order authorizing Danica Associates, LLC, to use Valley National
Bank's cash collateral on final basis.

The Debtor is authorized cash collateral to pay the monthly
expenses set forth in the budget and all fees required by the
United States Trustee and Clerk of the Court.  The Debtor will
operate strictly in accordance with the Budget and will not exceed
10% above the amount of any line item shown in the Budget.

Valley National Bank will have a first priority post-petition
security interest in, and lien upon, all of the Debtor's personal
property, and all cash and non-cash proceeds thereof, which are or
have been acquired, generated or received by the Debtor after the
filing of the petition commencing this case, to the same extent
that Valley National Bank held a properly perfected prepetition
security interest or lien in assets immediately prior to the filing
of the petition commencing the case.

In addition, the Debtor will deliver, on the first day of each
month, to Valley National Bank, through its counsel, monthly
payments in the amount of $3,100. The Debtor will also promptly
furnish Valley National Bank with such financial and other
information as required by the underlying loan documents and such
other information, documents and reports as Valley National Bank
may reasonably request.

A full-text copy of the Agreed Fifth and Final Order is available
at:

           http://bankrupt.com/misc/flsb18-12476-65.pdf

                     About Danica Associates

Danica Associates, LLC, filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. S.D.
Fla. Case No. 18-12476) on March 2, 2018.  In the petition signed
by Rite K. Weller, managing member, the Debtor estimated at least
$50,000 in assets and $100,000 to $500,000 million in liabilities.
The case is assigned to Judge Paul G. Hyman, Jr.  The Debtor is
represented by David Lloyd Merrill, Esq. at Merrill PA.


DAVID SCHICK: Bid to Seal Certain Documents Junked
--------------------------------------------------
Plaintiff Herschel Kulefsky commenced this adversary proceeding
captioned HERSCHEL KULEFSKY, Plaintiff, v. DAVID SCHICK, Defendant,
Adv. Pro. No. 01-08038 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y.) nearly eighteen years ago
seeking a determination that the debt owed by the debtor-defendant
David Schick was non-dischargeable under 11 U.S.C. 523(a)(2), (4)
and (6).1 The parties have informed the Court they reached a
settlement, and Schick has moved to seal portions of six previously
filed documents claiming they are defamatory or scandalous within
the meaning of 11 U.S.C. section 107(b)(2) and Federal Bankruptcy
Rule 9018.

After careful consideration, Bankruptcy Judge Stuart M. Bernstein
denies Schick's motion.

The Court finds that Schick has failed to sustain his burden of
proof. First, the pleadings he seeks to redact were submitted in
response to the Court's Order to Show Cause and were relevant to
that motion. For the most part, they describe Herschel Kulefsky's
reasons for waiting fourteen years to submit a proposed judgment,
including the delay resulting from Schick's imprisonment for
several years, his expressed willingness to make payment, his
actual commencement of payments and his eventual reneging. Schick
has not pointed to any untrue statements or identified any
scandalous statements; he simply wants to bury past events which
have been described in numerous decisions and pleadings in this
adversary proceeding, such as the Complaint, and have been a matter
of public record for two decades.

Second, two of the six pleadings were submitted by Schick. He has
failed to explain why he would file scandalous, defamatory,
irrelevant information about himself, or wait several months before
seeking to seal the information. For that matter, he has not
identified a reason for ignoring for so long the scandalous and/or
defamatory information allegedly incorporated into the submissions
by Kulefsky.

Third, two of the six pleadings, the proposed judgment and
statement of judgment are virtually identical to an earlier
proposed judgment and statement of judgment, which he does not seek
to seal. Nor is there anything remotely scandalous about a proposed
money judgment or a statement of judgment.

In short, Schick has failed to overcome the presumption that these
records should remain open to the public. He would like to put
these "long-ago" events behind him and away from public view, but
the pleadings do no more than further document well-documented
events. Accordingly, his motion to seal is denied.

A copy of the Court's Memorandum Decision and Order dated Jan. 22,
2019 is available at https://bit.ly/2EuVELD from Leagle.com.

Herschel Kulefsky, Plaintiff, pro se.

David Schick, Defendant, represented by Abraham S. Beinhorn --
abeinhorn@jntllp.com -- Jacobowitz Newman Tversky LLP & Evan M.
Newman -- enewman@jntllp.com -- NEWMAN LAW, P.C.

The bankruptcy case is in re: DAVID SCHICK, Chapter 11, Debtor,
Case No. 96-42902 (SMB) (Bankr. S.D.N.Y.).


DEAN FOODS: S&P Lowers Issuer Credit Rating to CCC+, Outlook Neg.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings on March 5 removed all ratings from CreditWatch
with negative implications and lowered them, including the issuer
credit rating on Dallas-based milk processor Dean Foods Co to
'CCC+' from 'B-', reflecting the uncertainty over the success and
timing of the company's turnaround efforts, including the
increasing likelihood that its capital structure may be
unsustainable absent a material improvement in operating
performance.

At the same time, S&P lowered the issue-level ratings on the
company's $700 million senior unsecured debt due in 2023 to 'CCC+'.
The recovery rating remains '3'. It withdrew the issue-level rating
on the $450 million revolving credit facility.

S&P took the rating actions following Dean Foods' Feb. 26
announcement that it is exploring strategic alternatives (including
asset sales, possible joint venture (JV) formations, a strategic
business combination, a sale of the company, or taking the company
private) as it continues to face volume declines while operating
profits remain distressed by higher labor, freight and transitory
input costs.

Dean Foods continues to face volume declines in its core fluid milk
business and it is unclear if it will successfully turnaround its
weak operating performance over the next year. Dean Foods' core
fluid milk business faces several secular headwinds, including
ongoing low-single-digit declines in overall demand for fluid milk
demand, lost market share to certain retailers opting to
manufacture private label milk themselves, and competition from
other nondairy plant-based beverages. These pressures and much
higher operating cost form freight, labor, and input cost
inflation--coupled with large one-time plant closure costs--led to
material margin pressure in 2018. Although last year's inflationary
stresses and one-time costs are not likely to repeat to the same
degree in 2019, the company still needs to make ongoing investments
to improve its cost structure, streamline its supply chain, and
market its products to successfully turn the business around. Given
the secular headwinds facing the business, it is highly uncertain
whether the company can successfully turn the business around over
the next year.

The negative outlook reflects the potential unsustainability of the
company's capital structure if Dean Foods needs does not materially
turnaround its business performance. The company continues to face
several operating headwinds, including ongoing declines in demand
for fluid milk, and the need to continue making investments to
right size its manufacturing footprint in the face of declining
volumes; while still ensuring it adequately spends on sales and
marketing initiatives to offset volume declines. Given these
investment priorities S&P does not anticipate meaningful FOCF next
year, despite its expectations for lower adjusted leverage in the
mid-six range as one-time plant closure costs do not repeat next
year.

"We could lower the rating if the weak industry dynamics that
plagued the company in 2018 persist leading to additional operating
losses in 2019, including sustained promotional pricing pressure
and additional lost sales volumes if key customers continue to
shift milk production in house. This would result in an
unsustainable adjusted leverage of above 9.0x," S&P said.

S&P said it could consider a positive rating action if the company
is able to significantly improve operating performance in 2019 and
sustain debt to EBITDA near or below 6x heading into 2020 while
generating positive free cash flow of more than $25 million. We
believe this could happen if the company successfully implements
its productivity plan without any disruptions, particularly any
unforeseen losses in key customers that could otherwise force the
company to incur continued large one-time costs to shut down
additional plants," S&P said.


DIE TECH SERVICES: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
----------------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Die Tech Services, Inc.
        2457 Waldorf Ct. NW
        Walker, MI 49544

Business Description: Die Tech Services, Inc. --
                      http://www.dietechservices.com--
                      was founded in 2002 in West Michigan as a
                      services company providing skilled labor
                      support on an as-needed basis.  Die Tech
                      Services works with OEM's, Tier 1 and Tier 2
                      suppliers fulfilling their short and long-
                      term needs.  In 2009 Die Tech Services
                      expanded its services from specialized
                      skilled labor to include the manufacturing
                      of "inspection fixtures and gages."
                      In 2011, Die Tech Services added another
                      service to it's product list "Special
                      Machines". This division is dedicated to
                      develop, design and build custom tooling to
                      fit its customers specific needs.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: March 5, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Western District of Michigan (Grand Rapids)

Case No.: 19-00835

Judge: Hon. John T. Gregg

Debtor's Counsel: John T. Piggins, Esq.
                  MILLER JOHNSON
                  45 Ottawa Avenue, SW, Suite 1100
                  Grand Rapids, MI 49503
                  Tel: (616) 831-1793
                       (616) 831-1700
                  Fax: (616) 988-1793
                  Email: ecfpigginsj@millerjohnson.com

Estimated Assets: $500,000 to $1 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Kelly C. Darby, 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/miwb19-00835.pdf


DIESEL USA: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
---------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Diesel USA Inc.
        220 West 19th Street
        New York, NY 10011

Business Description: Diesel USA Inc., a Delaware corporation
                      launched in the United States in 1995, is a
                      wholly-owned subsidiary of the Parent,
                      Diesel S.p.A.  The Debtor is the United
                      States member of the international Diesel
                      brand, an innovative lifestyle and apparel
                      brand founded in Molvena Italy in 1978.
                      Diesel specializes in a variety of denim-
                      wear and has expanded its offerings to
                      include a vast array of premium casual
                      clothing and accessories for men, women, and

                      children, operating in approximately 85
                      countries.  As of the Petition Date, the
                      Debtor's brick-and-mortar retail operations
                      consists of 28 retail store locations in 11
                      states, comprised of 17 full-price retail
                      stores and 11 factory outlet stores.  As of
                      the Petition Date, the Debtor employs
                      approximately 380 people.  

                      On the web: https://shop.diesel.com/

Chapter 11 Petition Date: March 5, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       District of Delaware (Delaware)

Case No.: 19-10432

Judge: Hon. Mary F. Walrath

Debtor's Counsel: Kenneth J. Enos, Esq.
                  YOUNG, CONAWAY, STARGATT & TAYLOR, LLP
                  Rodney Square
                  1000 North King Street
                  Wilmington, DE 19801
                  Tel: 302-571-6600
                  Email: kenos@ycst.com

                     - and -

                  Pauline K. Morgan, Esq.
                  YOUNG, CONAWAY, STARGATT & TAYLOR, LLP
                  Rodney Square
                  1000 North King Street
                  Wilmington, DE 19801
                  Tel: 302 571-6600
                  Fax: 302-571-1253
                  Email: bankfilings@ycst.com
                         pmorgan@ycst.com

Debtor's
Co-Counsel:       ARENT FOX LLP
                  1301 Avenue of the Americas
                  Floor 42, New York, NY 10019

Debtor's
Restructuring
Advisor:          Mark Samson
                  GETZLER HENRICH & ASSOCIATES LLC

Debtor's
Noticing
Agent:            BANKRUPTCY MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS, INC.
                  D/B/A STRETTO
                  7 Times Square, 16th Floor,
                  New York, NY 10036

Estimated Assets: $50 million to $100 million

Estimated Liabilities: $10 million to $50 million

The petition was signed by Mark G. Samson, chief restructuring
officer.

A full-text copy of the petition is available for free at:

             http://bankrupt.com/misc/deb19-10432.pdf

List of Debtor's 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors:

   Entity                          Nature of Claim    Claim Amount
   ------                          ---------------    ------------
U.S. Customs and                    Governmental          $573,702
Border Protection                      Entity
P.O. Box 100769
Atlanta, GA 30384
Tel: (718) 995-3838

New York Speed Inc.                  Litigation           $300,000

c/o Parker Pohl LLP
Attn: David M. Pohl
420 Lexington Ave., Suite 2440
New York, NY 10170
Email: david.pohl@parkerpohl.com

Arvato Digital Services LLC          E-commerce           $242,308
P.O. Box 749060                   Service Provider
Los Angeles, CA 90074
Tel: (661) 755-7873

Euro Leder Fashion Ltd.            Sourcing Agent         $156,130
No. 99-G.S.T. Road
Pallavaran, Chennai, India 60043
Email: rathnavel@euroleder.com

Florida Department of Revenue           Taxing            $139,802
5050 W. Tennessee St.,                Authority
Tallahase, Florida
32399-0135
Tel: (850) 488-6800

California Board of                     Taxing            $130,512
Equalization                          Authority
P.O. Box 942879
Sacramento, CA 94279-8064
Tel: (800) 400-7115

Facebook, Inc.                       Advertising           $91,916
Attn: Accounts Receivable             Services
1516 Collection Center Dr.
Chicago, IL 60696
Tel: (833) 272-0777
Email: legal@facebook.com

Global Sourcing DIS, TIC, A.S.        Sourcing             $75,919
Evren Mah, Halkali Cad. No. 113        Agent
Istanbul Turkey 34212
Email: Christian.Schmid@eurofactor.de

Fashion Point                         Sourcing             $72,078
Tekstil Uretim AS                      Agent
Halkali Cad No. 196-Sefakoy
34295 Istanbul, Turkey
Email: esink@fashionpoint.com.tr

Anglotex Confeccoes Lda               Sourcing             $66,880
Parque Industrial de Celeiros           Agent
4705-414 Celeiros
Braga 04705, Portugal
Email: Manuela@anglotex.pt

Fossil Partners LP                     Vendor              $64,511
P.O. Box 200345
Dallas, TX 75320
Tel: (972) 234-2525

New York State Sales Tax               Taxing              $58,767
JAF Building                         Authority
P.O. Box 1205
New York, NY 10116-1205
Tel: (518) 485-2889

China Win Textiles                    Sourcing             $53,760
Co. Limited                             Agent
Building 87-Hung To Road
Kwun Tong
Kowloon, Hong Kong
Email: lewa.yeung@chinawin.com.hk

Ningbo Orient                         Sourcing             $46,492
Hongye IMP & EXP Co.                    Agent
72-106 Gong Mao 1 Road
Jishigang Ningbo, Chinka
Email: carolren@orient-hongye.com

Hawaii State Tax Collector             Taxing              $40,437
P.O. Box 259                          Authority
Honolulu, HI 96809
Tel: (808) 587-4242

Karbel Tekstil DIS                    Sourcing             $38,129
TIC.SAN. VE TIC.                       Agent
Topkapi Maltepe Cad No.20-22
Istanbul, Turkey 34220
Email: gorkem.agacdelen@karbel.com

Nevada Department of Taxation          Taxing              $37,718
Grant Sawyer Office Building          Authority
555 E. Washington Ave
Suite 1300 Las Vegas, NY 89101
Tel: (702) 486-2300

Everybodyneedsus LLC                 Advertising           $36,887
1018 Havenhurst Drive                 Services
Los Angeles, CA 90046
Email: us@everybodyneedus.com

Dalian Ever Bright                    Sourcing             $35,222
Industrial Co.                         Agent
Tangli Ind. Zone Hongqi Street
Dalian, China 116081
Email: kurt.gao@dlever.bright.com

Buttress International Trading Co.    Sourcing             $31,616
Room 2101, 21 F                         Agent
Global Trade Square
Wong Chuk Hand, Hong Kong 02102
Email: nicole@orient-hongye.com


DOVETAIL GALLERY: Needs Access to Cash Collateral to Operate
------------------------------------------------------------
Dovetail Gallery Limited, d/b/a The Dovetail Gallery and Dovetail
Gallery, Inc., requests the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western
District of Pennsylvania for an order authorizing it to use of cash
collateral to avoid immediate and irreparable harm to the Property
located at 352 East 18th Street, Erie, Pennsylvania 16503 and to
the estate.

The Debtor requires the use of its cash in order to operate. The
Debtor's short-term, monthly cash budget provides for a monthly
interest only payment to Northwest Bank -- at least for the time
being -- in the form of a monthly adequate protection payment,
without prejudice to recharacterize the payments other than as
"interest only" payments, after the value of the Property and the
extent of the liens there against are finally determined.

The budget also provides that $1,000 per month will be paid to the
Debtor's counsel to be held in escrow. The amount in escrow is
property of the estate and will remain in escrow unless and until
the Court may authorize an appropriate distribution therefrom,
after notice and hearing on an appropriate application or motion.

The Debtor owes Northwest Bank approximately $151,922, secured by
an all-inclusive security interest in the Debtor's personal
property, including accounts receivable, proceeds and cash.

The Debtor proposes to provide adequate protection to Northwest
Bank, the United States of America, Internal Revenue Service, the
Pennsylvania Department of Revenue, and the Pennsylvania Department
of Labor and Industry by transferring their liens and security
interests to the Debtor's post-Petition assets with the same force
and effect as the liens and security interests attached to the
Debtor's pre-Petition assets.

Dovetail Gallery Limited, d/b/a The Dovetail Gallery and Dovetail
Gallery, Inc., filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. W.D. Pa. Case
No. 19-10134) on Feb. 14, 2019.  The Debtor is represented by its
counsel, Michael P. Kruszewski, Esq. and the Quinn Law Firm.


EAGLE RIDGE ACADEMY, MN: S&P Affirms 'BB+' Rating on Revenue Bonds
------------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings revised its outlook to stable from negative and
affirmed its 'BB+' rating on Deephaven, Minn.'s series 2016A,
2016B, 2015A, and 2015B school lease revenue bonds issued for Eagle
Ridge Academy.

"The outlook revision and rating affirmation reflect our view that
the school has maintained its academic strength and student quality
during the transition to its new building, while financial
performance has improved in fiscal 2018," said S&P Global Ratings
credit analyst Jessica Wood.

The rating further reflects S&P's view of the school's:

-- Recent growth in enrollment, with more gradual growth expected
to continue in fall 2019;

-- Strong demand, with over 600 students on the waitlist in fall
2018, even after the addition of over 500 students in the new
building;

-- Strong historical academic results relative to those of
Minnesota's and Minneapolis' public schools;

-- Very active board and experienced management; and

-- Strong maximum annual debt service (MADS) coverage of 1.3x
based on fiscal 2018 results.

The following factors partially offset the preceding positive
credit factors:

-- Weak liquidity at the end of fiscal 2018, with 62 days' cash;

-- Moderate lease-adjusted MADS burden of 14%, although this is
expected to decline over time as the school grows and the budget
increases;

-- Potential operational and academic challenges as the school
continues to grow over the next few years; and

-- The inherent uncertainty associated with charter renewals, as
the final maturity of the bonds exceeds the existing charter's
term.

The stable outlook reflects S&P's view that Eagle Ridge will
continue to increase its enrollment in the expanded school as
projected, and maintain its strong academic profile in the next two
years. S&P expects that MADS coverage and liquidity will remain
steady during the outlook period.

S&P said it could raise the rating during the outlook period if the
school fulfills its enrollment goals and grows operations such that
MADS coverage and liquidity improve to levels more commensurate
with a higher rating. S&P expects the MADS burden to decline over
time.

"While we consider it unlikely, we could lower the rating during
the outlook period if the school's enrollment profile significantly
declines, and operations weaken such that MADS coverage and
liquidity decline to levels more commensurate with a lower rating,"
S&P said.


ELISOL LLC: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
----------------------------------------------------
No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Chapter 11 case of Elisol LLC as of March 1, according to a
court docket.
   
                         About Elisol LLC

Elisol LLC sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-70797) on January 31, 2019.  The
petition was filed pro se.  At the time of the filing, the Debtor
had estimated assets of less than $50,000 and liabilities of
$1,000,001 to $10 million.  The case has been assigned to Judge
Alan S. Trust.


EP ENERGY: Approves Incentive and Retention Awards for Executives
-----------------------------------------------------------------
In the course of its annual executive compensation review and
determination of annual incentive awards, the Compensation
Committee of the Board of Directors of EP Energy Corporation
approved annual cash incentive payouts for certain named executive
officers based on the achievement of the Company's 2018 scorecard
goals, the details of which will be included in the Company's proxy
statement for its 2019 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.  On Feb. 28,
2019, in connection with the determination of those annual
incentive awards, the Compensation Committee also approved cash
retention awards to employees other than the CEO, including the
named executive officers.  The retention awards will be paid in
eight equal monthly installments over the course of 2019, provided
the employee remains in the employ of the Company on the payment
date.  The cash retention amounts for each named executive officer
were approved as follows: Mr. England, $160,000 ($20,000 per
month); Mr. Ambrose, $120,000 ($15,000 per month); Mr. McCuen,
$80,000 ($10,000 per month); and Mr. Locke, $110,000 ($13,750 per
month).

                        About EP Energy LLC

EP Energy LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of EP Energy Corporation
-- http://www.epenergy.com/-- is an independent exploration and
production company engaged in the acquisition and development of
unconventional onshore oil and natural gas properties in the United
States.  The Company operates through a diverse base of producing
assets and are focused on providing returns through the development
of its drilling inventory located in three areas: the Permian basin
in West Texas, the Eagle Ford Shale in South Texas, and the
Altamont Field in the Uinta basin in Northeastern Utah. The Company
is headquartered in Houston, Texas.

EP Energy LLC incurred a net loss of $203 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2017, compared to a net loss of $21 million for the
year ended Dec. 31, 2016.  As of Sept. 30, 2018, the Company had
$5.23 billion in total assets, $563 million in total current
liabilities, $4.35 billion in total non-current liabilities, and
$317 million in member's equity.

                           *    *    *

In January 2018, S&P Global Ratings raised its corporate credit
rating on Houston-based exploration and production (E&P) company EP
Energy LLC to 'CCC+' from 'SD' (selective default).  The outlook is
negative.  "The upgrade reflects the announcement that EP has
completed exchanges of its unsecured debt, which we considered to
be distressed, for 1.5-lien secured debt due 2024. The rating
incorporates the new capital structure, which reflects the minimal
reduction of the company's debt as a result of the exchanges," S&P
said.

EP Energy LLC carries a 'Caal' Corporate Family Rating from Moody's
Investors Service.


F.A.S.S.T LLC: Continued Cash Collateral Use Beyond Feb. 13 Denied
------------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Ernest M. Robles of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Central District of California has issued an order denying
F.A.S.S.T, LLC's request for continued use of cash collateral
beyond Feb. 13, 2019.

The Court has previously entered interim orders authorizing FASST's
use of cash collateral through and including Feb. 13.

                        About F.A.S.S.T, LLC

F.A.S.S.T, LLC, filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition (Bankr. C.D.
Cal. Case No. 18-21828) on Oct. 10, 2018.  In the petition signed
by its managing member, Charles Debus, the Debtor estimated assets
of less than $100,000 and liabilities of less than $1 million.  The
Debtor hired the Law Firm of Robert M. Yaspan as bankruptcy
counsel.


FLAVORS HOLDINGS: S&P Cuts ICR to CCC on Elevated Refinancing Risk
------------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings on March 5 lowered its issuer credit rating on
Flavors Holdings Inc. to 'CCC' from 'CCC+'.

At the same time, S&P lowered its issue-level rating on the
company's first-lien debt to 'CCC' from 'CCC+' and its issue-level
rating on its second-lien debt to 'CCC-' from 'CCC'.  Its recovery
ratings on the debt remain unchanged.

S&P noted that Flavors' liquidity profile continues to weaken
because the company has not addressed the October 2019 maturity of
its $50 million revolving credit facility or its very tight
covenant cushion ahead of the first-quarter 2019 step-down on its
first-lien leverage covenant. It believes the risk of default has
increased and, absent a positive liquidity event, the company may
need to restructure its balance sheet.

The downgrade reflects the company's elevated refinancing and
default risk due to its near-term maturities. Flavors Holdings has
still not extended the maturity of its $50 million revolver, which
is set to mature in October 2019. Additionally, its first-lien term
loan becomes current on April 3, 2019. S&P does not view the
company as having prudent risk management, given its failure to
prioritize and address its near-term maturities. Flavors Holdings'
revolver is almost fully drawn ($48 million outstanding as of
December 2018) and, absent a positive event, the company will not
have the liquidity to repay these borrowings, which could lead to a
distressed exchange or an event of default. The company's revolver
balance grew to these levels because management decided to invest
in growing its Whole Earth product instead of preserving its
liquidity.

"The negative outlook on Flavors reflects that we could lower our
ratings on the company in the coming quarters if its liquidity
position continues to weaken and we believe a default is imminent,"
S&P said.

S&P also said it could lower its ratings on Flavors if the company
does not address the maturity of its revolver and its first-lien
term loan becomes current in April 2019. It could also lower the
ratings if MacAndrews & Forbes does not address the covenant
step-down leading to a technical default.

"We could raise our rating on Flavors if the company is able to
refinance its capital structure before its revolver matures in
October 2019 and its first-lien term loan becomes current.
Additionally, the company would need to renegotiate its financial
covenants, which we expect will remain very tight given the ongoing
step-downs, before we would raise our rating," S&P said.


FLO-TECH INC: Authorized to Use Cash Collateral on Final Basis
--------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Judge Brenda K. Martin of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the District of Arizona has granted Flo-Tech, Inc.'s Emergency
Motion for Authority to Use Cash Collateral on an immediate and
final basis. Flo-Tech is authorized to use the cash collateral in
accordance with the revised Budget.

Pursuant to the revised Budget, Flo-Tech projects the Business will
incur total monthly operational expenses of approximately $77,137
during the months of February through December 2019.

A full-text copy of the Order is available at

            http://bankrupt.com/misc/azb19-00460-44.pdf

A copy of the Budget is available at

         http://bankrupt.com/misc/azb19-00460-44-Bgt.pdf

                      About Flo-Tech, Inc.

Formed in December 1994, Flo-Tech, Inc., is in the business of
providing concrete floor repair, restoration and refinishing
services.  Flo-Tech has its principal place of business located in
Phoenix, Maricopa County, Arizona. Thomas Tedford is the president,
director and majority shareholder of Flo-Tech -- he owns 100% of
the outstanding shares in Flo-Tech

Flo-Tech, Inc., filed a petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Ariz. Case No. 19-00460) on Jan. 15,
2019.  The Debtor engaged Keery McCue, PLLC, as counsel.


GERMAN SANTANA: Stay Remains Lifted in Favor of Creditor SFS
------------------------------------------------------------
On remand, Bankruptcy Judge Brian K. Tester considers the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the District of Puerto Rico orders granting
Creditor Santander Financial Services' Motion for Relief of Stay
and denying Debtors' Motion to Alter or Amend Order. Debtors German
Rosado Santana and Lilian Alejandro Diaz appeal the orders.

After a thorough review of the motions, Judge Tester denies the
motion to alter or amend order and the stay remains lifted in favor
of Creditor.

The court determines that Debtors' motion neither provides the
court with genuine reasons why it should revisit the Order lifting
the stay, nor compelling facts or law in support of reversing the
prior decision. Debtors' basis for reconsideration stems from their
belief that the Creditor acted in bad faith when it purportedly
refused to ignore their proposal for adequate protection payments
and proof of insurance coverage. The court, Debtors assert, lifted
the stay protection without this updated information. The Debtors
misconstrue the events of the August 29, 2017 final hearing on
Creditor's motion to lift the stay and the subsequent Amended
Minute Entry.

The minutes are clear as to the matters discussed at the August
29th, 2017 final hearing and the deadlines established by the
court. The court determined at said hearing, that all the factors
were present for the lift of stay to be granted on that date. It
was only upon the Debtors' request for reconsideration, that the
deadlines were established as a last opportunity for them to
provide Creditor with proof of hazard insurance and pay the arrears
owed on their adequate protection payments. It is undisputed that
the adequate protection arrears payment was not made and that the
proof of hazard insurance was not provided to Creditor within the
time allowed. Moreover, when the order lifting the automatic stay
in favor of Creditor was entered on Dec. 1, 2017, the Debtors had
still not cured the arrears on the adequate protection payments nor
provided proof of hazard insurance to Creditor.

In their motion to reconsider, the Debtors fail to establish any of
the required legal factors. Moreover, the court finds the argument
raised in the Creditor's opposition compelling and legally sound.
Debtors have failed to establish the legal requirements for
reconsideration under Rule 9023 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy
Procedure, and therefore, their Motion to Alter or Amend Order is
denied. The stay remains lifted in favor of Creditor.

A copy of the Court's Opinion and Order dated Feb. 26, 2019 is
available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/prb16-09874-11-166.pdf

German Rosado Santana and Lillian Alejandro Diaz filed for chapter
11 bankruptcy petition (Bankr. D.P.R. Case No. 16-09874) on Dec.
20, 2016, and is represented by Nicolas A. Wong, Esq. of Wong Law
Offices.


GIGA-TRONICS INC: Appoints New Corporate Controller and CAO
-----------------------------------------------------------
Giga-tronics Incorporated has appointed Traci K. Mitchell to the
position of corporate controller and principal accounting officer,
effective March 1, 2019.  Ms. Mitchell, age 48, has been a
consultant to the Company since March 2018, providing services in
support of the Company's finance department.  Prior to joining
Giga-tronics, Ms. Mitchell was the director of Global Finance for
Console Connect and corporate controller for Keyssa, Inc.
Previously, Ms. Mitchell was an owner of a consulting firm for ten
years providing accounting services to several Bay area clients,
some of which include Ion Torrent, Sensys and Omneon Inc.  In
addition, Ms. Mitchell held financial management positions with
several large Bay area companies including eBay, Inc., Informix
Systems and Symantec Corporation.  Ms. Mitchell is a Certified
Public Accountant (inactive) in the State of California and a
graduate of San Jose State University with a degree in Business
Administration, Accounting.

Dr. Lutz P. Henckels, executive vice president and interim CFO
said, "I've worked closely with Traci during her consulting
arrangement this past year and she's contributed greatly during
this difficult transition period.  John and I are delighted that
she's joining us now as our Controller and Principal Accounting
Officer as we enter the anticipated growth phase of our
businesses."

Ms. Mitchell's annual salary (4 days per week) is $180,000.  The
Company and Ms. Mitchell will enter into a severance agreement
providing Ms. Mitchell with a severance benefit of up to six months
salary.  Subject to the approval of the Company's board of
directors, the Company will grant Ms. Mitchell a stock option to
purchase 200,000 shares of the Company's common stock, which will
vest over a four-year period with a one-year cliff of 25% followed
by vesting of 1/48th of the options granted for each month
thereafter, with accelerated vesting if she is terminated without
Cause or quits for Good Reason within twelve months of a Change in
Control.

Since the begining of the Company's last fiscal year and prior to
commencing her employment on March 1, 2019, Ms. Mitchell earned
approximately $150,000 in consulting fees from the Company and was
awarded 50,000 restricted stock that vested on Sept. 30, 2018.

                      About Giga-tronics

Headquartered in Dublin, California, Giga-tronics Incorporated is a
publicly held company, traded on the OTCQB Capital Market under the
symbol "GIGA", which produces an Advanced Signal Generator (ASG)
and an Advanced Signal Analyzer (ASA) for the electronic warfare
market and YIG (Yttrium, Iron, Garnet) RADAR filters used in
fighter jet aircraft.  Giga-tronics produces instruments,
subsystems and sophisticated microwave components that have broad
applications in defense electronics, aeronautics and wireless
telecommunications.

As of Dec. 29, 2018, Giga-Tronics had $6.59 million in total
assets, $5.35 million in total liabilities, and $1.23 million in
total shareholders' equity.  Giga-Tronics reported a net loss of
$3.10 million for the year ended March 31, 2018, compared to a net
loss of $1.54 million for the year ended March 25, 2017.

Armanino LLP's opinion included in the Company's Annual Report on
Form 10-K for the year ended March 31, 2018 contains a going
concern explanatory paragraph stating that the Company's
significant recurring losses and accumulated deficit raise
substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern.


GLANSAOL HOLDINGS: Seeks to Hire Global Tax  as Accountant
----------------------------------------------------------
Glansaol Holdings Inc. and its debtor-affiliates seek authority
from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New
York to hire Global Tax Management, Inc. as tax accountant nunc pro
tunc to January 28, 2019.

The firm will assist the Debtors in the preparation of tax returns,
advise the Debtors regarding federal, state and local tax matters,
and provide other accounting services requested by the Debtors.

GTM's hourly rates are:

     Managing Director   $385
     Sr. Manager         $305
     Manager             $265
     Supervisor          $225
     Senior              $205
     Staff               $160

John Diamond, managing director of GTM, attests that his firm
neither holds nor represents any interest adverse to the Debtors or
their bankruptcy estates, and is a "disinterested person" as that
term is defined in section 101(14) of the Bankruptcy Code.

The firm can be reached through:

     John Diamond
     Global Tax Management Inc.
     90 Woodbridge Center Drive, Suite 250
     Woodbridge, NJ 07095
     Phone: (908) 458-4540
     Fax: (908) 458-4541

                     About Glansaol Holdings

Headquartered in New York, Glansaol Holdings and its subsidiaries
are an independent prestige beauty and personal care companies.

On Dec. 19, 2018, Glansaol Holdings Inc. and seven of its
subsidiaries filed voluntary Chapter 11 petitions (Bankr. S.D.N.Y.
Lead Case No. 18-14102).  Glansaol estimated assets and liabilities
of $10 million to $50 million.

The Debtors tapped Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP as legal counsel;
Emerald Capital Advisors as financial advisor; and Omni Management
Group Inc. as claims and noticing agent.


GLOBAL HOTELS: Files Immaterially Modified Amended Plan Outline
---------------------------------------------------------------
Global Hotels International, LLC, filed an immaterially modified
amended disclosure statement explaining its Chapter 11 plan of
liquidation.

Under the Plan's proposed treatment of Class 2, General Unsecured
Claims will be paid in the event the total amount of the offset of
the Debtor's certificate of deposit and deposit account combined
with the net proceeds of the sales of Debtor's hotel and additional
tract are sufficient to satisfy the Class 1 claims of BOM, the
balance remaining will be used to pay the Class 2 General Unsecured
Claims in pro rata fashion, and without interest.

The secured pre-petition claims against Debtor are in one class,
held by BOM Bank. The Debtor will satisfy the secured claims of BOM
in the total amount of $4,280,373.98 from the auction sale of the
hotel and additional tract of land that serve as collateral for
BOM's claims in early spring 2019, in the event a suitable
buyer/offer is not received by BOM during the marketing period. BOM
will receive the net proceeds of such sale remaining after
commission due to any brokerage firm, auctioneering firm or other
party providing similar services in connection with the Plan Sale,
and after application of a surcharge in the amount of $285,000.00
for satisfaction of, inter alia, administrative and priority
claims, all of which amounts will be subject to Court approval via
separate motion(s).

The Debtor will satisfy priority tax claims by paying an amount
sufficient to pay the claims as filed with interest pursuant to 11
U.S.C. Section 511 by the payment of the same from proceeds of the
sale of Debtor's assets by virtue of a surcharge of funds in the
amount of $285,000.00 to be submitted to the Court for approval to
pay, inter alia, administrative and priority claims.

Payments and distributions under the Plan will be funded primarily
by the organized liquidation of Debtor's assets, and, to a lesser
extent, by the ongoing operations of the business during Debtor's
liquidation of assets.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement dated February 27,
2019, is available at
https://tinyurl.com/y2x2oft9 from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

                  About Global Hotels

Global Hotels International, LLC, is a provider of traveler
accommodations in Jonesboro, Louisiana.  Global Hotels
International, a single asset real estate as defined in 11 U.S.C.
Section 101(51B), is the fee simple owner of a real property
located 144 Old Winnsboro Road (consisting of 1.65 acres of land,
hotel, FF&E), valued by the Company at $4.10 million.

Global Hotels International filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr.
W.D. La. Case No. 18-30342) on Feb. 26, 2018.  In the petition
signed by Herbert Simmons, managing partner, the Debtor disclosed
$5.37 million in total assets and $4.39 million in total
liabilities.  

Judge Jeffrey P. Norman presides over the case.  Bradley L. Drell
and the law firm of Gold, Weems, Bruser, Sues & Rundell, APLC,
serve as the Debtor's counsel.


GMI GROUP: Seeks Authorization to Use Cash Collateral
-----------------------------------------------------
GMI Group, Inc., seeks authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Northern District of Georgia to use cash collateral.

Specifically, the Debtor is seeking authority to use approximately
$200,000 of proceeds of prepetition receivables which are, or may
be, the cash collateral of certain pre-petition lenders.

The Debtor is seeking authority to use Cash Collateral in
conjunction with its Emergency for Order Approving Postpetition
Financing. The Debtor proposes to use cash collateral for working
capital and general corporate needs of the Debtor as set forth in
Debtor's proposed budget is attached to the Financing Motion.

The Debtor believes Reliable Fast Cash, LLC, Unique Funding
Solutions, LLC, and Expansion Capital Group, or one or more of the
foregoing entities may claim liens on the Receivables or the
Collateral, or a part thereof.

Pursuant to its Financing Motion, the Debtor seeks authority to
grant to its Postpetition Lender, Commercial Finance of Atlanta,
Inc., a security interest in the Receivables and the other
Collateral that is senior to any lien on such property claimed by
the Prepetition Lenders pursuant to Section 364(d)(1).

While the Debtor may ultimately claim that the liens asserted by,
or that may be claimed by, one or more of the Prepetition Lenders
are avoidable or otherwise invalid or subject to setoff. But in any
case, the Debtor represents that such liens in favor of the
Prepetition Lenders, if valid, are adequately protected by the
equity cushion in the Receivables and other Collateral.

In addition, the Debtor is willing to provide adequate protection
for the use of the cash collateral: to wit, a replacement junior
lien in continuing ongoing accounts receivable and proceeds thereof
to the extent such liens are valid, properly perfected and
enforceable interests and in the same relative priority and cash
collateral may only be used for items in accordance with the
Court-approved budget.

              http://bankrupt.com/misc/ganb19-52577-4.pdf

                         About GMI Group

GMI Group, Inc. -- http://thegmigroup.com/-- is a janitorial
service company serving the Southeastern United States.
Established in 2005, the Company specializes in corporate sites,
multitenant, medical offices, universities, schools, manufacturing
plants, federal, state and local agency facilities.

GMI Group filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. N.D. Ga. Case No.
19-52577) on Feb. 14, 2019. In the petition signed by CEO Kayla
Dang, the Debtor disclosed $791,787 in assets and $1,621,246 in
liabilities.  The Debtor is represented by Shayna M. Steinfeld,
Esq. at Steinfeld & Steinfeld PC.


GMI GROUP: Seeks to Hire Steinfeld & Steinfeld as Counsel
---------------------------------------------------------
GMI Group, Inc. seeks authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Northern District of Georgia to hire Steinfeld & Steinfeld, PC,
Attorneys at Law as its legal counsel.

The firm will advise the Debtor of its rights and duties under the
Bankruptcy Code; conduct examinations incidental to the
administration of its Chapter 11 case; assist the Debtor in the
preparation of a bankruptcy plan; and provide other legal services
in connection with the case.  

The firm received $5,950 for legal fees and $1,717 for the filing
fee.

Shayna Steinfeld, Esq., president of Steinfeld and the attorney who
will be handling the case, attests that she is a disinterested
person and she does not hold any interest adverse to the Debtor's
estate in the matters upon which she is to be engaged.

The firm can be reached through:

     Shayna M. Steinfeld
     Steinfeld & Steinfeld, PC
     P.O. Box 49446
     Atlanta, Georgia 30359
     Phone: 404/636-7786
     Email: shayna@steinfeldlaw.com

                          About GMI Group, Inc.

GMI Group, Inc. -- http://thegmigroup.com-- is a janitorial
service company serving the Southeastern United States.
Established in 2005, the company specializes in corporate sites,
multitenant, medical offices, universities, schools, manufacturing
plants, federal, state and local agency facilities.

GMI Group filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. N.D. Ga. Case No.
19-52577) on February 14, 2019. In the petition signed by Kayla
Dang, chief executive officer, the Debtor estimated $791,787 in
total assets and $1,621,246 in total liabilities. Shayna M.
Steinfeld, Esq., at Steinfeld & Steinfeld, PC, is the Debtor's
counsel.


GNC HOLDINGS: Posts $58.8 Million Net Income in Fourth Quarter
--------------------------------------------------------------
GNC Holdings, Inc., reported consolidated revenue of $547.9 million
in the fourth quarter of 2018, compared with consolidated revenue
of $562.8 million in the fourth quarter of 2017.  The decrease was
mainly driven by the closure of company-owned stores from the
Company's store portfolio optimization strategy.

Key Updates

   * In February 2019, completed last tranche of the approximately
     $300 million investment ($100 million received in 2018) by
     Harbin and applied proceeds to pay down debt; a significant
     enhancement of the Company's capital position.

   * In connection with the Harbin transaction, GNC contributes
     the Hong Kong-based China e-commerce net assets in exchange
     for 35% interest in the Hong Kong-based China e-commerce
     joint venture.  This joint venture includes the operations of
     the existing profitable, growing cross border China e-
     commerce business.

   * Strategic joint venture with IVC will enable GNC to increase
     focus on product innovation while IVC manages manufacturing
     and integrates with GNC's supply chain thereby driving more
     efficient usage of capital.

   * The International segment continued to grow with an increase
     in revenue of 12.1% driven by sales in China, Mexico and
     South Korea.

   * GNC brand mix for domestic system-wide sales increased to 54%
     compared with 48% in the fourth quarter of 2017, and 52% in
     the third quarter of 2018.

Same store sales in domestic company-owned stores (including
GNC.com) decreased 0.6% in the fourth quarter of 2018.  In domestic
franchise locations, same store sales decreased 1.3%.

For the fourth quarter of 2018, the Company reported net income of
$58.8 million compared with a net loss of $212.7 million in the
prior year quarter.  Diluted earnings per share was $0.62 in the
fourth quarter compared with a loss of $3.03 in the prior year
quarter.  The fourth quarter was significantly impacted by an $88.9
million gain on forward contracts for the issuance of convertible
preferred stock in connection with the Harbin investment, and a
$23.7 million non-cash long-lived asset impairment charge related
to an indefinite-lived intangible asset ($21.6 million allocated to
the U.S and Canada segment with the remaining $2.1 million
allocated to the International segment.) The prior year quarter was
significantly impacted by $434.6 million in non-cash long-lived
asset impairment charges, of which $395.6 million related to an
indefinite-lived intangible asset ($394.0 million allocated to the
U.S. and Canada segment with the remaining $1.6 million allocated
to the International segment), $24.3 million related to goodwill in
the Manufacturing / Wholesale segment and $14.7 million related to
property and equipment in the U.S. and Canada segment.  The Company
also recorded a non-cash tax benefit of $86.8 million in the prior
year quarter from the revaluing of its net deferred tax liabilities
as a result of the enacted Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017.
Excluding certain items,  adjusted net loss was $10.0 million in
the fourth quarter of 2018 compared with adjusted net income of
$18.5 million in the prior year quarter, and adjusted EPS was a
loss of $0.13 in the fourth quarter of 2018 compared with EPS of
$0.26 in the prior year quarter.

Adjusted EBITDA was $35.0 million in the fourth quarter of 2018
compared with $56.3 million in the prior year quarter.

"While fourth quarter operating results were below our
expectations, we recently achieved some major milestones in
repositioning the company.  The completion of Harbin's $300 million
strategic investment strengthens our capital structure and will
accelerate our growth plans in China, while our $176 million
strategic partnership with International Vitamin Corporation will
create meaningful efficiencies in manufacturing, further strengthen
the innovation and product development capabilities that set GNC
apart and drive further reductions in our debt," said Ken
Martindale, GNC's Chairman and CEO.

Segment Operating Performance

U.S. & Canada

Revenues in the U.S. and Canada segment decreased $17.1 million, or
3.7%, to $445.0 million for the three months ended Dec. 31, 2018
compared with $462.1 million in the prior year quarter.  E-commerce
sales were 9.3% of U.S. and Canada revenue for the three months
ended Dec. 31, 2018 compared with 8.4% in the prior year quarter.

The decrease in revenue compared with the prior year quarter was
primarily due to the impact of company-owned net store closures,
which contributed an approximate $10 million decrease in revenue,
and negative same store sales of 0.6%, which resulted in a revenue
decrease of $1.9 million.  In addition, domestic franchise revenue
declined $5.0 million in the fourth quarter of 2018 compared with
the prior year period, due to a decrease in retail same store sales
as well as a reduction in the number of franchise stores.

Operating loss was $5.9 million for the three months ended
Dec. 31, 2018 compared with an operating loss of $378.9 million for
the same period in 2017.  Excluding non-cash impairment charges in
the fourth quarter of 2018 and 2017 and immaterial gains on
refranchising in the fourth quarter 2018, operating income was
$15.4 million, or 3.5% of segment revenue, in the fourth quarter of
2018, compared with $29.7 million, or 6.4% of segment revenue, in
the prior year quarter.  The decrease in operating income was
primarily due to the impact of the new loyalty program, a reserve
related to risk associated with a third party vendor, an increase
in store commissions associated with a higher sales mix of
proprietary product and the comparative effect of a 2017 fourth
quarter legal settlement associated with the media launch of One
New GNC.  The decreases were partially offset by a higher sales mix
of proprietary product which contribute higher margins relative to
third-party sales.

International

Revenues in the International segment increased $5.5 million, or
12.1%, to $51.3 million for the three months ended Dec. 31, 2018
compared with $45.8 million in the prior year quarter.  Revenue
from the Company's China business increased by $3.3 million due to
higher cross border e-commerce sales.  Revenue from the Company's
international franchisees increased by $2.3 million despite a
decrease in retail same store sales (in local currency) of 3.0%.
Operating income decreased $0.5 million to $13.7 million, or 26.8%
of segment revenue, for the three months ended Dec. 31, 2018.
Excluding start-up costs related to the China joint ventures in the
fourth quarter of 2018 and indefinite-lived intangible asset
impairment charges in the fourth quarter of 2018 and 2017,
operating income in the fourth quarter was $16.5 million, or 32.2%
of segment revenue, compared with $15.8 million, or 34.5% of
segment revenue, in the prior year quarter.  The decrease in
operating income percentage was primarily due to higher mix of
China sales, which contribute lower margins relative to franchise
sales.  In addition, as the Company invests to grow the brand in
China, marketing expense increased in its China business compared
with the prior year quarter.

Manufacturing / Wholesale

Revenues in the Manufacturing / Wholesale segment, excluding
intersegment sales, decreased $3.4 million, or 6.1%, to $51.6
million for the three months ended Dec. 31, 2018 compared with
$55.0 million in the prior year quarter primarily due to a $2.5
million correction related to previously recorded revenue for
specialty manufacturing.  Intersegment sales increased $14.4
million reflecting the Company's increasing focus on proprietary
products.

Operating income was $15.1 million for the three months ended
Dec. 31, 2018 compared with an operating loss of $5.9 million in
the prior year quarter.  Excluding non-cash impairment charges in
the prior year quarter, operating income decreased $3.3 million
from $18.4 million, or 16.5% of segment revenue, in the prior year
quarter, to $15.1 million, or 12.4% of segment revenue, in the
fourth quarter of 2018 due to a lower margin rate from third-party
contract manufacturing and the correction mentioned above,
partially offset by higher intersegment sales, which contribute
higher margins.

Full Year Performance

For the year ended Dec. 31, 2018, the Company reported consolidated
revenue of $2,353.5 million, a decrease of $127.5 million compared
with consolidated revenue of $2,481.0 million for the year ended
Dec. 31, 2017.  Revenue in the prior year includes $66.2 million
from Lucky Vitamin, which was sold on Sept. 30, 2017, and $23.0
million recognition of deferred revenue related to the U.S. Gold
Card Member Pricing program, which was terminated in December 2016.
The Gold Card impact was offset by a current year increase of
$32.9 million related to its loyalty program, PRO Access paid
membership fees and the myGNC Rewards change in deferred points
liability.

Same store sales in domestic company-owned stores (including
GNC.com sales) decreased 0.6% for the full year 2018 compared with
2017.  In domestic franchise locations, same store sales decreased
2.9%.

For the full year 2018, the Company reported net income of $69.8
million and diluted EPS of $0.81 compared with net loss of $150.3
million and diluted loss per share of $2.18 for the full year 2017.
Excluding certain items, adjusted diluted EPS was $0.34 and $1.38
for the full year 2018 and 2017, respectively.

Cash Flow and Liquidity Metrics

For the full year 2018, the Company generated net cash from
operating activities of $95.9 million compared with $220.5 million
for the full year 2017.  The decrease was primarily due to reduced
operating performance, the comparative effect of a $76.4 million
inventory reduction in the prior year as part of the Company's
supply chain optimization launched at the end of 2016, higher
interest payments of $53.1 million, and the refinancing of the
Company's long-term debt, which resulted in $16.3 million in fees
paid to third-parties, partially offset by lower tax payments and a
$12.4 million tax refund received in the fourth quarter of 2018.
For the full year 2018, the Company generated $95.7 million in free
cash flow, compared with $196.7 million for the full year 2017.
The Company defines free cash flow as cash provided by operating
activities (excluding fees relating to the debt refinancing) less
cash used in investing activities.  At Dec. 31, 2018, the Company's
cash and cash equivalents were $67.2 million and debt was $1.2
billion.  No borrowings were outstanding on the Revolving Credit
Facility.

Subsequent to year end, the Company completed the $300 million
Harbin transaction with $200 million being received in 2019.
Additionally, the Company received $101 million from IVC for the
new joint venture as mentioned above.  The Company utilized the
proceeds and paid down the remaining balance of the Tranche B-1
Term Loan and applied the remaining proceeds to the Tranche B-2
Term Loan reducing total debt from $1,152 million as of Dec. 31,
2018 to $887 million as of March 4, 2019.

                       About GNC Holdings

GNC Holdings, Inc., headquartered in Pittsburgh, PA, is a global
specialty retailer of health, wellness and performance products,
including protein, performance supplements, weight management
supplements, vitamins, herbs and greens, wellness supplements,
health and beauty, food and drink and other general merchandise.
As of Dec. 31, 2018, GNC had approximately 8,400 locations, of
which approximately 6,200 retail locations are in the United States
(including approximately 2,200 Rite Aid licensed
store-within-a-store locations) and franchise operations in
approximately 50 countries.

GNC Holdings incurred a net loss of $148.9 million in 2017 and a
net loss of $286.3 million in 2016.  As of Dec. 31, 2018, GNC
Holdings had $1.52 billion in total assets, $1.54 billion in total
liabilities, $99.76 million in convertible preferred stock, and a
total stockholders' deficit of $115.26 million.

                           *    *    *

As reported by the TCR on Nov. 15, 2018, S&P Global Ratings
affirmed its 'CCC+' issuer credit rating on Pittsburgh-based
vitamin and supplement retailer GNC Holdings Inc. and removed all
of its ratings on the company from CreditWatch, where S&P placed
them with negative implications on Feb. 14, 2018.  "The affirmation
reflects our belief that GNC's capital structure remains
unsustainable over the long term in light of its current operating
performance, including its cash flow generation, because of
increased competitive threats amid the ongoing secular changes in
the retail industry.


GOD'S HOUSE OF REFUGE: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
---------------------------------------------------------------
No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Chapter 11 case of God's House of Refuge Christian Center, Inc.
as of March 4, according to a court docket.
   
           About God's House of Refuge Christian Center

God's House of Refuge Christian Center, Inc., a religious
organization in Cocoa, Florida, sought protection under Chapter 11
of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 18-07997) on
December 28, 2018.  It previously sought bankruptcy protection on
May 19, 2017 (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 17-03291) and on Nov. 19,
2018 (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 18-07201).

At the time of the filing, the Debtor had estimated assets of $1
million to $10 million and liabilities of $1 million to $10
million.  

The Debtor tapped Mathis Law Group as its bankruptcy counsel.


GOODWILL INDUSTRIES: Gets Approval to Continue to Employ FTI
------------------------------------------------------------
Goodwill Industries of Southern Nevada, Inc. received approval from
the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Nevada to continue to
employ its financial advisor FTI Consulting, Inc.

The Debtor said it needs the services of FTI whose term of
employment expired after Jan. 31 since there are specific items
that still need to be completed.  

The services to be provided by the firm include (i) preparing the
liquidation analysis; (ii) assisting with the covenant calculations
and loan document language by negotiating with bondholders and
their advisors; (iii) participating in weekly status calls with the
bondholders and the Debtor; (iv) reviewing weekly cash flow
reporting; and (v) answering questions of the bondholder's
advisors.

FTI will be paid a flat fee of $20,000 per month.  However, for
April 2019, the monthly fee will be prorated as to amount due for
the period from April 1 through the date the bankruptcy court
enters an order confirming the Debtor's Chapter 11 plan.  In
addition, the firm will be reimbursed up to $10,000 per month for
work-related expenses.

                   About Goodwill Industries of
                       Southern Nevada Inc.

Founded in 1975 and headquartered in North Las Vegas, Nevada,
Goodwill of Southern Nevada -- http://www.goodwill.vegas/-- is a
registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit, accepts the communities' gifts in
the form of donated goods and sells those items to provide free job
training and placement services for unemployed locals.

In 2016, Goodwill of Southern Nevada served the job training needs
of 14,465 and directly placed 3,004 individuals into local jobs.
Goodwill also makes a significant impact on the environment through
recycling and reuse practices.  In 2016, there were 873,624
generous donors of goods who helped Goodwill divert over 26 million
pounds from its local landfills.

Goodwill Industries -- d/b/a Goodwill of Southern Nevada, Goodwill
Deja Blue Boutique, Goodwill Store/Donation Center, Goodwill
Clearance Center, Goodwill Select, and Goodwill Donation Center --
filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection (Bankr. D. Nev. Case No.
17-14398) on Aug. 11, 2017.  In the petition signed by John
Hederman, interim CEO, Goodwill Industries estimated its assets and
debt at between $10 million and $50 million.

Judge Bruce T. Beeley oversees the case.

Zachariah Larson, Esq., at Larson & Zirzow, LLC, serves as the
Debtor's bankruptcy counsel. The Debtor hired Kamer Zucker Abbott;
and Greenberg Traurig, LLP, as special counsel; Piercy Bowler
Taylor & Kern Certified Public Accountants & Business Advisors as
accountant and auditor; and FTI Consulting, Inc., as financial
advisor.


GREENPARTS INTERNATIONAL: Case Summary & 9 Unsecured Creditors
--------------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Greenparts International, Inc.
        844 Regina Drive, NW
        Atlanta, GA 30318

Business Description: Greenparts International, Inc. is a
                      recycling company with multiple locations in

                      Atlanta, Georgia.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: March 5, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Northern District of Georgia (Atlanta)

Case No.: 19-53617

Debtor's Counsel: Will B. Geer, Esq.
                  WIGGAM & GEER, LLC
                  Suite 1245
                  50 Hurt Plaza SE
                  Atlanta, GA 30303
                  Tel: (678) 587-8740
                  Fax: (404) 287-2767
                  Email: wgeer@wiggamgeer.com

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Asif Balagamwala, president.

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

            http://bankrupt.com/misc/ganb19-53617.pdf


GROUP GOLF: May 6 Plan Confirmation Hearing
-------------------------------------------
The disclosure statement explaining Group Golf of Palm Coast, LLC's
Chapter 11 Plan is conditionally approved.

May 6, 2019, is fixed for the hearing on final approval of the
disclosure statement and for the hearing on confirmation of the
plan. The hearing will be held at 2:30 p.m., in 4th Floor Courtroom
D, 300 North Hogan Street, Jacksonville, Florida.  Any objections
to Disclosure or Confirmation shall be filed and served seven (7)
days before the date set forth above.

Class 7. Allowed General Unsecured Claims (Estimated at $20,000).
Allowed unsecured claims will be paid in full on the Effective
Date.

Class 6. Allowed Secured Claim of the City of Palm Coast (Claim No.
7, $165,373.73). The Debtor will separately file an objection to
the amount of this claim as the Debtor contests liability for the
amount stated. After judicial determination, the allowed secured
claim will be paid in full on the Effective Date.

The payments required under this plan will be funded from the sale
of the subject real estate holdings of the Debtor.

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement dated February 20,
2019, is available at https://tinyurl.com/y4pl49g2 from
PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

                About Group Golf of Palm Coast

Group Golf of Palm Coast, LLC sought protection under Chapter 11 of
the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 18-01581) on May 10,
2018.  Judge Paul M. Glenn presides over the case.  The Debtor
tapped the Law Offices of Scott W. Spradley, P.A. as its legal
counsel.


HG VENTURES: U.S. Trustee Objects to Disclosure Statement
---------------------------------------------------------
Andrew R. Vara, Acting United States Trustee, objects to the
Disclosure Statement explaining HG Ventures, Inc., dba Diamond Head
Trucking's Chapter 11 Plan.

The Trustee asserts that the Disclosure Statement does not include
the required information regarding the Debtor's finances.

The Trustee complains that the Disclosure Statement does not
adequately explain whether the Plan is dependent on the success of
the Debtor in objecting to or modifying various claims. According
to the Trustee, the Disclosure Statement states the Debtor will
institute an adversary action against several creditors to
establish the secured and unsecured amounts, in addition to
objecting to various claims.

The Trustee complains that the Disclosure Statement does not
identify whether the Debtor has the resources to fund a Plan
without succeeding on its future litigation.

The Trustee points out that the Disclosure Statement states the
United States Trustee shall be paid $5,000 for "Court Costs . . .
[t]o be paid in full on the Plan Effective Date." [Doc. 208, p. 11,
Par. IV.5], presumably, the Debtor is referring to the United
States Trustee quarterly fees due. The Trustee further point out
that the amount due for payment of the United States Trustee
quarterly fees is currently $26,204.45,this is the amount due for
the fourth quarter of 2018, which was due by January 31, 2019.

                      About HG Ventures, Inc.
                    dba Diamond Head Trucking

HG Ventures, Inc., dba Diamond Head Trucking, based in Finleyville,
Pennsylvania, filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. W.D. Pa. Case No.
18-22478) on June 19, 2018.  The Hon. Gregory L. Taddonio presides
over the case.  In the petition signed by Dave Golupski, president,
the Debtor estimated $0 to $50,000 in assets and $1 million to $10
million in liabilities.  Calaiaro Valencik, led by name partner
Donald R. Calaiaro, serves as bankruptcy counsel to the Debtor.


HILL ENTERPRISES: Taps Professional Management as Accountant
------------------------------------------------------------
Hill Enterprises of NW FL, Inc. seeks approval from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Florida to hire
Professional Management Systems, Inc. as accountant.

The firm will provide these services:

     a. give the Debtor financial and accounting advice with
respect to its powers and duties in the continued management of its
property;

     b. prepare operating reports and financial projections
regarding the administration of the Debtor's bankruptcy estate; and


     d. take necessary actions instant to the proper preservation
and administration of the estate.

Professional Management Systems will charge $65 per hour for its
accounting services. In addition, the firm will provide general
bookkeeping services as needed at the rate of $65 as well as income
tax preparation services at a flat rate per return.

Georgia Evans, accountant at Professional Management Systems,
disclosed in a court filing that she and her firm neither hold nor
represent an interest adverse to the Debtor and its bankruptcy
estate.

The accountant can be reached at:

     Georgia Evans
     Professional Management Systems
     512 Pennsylvania Ave.
     Lynn Haven, FL 32444
     Phone: 850-441-2000
     Fax: 866-401-5685
     Email: georgia@payrollandaccounting.net

                     About Hill Enterprises of NW FL

Hill Enterprises of NW FL, Inc., which conducts business under the
name Fishale Tap House and Grill, operates a seafood restaurant in
Panama Beach, Florida.

Hill Enterprises of NW FL sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D. Fla. Case No. 18-50325) on Dec. 4,
2018.  At the time of the filing, the Debtor estimated assets of
less than $1 million and liabilities of $1 million to $10 million.
The case has been assigned to Judge Karen K. Specie.  Charles M.
Wynn Law Offices, P.A. is the Debtor's legal counsel.


HOME BOUND HEALTHCARE: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
--------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Home Bound Healthcare, Inc.
        1615 Vollmer Rd
        Flossmoor, IL 60422

Business Description: Home Bound Healthcare, Inc. is a home health

                      care company that offers outpatient therapy,

                      nursing, occupational, and rehabilitation
                      services.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: March 5, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Northern District of Illinois (Eastern Division)

Case No.: 19-05760

Judge: Hon. Janet S. Baer

Debtor's Counsel: John D. Ioakimidis, Esq.
                  JOHN D. IOAKIMIDIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW
                  8770 W. Bryn Mawr Ave, Suite 1300
                  Chicago, IL 60631
                  Tel: 312-593-1765
                  Fax: 800-604-0507
                  Email: jioakimidis@gmail.com

Estimated Assets: $500,000 to $1 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Julieta Mitra, president.

The Debtor failed to submit a list of its 20 largest unsecured
creditors at the time of the filing.

A full-text copy of the petition is available for free at:

         http://bankrupt.com/misc/ilnb19-05760.pdf


HORIZON PHARMA: Moody's Puts B2 CFR under Review for Upgrade
------------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service placed the ratings of Horizon Pharma USA,
Inc., a subsidiary of Horizon Pharma plc (collectively "Horizon")
under review for upgrade. Ratings placed under review include the
B2 Corporate Family Rating, the B2-PD Probability of Default
Rating, the Ba2 senior secured rating and the B3 senior unsecured
rating. At the same time, Moody's affirmed the SGL-1 Speculative
Grade Liquidity Rating.

This rating action follows the announcement that Horizon plans to
issue $300 million of equity and, together with cash on hand, will
use the proceeds to repay approximately $550 million of debt. The
deleveraging is credit positive.

Moody's review will focus on the impact of the equity offering on
Horizon's credit metrics and on its financial policies including
appetite for debt-financed acquisitions. The review will also
consider opportunities from Horizon's late stage development
pipeline including teprotumumab, an experimental drug for thyroid
eye disease. Last week, Horizon reported favorable Phase III data
for teproptumumab.

Ratings placed under review for upgrade:

Issuer: Horizon Pharma USA, Inc.

Corporate Family Rating, B2

Probability of Default Rating, B2-PD

Senior secured term loan, Ba2 (LGD2)

Senior unsecured notes, B3 (LGD4)

Rating affirmed:

Issuer: Horizon Pharma USA, Inc.

Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating, at SGL-1

Outlook actions:

Issuer: Horizon Pharma USA, Inc.

Revised to Rating Under Review from Stable

RATINGS RATIONALE

Horizon's B2 Corporate Family Rating (under review for upgrade)
reflects its modest size within the pharmaceutical industry with
annual revenue of about $1.2 billion. Horizon's efficient operating
structure, with high profit margins and a low tax rate, results in
good cash flow. Horizon's drugs for rare diseases have high price
points, solid growth potential, and generally high barriers to
entry. Key pipeline opportunities include the thyroid eye disease
drug teprotumumab and expanding uses of Krystexxa.

However, the rating reflects high financial leverage, prior to the
pending equity offering, and the risks associated with a business
transformation towards rare disease products. Horizon's primary
care business faces weak volume trends, pricing pressure, and
unresolved legal exposures. The durability of the primary care
products is uncertain because of payer pushback, and several face
unresolved patent challenges.

Headquartered in Lake Forest, Illinois, Horizon Pharma USA, Inc.,
is an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Dublin, Ireland-based
Horizon Pharma plc. Horizon is a publicly-traded pharmaceutical
company focused on developing and commercializing innovative
medicines that address unmet treatment needs for rare and rheumatic
diseases. Net annual revenues total approximately $1.2 billion.


HOUSTON TRANSPORTATION: Gets Final Nod on Financing, Use Cash
-------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Jeffrey P. Norman of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of Texas has issued a final order authorizing
Houston Transportation Services, LLC to (a) obtain unsecured
postpetition financing, and (n) to spend cash collateral as
provided for under the Final Budget.

According to approved Final Budget, the Debtor projects total cash
disbursements of approximately $486,233 during the period
commencing Jan. 21, 2019 through May 3, 2019.

The DIP Lender will be entitled to an administrative claim for the
full amount borrowed by the Debtor following the Petition Date as
well as all accrued interest on such amount.

The Debtor stipulates that Independent Bank has an interest in the
cash collateral, but the Court makes no determination as to what
other entities, if any, have an interest in the cash collateral
that is authorized to be spent under the Final Order.

Independent Bank and any other entities with an interest in the
cash collateral, if any, are granted the following as adequate
protection for any diminishment in the value of their collateral,
with all rights attaching in the same priority as existed on the
Petition Date:

      (a) An administrative claim under Section 507(b), to the
maximum extent allowed by law.

      (b) A replacement lien on any assets acquired by the Debtor
from and after entry of the Final Order.

      (c) Interest payments on the Debtor's indebtedness to
Independent Bank monthly on the first day of each month beginning
March 1, 2019, until an order is entered confirming the Debtor's
plan of reorganization.

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

           http://bankrupt.com/misc/txsb19-30271-34.pdf

              About Houston Transportation Services

Houston Transportation Services, LLC, is privately held company in
Houston, Texas, in the taxicab business.  HTS was originally formed
in 2005 as a limited partnership and converted to a limited
liability company in 2010.  HTS was founded for the purpose of
purchasing City of Houston Taxicab Permits to be operated by a
fleet of independent contractor drivers.  HTS leased property which
contained offices and a maintenance facility where the
company-owned vehicles and driver-owned vehicles could be
maintained and repaired.

Houston Transportation Services filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr.
S.D. Tex. Case No. 19-30271) on Jan. 21, 2019.  In the petition
signed by Duane Kamins, manager, the Debtor estimated $1 million to
$10 million in assets and the same range of liabilities as of the
bankruptcy filing.  The case is assigned to Judge Jeffrey P.
Norman.  The Debtor's counsel is Okin Adams LLP.


INNOVATIVE MATTRESS: Gets Final Approval on $14-Mil Loan, Cash Use
------------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Gregory R. Schaaf of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Eastern District of Kentucky authorized Innovative Mattress
Solutions, LLC ("iMS") and its affiliated debtors (a) to obtain
from Tempur World, LLC, as the DIP Lender, secured postpetition
financing pursuant to the terms set forth in the DIP Loan Documents
and the Final Order, up to an aggregate principal amount of
$14,000,000 (inclusive of the amount that the Debtors were
authorized to borrow under the Interim Order); and (b) to use cash
collateral in accordance with the Budget.

The Debtors have delivered to the DIP Lender a detailed 13-week
budget that sets forth projected cash receipts and cash
disbursements (by line item) on a weekly basis for the time period
from and including the Petition Date through the week ending April
14, 2019.

To secure the DIP Obligations, Tempur World is granted: (i)
perfected new liens on and security interests in all assets that
constitute DIP Collateral of each of the Borrower/Guarantors to the
extent that such DIP Collateral is not subject to Permitted
Priority Liens; (ii) a perfected lien on the DIP Collateral junior
to any Permitted Priority Liens on such DIP Collateral, and (iii)
the DIP Liens will rank senior in priority to all liens other than
any Permitted Priority Liens or those valid, perfected, and
unavoidable liens existing on the Debtors' assets either recognized
by or described in the Interim Order or the Final DIP Order.

The DIP Lender is granted an allowed superpriority administrative
expense claim in each of the Debtors' Chapter 11 Cases and in any
successor cases under the Bankruptcy Code (including any case or
cases under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code) for all DIP
Obligations, to have priority over any and all administrative
expenses of and unsecured claims against any of the Debtors now
existing or hereafter arising, of any kind or nature whatsoever.

The DIP Superpriority Claim will be senior in all respects to any
superpriority claims granted in these Chapter 11 Cases including,
without limitation, on account of any break-up fee or expense
reimbursement that may be granted by the Court in connection with
any sale of the Debtors' assets, and the Adequate Protection
Superpriority Claim.

Tempur World, in its capacity as Prepetition Lender, may claim an
interest in cash collateral which was pledged to secure the
prepetition obligations owed pursuant to the Prepetition
Facilities. The Debtors' primary prepetition secured liabilities
consist of: (i) a term note credit facility; and (ii) a line of
credit facility. As of the Petition Date, approximately $1.3
million was due under the Prepetition Term Loan, which is secured
by a first-priority lien on the Prepetition Collateral. The
Prepetition LOC Loan is also secured by the Prepetition Collateral,
and approximately $2.4 million was due under the Prepetition LOC
Loan as of the Petition Date.

Tempur World, in its capacity as Prepetition Lender, is granted the
following adequate protection:

      (a) The Pre-Petition Lender is granted valid, perfected
replacement security interests in and liens on all of the DIP
Collateral to secure the amount of any Diminution Claim, provided
that the Adequate Protection Liens will attach to Avoidance
Proceeds upon entry of the Final Order. The Adequate Protection
Liens will be junior and subordinate only to the Carve-Out, the DIP
Liens, and any liens that are senior to the DIP Liens as and to the
extent expressly provided in the Final Order.

      (b) The PrePetition Lender is also granted a superpriority
claim with priority over all administrative expense claims and
unsecured claims against the Debtors or their estates, now existing
or hereafter arising, of any kind or nature whatsoever, which
allowed Adequate Protection Superpriority Claim will be payable
from all pre- and postpetition property of the Debtors and all
proceeds thereof including, without limitation, any Avoidance
Actions proceeds upon entry of the Final Order. The Adequate
Protection Superpriority Claim will be subordinate and subject only
to the DIP Superpriority Claim and payment of the Carve-Out. Each
Adequate Protection Superpriority Claim will maintain its priority
relative to the Pre-Petition Indebtedness as set forth in the
Pre-Petition Financing Agreement.

The DIP Liens, the DIP Superpriority Claim, the Adequate Protection
Superpriority Claims and the Pre-Petition Secured Liens will be
subject and subordinate only to Permitted Priority Liens and
payment of:

      (i) fees payable to the U.S. Trustee, in such amounts as
determined in agreement with the U.S. Trustee or by a final order
of the Court, and fees payable to the Clerk of the Court;

      (ii) unpaid professional fees and expenses payable to any
legal or financial advisors retained by the Debtors or any
Creditors' Committee that are incurred or accrued prior to the date
on which the DIP Lender provides written notice to the Debtors and
the Creditors' Committee of the occurrence of the Termination Date,
but solely if, as and to the extent such Professional Fees are or
have been provided for in, and are consistent with, the DIP Budget
(subject to the Permitted Variance) and are ultimately allowed by
the Court pursuant to section 330 of the Bankruptcy Code, and

      (iii) unpaid Debtors' Professional Fees incurred or accrued
on or after the date on which the DIP Lender provides written
notice to the Debtors of the occurrence of the Termination Date in
an aggregate amount not to exceed $150,000 and Committee's
Professional Fees incurred or accrued on or after the date on which
the DIP Lender provides written notice to the Creditors' Committee
of the occurrence of the Termination Date in an aggregate amount
not to exceed $25,000.

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

            http://bankrupt.com/misc/kyeb19-50042-302.pdf

                     About Innovative Mattress

Innovative Mattress Solutions, LLC, operates 142 specialty sleep
retail locations primarily in the southeastern U.S. under the names
Sleep Outfitters, Mattress Warehouse, and Mattress King. It offers
sleep outfitters, complete beds, electric adjustable beds, bed bug
protectors, sheets and pillows.  Innovative Mattress Solutions was
founded in 1983 and is based in Lexington, Kentucky.

Innovative Mattress Solutions, LLC, and 10 affiliates sought
Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. E.D. Ky. Lead Case No. 19-50042) on
Jan. 11, 2019.  The Hon. Gregory R. Schaaf is the case judge.
Innovative Mattress estimated assets of $10 million to $50 million
and liabilities of the same range.  The Debtors tapped Delcotto Law
Group PLLC as counsel; Jackson Kelly PLLC, and Morris Nichols Arsht
& Tunnell LLP, as special counsels; Brown, Edwards & Company,
L.L.P. as accountant; and Conway Mackenzie, Inc. as financial
advisor.


INSCOPE INTERNATIONAL: U.S. Trustee Forms 5-Member Committee
------------------------------------------------------------
John Fitzgerald, III, acting U.S. trustee for Region 4, on March 1
appointed five creditors to serve on the official committee of
unsecured creditors in the Chapter 11 case of InScope
International, Inc.

The committee members are:

     (1) Kanor Systems Inc.
         c/o Naveen Singh  
         13889 Walney Park Dr.  
         Chantilly, VA 20151
         Email: naveen@kanorsystems.com  
         Phone: (270) 320-1783

     (2) Leidos, Inc.
         c/o Glenn Nozick
         700 North Frederick Ave.
         Gaithersburg, MD 20879
         Email: Glen.s.nozick@leidos.com
         Phone: (301) 980-5174

     (3) JBMICRO Inc.
         c/o Maninder Chhabra
         3226 Diablo Ave.
         Hayward, CA 84545
         Email: mani@jbmicro.com
         Phone: (650) 346-5788

     (4) Seven Senz DBA  
         Your CyberSecurity Matters
         19 Rutledge Court Sterling, VA 20165
         Steven.senz@yourcybersecuritymatters.com
         (703) 307-8665

     (5) ClearFocus Technologies LLC
         c/o Kevin Cassidy
         305 Harrison Street SE, Suite 100B
         Leesburg, VA 20175
         Email: kcassidy@clearfocustech.com
         Phone: (703) 785-0766

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 InScope International Inc.

InScope International, Inc. --
https://www.inscopeinternational.com/ -- provides management,
scientific, and technical consulting services.  It combines
technology and staffing expertise to serve clients that address
complex issues in both the private and public sectors.  Since 2002,
InScope has grown its expertise from a specialized, regional
technology staffing firm to a diversified consulting and
integration company.  

InScope International sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E.D. Va. Case No. 19-10230) on January 23,
2019.  At the time of the filing, the Debtor had estimated assets
of less than $1 million and liabilities of $1 million to $10
million.  

The case has been assigned to Judge Klinette H. Kindred.  Hirschler
Fleischer PC is the Debtor's legal counsel.


INTERNATIONAL IRON: Seeks to Hire Byrd Campbell as Special Counsel
------------------------------------------------------------------
International Iron, LLC seeks approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Middle District of Florida to hire Byrd Campbell,
P.A. as special counsel.

The firm will represent the Debtor in a civil case it filed against
Kubota Corporation.  The U.S. District Court for the Middle
District of Florida oversees the case.

Byrd Campbell has agreed to handle the case on a contingency basis
and will receive 40% of the gross amount recovered from the case.
The firm has agreed to share 20% of the contingency fee with
associating counsel, Winderweedle, Haines & Woodman, P.A.

As disclosed in the court filing, Byrd Campbell does not represent
the individual interest of any insider or affiliate of the Debtor.

The firm can be reached at:

     Tucker H. Byrd, Esq.
     Byrd Campbell, P.A.
     180 Park Avenue, Suite 2A
     Winter Park, FL 32789
     Phone: (407) 392-2285
     Fax: (407) 392-2286

                 About International Iron

International Iron, LLC, an industrial equipment supplier in
Florida, sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code
(Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 19-00724) on Feb. 2, 2019.  At the time
of the filing, the Debtor disclosed $1,922,795 in assets and
$3,588,520 in liabilities.  Winderweedle, Haines, Ward & Woodman,
P.A. is the Debtor's counsel.


J.C. PENNEY: S&P Cuts ICR to CCC+ on Weak Performance, Outlook Neg
------------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings on March 5 lowered the ratings on U.S.
department store operator J.C. Penney Co. Inc. (JCP), including the
issuer credit rating to 'CCC+' from 'B-'. At the same time, S&P
assigned a 'CCC+' issuer credit rating to the company.

S&P took the rating actions after JCP announced weak fourth quarter
results and faces intense industry headwinds as new management
works to turn around its persistently negative operating trends.

The downgrade reflects S&P's view that JCP's competitive standing
has continued to weaken materially. Prior poor inventory
management, underinvestment in omni-channel capabilities, and years
of inconsistent brand messaging have created an unappealing
shopping experience that has translated to persistent traffic
declines. S&P views JCP's modest maturities over the next 12 to 18
months as manageable without refinancing ($50 million due in
October 2019 and $110 million due in June 2020). However, S&P
believes the company has limited time to significantly improve
operating trends and cash flows in order to meet its sizeable
long-term debt obligations. This is because more than half of JCP's
capital structure matures in July 2023, including its $1.6 billion
term loan facility and $500 million senior secured notes. If
performance does not improve and long-term maturities are not
refinanced, S&P could consider its capital structure
unsustainable.

"The negative outlook reflects the heightened execution risk as JCP
implements its new strategies and eliminates initiatives from
previous management. We also expect the competitive landscape to
become increasingly competitive in 2019 as the economic growth
slows and consumer discretionary spending declines," S&P said. S&P
said it forecasts fixed-charge coverage to remain in the mid-1.0x
area and FOCF to be moderately positive (driven by meaningful
working capital cash inflow) at fiscal year-end 2019.

S&P said it could lower the ratings if it envisions a specific
default scenario occurring over the subsequent 12 months. "This
could happen if JCP's turnaround strategy does not appear to be
gaining traction with customers or if the company continues to
experience self-inflicted operational missteps.  This scenario
could lead us to believe that the likelihood of a distressed
exchange or proactive debt restructuring has increased," S&P said.

S&P said it could revise the outlook to stable if it expects the
company to meaningfully improve profitability and free operating
cash flow on a sustained basis. "This could occur if the company
establishes a track record of effective inventory management and
operational improvement, and announces a clear and viable long-term
business and financial strategy that we believe will support
sustained profit growth," S&P said.  "We would expect improvement
in cash flow to be driven primarily by stronger operating
performance instead of working capital benefit, which we do not
view as sustainable in the long term."


JAGUAR HEALTH: All Seven Proposals Approved at Special Meeting
--------------------------------------------------------------
Jaguar Health, Inc. announced the voting results from the Special
Meeting of Stockholders of the Company that was held on Feb. 28,
2019.  At the Special Meeting, the stockholders approved:

   1. an amendment of the Company's 2014 Stock Incentive Plan to
      allow for a stock exchange program under which eligible
      Company employees and consultants (excluding directors and
      executive officers) would have the opportunity to exchange
      certain underwater stock options for a lesser number of
      RSUs;

   2. an amendment of the 2014 Plan to allow for a stock exchange
      program under which eligible Company directors and executive

      officers (excluding other employees) would have the
      opportunity to exchange certain underwater stock options for

      a lesser number of RSUs;

   3. an amendment of the 2014 Plan to increase the number of
      shares of Common Stock authorized for issuance under the
      2014 Plan by 3,533,826 shares;

   4. an amendment of the 2014 Plan to extend the annual evergreen
      provision for a period of five years up to and including
      Jan. 1, 2024;

   5. for purposes of Nasdaq Rule 5635(d), the issuance of up to
      8,000,000 shares of Common Stock that may be issued to
      Chicago Venture Partners, L.P. upon exchange of the
      outstanding balance (including interest thereon), or any
      portion thereof, of the promissory notes issued by the
      Company to CVP with an outstanding balance, including
      accrued and unpaid interest as of Dec. 31, 2018, equal to
      $6,344,943, subject to the terms of the CVP Notes and one or
      more exchange agreements that may be entered into from time
      to time between the Company and CVP;

   6. for purposes of Nasdaq Rule 5635(d), the issuance of up to
      13,633,333 shares of Common Stock that may be issued at the
      Company's discretion from time to time to Oasis Capital, LLC
  
      under an equity line, pursuant to the common stock purchase
      agreement, dated Jan. 7, 2019, between the Company and Oasis
      Capital; and

   7. a proposal to grant discretionary authority to adjourn the
      Special Meeting, if necessary, to solicit additional proxies

      in the event that there are not sufficient votes at the time

      of the Special Meeting to approve Proposals 1-6.

                      About Jaguar Health

Jaguar Health, Inc. -- http://www.jaguar.health/-- is a commercial
stage natural-products pharmaceuticals company focused on
developing novel, sustainably derived gastrointestinal products on
a global basis.  Its wholly-owned subsidiary, Napo Pharmaceuticals,
Inc., focuses on developing and commercializing proprietary human
gastrointestinal pharmaceuticals for the global marketplace from
plants used traditionally in rainforest areas. Jaguar Health's
principal executive offices are located in San Francisco,
California.

Jaguar Health reported a net loss of $21.96 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2017, compared to a net loss of $14.73 million for
the year ended Dec. 31, 2016.  As of Sept. 30, 2018, Jaguar Health
had $46.12 million in total assets, $26.79 million in total
liabilities, $9 million in series A convertible preferred stock,
and total stockholders' equity of $10.32 million.

BDO USA, LLP, in San Francisco, Calif., issued a "going concern"
opinion in its report on the consolidated financial statements for
the year ended Dec. 31, 2017, stating that the Company has suffered
recurring losses from operations and an accumulated deficit that
raise substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going
concern.


JLT HOLDINGS: Seeks Authority to Use McCormick Cash Collateral
--------------------------------------------------------------
JLT Holdings, LLC, seeks authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court
for the Northern District of Illinois to use McCormick 101, LLC's
cash collateral in the ordinary course of its business.

Specifically, the Debtor is seeking entry of a first agreed interim
order, approving the use of cash collateral consistent with the
Term Sheet and the Cash Collateral Motion from the date of the
Agreed Interim Order through April 10, 2019.

The Agreed Interim Order provides McCormick with additional and
replacement security interests, liens, and mortgages in its
prepetition collateral and all property of the estate acquired on
or after the petition date. The Agreed Interim Order also provides
a carve-out in favor of A&G for post-petition attorneys' fees in
the amount of $15,000.00.

Sometime in February 2019, the Debtor and McCormick agreed to a
Second Amended Term Sheet that sets forth the terms for a
consensual resolution of the dispute between the Debtor and
McCormick. The Term Sheet provides that, subject to an Order of the
Court, among other things: (1) the Debtor will begin making monthly
adequate protection payments in the amount of $15,000 to McCormick
retroactive to Jan. 1, 2019; (2) the Debtor will pay, or cause to
be paid through its tenants, or make monthly payments into escrow
to fund applicable real estate taxes, HOA fees, utilities, and
property insurance; and (3) the Debtor will provide $15,000 to
Adelman & Gettleman, Ltd. ("A&G"), for post-petition legal services
rendered, subject to allowance by the Court.

The Debtor and McCormick are parties to these loans: (a) McCormick
(as successor-in-interest to JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. made a
certain term loan to the Debtor pursuant to that certain Business
Loan Agreement (Asset Based), in the original principal amount of
$950,000 and secured by, among other things, that certain Mortgage
with respect to 220 Garden; and (b) McCormick (as
successor-in-interest to Chase) made a certain term loan in the
original principal amount of $475,647.50 (the "Investment Note").
The Investment Note is secured by, among other things, that certain
Mortgage with respect the Florida Condo and another Mortgage with
respect to Deames.

A full-text copy of the Debtor's Motion is available at

              http://bankrupt.com/misc/ilnb18-33604-37.pdf

                       About JLT Holdings

JLT Holdings, LLC, owns properties located at 220 Garden Street,
Yorkville, Illinois; 4512 Deames Street, Plano, Illinois; and 1800
South Ocean Drive, Unit 3205, Hallandale, Florida.

JLT Holdings sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. N.D. Ill. Case No. 18-33604) on Dec. 3, 2018.  At the
time of the filing, the Debtor estimated assets of $1 million to
$10 million and liabilities of $1 million to $10 million.  The case
is assigned to Judge Benjamin A. Goldgar.  Adelman & Gettleman,
Ltd., is the Debtor's counsel.


JME TRUCKING: Court Approves Disclosures, Confirms Plan
-------------------------------------------------------
The Amended Disclosure Statement explaining JME Trucking, LLC's
Chapter 11 Plan is approved.  The Chapter 11 Plan is also confirmed
after the Court found that the Plan Proponent has satisfied its
burden of proving compliance with the requirements.

                       About JME Trucking

JME Trucking, LLC, is a limited liability company owned 100% by
John Evenson.  Mr. Evenson is the sole operating member of JME
Trucking, LLC. It is located and operates the trucking company at
2120 16 1/2 Street, Rice Lake, Wisconsin.  It leases this
commercial property from an unrelated third party.

JME Trucking filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11
of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D. Wis. Case No. 18-11512) on May
3, 2018, estimating under $1 million in assets and liabilities.
The case is assigned to Chief Judge Catherine J. Furay.  Mart W.
Swenson, at The Swenson Law Group, is the Debtor's counsel.


KAIROS HOMES: May Use Sales Proceeds for Post-Petition Expenses
---------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Mark X. Mullin of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Northern District of Texas has signed an amended interim agreed
order authorizing Kairos Homes, L.L.C., to use cash collateral in
the ordinary course of its business.

In the interim, the Debtor may use the net proceeds -- estimated at
$270,000 -- from the sale of the property 621 County Road 3696,
Springtown, TX, to satisfy post-petition payroll, materials,
subcontractors, rent, bills and other miscellaneous expenses as
reflected in the Projected Budget.

The Court further ordered that the property which is described as
621 County Road 3696, Springtown, TX 76082, may be sold free and
clear of all judgment liens, claims, and encumbrances except
purchase money, all unpaid ad valorem property tax liens and
Federal Tax Liens.

In addition, the Amended Interim Agreed Order states that all ad
valorem property taxes for year 2019 and all prior years will be
paid in full at the sale closing with the liens that secure all
amounts owed for any unpaid years remaining attached to the
property and becoming the responsibility of the purchaser.

The Debtors will be entitled to utilize cash collateral of the
Internal Revenue Service only for ordinary business expenses,
consistent with the cash flow projections of the Debtor and may
exceed the line item in the cash flow projection by not more than
10% without a variance sought by the Debtor and approved by the IRS
in writing (including email), or approved by order of the Court.

The Debtors will be entitled to utilize the asserted Cash
Collateral of the IRS and to utilize the property in which the IRS
has asserted a secured interest subject to the provisions of the
Agreed Order under the following terms and conditions:

      (a) The IRS will be granted replacement liens on
post-petition cash collateral and property of the Debtors,
including inventory, accounts receivable, cash, cash equivalents,
intangibles, and all other post-petition property of the Debtors
which would constitute the IRS' pre-petition collateral, including
proceeds and products thereof to the same validity, extent and
priority of the IRS' liens prior to the Petition Date. These liens,
if any, will be in addition to the liens that the IRS had in the
assets of the Debtor as of the petition date. The replacement liens
will not extend to Chapter 5 causes of action and will be limited
to the decline, if any, in the value of the IRS' collateral by
virtue of the Debtor's use.

      (b) The Debtors will file all past due tax returns, if any,
(including, but not limited to, income, excise, employment, and
unemployment returns) within 60 days of the entry of the Interim
Agreed Order and will file such return with Leo Carey, Bankruptcy
Specialist, IRS, Insolvency Group II, Stop: MC5026DAL, 1100
Commerce St., Dallas, Texas 75242.

      (c) The Debtors will file all post-petition federal tax
returns on or before the due date, and will pay any balance due
upon filing of the return.

      (d) The Debtors will, during the pendency of this bankruptcy
case, provide proof of deposit of all federal trust fund taxes
within 7 days from the date on which they are deposited.

      (e) Upon reasonable notice, the Debtors will, during the
pendency of Debtors' case, permit the IRS to inspect, review, and
copy any financial records of the Debtor.

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

              http://bankrupt.com/misc/txnb18-43969-73.pdf

                        About Kairos Homes

Kairos Homes, L.L.C. -- http://www.kairoshomesllc.com/-- is a home
builder in Fort Worth, Texas.  Kairos Homes filed a Chapter 11
petition (Bankr. N.D. Tex. Case No. 18-43969) on Oct. 3, 2018.  In
the petition signed by Brian Frazier, president, the Debtor
disclosed $3,006,914 in assets and $1,116,717 in liabilities.  The
Hon. Mark X. Mullin oversees the case.  John Park Davis, Esq., at
Davis Law Firm, serves as bankruptcy counsel.


KAISER GYPSUM: Suit vs AWI Subject to Withdrawal of Reference
-------------------------------------------------------------
District Judge Graham C. Mullen granted the Defendant's Motion to
Withdraw the Reference of the adversary proceeding captioned KAISER
GYPSUM COMPANY, INC., Plaintiff, v. ARMSTRONG WORLD INDUSTRIES,
INC., Defendant, Adversary Proceeding No. 18-03078 (W.D.N.C.).

Having reviewed the Motion, the Court finds that the Adversary
Proceeding is subject to mandatory withdrawal of the reference
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. section 157(d) because resolution of this
proceeding will require the Court's substantial and material
consideration of federal environmental statutes in determining
whether to impose the contribution and recovery sought by Plaintiff
and to issue a declaratory judgment under CERCLA. The Court, thus,
withdraws the reference to the Bankruptcy Court of this Adversary
Proceeding.

A copy of the Court's Order dated Jan. 18, 2019 is available at
https://bit.ly/2IOOsiU from Leagle.com.

Kaiser Gypsum Company, Inc., Plaintiff, represented by C. Richard
Rayburn, Jr. -- rrayburn@rcdlaw.net -- Rayburn Cooper & Durham,
P.A., Daniel B. Prieto, Jones Day, pro hac vice, Gregory M. Gordon
-- gmgordon@jonesday.com -- Jones Day, pro hac vice & John R.
Miller, Jr., Rayburn, Cooper & Durham, P.A.

Armstrong World Industries, Inc., Defendant, represented by
Christopher McCurry Towery , Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice LLP,
Ericka F. Johnson , Womble Bond Dickinson (US) LLP, pro hac vice,
Matthew P. Ward , Womble Bond Dickinson (US) LLP, pro hac vice &
Morgan L. Patterson , Womble Bond Dickinson (US) LLP, pro hac
vice.

                        About Kaiser Gypsum

Kaiser Gypsum Company, Inc., and affiliate Hanson Permanente
Cement, Inc. sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. W.D.N.C. Case Nos. 16-31602 and 16-10414) on Sept. 30,
2016.  The petitions were signed by Charles E. McChesney, II,
vice-president and secretary.

The companies are represented by Rayburn Cooper & Durham P.A. and
Jones Day.  Cook Law Firm, P.C. and K&L Gates LLP serve as special
insurance counsel; NERA Economic Consulting as consultant; Miller
Nash Graham & Dunn LLP as special environmental and insurance
counsel; and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as financial advisors.

At the time of the bankruptcy filing, Kaiser and Hanson estimated
their assets and liabilities at $100 million to $500 million.

Kaiser's principal business consisted of manufacturing and
marketing gypsum plaster, gypsum lath and gypsum wallboard.  The
company has no current business operations other than managing its
legacy asbestos-related and environmental liabilities.  The company
has no material tangible assets.

HPCI's primary business was the manufacture and sale of Portland
cement products. It is a wholly-owned, indirect subsidiary of
non-debtor Lehigh Hanson, Inc.

HPCI is the direct parent of Kaiser Gypsum as well as non-debtor
Hanson Micronesia Cement, Inc. and non-debtor Hanson Permanente
Cement of Guam, Inc., the operating subsidiaries.  Non-debtor
Permanente Cement Company, which has no assets or operations, is
also a wholly-owned subsidiary of HPCI.

The Office of the U.S. Trustee appointed three creditors to serve
on the official committee of unsecured creditors in the Chapter 11
case of Kaiser Gypsum Company, Inc.  The Creditors Committee hired
Blank Rome LLP as counsel, and Moon Wright & Houston, PLLC.

An Official Committee of Asbestos Personal Injury Claimants
retained Caplin & Drysdale, Chartered, as its counsel.

Lawrence Fitzpatrick, the Future Claimants' Representative, tapped
Ankura Consulting Group, LLC as his claims evaluation consultant;
Young Conaway Stargatt & Taylor, LLP as attorney; and Hull &
Chandler, P.A. as local counsel.


KOI DESIGN: Seeks to Hire Brutzkus Gubner as Legal Counsel
----------------------------------------------------------
Koi Design LLC seeks authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Central District of California to hire Brutzkus Gubner Rozansky
Seror Weber LLP as its legal counsel.

The firm will provide these services:

     a. advise the Debtor with regard to the requirements of the
bankruptcy court, the Office of the U.S. Trustee and U.S.
bankruptcy law;

     b. advise the Debtor with regard to certain rights and
remedies of its bankruptcy estate, and the rights, claims and
interests of its creditors and equity holders;

     c. represent the Debtor in any proceeding or hearing unless it
is represented by a special counsel;

     d. conduct examinations of witnesses, claimants or adverse
parties and represent the Debtor in adversary proceedings except
those that are in an area outside of the firm's expertise;

     e. represent the Debtor with regard to obtaining use of
debtor-in-possession financing; and

     g. assist the Debtor in the negotiation and preparation of a
plan of reorganization.

Brutzkus Gubner received from the Debtor a pre-bankruptcy retainer
of $255,000, of which $205,000 was funded by an unsecured loan from
Kathy Peterson, president and managing member of the Debtor.

Prior to the Debtor's bankruptcy filing, Brutzkus Gubner incurred
and was paid the sum of $155,000 for its pre-bankruptcy services,
leaving a balance of $100,000 as retainer.

The firm's standard hourly rates are:

     Mark D. Brutzkus       Partner      $675.00
     Steven T. Gubner       Partner      $895.00
     Jeffrey A. Kobulnick   Partner      $595.00
     Nicholas Rozansky      Partner      $645.00
     David Seror            Partner      $695.00
     Corey R. Weber         Partner      $645.00
     Joseph Balice          Partner      $550.00
     Gina A. Bibby          Partner      $550.00
     Philip J. Bonoli       Partner      $575.00
     Jerrold L. Bregman     Partner      $595.00
     Richard Burstein       Partner      $650.00
     Deborah Greaves        Partner      $550.00
     Jason B. Komorsky      Partner      $650.00
     Robyn B. Sokol         Partner      $625.00
     Ronald Abrams          Of Counsel   $525.00
     Racey Cohn             Of Counsel   $495.00
     Larry Gabriel          Of Counsel   $625.00
     Talin Keshishian       Of Counsel   $525.00
     Stuart Y. Kim          Of Counsel   $675.00
     Susan Seflin           Of Counsel   $625.00
     Michael P. Weisberg    Of Counsel   $450.00
     Jessica Bagdanov       Associate    $495.00
     Michael Bernet         Associate    $375.00
     Reagan Boyce           Associate    $525.00
     Michael W. Davis       Associate    $525.00
     Joseph M. Rothberg     Associate    $495.00
     Maria Abel             Paralegal    $230.00
     Karla Bagley           Paralegal    $280.00
     Tina Dow               Paralegal    $240.00
     Melody Evans           Paralegal    $195.00
     Susan Robbins          Paralegal    $260.00
     Juanita Treshinsky     Paralegal    $270.00
     Sheri Broffman         Trademark Administrator    $235.00
     Litigation Support                  $125.00
     Law Clerk                           $100.00

Susan Seflin, Esq., at Brutzkus Gubner, attests that the firm and
its attorneys are "disinterested" within the meaning of sections
101(14) and 327 of the Bankruptcy Code.  

The firm can be reached through:

     Nicholas Rozansky, Esq.
     Susan K. Seflin, Esq.
     Jessica L. Bagdanov, Esq.
     Brutzkus Gubner Rozansky Seror Weber LLP
     21650 Oxnard Street, Suite 500
     Woodland Hills, CA 91367
     Tel: (818) 827-9000
     Fax: (818) 827-9099
     Email: nrozansky@bg.law
            sseflin@bg.law
            jbagdanov@bg.law

                       About Koi Design LLC

Koi Design LLC -- https://www.koihappiness.com -- is an
independently-owned, woman-run company engaged in wholesale
distribution of women's and men's clothing and accessories.

Koi Design, a California limited liability company, filed a
voluntary Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 19-10762)
on January 25, 2019. In the petition signed by Kathy Peterson,
president and managing member, the Debtor estimated $10 million to
$50 million in both assets and liabilities. The case has been
assigned to Judge Neil W. Bason.  Jessica L. Bagdanov, Esq., at
Brutzkus Gubner Rozansky Seror Weber LLP, is the Debtor's counsel.
               


KPH CONSTRUCTION: May Use Cash Collateral on Interim Basis
----------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Beth E. Hanan of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern
District of Wisconsin, at the behest of KPH Construction, Corp.,
KPH Environmental, Corp., and KPH Construction Services, LLC, has
entered an order authorizing interim use of cash collateral until
the conclusion of the final hearing on the Cash Collateral Motion.


The KPH Debtors will make all trust fund payments to their
subcontractors that have an interest in funds received when
payments are due. The KPH Debtors are also permitted to pay
expenses in the approximate amounts shown on their budgets attached
to the Motion, or as otherwise approved by BMO Harris Bank.

BMO Harris Bank and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company are granted
the following as adequate protection for the use of cash
collateral:

      (a) BMO Harris Bank and Liberty Mutual are granted
replacements liens of the same priority to the same extent and in
the same collateral as they had pre-petition. Neither one can
improve its collateral position;

      (b) The KPH Debtors will provide the following reports of
their receipts and disbursements once a month consistent with the
Debtors' monthly reporting requirements for chapter 11 debtors plus
a list of accounts receivable by aging to the Bank, Liberty Mutual
and Attorney David Turiciano on a weekly basis;

      (c) The KPH Debtors will continue to honor their prepetition
leases for the Bruce Street Property, including payment of rents,
utility charges, real estate taxes and insurance even if they
accrued pre-petition;

      (d) The KPH Debtors will continue to make timely payments of
interest only at the contract rate of approximately $10,000 per
month to BMO Harris Bank; and

      (e) The KPH Debtors will continue to comply with loan terms
with BMO Harris Bank except as they conflict with the Bankruptcy
Code and this Order.

A copy of the Order is available at

            http://bankrupt.com/misc/wieb19-20939-23.pdf

                   About KPH Construction Corp.

Founded in 1999, KPH Construction, KPH Environmental and KHP
Services are providers of commercial construction services.  Triple
H is a holding company.  Keith P. Harenda is the sole member and
manager of Triple H, and the sole shareholder and president of KPH
Construction and KPH Environmental.  Harenda is the manager of KPH
Services.  The companies collectively employ approximately 30
people in the operations of their construction business at projects
throughout Wisconsin.

KPH Construction Corp., based in Milwaukee, WI, filed a Chapter 11
petition (Bankr. E.D. Wis. Lead Case No. 19-20939) on Feb. 6, 2019.
In the petition signed by Keith P. Harenda, president, debtor KPH
Construction Corp. estimated $1 million to $10 million in assets
and $10 million to $50 million in liabilities.  The Hon. Beth E.
Hanan oversees the case.  Evan P. Schmit, Esq. at Kerkman & Dunn,
serves as bankruptcy counsel.


LANDING AT BRAINTREE: Wants to Continue Using Cash Collateral
-------------------------------------------------------------
Landing at Braintree, LLC, requests the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the District of Massachusetts to authorize the use of cash
collateral of the secured creditors, including but not limited to
Northeast Bank, on a continuing basis.

The Debtor receives rent with regard to the Property located at
125-141 Commercial Street, Braintree, MA 02184. The fair market
value of the Braintree Property, based on the assessed value of
each unit, totals $1,443,300. The Braintree Property is currently
insured in the amount of $5,092.

The Debtor has prepared a Projected Income and Expense Accounting
for the period Feb. 1, 2019 through May 31, 2019. The Debtor earns
a total monthly rental income of $12,480.

Northeast Bank is the holder of a first mortgage with a refinance
balance of approximately $1,038,000 and a second mortgage with a
guaranty balance of approximately $600,000, cross collateralized
with property valued at $1,058,700.

The Debtor requests that said rents will be used (i) to make the
insurance, property taxes and any other ordinary operating expenses
for the Property; (ii) to pay the quarterly U.S. Trustee's fees;
and (iii) to make adequate protection payments to Northeast Bank of
$7,000 in monthly principal and interest payments.

As adequate protection, the Debtor proposes the following:

      (a) To continue maintaining insurance on the Property;

      (b) To grant Northeast Bank a replacement lien on the same
type of postpetition property of the estate against which Northeast
Bank held lien as of the Petition Date. Said replacement lien will
maintain the same priority, validity and enforceability as
Northeast Bank's pre-petition lien. Said replacement lien will be
recognized only to the extent of the diminution in value of
Northeast Bank's pre-petition collateral after the petition date
resulting from the Debtors' use of cash collateral during the
pendency of the case;

      (c) To set aside on a monthly basis and to pay when due the
real estate taxes accruing on the property;

      (d) To pay the utilities of the Braintree property including,
electricity and gas;

      (e) To pay the water and sewer;

      (f) To pay the quarterly U.S. Trustee fees;

      (h) To pay the monthly principal and interest payments of
$7,000 to Northeast Bank; and

      (i) To pay the condominium fees.

A full-text copy of the Debtor's Motion is available at

           http://bankrupt.com/misc/mab18-14159-67.pdf

                  About Landing at Braintree

10 Homestead Avenue, LLC, is the developer of 4 separate
condominium units in a 4-unit building located at 10 Homestead
Avenue, Quincy, MA 02169.

Landing at Braintree, LLC, is the owner of all 10 separate
condominium units that occupy a 10 unit building located at 125-141
Commercial Street, Braintree, MA 02184.

10 Homestead Avenue, LLC, and affiliate Landing at Braintree, LLC,
filed voluntary petitions seeking relief under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Mass. Case No. 18-14158 and Bankr. D.
Mass. Case No. 18-14159, respectively) on Nov. 6, 2018.  In the
petitions signed by William T. Barry, manager, the Debtors
estimated $1 million to $10 million in assets and liabilities.

Judge Frank J. Bailey oversees Case No. 18-14158 while the Hon.
Christopher J. Panos oversees Case No. 18-14159.

The Ann Brennan Law Offices serves as the Debtors' counsel.  The
Law Office of Lipman & White, is the special counsel.


M&P COLLECTIONS: Seeks to Hire Kaplan Johnson as Legal Counsel
--------------------------------------------------------------
M&P Collections, Inc. and F&M Law Firm, P.S.C. seek authority from
the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Kentucky to
hire Kaplan Johnson Abate & Bird, LLP as their legal counsel.

The firm will provide these services in connection with the
Debtors' Chapter 11 cases:

     a. advise the Debtors' of their powers and duties in the
continued operations of the bankruptcy estates' business and
management of their assets;

     b. take all necessary actions to protect and preserve the
estates, including the prosecution of actions on behalf of the
Debtors, the defense of actions commenced against them,
negotiations concerning all litigation in which the Debtors are
involved, and objecting to claims filed against the estates;

     c. prepare court documents in connection with the
administration of the Debtors' estates herein; and

     d. provide other legal services in connection with the
Debtors' cases and the formulation and implementation of a Chapter
11 plan.

Kaplan Johnson will charge these hourly fees:

     Charity Bird               $350
     James McGhee               $300
     Aimeee Lily (paralegal)     $92

Charity Bird, Esq., at Kaplan Johnson, attests that her firm is a
"disinterested person" as defined by section 101(14) of the
Bankruptcy Code.

The firm can be reached at:

      Charity S. Bird, Esq.
      Kaplan Johnson Abate & Bird, LLP
      710 West Main Street, 4th Floor
      Louisville, KY 40202
      Tel: 502-540-8285
      Fax: 502-540-8282
      E-mail: cbird@kaplanjohnsonlaw.com

                        About M&P Collections

M&P Collections, Inc.'s line of business includes collection and
adjustment services on claims and other insurance related issues.
Its affiliate, F&M Law Firm, P.S.C., is a debt collection agency in
Louisville, Kentucky.  M&P Collections was founded in 2005 as an
employee owned back office collection support company for law
firms.  From its beginning, it provided collection support services
to Morgan & Pottinger, P.S.C., now known as Morgan Pottinger
McGarvey.  In August 2014, MPM assigned and transferred its retail
collections practice to the newly formed Fenton Law.

M&P Collections has worked with Fenton Law since its inception
pursuant to a service agreement.  The agreement provides that M&P
Collections will lease non-lawyer employees to Fenton Law as
required for the operation of its collections law practice, that
such employees would be employees of both firms, and that M&P
Collections would provide administrative and human resources
services related thereto.  M&P Collections' operations are based
out of leased premises located at 2700 Stanley Gault Parkway, Suite
130, Louisville, Kentucky.

M&P Collections (Bankr. W.D. Ky. Case No. 19-30311) and F&M Law
Firm (Bankr. W.D. Ky. Case No. 19-30312) sought Chapter 11
protection on Feb. 1, 2019.  M&P Collections' petition was signed
by Steve Douglas, president and director.  F&M Law Firm's petition
was signed by Thomas Fenton, president and director.  

M&P Collections estimated assets in the range of $100,000 to
$500,000 and $1 million to $10 million in debt.
F&M Law Firm estimated assets and liabilities in the range of $1
million to $10 million.

Judge Alan C. Stout has been assigned to the cases.  The Debtors
tapped Charity S. Bird, Esq., at Kaplan Johnson Abate & Bird LLP as
counsel.


M.E. SMITH: Seeks Access to Cash to Fund Ongoing Operations
-----------------------------------------------------------
M.E. Smith, Inc., requests the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Massachusetts to authorize the interim use of cash
collateral in the ordinary course of business to fund its ongoing
operations substantially in accordance with the Budget.

The Debtor believes these creditors have an interest in its cash
collateral:

         -- Aegis Security Insurance                        all
assets
         -- Corporation Service Company                     all
assets
         -- John Deere Construction & Forestry Company      all
assets
         -- Komatsu Financial Limited Partnership           all
assets
         -- Kubota Credit Corporation, USA                  Kubota
SSV75PHFRC
         -- Susquehanna Salt Lake                           all
assets
         -- TD Bank, N.A.                                   all
assets
         -- Webster First Federal Credit Union              all
assets

The Debtor proposes that each lienholder be granted in some
instances monthly cash payment along with postpetition replacement
liens and security interests in property of the Debtor's estate.
The replacement liens will be recognized only to the extent of
diminution in the value of the lienholder's prepetition collateral
constituting cash collateral resulting from the Debtor's use
thereof in operation of its ongoing operations.  The replacement
liens will maintain the same priority, validity, and enforceability
as the lienholder's liens on their prepetition collateral.

M.E. Smith, Inc., is a Massachusetts corporation providing
construction and maintenance of municipal water utilities.  The
company filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. D. Mass. Case No.
19-40235) on Feb. 12, 2019.  The Debtor is represented by Michael
Van Dam, Esq. at Van Dam Law LLP.


MAXAR TECHNOLOGIES: S&P Lowers ICR to 'B', Outlook Negative
-----------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings on March 5 announced that it lowered its issuer
credit rating on Maxar Technologies Inc. to 'B' from 'BB-' and said
the outlook remains negative.

At the same time, S&P lowered its issue-level rating on the $1.15
billion revolver, $250 million term loan A1, $250 million term loan
A2, and $2 billion term loan B to 'B' from 'BB-' and revised the
recovery rating to '4' from '3'. It also lowered its issue-level
rating on the $100 million revolver (operating facility) at MDA
Systems Holdings Ltd. to 'BB-' from 'BB+'. The '1' recovery rating
remains unchanged.

S&P took the rating actions after the Westminster, Colo.-based
space technology solution provider announced earnings for 2018 and
guidance for 2019 that were below S&P's expectations. The company
also announced that it took a $1.1 billion impairment charge in
2018 related to its decision to retain and restructure its GEO
communications satellite business.

The negative outlook reflects that S&P expects credit metrics to
remain weak while Maxar reorganizes its business to adjust for the
shrinking GEO communications satellite market, with debt to EBITDA
expected to be between 6.3x-6.7x in 2019. It also reflects to the
upcoming maturity of its $250 million term loan A1, due October
2020.

The downgrade reflects Maxar's decision to keep the GEO business
while attempting to lower costs and operate on a smaller scale,
combined with the rest of the business not performing as well as
expected. Maxar took a $1.1 billion impairment charge related to
both its decision to restructure the GEO business and to the
failure of its WorldView-4 satellite earlier this year. The company
also announced it will cut its dividend to a nominal amount, saving
about $60 million per year, which should offset the cash outflow
related to its restructuring. The company's S&P adjusted
debt-to-EBITDA ratio was 9.4x in 2018, compared with S&P's previous
expectation of 5.5x to 6x. While S&P expects leverage to improve,
debt to EBITDA will likely remain over 5x through at least 2020.

"The negative outlook reflects our expectation that debt leverage
will remain high while Maxar restructures its business to reflect
the smaller GEO communications satellite market. While the company
works to reduce costs associated with the business, we assume the
company will win new business to make up for the significant losses
in revenue and earnings," S&P said. S&P expects Maxar's S&P
adjusted debt-to-EBITDA metric to be 6.3x-6.7x in 2019, before
dropping to 5.4x-5.8x in 2020. The negative outlook also reflects
the upcoming maturity of its $250 million term loan A1 due October
2020.

Downside scenario

S&P could lower its rating on Maxar if the company's performance
over the next six months is weak enough to suggest that it might
have difficulty refinancing its term loan. This could occur if
Maxar is unable to cut costs associated with the GEO business as
quickly as expected, or earnings in other segments falter. S&P
could also lower the rating on Maxar if it is unable to refinance
its $250 million term loan A1 by Oct. 5, 2019, within a year of the
maturity date. Lastly, S&P could lower the rating if operations
fail to improve and debt to EBITDA remains above 7x in 2019. This
could occur if Maxar continues to lose money on the GEO business,
fails to win new contract awards, or experiences higher than
expected investment requirements in the Legion constellation,
resulting in weaker earnings or cash flow.

Upside scenario

S&P could revise the outlook to stable in the next 12 months if
Maxar is able to refinance its term loan while operating
performance is tracking toward debt to EBITDA of 6.5x or lower.
This could occur if Maxar is able to reduce costs associated with
the GEO business while earning new awards and returning the segment
to a profitable level while the rest of the business continues to
perform well. This could also be the result of Maxar receiving
meaningful insurance proceeds from the WorldView-4 satellite
failure and using those proceeds to repay debt.


MAYFLOWER COMMUNITIES: Seeks to Hire Ankura Consulting, Appoint CRO
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Mayflower Communities, Inc. seeks authority from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas to employ
Ankura Consulting Group, LLC as its restructuring advisor and
appoint the firm's senior managing director Louis Robichaux IV as
its chief restructuring officer.

Mr. Robichaux and his firm will provide these services in
connection with the Debtor's Chapter 11 case:

     (a) assist the Debtor in connection with the identification,
evaluation, development and implementation of financial
restructuring strategies and tactics;

     (b) assist the Debtor in developing multi-year financial
projections and related debt service capacity models, as needed;

     (c) give advice regarding the Debtor's cash management and
cash flow forecasting process;

     (d) assist the Debtor in its negotiations with bondholders,
secured creditors, customers, suppliers and other
parties-in-interest;

     (e) assist the management in responding to information
requests from the Debtor's stakeholders and potential capital
sources;

     (f) advise the Debtor regarding its financial restructuring
process;

     (g) assist the Debtor in the preparation of various
stakeholder presentations and financial reports required to support
stakeholder negotiations and coordination;

     (h) review and assess vendor relationships and other executory
contracts; and

     (i) provide advice concerning issues related to employee
retention;

     (j) assist the Debtor in identifying, evaluating and
negotiating financing;

     (k) assist the Debtor in developing certain business and
financial information required for filing first day motions and
other bankruptcy disclosures to the extent they are not addressed
by its accounting advisor; and

     (l) assist the Debtor in the preparation of a plan of
reorganization or liquidation.

Ankura's present hourly rates are:

     Senior Managing Directors  $850 - $950
     Other Professionals        $350 - $800
     Paraprofessionals          $150 - $250

     Michael Morton, Senior Director  $595
     Helen Kim, Senior Associate      $445
     Charles Pease, Associate         $350

The estimated monthly allocated CRO fee is $22,500.

Mr. Robichaux attests that Ankura does not represent any interested
party in connection with the Debtor's bankruptcy case.

Ankura can be reached through:

     Louis E. Robichaux IV
     Ankura Consulting Group, LLC
     15950 Dallas Parkway, Suite 750
     Dallas, TX 75248
     Direct +1-214-200-3689
     Mobile +1-214-924-1575

                       About Mayflower Communities

Mayflower Communities, Inc. --
https://www.thebarringtonofcarmel.com/ -- operates The Barrington
of Carmel a senior living retirement community in Carmel, Indiana.
It provides nursing care, memory support, rehabilitation,
retirement home, assisted living, and independent living.

Mayflower Communities filed for Chapter 11 protection (Bankr N.D.
Tex. Case No. 19-30283) on Jan. 30, 2019, estimating $50 million to
$100 million in assets and $100 million to $500 million in
liabilities.

The Hon. Harlin DeWayne Hale oversees the case.

The Debtor tapped DLA Piper LLP (US) as legal counsel; Ankura
Consulting Group, LLC as restructuring advisor; Larx Advisors, Inc.
as financial advisor; Cushman & Wakefield U.S., Inc. as investment
banker; and Donlin Recano & Company, Inc. as claims agent.


MCP REAL ESTATE: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
---------------------------------------------------------
No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Chapter 11 case of MCP Real Estate Holding, LLC as of March 4,
according to a court docket.
   
                About MCP Real Estate Holding

MCP Real Estate Holding, LLC sought protection under Chapter 11 of
the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. W.Va. Case No. 19-30026) on Jan.
23, 2019.

At the time of the filing, the Debtor had estimated assets of less
than $50,000 and liabilities of less than $50,000.  

The case has been assigned to Judge Frank W. Volk.  The Debtor
hired Pepper & Nason as legal counsel.


MICROVISION INC: Incurs $11.9 Million Net Loss in Fourth Quarter
----------------------------------------------------------------
MicroVision, Inc., reported revenue of $1.8 million for the fourth
quarter of 2018, compared to $2.3 million for the fourth quarter of
2017.  MicroVision's net loss for the fourth quarter of 2018 was
$11.9 million, or $0.13 per share, compared to a net loss of $8.1
million, or $0.10 per share for the fourth quarter of 2017.

Revenue for full year 2018 was $17.6 million, compared to $9.6
million for full year 2017.  MicroVision's net loss for full year
2018 was $27.3 million, or $0.31 per share, compared to a net loss
of $25.5 million, or $0.35 per share for full year 2017.

"We made tremendous progress in 2018 and are very excited by the
sales opportunities we have for 2019," said Perry Mulligan,
MicroVision's chief executive officer.  "By advancing our core
technology, products, company culture and our ability to execute we
have positioned the company to deliver our technology and solutions
to multiple OEMs in 2019."

The Company has implemented Revenue Standard ASC 606 for the year
beginning Jan. 1, 2018.  The Company transitioned to the new
standard using the full retrospective approach, and per the
standard, historical periods have been adjusted as if the new
standard was in place for historical periods.

                      About MicroVision

Based in Redmond, Washington, MicroVision, Inc. --
http://www.microvision.com/-- is the creator of PicoP scanning
technology, an ultra-miniature laser projection and sensing
solution for mobile consumer electronics, automotive head-up
displays and other applications.  PicoP scanning technology is
based on the Company's patented expertise in micro-electrical
mechanical systems (MEMS), laser diodes, opto-mechanics, and
electronics and how those elements are packaged into a small form
factor, low power scanning engine that can display, interact and
sense, depending on the needs of the application.

MicroVision incurred net losses of $24.24 million in 2017, $16.47
million in 2016, and $14.54 million in 2015.  As of Dec. 31, 2018.
the Company had $23.03 million in total assets, $18.91 million in
total liabilities, and $4.11 million in total shareholders'
equity.

Moss Adams LLP, in Seattle, Washington, the Company's auditor since
2012, issued a "going concern" opinion in their report on the
consolidated financial statements for the year ended Dec. 31, 2017,
stating that the Company has suffered recurring losses from
operations and has an accumulated deficit that raise substantial
doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern.


MIKE TAMANA: Allowed to Use Cash Collateral Through April 5
-----------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Ronald H. Sargis of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Eastern District of California authorized Mike Tamana Freight
Lines, LLC to use cash collateral consisting of the proceeds of the
pre-petition accounts receivables and factoring proceeds to pay the
expenses specified on the Budget for the period through and
including April 5, 2019.

The final hearing on the Motion to Use Cash Collateral will be
conducted on March 28, 2019 at 10:30 a.m. Any opposition to the
Motion will be filed and served on or before March 14 and replies,
if any, filed and served on or before March 21.

Any creditor having a lien on cash collateral used by the Debtor is
given a replacement lien on the post-petition accounts receivables
and factoring proceeds in the amount by which such creditor's
secured claim is diminished in amount, which replacement lien will
be in the same extent, validity, and priority as the lien in the
cash collateral used by the Debtor.

A full-text copy of the Order is available at

             http://bankrupt.com/misc/caeb19-90122-47.pdf

                   About Mike Tamana Freight Lines

Mike Tamana Freight Lines, LLC -- http://miketamana.com/-- is a
family owned company that specializes in the transportation of
temperature controlled and dry freight with truck load service
throughout the United States, mainly servicing the lanes in
California, Oregon, Washington, Utah, Indiana, Nevada, Arizona, New
Mexico, and Texas.  Mike Tamana Freight Lines owns and operates a
fleet of over 75 sleeper cabs and five day cabs trucks and 110
refrigerated trailers.

Mike Tamana Freight Lines filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. E.D.
Cal. Case No. 19-90122) on Feb. 8, 2019.  In the petition signed by
Amanjot Tamana, president and manager, the Debtor estimated $1
million to $10 million in assets and $10 million to $50 million in
liabilities.
The case is assigned to Judge Ronald H. Sargis.  The Debtor is
represented by Reno F.R. Fernandez, III, Esq., at MacDonald
Fernandez LLP.


MOBILITY SALES: Seeks to Hire Joyce W. Lindauer as Legal Counsel
----------------------------------------------------------------
Mobility Sales of Saginaw LLC seeks authority from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas to hire legal
counsel in connection with its Chapter 11 case.

The Debtor proposes to employ Joyce W. Lindauer Attorney, PLLC and
pay the firm at these hourly rates:

     Joyce Lindauer               $395
     Jeffery Veteto               $225
     Dian Gwinnup, Paralegal      $125

The firm will be paid a retainer in the amount of $6,800, inclusive
of the filing fee, and will receive reimbursement for work-related
expenses.

Joyce Lindauer, Esq., assured the court that her firm is a
"disinterested person" as the term is defined in Section 101(14) of
the Bankruptcy Code and does not represent any interest adverse to
the Debtor and its estate.

Joyce W. Lindauer can be reached at:

     Joyce W. Lindauer, Esq.
     Jeffery M. Veteto, Esq.
     Joyce W. Lindauer Attorney, PLLC
     12720 Hillcrest Road, Suite 625
     Dallas, TX 75230
     Tel: (972) 503-4033
     Fax: (972) 503-4034

                       About Mobility Sales

Mobility Sales of Saginaw LLC filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr.
N.D. Tex. Case No. 19-40276), on Jan. 23, 2019. In the petition
signed by its manager, James Altiery, the Debtor disclosed both
assets and debts of less than $500,000.  The case has been assigned
to Judge Mark X. Mullin.  The Debtor tapped Joyce W. Lindauer
Attorney, PLLC as its legal counsel.


NATIONAL RADIOLOGY: Seeks Authority to Use Chase Cash Collateral
----------------------------------------------------------------
National Radiology Consultants, P.A., seeks authority from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Florida to use property
that may constitute Cash Collateral comprised of cash, income and
other receivables derived from the Debtor's operations.

The Debtor believes JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., may claim a security
interest in all inventory, chattel paper, accounts, equipment and
general intangibles.  The Debtor's Schedules identify Chase's
balance on (i) the Feb. 8, 2017 debt as $293,416 and (ii) the May
8, 2017 debt as $995,468.34, thus, totaling $1,288,884.  The
Schedules further identify that the Cash Collateral totals
approximately $16,183,380, as of the Petition Date.  Therefore, the
Debtor has equity in the Cash Collateral.

In exchange to the authority to use cash collateral, the Debtor
proposes:

      A. All income derived from the business operations of the
Debtor will be maintained in its existing accounts, with the
existing institutions, under the existing account names, for the
existing account purposes per the Debtor's Emergency Motion for
Authorization to Maintain Existing Bank Accounts, Business Forms
and System filed simultaneously with the Cash Collateral Motion.

      B. The Debtor will disburse funds from the Accounts to pay
the customary and reasonable expenses associated with the operation
of its business in accordance with the Budget. The Debtor requests
that a variance of expense line items of up to 10% per month and
cumulatively per month of up to 10% be permitted without the need
for further order of the Court. Chase may approve a variance of
more than 10% without further order of the Court either. The
proposed budget projects monthly expenses of approximately $76,914
during the months of March, April and May.

      C. The Debtor will provide Chase with monthly written
reporting as to the status of its accounts receivable, collections,
disbursements and operations in the same or similar format as has
been historically provided by Debtor.

      D. Furthermore, Chase will be granted a replacement lien in
any Cash Collateral acquired by the Debtor subsequent to the
Petition Date to the same extent, priority and validity of its
respective liens in such Cash Collateral as of the Petition Date

A full-text copy of the Cash Collateral Motion is available at

            http://bankrupt.com/misc/flmb19-01274-5.pdf

                About National Radiology Consultants

National Radiology Consultants, P.A., is healthcare practice
management provider, specializing in radiology, anesthesiology,
emergency, and hospital medicine solutions.

National Radiology Consultants filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr.
Case No. 19-01274) on Feb. 15, 2019.  In the petition signed by
Jame Okoh, M.D., president and CEO, the Debtor disclosed
$18,709,234 in assets and $4,925,568 in liabilities.  The Debtor is
Daniel E. Etlinger, Esq. at Jennis Law Firm.


NATIONAL RADIOLOGY: Seeks to Hire Jennis Law Firm as Counsel
------------------------------------------------------------
National Radiology Consultants, P.A. seeks authority from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Florida to hire Jennis
Law Firm as its legal counsel.

The firm will provide these services in connection with the
Debtor's Chapter 11 case:

     (a) take all necessary action to protect and preserve the
Debtor's estate, including the prosecution of actions on its
behalf, the defense of any actions commenced against the Debtor,
negotiations concerning any litigation in which the Debtor is
involved, and objecting to claims filed against the estate;

     (b) advise the Debtor of its rights and obligations under the
Bankruptcy Code; and

     (c prepare and file schedules of assets and liabilities, plan
of reorganization and disclosure statement.

Jennis Law's hourly rates range from $120 to $160 for paralegals
and from $250 to $450 for attorneys.  David Jennis, Esq., and
Daniel Etlinger, Esq., are the firm's attorneys who will be
handling the case.

Jennis Law neither holds nor represents any interest adverse to the
Debtor's estate as disclosed in court filings.

The firm can be reached through:

      David S. Jennis, Esq.
      Daniel E. Etlinger, Esq.
      Jennis Law Firm
      606 East Madison Street
      Tampa, FL 33602
      Tel: 813-229-2800
      Fax: 813-229-1707
      Email: djennis@jennislaw.com
             detlinger@jennislaw.com
              
                    About National Radiology Consultants P.A.

National Radiology Consultants, P.A. is a healthcare practice
management provider, specializing in radiology, anesthesiology,
emergency, and hospital medicine solutions.

National Radiology Consultants filed its voluntary Chapter 11
petition (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 19-01274) on February 15, 2019.
In the petition signed by Jame Okoh, M.D., president and chief
executive officer, the Debtor estimated $18,709,234 in assets and
$4,925,568 in liabilities. Daniel E. Etlinger, Esq., at  Jennis Law
Firm, represents the Debtor as counsel.     


NOBLE REY: Seeks Court Approval to Hire Accountant
--------------------------------------------------
Noble Rey Brewing Co., LLC seeks authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Northern District of Texas to hire an accountant.

The Debtor proposes to employ Susan Carmill, a certified public
accountant, to provide services necessary to administer its
bankruptcy estate and pay her an hourly fee of $95.  

The accountant attests that she is a disinterested person within
the meaning of Section 101(14) of the Bankruptcy Code.

Ms. Carmill maintains an office at:

     Susan J. Cartmill, CPA
     2213 Cypress Ct
     Flower Mound, TX 75028
     Phone: +1 972-221-6431

                  About Noble Rey Brewing Co.

Noble Rey Brewing Co., LLC, owns and operates a taproom offering
homemade beers, ciders & meads, other local brews & regular live
music.

Noble Rey Brewing filed a voluntary Chapter 11 petition (Bankr.
N.D. Tex. Case No. 18-34214) on Dec. 19, 2018.  In the petition
signed by Chris Rigoulot, managing member, the Debtor estimated
$50,000 in assets and $1 million to $10 million in liabilities.
The Debtor's counsel is Eric A. Liepins, P.C.


OAKLAND PARK: Ch. 11 Trustee Taps KapilaMukamal as Accountant
-------------------------------------------------------------
Soneet Kapila, the Chapter 11 trustee for Oakland Park Inn Inc.,
received approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern
District of Florida to employ his own firm KapilaMukamal, LLP as
accountant.

KapilaMukamal will render these services to the trustee:

     (a) review of all financial information prepared by the Debtor
or its accountants;

     (b) review and analysis of the organizational structure of and
financial interrelationships among the Debtor and its affiliates
and insiders, including a review of the books of the companies or
persons as may be requested;

     (c) review and analysis of transfers to and from the Debtor to
third parties, both pre-petition and post-petition;

     (d) attendance at meetings with the Debtor, its creditors, the
attorneys of such parties, and with federal, state, and local tax
authorities, if requested;

     (e) review of the books and records of the Debtor for
potential preference payments, fraudulent transfers, or any other
matters that the trustee may request; and

     (f) preparation of estate tax returns.

KapilaMukamal will be paid on an hourly basis and will be
reimbursed for work-related expenses incurred.

KapilaMukamal is a "disinterested person" as the term is defined in
Section 101(14) of the Bankruptcy Code and does not represent any
interest adverse to the Debtor and its estates, according to court
filings.

The firm can be reached through:

     Soneet R. Kapila
     KapilaMukamal, LLP  
     1000 South Federal Highway, Suite 200
     Kapila Building
     Fort Lauderdale, FL 33316
     Direct: 954-712-3201
     Email: kapila@kapilamukamal.com

                  About Oakland Park Inn

Oakland Park Inn Inc. -- http://ramadaoaklandparkinn.com/-- owns
and operates the Ramada Oakland Park Inn located at 3001 N. Federal
Highway, Fort Lauderdale.  The Ramada branded hotel features
outdoor heated pool, business center, fitness center, tiki bar, and
restaurant.

Oakland Park Inn filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case
No. 19-10620) on Jan. 16, 2019.  In the petition signed by Walter
W. Johnson, Jr., authorized representative, the Debtor disclosed
$7,118 in assets and $3,187,752 in liabilities.

The Hon. John K. Olson oversees the case. Kevin C. Gleason, Esq.,
at Florida Bankruptcy Group, LLC, serves as the Debtor's bankruptcy
counsel.

Soneet Kapila was appointed as Chapter 11 trustee for the Debtor's
bankruptcy estate.


OAKLAND PARK: Ch. 11 Trustee Taps Stearns Weaver as Counsel
-----------------------------------------------------------
Soneet Kapila, the Chapter 11 trustee for Oakland Park Inn Inc.,
received approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern
District of Florida to employ Stearns Weaver Miller Weissler
Alhadeff & Sitterson, P.A. as his legal counsel.

Stearns Weaver will represent the trustee in the Debtor's Chapter
11 case to provide legal services required in the administration of
its bankruptcy estate.

Drew Dillworth, Esq., a partner at Stearns Weaver and the attorney
who will be representing the trustee, attests that he and his firm
neither hold nor represent any interest adverse to the estate and
they are disinterested persons as required by Section 327(a) of the
Bankruptcy Code.

Stearns Weaver can be reached through:

     Drew M. Dillworth, Esq.
     Stearns Weaver Miller Weissler Alhadeff & Sitterson, P.A.
     150 W. Flagler St., Suite 2200
     Miami, FL 33130
     Tel: 305-789-4175
     Fax: 305-789-3395

                  About Oakland Park Inn

Oakland Park Inn Inc. -- http://ramadaoaklandparkinn.com/-- owns
and operates the Ramada Oakland Park Inn located at 3001 N. Federal
Highway, Fort Lauderdale.  The Ramada branded hotel features
outdoor heated pool, business center, fitness center, tiki bar, and
restaurant.

Oakland Park Inn filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case
No. 19-10620) on Jan. 16, 2019.  In the petition signed by Walter
W. Johnson, Jr., authorized representative, the Debtor disclosed
$7,118 in assets and $3,187,752 in liabilities.

The Hon. John K. Olson oversees the case. Kevin C. Gleason, Esq.,
at Florida Bankruptcy Group, LLC, serves as the Debtor's bankruptcy
counsel.

Soneet Kapila was appointed as Chapter 11 trustee for the Debtor's
bankruptcy estate.


PANTHER BF 2: S&P Assigns B+ Issuer Credit Rating, Outlook Stable
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Brookfield Business Partners, together with Caisse de depot et
placement du Quebec, plans to purchase the Power Solutions business
of Johnson Controls International for $13.5 billion. The companies
expect the acquisition to close by June 30, 2019.

The new owners will fund the transaction by securing a $500 million
asset-based lending (ABL) facility (Unrated), a $750 million
revolving credit facility (RCF), a $3.2 billion term loan B, a
$2.25 billion euro-denominated term loan B, $2 billion of senior
secured notes, $750 million of euro-denominated senior secured
notes, and $1.95 billion of senior unsecured notes.

S&P Global Ratings on March 4 assigned its 'B+' issuer credit
rating to Panther BF Aggregator 2 L.P. (Power Solutions).  At the
same time, S&P assigned its 'B+' issue-level rating and '3'
recovery rating to the proposed secured debt and its 'B'
issue-level rating and '5' recovery rating to the proposed
unsecured debt.

Among other things, the ratings reflect Power Solutions'
substantial market share, global presence, long-term customer ties,
low-cost leadership, and ability to capitalize on the trend toward
the increasing electrification of vehicles, according to S&P. At
the same time, the company's solid business position is somewhat
offset by Brookfield's decision to construct its capital structure
with elevated debt leverage of 6.9x and FOCF to debt of less than
5% in 2019. S&P's projections also assume that the company will be
able to realize about half of its estimated $300 million of
run-rate cost savings from improved manufacturing efficiency and
more strategic sourcing.

"The stable outlook on sponsor-owned Power Solutions reflects our
view that its debt leverage will remain over 6.0x. However, we
expect the company to generate positive FOCF and begin to reduce
its debt levels over the next 12 months," S&P said.

S&P said it could lower it ratings on Power Solutions if the
company encounters operational difficulties as a stand-alone
entity, fails to secure new business, or faces a lengthening
battery replacement cycle due to a decline in miles driven that
weakens its EBITDA margins. Moreover, S&P could lower the rating if
the company begins to generate negative FOCF over the next 12
months, thereby draining its liquidity and undermining its ability
to sufficiently invest in its business. Additionally, S&P could
consider lowering its ratings if it came to believe that the
company would maintain debt to EBITDA of more than 6.5x after
2019.

"We could raise our ratings on Power Solutions if the company
demonstrates a solid operational performance and realizes its
targeted cost savings, which it would demonstrate by expanding its
margins. Moreover, we would expect management to pursue a less
aggressive financial policy by lowering its debt to EBITDA below
5.0x and generating a FOCF-to-debt ratio of more than 5% on a
sustained basis," S&P said.


PAYLESS HOLDINGS: U.S. Trustee Forms 7-Member Committee
-------------------------------------------------------
The Office of the U.S. Trustee on March 1 appointed seven creditors
to serve on the official committee of unsecured creditors in the
Chapter 11 cases of Payless Holdings LLC and its affiliates.

The committee members are:

     (1) Moda Shoe, Ltd.  
         3601 AIA Tower Landmark East
         100 How Ming Street, Kun Tong
         Kowloon, Hong Kong
         Attn.: Anthony Cox
         (852) 2736-8093 (Phone)

     (2) Xiamen C&D Light Industry Co, Ltd.
         Attn: Brian Metteldorf
         14226 Ventura Blvd.
         Sherman Oaks, CA 91423
         (818) 990-4800 (Phone)

     (3) Simon Property Group, Inc.
         Attn:  Ronald Tucker
         225 W. Washington Street
         Indianapolis, IN 46204
         317-263-2346 (Phone)

     (4) Huge Development, Ltd.
         Attn: Jeffrey Tu
         2nd Floor, Eton Tower
         8 Husan Avenue
         Causeway Bay, Hong Kong
         886-4-2305-1789 (Phone)

     (5) Brookfield Property REIT, Inc.
         Attn: Julie Minnick Bowden
         350 N. Orleans, St., Ste. 3090
         Chicago, IL 60654-1607
         312-960-2707 (Phone)

     (6) C and C Accord, LTD.
         Attn: Jayne Neal
         Diba Far East LLC
         3630 Corporate Trail Dr.
         Earth City, MO 63045
         314-209-0150 x 130 (Phone)

     (7) Yaquelin Garcia
         1115 Monterey Street
         Bakersfield, CA 93305

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 Payless Holdings

Founded in 1956 in Topeka, Kansas, Payless --
https://www.payless.com -- is an American footwear retailer selling
shoes and accessories for women, men, girls, and boys.  It has
3,400 stores in more than 40 countries.  Payless operates through
its three business segments (North America, Latin America, and
franchise stores), producing approximately 110 million pairs of
shoes per year across the world.  It also operates an e-commerce
business through which it sells goods online at www.payless.com and
Amazon.  Payless first traded publicly in 1962, and was taken
private in May 2012.

Payless Holdings LLC and its affiliates sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E.D. Mo. Lead Case No.
19-40883) on February 18, 2019.  At the time of the filing, the
Debtors had estimated assets of $500 million to $1 billion and
liabilities of $500 million to $1 billion.  

The cases have been assigned to Judge Kathy A. Surratt-States.  

The Debtors tapped Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP as their
legal counsel; Armstrong Teasdale, LLP as co-counsel; Ankura
Consulting Group, LLC as restructuring advisor; PJ Solomon, L.P. as
financial advisor and investment banker; and Prime Clerk LLC as
notice, claims and balloting agent.

Cassels Brock & Blackwell LLP serves as counsel in the CCAA
proceedings while Seward & Kissel LLP serves as counsel for the
Debtors' independent managers.


PEM FAMILY LIMITED: Case Summary & 2 Unsecured Creditors
--------------------------------------------------------
Four affiliates that have filed voluntary petitions seeking relief
under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code:

    Debtor                                             Case No.
    ------                                             --------
    The PEM Family Limited Partnership I               19-12916
    4445 NW 24th Terrace
    Boca Raton, FL 33431-8427

    The SAM Family Limited Partnership I               19-12917
    4445 NW 24th Terrace
    Boca Raton, FL 33431-8427

    PEM Irrevocable Trust I                            19-12918
    4445 NW 24th Terrace
    Boca Raton, FL 33431-8427

    SAM Irrevocable Trust I                            19-12920
    4445 NW 24th Terrace
    Boca Raton, FL 33431

Type of Debtors: Partnership/Business Trust

Chapter 11 Petition Date: March 5, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Southern District of Florida (West Palm Beach)

Judge: Hon. Mindy A. Mora

Debtors' Counsel: Chad P. Pugatch, Esq.
                  RICE PUGATCH ROBINSON STORFER & COHEN, PLLC
                  101 NE 3 Ave Suite 1800
                  Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33301
                  Tel: (954) 462-8000
                  Email: cpugatch.ecf@rprslaw.com
                         cpugatch@rprslaw.com

                           Estimated            Estimated
                             Assets            Liabilities
                       -------------------  -------------------
The PEM Family         $1-mil. to $10-mil.  $500,000 to $1-mil.
The SAM Family         $1-mil. to $10-mil.  $500,000 to $1-mil.
PEM Irrevocable Trust  $1-mil. to $10-mil.  $500,000 to $1-mil.
SAM Irrevocable Trust  $1-mil. to $10-mil.  $500,000 to $1-mil.

The petitions were signed by Philip E. Morgaman, as trustee of PEM,
LLC, as general partner of The PEM Family Limited Partnership I.

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

              http://bankrupt.com/misc/flsb19-12916.pdf

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

              http://bankrupt.com/misc/flsb19-12917.pdf

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

              http://bankrupt.com/misc/flsb19-12918.pdf

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

              http://bankrupt.com/misc/flsb19-12920.pdf


PERNIX SLEEP: U.S. Trustee Forms 5-Member Committee
---------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Trustee for Region 3 on March 1 appointed five creditors
to serve on the official committee of unsecured creditors in the
Chapter 11 cases of Pernix Sleep, Inc. and its affiliates.

The committee members are:

     (1) Telemetry Securities LLC
         Attn: Dan Sommers
         545 Fifth Avenue, Suite 1108
         New York, NY 10017
         Phone: (917) 305-1754

     (2) 683 Capital Partners, LP
         Attn: Mimi Liu
         3 Columbus Circle, Suite 2205
         New York, NY 10019
         Phone: (212) 554-2389

     (3) Medicine to Go Pharmacies, Inc.
         and certified class
         Attn: Andrew Thomasson, Esq.
         150 Morris Ave., 2nd Floor
         Springfield, NJ 07081-1315
         Phone: (973) 665-2056
         Fax: (973) 532-5868

     (4) Chad Myers and Jeffrey Hartzler
         (On behalf of themselves and others
         similarly situated in Adv. No. 19-50107)
         Attn: Mary E. Olsen, Esq.
         182 St. Francis St., Suite 103
         Mobile, AL 36602
         Phone: (251) 415-4978
         Fax: (251) 433-8181

     (5) Walgreen Co.
         Attn: Darin V. Osmond
         104 Wilmont Road, 4th Floor, MS #144P
         Deerfield, IL 60016
         Phone: (847) 315-4692

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 Pernix Sleep

Pernix -- http://www.pernixtx.com/-- is a specialty pharmaceutical
company focused on identifying, developing and commercializing
prescription drugs, primarily for the United States market,
currently focused on the therapeutic areas of pain and neurology.
Primarily, the Debtors sell three core branded products: Zohydro ER
with BeadTek, Silenor, and Treximet.  Pernix is headquartered in
Morristown, New Jersey.

Pernix Sleep, Inc. and its affiliates sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Del., Lead Case No.
19-10323) on Feb. 18, 2019.  As of Sept. 30, 2018, Pernix had
assets of $274,770,000 and liabilities of $447,052,000.

The cases have been assigned to Judge Christopher S. Sontch.

The Debtors tapped Davis Polk & Wardell LLP as their bankruptcy
counsel; Landis Rath & Cobb LLP as Delaware bankruptcy counsel;
Guggenheim Securities, LLC as investment banker; Ernst & Young LLP
as financial advisor; and Prime Clerk LLC as claims and noticing
agent.


PHILLIP TARVER: Peoples National Bank Automatic Stay Lifted
-----------------------------------------------------------
Upon consideration of Peoples National Bank, N.A.'s motion to
prohibit Phillip Tarver Cattle Co., LLC from using cash collateral,
or in the alternative, to terminate the automatic stay, Bankruptcy
Judge Alan C. Stout for the Western District of Kentucky has
entered an order terminating the automatic stay as to Peoples
National Bank and LOL Finance Co. for cause -- including a lack of
adequate protection to Peoples National Bank and failure to provide
sufficient insurance. Judge Stout finds that the Debtor does not
have equity in the collateral, and the collateral is not necessary
for an effective reorganization.

                  About Phillip Tarver Cattle

Phillip Tarver Cattle Company, LLC, based in Clinton, KY, filed a
Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. Ky. Case No. 18-50728) on Nov. 12,
2018.  In the petition signed by Philip Tarver, managing member,
the Debtor estimated $500,000 to $1 million in assets and $1
million to $10 million in liabilities.  The Hon. Alan C. Stout
presides over the case.  Todd A. Farmer, Esq., at Farmer & Wright,
PLLC, serves as bankruptcy counsel to the Debtor.


PHUONG NAM VIETNAMESE: May Use Cash to Pay Prepetition Wages
------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Diane Davis of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern
District of New York has entered an order approving Phuong Nam
Vietnamese Restaurant, LLC's Emergency Motion to Approve Use of
Cash Collateral and Authorize Payment of Pre-Petition Wages, on an
interim basis.

The Debtor is authorized, but not directed, to pay the prepetition
wages in the amount of $3,028.38.

In addition, Citizens Bank is authorized and directed to continue
to service and administer the Debtor's bank accounts without
interruption in the ordinary course and to receive, process, honor
and pay any and all checks and electronic payment requests when
funds are available in the applicable accounts to make such
payments.

A final hearing on the Cash Collateral Motion will be held on March
5, 2019 at 1:00 p.m.  Any objections to the Motion to pay
prepetition wages will be filed and served no later than seven days
before said hearing.

A copy of the Order is available at

          http://bankrupt.com/misc/nynb19-60132-25.pdf

              About Phuong Nam Vietnamese Restaurant

Phuong Nam Vietnamese Restaurant, LLC sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D.N.Y. Case No.
19-60132) on Jan. 31, 2019.  At the time of the filing, the Debtor
estimated assets of less than $50,000 and liabilities of less than
$500,000.  Peter A. Orville, Esq., is the Debtor's bankruptcy
attorney.  No official committee of unsecured creditors has been
appointed in the Chapter 11 case.


PRAGAT PURSHOTTAM: Cash Collateral Use Continued to March 21
------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Carol A. Doyle of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Northern District of Illinois has authorized Pragat Purshottam,
Inc., to use the cash collateral upon the terms and conditions in
the Agreed Sixth Interim Order to avoid immediate and irreparable
harm to the estate.

The Debtor may use collateral and cash to the extent of plus or
minus 10% of each line item set forth on its Budget, up to and
including March 21, 2019.  The approved Budget shows total monthly
expenses of in the aggregate amount of $4,077.

Phoenix REO, LLC, is granted a postpetition replacement lien, to
the same extent and with the same priority held prepetition
resulting from its recorded mortgage. The liens and security
interests granted to Phoenix REO will have the same validity,
perfection and enforceability as the prepetition mortgages and
liens of Phoenix REO.

Pursuant to the Agreed Sixth Interim Order, the Debtor will: (a) be
authorized to deposit all cash into its Debtor-in-Possession
Accounts or such other bank as ordered or allowed by the Court; and
(b) escrow with Phoenix REO, 1/12 per month of the annual real
estate taxes subject to a written escrow agreement.

The Debtor's Motion for Use of Cash Collateral is continued for
final hearing to March 21, 2019 at 10:30 a.m.

A copy of the Agreed Sixth Interim Order is available at

             http://bankrupt.com/misc/ilnb18-20221-65.pdf

                     About Pragat Purshottam

Pragat Purshottam, Inc., is a real estate company that owns a
commercial property located at 270-280 Glen Ellyn Road,
Bloomingdale, Illinois.  The company valued the property at
$500,000.

Pragat Purshottam sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D. Ill. Case No. 18-20221) on July 19,
2018.  In the petition signed by Nikunj Patel, manager, the Debtor
disclosed $505,578 in assets and $1,559,150 in liabilities.  Judge
Carol A. Doyle oversees the case.


PURE AGROBUSINESS: Court Tosses Bid for Stay Pending Appeal
-----------------------------------------------------------
District Judge William J. Martinez denied Appellants Way to Grow,
Inc., Pure Agrobusiness, Inc., and Green Door Agro, Inc.'s motion
for stay pending appeal in the case captioned WAY TO GROW, INC., et
al., Appellants, v. COREY INNISS, Appellee, Civil Action No.
18-cv-3245-WJM (D. Colo).

Appellants Way to Grow, Inc., Pure Agrobusiness, Inc., and Green
Door Agro, Inc. are debtors in a Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceeding.
They appeal the bankruptcy court's order dismissing their
bankruptcy proceedings. The bankruptcy court found, after an
evidentiary hearing, that Appellants sell products (hydroponic
gardening equipment) that they know will be used to grow marijuana,
which remains illegal under federal law (both the marijuana itself
and sale of equipment knowing that it will be used to grow
marijuana). The bankruptcy court reasoned that bankruptcy
protection is unavailable to Appellants in such circumstances, and
that there was no feasible alternative (e.g., ordering Appellants
to stop servicing the marijuana industry) that might permit the
case to remain in bankruptcy court.

Appellants' filed a Motion for Stay Pending Appeal Pursuant to Fed.
R. Bankr. P. 8007. Appellee Corey Inniss, who filed the motion in
the bankruptcy court that prompted that court to dismiss the
proceedings, opposes Appellants' current motion.

The stay-pending-appeal analysis comprises four factors: (1)
whether the stay applicant has made a strong showing that he is
likely to succeed on the merits; (2) whether the applicant will be
irreparably injured absent a stay; (3) whether issuance of the stay
will substantially injure the other parties interested in the
proceeding; and (4) where the public interest lies.

The Court concludes that Appellants' argument for a stay is fatally
deficient on the first element, likelihood of success, and so the
Court need not address the other three elements.

Appellants argue that the bankruptcy court had "insufficient
evidence at trial to establish the requisite mens rea in this
case." A bankruptcy court's factual findings are reviewed for clear
error, Homestead Golf Club, Inc. v. Pride Stables--a standard
Appellants fail to acknowledge.

After a four-day trial, the bankruptcy court found that Appellants
"have actual knowledge they are selling equipment which will be
used to manufacture a controlled substance." The bankruptcy court
supported that conclusion by summarizing the testimony of several
witnesses, making credibility determinations, and ultimately
finding that a number of credible witnesses and exhibits
demonstrated that Appellants knew their customers would use the
hydroponic equipment for marijuana cultivation--indeed, that
Appellants' business model depended on it.

Appellants deny that the evidence supported as much but their only
specific challenge is that the bankruptcy court should have weighed
Appellee's testimony somewhat differently. This argument contains
no citation to anything in the bankruptcy court record, and in any
event comes nowhere close to demonstrating that the bankruptcy
court clearly erred in weighing Appellee's testimony. Appellants
have shown no likelihood of success on this argument.

Appellants also do not substantiate a key premise of their
hemp-for-marijuana argument, namely, that the commercial and
industrial hemp market needs what they sell--hydroponic gardening
equipment. Even if Appellants had support for that premise, it is
not clear it would undermine the bankruptcy court's Dismissal
Order. Appellants do not challenge the bankruptcy court's
conclusion that Appellants have established "a venerable reputation
for expertise and hydroponic marijuana growing, and it is difficult
to imagine how [Appellants] could prevent customers from continuing
to patronize [Appellants'] stores because of this reputation." In
other words, Appellants would continue to have at least "reasonable
cause to believe" that they were selling equipment that "will be
used to manufacture a controlled substance." Thus, Appellants have
not shown a likelihood of success on this argument.

A copy of the Court's Order dated Jan. 18, 2019 is available at
https://bit.ly/2EIJH6d from Leagle.com.

Way To Grow, Inc., Plaintiff, Green Door Agro, Inc., Plaintiff &
Pure Agro, Inc., Plaintiff, Appellants, represented by Keri Lynn
Riley, Kutner Brinen, P.C. & Lee Moss Kutner, Kutner Brinen, P.C.

Corey Inniss, Defendant, Appellee, represented by Annette Wanlass
Jarvis -- jarvis.annette@dorsey.com -- Dorsey & Whitney, LLP,
Gregory Scot Tamkin -- tamkin.greg@dorsey.com -- Dorsey & Whitney,
LLP & Andrea Ahn Wechter -- wechter.andrea@dorsey.com -- Dorsey &
Whitney, LLP.

                     About Pure Agrobusiness

Pure Agrobusiness, Inc., is a holding company devoted to the
organic growth of its existing divisions, including retail and
wholesale, and to the acquisition, consolidation and integration of
hydroponic retail stores throughout the United States.  It supplies
lighting products, fertilizer and nutrient products, controllers
and technology products, environment control equipment, and
grow-mediums to the medical and recreational cannabis industry as
well as to the indoor horticulture and specialty crop market.

Way to Grow, Inc. and Green Door Hydro and Solar Electric, Inc. are
subsidiaries of Pure Agrobusiness.  Way to Grow, Inc., is a
supplier in the hydroponics market with over six strategic
locations in Colorado while Green Door is a hydro shop in downtown
Los Angeles.

Pure Agrobusiness, Way to Grow, and Green Door sought protection
under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Colo. Case Nos.
18-14334, 18-14330 and 18-14333) on May 18, 2018.  The cases are
jointly administered under Case No. 18-14330.  In the petitions
signed by CEO Richard Byrd, each of the Debtors estimated $500
million to $1 billion in assets and $500 million to $1 billion in
liabilities.

The cases have been assigned to Judge Michael E. Romero.  

The Debtors tapped Kutner Brinen, P.C., as their legal counsel.


RCH LAWN: Wants to Extend Exclusive Plan Filing Period to May 28
----------------------------------------------------------------
RCH Lawn Maintenance LLC asked the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of Florida to extend the period during which it
has the exclusive right to file a Chapter 11 plan through May 28,
and to solicit acceptances for the plan through July 29.

The company also proposed to move the deadline to file their plan
and disclosure statement to May 28.

The extension, if granted by the court, would give RCH more time to
establish a "clearer track record of income and expenses" in order
to formulate a feasible plan.  In addition, the company is in talks
with several creditors to address certain issues that will have a
material effect on the plan, according to court filings.

                  About RCH Lawn Maintenance LLC

RCH Lawn Maintenance LLC sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No. 18-19428) on August 1,
2018.  At the time of the filing, the Debtor disclosed that it had
estimated assets of less than $500,000 and liabilities of less than
$500,000.  The petition was signed by Seth Horowytz, managing
member.

Judge Erik P. Kimball presides over the case.  Aaron A. Wernick,
Esq., at Furr & Cohen, is the Debtor's legal counsel.

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


RCJM INC: Has Authorization on Interim Use of Cash Collateral
-------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Carl L. Bucki of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western
District of New York has signed an interim order authorizing RCJM,
Inc. to use cash collateral as set forth in the Interim Budget,
pending a Final Hearing on the Cash Collateral Motion.

Pursuant to the approved 13-Week Budget, the Debtor projects it
will incur total operational expenses of approximately $134,890
during the period of Feb. 4, 2019 through April 29, 2019.

The holders of Prepetition Liens are granted roll-over or
replacement liens granting security to the same extent, in the same
priority, and with respect to the same assets, as served as
collateral for each of their respective Prepetition Indebtedness,
to the extent of cash collateral actually used during the pendency
of Debtor's Chapter 11 case, without the need of further public
filing or other recordation to perfect such liens or security
interests.

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

               http://bankrupt.com/misc/nywb19-10161-35.pdf

                           About RCJM

RCJM, Inc. d/b/a Union Auto & Truck Repair d/b/a Magic Auto Body is
a New York Corporation which operates as a licensed auto and truck
repair shop and body collision shop, providing services primarily
for governmental agencies and commercial customers.  RCJM operates
its business at 1560 Harlem Road, W-2, Cheektowaga, New York 14206.
Richard Jones, holds a 100% percent shareholder interest in RCJM
and is its President and sole director.

RCJM voluntarily filed its petition seeking relief under Chapter 11
of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-10161) on Jan.
31, 2019.  The Hon. Carl L. Bucki is assigned to the case.  RCJM is
represented by counsel, Baumeister Denz LLP.


ROYAL T ENERGY: Court Grants ENGS Bid for Summary Judgment
----------------------------------------------------------
Bankruptcy Judge Brenda T. Rhoades granted Defendant ENGS
Commercial Finance Co.'s motion for summary judgment in the case
ROYAL T. ENERGY, LLC., Plaintiff, v. ENGS COMMERCIAL FINANCE CO.,
Defendant, Adversary No. 18-04004 (Bankr. E.D. Tex.).

On Nov. 14, 2013, the debtor entered into a Commercial Lease
Agreement (the "Lease") with ENGS for the lease of a 2011 Kenworth
T800 with Cobra Truck-Mounted Hot Oil United (the "Equipment").
ENGS is the owner of the Equipment and filed a UCC-1 covering the
Equipment. Additionally, the Texas Certificate of Title shows that
ENGS is the owner of the Equipment.

The Lease required the debtor to make a one-time advance payment to
ENGS in the amount of $100,000. In addition, the Lease required the
debtor to make monthly rental payments of $9,520.74 to ENGS for a
period of forty months. The Equipment has a useful life of
approximately 20 years.

In this adversary proceeding, the parties dispute whether the Lease
is a true lease or a financing transaction.

When determining whether a lease is a true lease or a security
agreement, there is a rebuttable presumption that a transaction
denominated as a lease agreement, is in fact a bona fide lease,
absent compelling factors to the contrary. Accordingly, in this
proceeding, the debtor has the burden of rebutting the presumption
that the Lease is a true lease by proving the elements of I-UCC
section 1-204(b) or by establishing that the economic realities of
the transaction created a security agreement. If that presumption
is overcome, then the burden shifts to ENGS to refute the evidence
that the Lease constitute a security agreement.

Here, the debtor cannot terminate the Lease. However, to satisfy
the "per se test" and establish that the Lease is really a
financing agreement as a matter of law, the debtor must also
satisfy one of the four enumerated factors. The debtor has not
attempted to do so. The Court, therefore, concludes that the debtor
has failed to satisfy the "per se test" as a matter of law.

Instead, the debtor seeks to establish that the Lease is a
financing transaction based on the specific facts and "economic
realities" of the transaction. First, the debtor asserts that the
presence of the terminal rental adjustment clause (TRAC) rider is a
"key factor" for establishing that the transaction is a security
agreement. However, the TRAC rider does not grant the debtor equity
in the Equipment. The TRAC rider simply shifts the risk that the
actual value of the Equipment at the end of the Lease will be less
than the Estimated Fair Market Value. As one court explained, a
TRAC rider "is simply a more sophisticated means to measure the
true extent to which the lessee has consumed the lessor's interest
in the goods."

The debtor relies on In re Grubbs Const. to support its arguments.
However, in contrast to the TRAC rider in Grubbs, the TRAC rider,
in this case, does not obligate the debtor to purchase the
Equipment at the end of the Lease. The debtor has a choice to make.
The fact that the TRAC rider allows ENG to retain the sale proceeds
of the Equipment in the fixed amount of $74,300 does not take away
the debtor's option. On the contrary, it confirms that ENG retains
a meaningful reversionary interest in the Equipment and it also
creates an incentive for the debtor to use and maintain the
Equipment in a way that protects ENG's right as the owner of the
Equipment.

In summary, the Lease states that the parties intended the
transaction to be a lease, not a security agreement. There is no
indication that the present value of the lease payments equals or
exceeds the value of the Equipment. There is no evidence that the
Estimated Fair Market Value of the Equipment was set as a price
less than the anticipated fair market value of the Equipment.
Finally, the debtor cannot obtain the Equipment for a nominal sum
at the end of the Lease terms but must make a substantial payment
to acquire it.

The Court concludes that the debtor failed to overcome the
presumption that the Lease is a true lease as a matter of law.

A copy of the Court's Memorandum Opinion dated Jan. 18, 2019 is
available at https://bit.ly/2IOFzpy from Leagle.com.

Royal T Energy, LLC, Plaintiff, represented by Eric A. Liepins.

ENGS Commercial Finance Co., Defendant, represented by Michael
Ridulfo -- mridulfo@krcl.com. -- Kane Russell Coleman and Logan,
PC.

                  About Royal T Energy LLC

Headquartered in Sherman, Texas, Royal T Energy, LLC, is a
privately-owned company that provides petroleum haulage services.
It operates an oilfield services company, consisting largely of
hauling and disposal of materials related to the hydraulic
fracturing industry.  The Company's operations are conducted
primarily in the Permian Basin, near Pecos, Texas.

Royal T Energy filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection (Bankr.
E.D. Tex. Case No. 17-42386) on Nov. 1, 2017.  In the petition
signed by James Alexander, member-manager, the Debtor estimated its
assets at up to $50,000 and its liabilities at between $10 million
and $50 million.  Judge Brenda T. Rhoades presides over the case.
Nathan M. Johnson, Esq., at Spector & Johnson, PLLC, serves as the
Debtor's bankruptcy counsel.


RYNIC INC: Continued Cash Collateral Use Authorized on Final Basis
------------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Mindy A. Mora of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of Florida has entered an Agreed Fifth and Final
Order authorizing Rynic, Inc., to use Valley National Bank's cash
collateral.

The Debtor will use cash collateral to pay the monthly expenses in
the budget and all fees required by the United States Trustee and
Clerk of the Court.  The Debtor will operate strictly in accordance
with the Budget and will not exceed 10% above the amount of any
line item shown in the Budget.

Valley National Bank will have a first priority post-petition
security interest in, and lien upon, all of the Debtor's personal
property, and all cash and non-cash proceeds thereof, which are or
have been acquired, generated or received by the Debtor after the
filing of the petition commencing this case, to the same extent
that Valley National Bank held a properly perfected prepetition
security interest or lien in assets immediately prior to the filing
of the petition commencing this case.

As additional adequate protection for the Debtor's use of cash
collateral, the Debtor will, on the first day of each month,
deliver to Valley National Bank, though its counsel, monthly
payments in the amount of $1,700 (for loan #0536) and $1,200 (for
loan #8059), totaling $2,900.

The Debtor is also required to promptly furnish Valley National
Bank with such financial and other information as required by the
underlying loan documents and such other information, documents and
reports as Valley National Bank may reasonably request.

A full-text copy of the Agreed Fifth and Final Order is available
at:

           http://bankrupt.com/misc/flsb18-12477-61.pdf

                       About Rynic, Inc.

Rynic, Inc., filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No.
18-12477) on March 2, 2018.  In the petition signed by Rite K.
Weller, president, the Debtor estimated at least $50,000 in assets
and $500,000 to $1 million in liabilities.  The case is assigned to
Judge Paul G. Hyman, Jr.  The Debtor is represented by David Lloyd
Merrill, Esq., at Merrill PA.  


SCIENTIFIC GAMES: Moody's Rates Proposed $1.1BB Unsec. Notes 'Caa1'
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service assigned a Caa1 rating to Scientific
Games International, Inc.'s proposed $1.1 billion senior unsecured
notes due 2026. The company's existing Ba3 rated revolver and term
loan, Ba3 rated senior secured notes, Caa1 rated senior unsecured
notes, and Caa1 rated senior subordinated noted are unchanged.
Scientific Games Corporation's (SGC) B2 Corporate Family Rating,
B2-PD Probability of Default Rating and SGL-2 Speculative Grade
Liquidity rating are also unchanged. SGC's rating outlook remains
stable.

Proceeds from the new proposed $1.1 billion senior unsecured notes
will be used to repay approximately $1 billion of the company's
existing 10% $2.2 billion senior unsecured notes due 2022, as well
as pay related accrued interest, premiums, fees and expenses.

The proposed refinancing will reduce annual cash interest expense
by approximately $17 million and extend debt maturities. The
proposed transaction is largely debt neutral, should be accretive
to the company's free cash flow and aligns with Moody's expectation
for continued reduction in leverage from current levels, which is
key to the company maintaining its existing rating.

Assignments:

Issuer: Scientific Games International, Inc.

  - Senior Unsecured Regular Bond/Debenture, Assigned Caa1 (LGD5)

RATINGS RATIONALE

Scientific Games Corporation's B2 Corporate Family Rating considers
the company's significant leverage that weakly positions the
company at its current rating. Despite improvement in SGC's
leverage since the company's largely debt-financed $5.1 billion
acquisition of Bally Technologies, Inc. in November 2014 and more
recently the largely debt financed acquisition of NYX Gaming Group
Limited ("NYX"), Moody's expects debt/EBITDA will remain high
through fiscal 2019. Another key credit concern is the less than
favorable outlook for slot machine demand that will pressure
revenue and earnings, both in terms of pricing and demand, for the
company's Gaming operating segment. Partly mitigating SGC's high
leverage is the company's plan to further leverage recent cost
reduction efforts and accelerate its deleveraging efforts. Moody's
currently expects debt/EBITDA will drop towards 6.0 times by the
end of fiscal 2019 through a combination of absolute debt
reduction, over 5% annual revenue growth, with margin improvement
further leveraging expense reductions. On a combined basis, Moody's
expects these factors will contribute to low double digit EBITDA
growth over the next twelve to eighteen months. SGC is considering
a possible initial public offering of a minority interest in their
social gaming business segment in 2019. While the timing and amount
of a potential IPO is currently unknown, the use of any potential
proceeds to reduce debt would aid and possibly expedite the
company's deleveraging efforts. Positive rating consideration is
given to SGC's large recurring revenue base. The contract based
nature of a majority of SGC's revenue, including both in its gaming
and lottery businesses, provides some level of revenue and earnings
stability. The company is also well-positioned to benefit from the
growth of digital gaming products and sports betting, as these
markets mature. SGC owns a large portfolio of complementary gaming
products and services, both digital and non-digital, that it can
utilize and cross-sell globally among its various distribution
platforms.

SGC's stable rating outlook takes into consideration the
expectation for a reduction in leverage, a key factor needed for
SGC to avoid a downgrade. The stable outlook is also supported by
the company's good liquidity profile.

A ratings upgrade is not likely in the foreseeable future given
Moody's expectation that SGC's leverage will remain high. A higher
rating is possible over the longer-term to the extent the company
demonstrates sustainable earnings and free cash flow improvement
and achieves and maintains debt/EBITDA at or below 5.0 times. SGC's
ratings could be downgraded if it appears that, for any reason, the
company is not tracking towards reducing debt/EBITDA towards 6.0
times by the end of fiscal 2019.

Scientific Games Corporation is a developer of technology-based
products and services and associated content for worldwide gaming,
lottery, social and digital gaming markets. SGC is the parent
company of Scientific Games International, Inc., the direct
borrower of over $9 billion of SGC's rated debt. SGC is a publicly
traded company (NASDAQ:SGMS) with consolidated revenue for the
latest 12-month period ended December 31, 2018 of approximately
$3.4 billion.


SCIENTIFIC GAMES: Proposes to Offer $1.1 Billion of Senior Notes
----------------------------------------------------------------
Scientific Games Corporation's wholly owned subsidiary, Scientific
Games International, Inc., intends, subject to market and other
conditions, to offer $1,100.0 million of senior unsecured notes due
2026 in a private offering.

Scientific Games intends to use the net proceeds of the Notes
offering to redeem approximately $1.0 billion of its outstanding
10.000% senior unsecured notes due 2022, pay accrued and unpaid
interest thereon plus any related premiums, fees and costs and pay
related fees and expenses of the Notes offering.

The Notes will be guaranteed on a senior basis by Scientific Games
and certain of its subsidiaries, and the Notes will not be
secured.

The Notes will not be registered under the Securities Act of 1933,
as amended, or any state securities laws and, unless so registered,
may not be offered or sold in the United States except pursuant to
an applicable exemption from the registration requirements of the
Securities Act and applicable state securities laws.  The Notes
will be offered only to persons reasonably believed to be qualified
institutional buyers in accordance with Rule 144A and to non-U.S.
Persons under Regulation S under the Securities Act.

                      About Scientific Games

Based in Las Vegas, Nevada, Scientific Games Corporation
(NASDAQ:SGMS) -- http://www.scientificgames.com/-- is a developer
of technology-based products and services and associated content
for the worldwide gaming, lottery, social and digital gaming
industries.  Its portfolio of revenue-generating activities
primarily includes supplying gaming machines and game content,
casino-management systems and table game products and services to
licensed gaming entities; providing instant and draw-based lottery
products, lottery systems and lottery content and services to
lottery operators; providing social casino solutions to retail
consumers and regulated gaming entities, as applicable; and
providing a comprehensive suite of digital RMG and sports wagering
solutions, distribution platforms, content, products and services.

Scientific Games incurred a net loss of $352.4 million in 2018,
following a net loss of $242.3 million in 2017.  As of Dec. 31,
2018, Scientific Games had $7.71 billion in total assets, $10.18
billion in total liabilities, and a total stockholders' deficit of
$2.46 billion.


SENIOR CARE GROUP: Plan Solicitation Period Extended Until May 6
----------------------------------------------------------------
Senior Care Group, Inc. and its affiliates Key West Health and
Rehabilitation Center, LLC and The Bridges Nursing and
Rehabilitation, LLC have until May 6 to solicit acceptances for
their proposed Chapter 11 plan of reorganization, according to an
order issued by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District
of Florida.

The companies current exclusive filing period expired on March 6.

                     About Senior Care Group

Senior Care Group, Inc., is a non-profit corporation which, through
its wholly-owned subsidiaries, provides residents and patients with
nursing and long-term health care services.

Senior Care Group and its six affiliates sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Lead Case No.
17-06562) on July 27, 2017.  In the petition signed by David R.
Vaughan, chairman of the Board, Senior Care Group estimated asset
and liabilities of $1 million to $10 million.

Judge Catherine Peek Mcewen oversees the cases.

Stichter Riedel Blain & Postler, P.A., is the Debtors' bankruptcy
counsel.  The Debtors hired Akerman LLP as their special healthcare
counsel.

The U.S. Trustee for Region 21 appointed Mary L. Peebles as the
patient care ombudsman for Key West Health and Rehabilitation
Center LLC, SCG Baywood LLC, SCG Gracewood LLC, and SCG
Laurellwood, LLC.

On Aug. 18, 2017, the U.S. trustee appointed an official committee
of unsecured creditors.  The Committee hired Stevens & Lee, P.C.,
as its bankruptcy counsel; and Trenam, Kemker, Scharf, Barkin,
Frye, O'Neill & Mullis, P.A., as co-counsel.  On Aug. 17, 2017, the
Debtors hired Holliday Fenoglio Fowler, LP, as broker.


SIT-CO LLC: Seeks Approval on Interim Use of Cash Collateral
------------------------------------------------------------
Sit-Co, LLC requests the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern
District of Indiana to approve the interim use of cash collateral
to pay ordinary operating expenses, including its employees.

The Debtor in possession requires the use of cash collateral to
operate its business, pay its employees, service its customers, and
preserve the value of its business for its creditors. As of the
filing date the Debtor's accounts receivable and cash were valued
at $191,821.

NorthpointCommercialCredit, LLC is the holder of a security
interest in Debtor's accounts receivables, among other assets
including equipment, to secure several extensions of credit.
Northpoint is owed to approximately $1,352,627, as of the petition
date.

In the event Debtor is authorized to use such cash collateral, the
Debtor offers a replacement lien on Northpoint's collateral, as
previously existed, now existing, or at any time becoming property
of the estate of the Debtor, including any replacement equipment
and its proceeds acquired by the Debtor, as adequate protection for
Northpoint. The lien will have the same priority, dignity and
effect as Northpoint's pre-petition liens in the Collateral.

The replacement lien will provide security for and against any use,
replacement or diminution in the Collateral and against any
diminution in value of Northpoint's interest in the Collateral as
it existed on the Filing Date. The replacement lien is in addition
to Northpoint's pre-petition lien in the Collateral, but excludes a
lien on the causes of action, or any proceeds, arising under
Chapter 5 of the Bankruptcy Code.

A full-text copy of the Debtor's Motion is available at

             http://bankrupt.com/misc/insb19-70172-10.pdf

                        About Sit-Co, LLC

Sit-Co, LLC, is a multifaceted company providing solutions for
businesses.  Since 2004, the Company has built a wireless network
covering eight counties in Southern Indiana. In 2008, the Company
build a state of the art data center offering co-location, private
cloud, disaster recovery, and data backup services.  In 2010, the
Company deployed a business VOIP system providing phone service in
22 states.  Its latest venture is the construction of Enterprise
and FTTH networks throughout the tri-state area.

Sit-Co filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. S.D. Ind. Case No.
17-70172) on Feb. 14, 2019.  In the petition signed by Thomas D.
Kolb, member, the Debtor estimated up to $50,000 in assets and $1
million to $10 million in liabilities.  The case is assigned to
Judge Basil H. Lorch III.  Sandra D. Freeburger, Esq., at Deitz,
Shields & Freeburger, LLP, is the Debtor's counsel.



SKYMARK PROPERTIES SPE: Bid to Use Cash Collateral Denied
---------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. Thomas J. Tucker of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Eastern District of Michigan has issued an order denying Skymark
Properties SPE LLC's Cash Collateral Motion for the reasons stated
in the Opinion filed by the Court in the case.

                     About Skymark Properties

Toronto, Ontario-based Skymark Properties SPE LLC and Southfield,
Michigan-based Skymark Properties II LLC are privately held
companies that lease real estate properties.

Skymark Properties SPE and Skymark Properties II each filed a
voluntary Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. E.D. Mich. Lead Case No.
19-40248) on Jan. 8, 2019.  In the petition signed by Troy Wilson,
authorized agent, the Debtors estimated $1 million to $10 million
in both assets and liabilities.

The cases are assigned to Judge Thomas J. Tucker.

Scott A. Wolfson, Esq., and Anthony J. Kochis, Esq., at Wolfson
Bolton PLLC, represent the Debtors as legal counsel.


SOLID LANDINGS: Perry Loses Summary Judgment Bid vs Capstar
-----------------------------------------------------------
Defendant/counter-plaintiff Elizabeth Perry in the case captioned
CAPSTAR BANK, a Tennessee state chartered bank, Plaintiff, v.
ELIZABETH PERRY, Defendant, ELIZABETH PERRY, Counter-Plaintiff, v.
CAPSTAR BANK, a Tennessee state chartered bank, SCOTT McGUIRE, and
GERIK DEGNER, Counter-Defendants, Case No. 3:17-cv-01221 (M.D.
Tenn.) filed a Motion for Summary Judgment and incorporated
Memorandum of Points and Authorities seeking summary judgment in
her favor on the sole count in plaintiff/counter-defendant CapStar
Bank's Complaint for breach of a guaranty agreement. District Judge
Aleta A. Trauger denied Perry's motion.

CapStar brings suit for breach of a written contract; Perry's
defense is premised upon her interpretation of subsequent contracts
executed by the parties. The existence of the various agreements
and their wording are essentially undisputed. The parties simply
disagree as to how to construe some provisions of the contracts.

In November 2015, Elizabeth Perry, along with Stephen Fennelly and
Mark Shandrow, each personally guaranteed a loan made by CapStar to
Solid Landings Behavioral Health, Inc. and other entities. (See
Doc. No. 1-2, Loan and Security Agreement, Perry Guaranty
Agreement. CapStar brings suit to enforce Perry's Guaranty, seeking
to recover more than $6,000,000.

For her part, Perry maintains that CapStar is obligated to release
her from the Guaranty based either on the terms of a modified Asset
Purchase Agreement executed in 2017, which the parties refer to as
the July 27 APA, or, alternatively, on a Conditional Release
Agreement ("CRA") executed on June 1, 2017, the same day that
Debtors Solid Landings Behavioral Health, Inc. and a number of
related entities filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in
California.

CapStar filed its Complaint, asserting breach of the Guaranty
Agreement, on Sept. 1, 2017. Perry filed her Answer and
Counterclaim for damages in January 2018. As relevant here, the
Counterclaim seeks specific performance of the CRA, by requiring
CapStar to execute the Mutual Release attached thereto, damages for
breach of the November 2015 Loan Agreement, and breach of the duty
of good faith and fair dealing.

In her motion, Perry argues that (1) the July 27 APA requires
CapStar to sign a Mutual Release releasing her from her Guaranty;
and (2) alternatively, that each of the criteria for release set
forth in the CRA has been met, requiring CapStar to execute the
Mutual Release. CapStar's position is that Perry and CapStar never
reached an agreement to enter into the Mutual Release under the
July 27 APA and that the requirements for a release enumerated in
the CRA have not been met.

The July 27 APA, by its terms, is to be construed under California
law. California statutes require that "[t]he whole of a contract is
to be taken together, so as to give effect to every part, if
reasonably practicable, each clause helping to interpret the
other." California law directs the courts to interpret the words of
a contract in their ordinary and popular sense, unless the contract
uses words in a technical manner or defines certain terms.

A contract is ambiguous if it is capable of more than one
reasonable interpretation. In this case, the court finds that the
July 27 APA is not ambiguous. Interpretation of the
contract--specifically section 4.09, read in the context of the
contract as a whole and particularly in light of the definitions of
the various terms--does not require resort to anything other than
the contractual language itself. CapStar, as Lender, incurred an
obligation to execute and deliver a duly executed Mutual Release,
in substantially the same form as that contemplated by the CRA,
only "if such a release ha[d] been agreed to" by Perry and CapStar.
The record is clear that they had not agreed upon any such release,
so CapStar was not obligated to sign and deliver it.

If there were any ambiguity, the parties' conduct establishes their
understanding that sectopm 4.09 did not apply to Perry, because
Perry and CapStar had not reached a separate agreement regarding
the execution of a mutual release. Based on the unambiguous
language of the July 27 APA, Perry is not entitled to summary
judgment in her favor.

The Court also finds that Perry is also not entitled to summary
judgment on the basis of the CRA. The salient question with respect
to the CRA is not whether its conditions for release have been met,
but whether, even if they have, the agreement was effectively
superseded or modified by the Bankruptcy Stipulation and the July
27 APA, based either on merger or on a reading of the CRA in
conjunction with the subsequent agreements. The parties have not
effectively briefed this issue. In light of that open question, the
court finds that some ambiguity exists as to whether Perry
purchased the Debtors' assets through the Bankruptcy Sale that was
contemplated by and defined in the CRA and the original APA and as
to whether the CRA's release provision remained operative at all.
Accordingly, Perry's Motion for Summary Judgment is denied.

A copy of the Court's Memorandum dated Jan. 23, 2019 is available
at https://bit.ly/2VGk8IX from Leagle.com.

Capstar Bank, a Tennessee state chartered bank, Plaintiff,
represented by David W. Houston, IV -- dhouston@burr.com -- Burr &
Forman, LLP, J. Patrick Warfield -- pwarfield@burr.com -- Burr &
Forman, LLP & Payton M. Bradford -- pbradford@burr.com -- Burr &
Forman, LLP.

Elizabeth Perry, Defendant, represented by James P. Catalano , The
Catalano Firm & Leonard C. Herr , Herr Pedersen & Berglund LLP.

Elizabeth Perry, Counter Plaintiff, represented by James P.
Catalano , The Catalano Firm & Leonard C. Herr , Herr Pedersen &
Berglund LLP.

Capstar Bank, Counter Defendant, represented by David W. Houston,
IV , Burr & Forman, LLP.

            About Solid Landings Behavioral Health, Inc.

Solid Landings Behavioral Health, Inc., and four affiliates sought
Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. C.D. Cal. Lead Case No. 17-12213) on
June 1, 2017, with a deal to sell substantially all assets to
Alpine Pacific Capital, LLC, for $9.05 million, subject to
overbid.

The Debtors are providers of individualized 12-step and alternative
treatment programs for people suffering from substance abuse and
mental health disorders, with facilities located in California,
Nevada, and Texas. The "Solid Landings" brand was created in 2009,
when the Debtors' shareholders opened their first sober living
residence in Costa Mesa, California, which residence was operated
by Sure Haven.

The debtor-affiliates are Cedar Creek Recovery, Inc., EMS
Toxicology, Silver Rock Recovery and Sure Haven, Inc.

Katie S. Goodman, the chief restructuring officer, signed the
petitions.

The Debtors disclosed $63,070 in assets and $10.87 million in
liabilities as of the Petition Date.

Judge Catherine E. Bauer presides over the case.

The Debtors hired Levene, Neale, Bender, Yoo & Brill LLP as their
bankruptcy counsel.

Peter C. Anderson, U.S. Trustee for the Central District of
California, on July 13 appointed four creditors to serve on the
official committee of unsecured creditors in the Chapter 11 case of
Solid Landings Behavioral Health, Inc.

The Committee is represented by Michael I. Gottfried, Esq., and
Roye Zur, Esq., at Landau Gottfried & Berger LLP, in Los Angeles,
California.


SONOMA VALLEY HCD: Moody's Cuts GO Debt Rating to 'Ba1'
-------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service has downgraded to Ba1 from Baa3 Sonoma
Valley Health Care District (HCD), CA's general obligation rating.
The downgrade affects approximately $31.4 million in outstanding
general obligation debt. The outlook is stable. This concludes the
review for downgrade initiated on December 11, 2018.

RATINGS RATIONALE

In December 2018, the Baa3 rating was placed under review for
downgrade pending renewal of a $7 million line of credit (LOC) that
serves as a critical source of liquidity for the district. Not
withstanding renewal of the LOC in January, the rating downgrade
reflects expectations for continued weakness in the district's cash
position, recurring operating losses, and ongoing declines in net
revenues and patient volumes. The district hopes to expand
outpatient diagnostic services, however, inpatient volumes are
likely to continue to erode with reduced profitability.

The district's patient mix also represents a significant weakness,
with an increasing proportion of net patient revenues derived from
government reimbursements. Despite operational challenges, the
district benefits from favorable community support. An increased
parcel tax of $250 per parcel through the end of 2022, approved by
voters in 2017, generates annual revenues of close to $3.8 million,
providing critical financial support. In the past, the district's
foundation has raised around $1 million annually. The district is
currently in the process of raising $20 million to fund a planned
new outpatient diagnostic center, with approximately $13 million in
pledges thus far.

The rating also incorporates the security provided by the general
obligation (GO) pledge, which partially compensates for the
district's operating weakness. GO debt is secured by a
voter-approved unlimited property tax pledge on a sizeable and
growing tax base with above average wealth levels. Security is also
enhanced by the well-established levy and collection history of
Sonoma County for the debt service payments. The county, rather
than the health care district, levies, collects, and disburses the
district's property taxes, providing a "lock box" mechanism. This
arrangement further insulates the GO levy from the district's
financial operations.

RATING OUTLOOK

The stable outlook reflects expectations for continued growth in
the district's $10 billion tax base securing the GO debt, with
above average wealth levels remaining solid. While liquidity
remains weak, financial operations should remain stable, supported
by parcel taxes that offset ongoing operating losses.

FACTORS THAT COULD LEAD TO AN UPGRADE

  - Significant and sustained improvement in liquidity

  - Increased patient volumes and net patient revenues

FACTORS THAT COULD LEAD TO A DOWNGRADE

  - Failure to reduce, as planned, the outstanding balance on the
district's line of credit

  - Ongoing declines in liquidity or continued operating losses

LEGAL SECURITY

The general obligation bonds are secured by the district's
voter-approved, unlimited, ad valorem property tax pledge.
Strengthening credit quality, Sonoma County levies, collects, and
disburses the district's property taxes, creating a lock-box
mechanism.

USE OF PROCEEDS

Not applicable

PROFILE

Sonoma Valley Health Care District, also known as Sonoma Valley
Hospital, is licensed for 48 general acute care beds and 27 skilled
nursing beds and serves a rural population of roughly 42,000 people
in and around the City of Sonoma. The district provides outpatient
diagnostics, skilled nursing, and occupational health services. In
2018, the district discontinued obstetrics and home health care
services. The hospital has several competitors within 30 miles,
although none exist within the district's boundaries or its primary
service area.


ST. JOHN PENTECOSTAL: Seeks to Hire DelBello Donnellan as Counsel
-----------------------------------------------------------------
St. John Pentecostal Church Inc. seeks authority from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York to employ
DelBello Donnellan Weingarten Wise & Wiederkehr, LLP as its legal
counsel.

The services DelBello will render are:

     a. advise the Debtor of its powers and duties in the continued
management of its property and affairs;

     b. negotiate with creditors of the Debtor to formulate a plan
of reorganization;

     c. prepare the necessary answers, orders, reports and other
legal papers required for the Debtor's protection from their
creditors under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code;

     d. attend meetings and represent the Debtor in all matters
pending before the court;

     e. advise the Debtor in connection with any potential
refinancing or sale of its properties;

     g. represent the Debtor in connection with obtaining
post-petition financing, if necessary; and

     h. take any necessary action to obtain approval of a
disclosure statement and confirmation of a plan of reorganization.

The firm's 2019 hourly rates are:

     Attorneys          $375 - $595
     Law Clerks                $200
     Legal Assistants          $150
     Paralegals                $150

Julie Cvek Curley, Esq., a partner at DelBello, disclosed in a
court filing that her firm is a "disinterested person" as defined
in Section 101(14) of the Bankruptcy Code.

The counsel can be reached through:

     Julie Cvek Curley, Esq.
     DelBello Donnellan Weingarten Wise & Wiederkehr, LLP
     One North Lexington Avenue
     White Plains, NY 10601
     Tel: 914-681-0200
     Fax: 914-684-0288
     Email: info@ddw-law.com

                       About St. John Pentecostal Church Inc.

St. John Pentecostal Church Inc., a religious organization in New
York, filed a voluntary Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Case
No. 19-10195) on January 23, 2019. In the petition signed by Robert
Johnson, deacon, the Debtor estimated $1 million to $10 million in
assets and $100,000 to $500,000 in liabilities. Erica Feynman
Aisner, Esq., at DelBello Donnellan Weingarten Wise & Wiederkehr,
LLP is the Debtor's counsel.


SUNGLO HOME: Seeks Authorization to Use Cash Collateral
-------------------------------------------------------
Sunglo Home Health Services, Inc., seeks authorization from the
U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas to use
cash collateral in order to continue its business operations
without interruption toward the objective of formulating an
effective plan of reorganization.

Specifically, the Debtor seeks authorization to use cash collateral
to meet the ordinary cash needs of the Debtor for the payment of:
(a) reasonable and necessary operating expenses; (b) maintenance
and preservation of property of the estate; (c) property taxes; (d)
payment of expenses associated with the Chapter 11 case, including
U.S. Trustee's fees and professional fees and expenses; and (e) for
such other purposes as may be approved in writing by the Secured
Creditors.

The Debtor's business includes accounts receivable, supplies, and
office equipment, all of which are believed to be subject to
security interests and liens granted by Debtor to various creditors
listed in its bankruptcy schedules. Specifically, the Internal
Revenue Service holds a secured federal tax lien of approximately
$686,000 secured by all of Debtor's assets.

The Debtor agrees to grant the IRS, as applicable and necessary, a
replacement lien on all inventory and accounts receivable acquired
by the Debtor since the Petition Date, and Debtor ratifies and
confirms the federal tax lien filed on the Debtor's inventory,
accounts and fixtures perfected by the IRS prior to the Petition
Date and affirms that such lien and replacement lien will continue
until further Order of the Court or confirmation of a Plan of
Reorganization.

A full-text copy of the Debtor's Motion is available at

              http://bankrupt.com/misc/txsb19-10061-3.pdf

                        About Sunglo Home

Sunglo Home Health Services, Inc. -- http://www.sunglohhs.com/--
is a home health care services provider that offers a variety of
programs to assist the aging and disabled in sustaining an improved
quality of life.  With more than 27 years of experience, Sunglo
offers adult daycare, nurses, nursing aides, therapies, domestic
help and spiritual support.  

Based in Harlingen, Texas, Sunglo Home Health Services, Inc., d/b/a
Sunglo Adult Day Care VIII; d/b/a Sunglo Adult Day Care II; d/b/a
Brighten Academy filed a voluntary Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. S.D.
Tex. Case No. 19-10061) on Feb. 14, 2019, and disclosed $476,699 in
assets and $1,540,810 in liabilities.  The petition was signed by
Linda Salazar, vice president.  The Debtor is represented by Jana
Smith Whitworth, Esq. at JS Whitworth Law Firm, PLLC


SYNERGY PHARMACEUTICALS: Panel Opposes Independent Director Appt.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
BankruptcyData.com reported that Synergy Pharmaceuticals, et al.,
Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors objected to the Debtors'
motion for (i) the appointment of an independent director (the
"Investigation Motion") and (ii) the retention of Kirkland & Ellis
as counsel to the independent director.

BankruptcyData added that the Debtors' Official Committee of Equity
Security Holders (the "Equity Committee") subsequently joined the
Creditors Committee objection.

This is the second time that the Creditors Committee and Equity
Committee have teamed up to challenge the Debtors' Plan and its
alleged protection of directors and officers at the expense of
stakeholders, BankruptcyData noted. Earlier, on March 4, 2019, the
Creditors Committee objected to the approval of the Debtors'
Disclosure Statement, arguing that it is patently unconfirmable
given opposition from what the Creditors Committee believes is the
only impaired class. That opposition stems "solely on account of
the preferential treatment the Plan affords the Debtors' directors
and officers."  As with the Investigation Motion, the Equity
Committee submitted a joinder to the Creditors Committee
objection.

The Creditors Committee complained that "[t]he Investigation Motion
is a last-ditch attempt, authorized by the Debtors' officers and
directors but funded by the creditors without their consent, to
obtain releases for the Debtors' officers and directors."

The Court scheduled a hearing for March 12, 2019 to consider the
objection.

                  About Synergy Pharmaceuticals

Synergy (NASDAQ: SGYP) -- http://www.synergypharma.com/-- is a
biopharmaceutical company focused on the development and
commercialization of novel gastrointestinal (GI) therapies.  The
company has pioneered discovery, research and development efforts
around analogs of uroguanylin, a naturally occurring human GI
peptide, for the treatment of GI diseases and disorders.  Synergy's
proprietary GI platform includes one commercial product TRULANCE(R)
(plecanatide) and a second product candidate - dolcanatide.

Synergy Pharmaceuticals Inc. (Lead Case) and its subsidiary Synergy
Advanced Pharmaceuticals, Inc., filed voluntary Chapter 11
petitions (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Lead Case No. 18-14010) on Dec. 12,
2018.  

In the petitions signed by Gary G. Gemignani, executive vice
president and chief financial officer, the Debtors posted total
assets of $83,039,825 and total liabilities of $179,282,378 as of
Sept. 30, 2018.

The Debtors tapped Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP as
bankruptcy counsel; Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton LLP as
special counsel; FTI Consulting, Inc. as financial advisor;
Centerview Partners Holdings LP as investment banker; and Prime
Clerk LLC, as notice and claims agent.


SYNERGY PHARMACEUTICALS: Taps Togut Segal as Co-Counsel
-------------------------------------------------------
Synergy Pharmaceuticals Inc. and Synergy Advanced Pharmaceuticals,
Inc., received approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of New York to hire Togut, Segal & Segal LLP.

The firm will serve as co-counsel with Skadden, Arps, Slate,
Meagher & Flom LLP, the Debtors' lead bankruptcy counsel.  Togut
will represent the Debtors in matters that Skadden may not handle
due to a conflict of interest with their creditors.

Togut will charge these hourly fees:

     Partners        $595 - $1,125
     Counsel         $630 - $810
     Associates      $305 - $730

Albert Togut, Esq., a senior member of Togut, disclosed in a court
filing that his firm is "disinterested" as defined in Section
101(14) of the Bankruptcy Code.

In accordance with Appendix B-Guidelines for reviewing fee
applications filed by attorneys in larger Chapter 11 cases, Mr.
Togut disclosed that the firm has not agreed to a variation of its
standard or customary billing arrangements in connection with its
employment with the Debtors, and that no professional in his firm
has varied his rate based on the geographic location of the
Debtors' bankruptcy cases.

With their motion relating to postpetition financing and cash
collateral, the Debtors prepared a 13-week cash flow budget, which
included items such as professional fees.  Using this budget as a
guide, the Debtors expect to develop a specific prospective budget
and staffing plan to comply with the U.S. trustee's requests for
additional disclosures and orders of the bankruptcy court,
according to Mr. Togut.

"As these Chapter 11 cases continue to develop, the Togut firm will
formulate a budget and staffing plan for this proposed retention,
which it will review with the Debtors," Mr. Togut said in a court
filing.
  
The firm can be reached through:

     Albert Togut, Esq.
     Togut, Segal & Segal LLP
     One Penn Plaza
     New York, NY 10119
     Phone: 212-594-5000
     Fax: 212-967-4258
     Email: altogut@TeamTogut.com

                   About Synergy Pharmaceuticals

Synergy (NASDAQ: SGYP) -- http://www.synergypharma.com/-- is a
biopharmaceutical company focused on the development and
commercialization of novel gastrointestinal (GI) therapies.  The
company has pioneered discovery, research and development efforts
around analogs of uroguanylin, a naturally occurring human GI
peptide, for the treatment of GI diseases and disorders.  Synergy's
proprietary GI platform includes one commercial product TRULANCE(R)
(plecanatide) and a second product candidate - dolcanatide.

Synergy Pharmaceuticals Inc. (Lead Case) and its subsidiary Synergy
Advanced Pharmaceuticals, Inc. filed voluntary Chapter 11 petitions
(Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Lead Case No. 18-14010) on Dec. 12, 2018.  

In the petitions signed by Gary G. Gemignani, executive vice
president and chief financial officer, the Debtors posted total
assets of $83,039,825 and total liabilities of $179,282,378 as of
Sept. 30, 2018.

The Debtors tapped Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP as
bankruptcy counsel; Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton LLP as
special counsel; FTI Consulting, Inc. as financial advisor;
Centerview Partners Holdings LP as investment banker; and Prime
Clerk LLC, as notice and claims agent.


TM VILLAGE: Court OK's Bid to Assume Prepetition Sales Contracts
----------------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas
granted TM Village, Ltd.'s motion to assume prepetition sales
contracts covering 43 of 50 condominium units it owns.

The motion drew responses from: (1) the majority of counterparties
to the Contracts, who refer to themselves as the "Condo Owners;"
(2) senior lienholders Tamamoi, LLC and FDRE, Inc.; (3) Richard
Yao, as successor of interest to Yaling Pei, Di Zhang and Young
Chen; and (4) second lienholder SKR Partners, LLC.

The objections to the Motion to Assume are that:

   (1) TMV Condo is the party to the Contracts and no evidence
supports a finding that the Contracts were validly assigned to the
Debtor;

   (2) creditors cannot make an informed decision on the Motion to
Assume without copies of the Contracts or evidence of TMV Condo's
use of the sale proceeds;

   (3) the Motion to Assume impermissibly seeks to assume
forty-three Contracts without complying with Bankruptcy Rule
6006(f)'s omnibus procedures;

   (4) the Contracts are not executory and so cannot be rejected
because the Debtor has no remaining material obligations; and

   (5) assumption of the Contracts is not an exercise of sound
business judgment because the Debtor could reject the Contracts and
resell the Condominiums at higher prices.

The Assignment of Contract of Sale entered into evidence at the
hearing21 plainly shows that TMV Condo assigned the forty-three
Contracts to the Debtor effective August 3, 2018. Although several
objectors complained that the Debtor received nothing in exchange
for assuming the Contracts (arguably making the assignment a fraud
on its creditors), the evidence established that TMV Condo used
nearly $7.75 million it received as the Condo Owners' prepaid
purchase price to build the Office Suites and Condominiums on the
Debtor's land.22 The objectors also argue that the entry into the
assignment shortly before the bankruptcy filing is a fraudulent
conveyance; however, no party in interest has filed a complaint
asserting a chapter 5 cause of action. Too, absent the assignment
the Debtor would have paid nothing for the building that now sits
on its land. Accordingly, this objection is overruled.

The Contracts were also admitted into evidence at the hearing
without objection. Together with them, the record comprises
sufficient evidence concerning the circumstances surrounding
formation of the Contracts and construction of the Office Suites
and Condominiums to permit the court to make a fully informed
decision regarding the Motion to Assume. Thus, the second objection
is overruled.

The objectors argue that the Motion to Assume must be denied as
procedurally improper because it fails to meet the requirements for
omnibus objections set forth in Fed. R. Bankr. P. 6006(f). Nothing
in the record suggests that the Debtor's less than scrupulous
compliance disserved the objectives of the amended rule. First, the
motion involves one type of executory contract, all identified on
Exhibit A by unit number and a purchaser's name. Second, the motion
is straightforward: it is only five pages long and does not seek a
ruling on a myriad of complex agreements contained in an extensive
and convoluted motion. On these facts it is doubtful that a Condo
Owner was unable to locate its Contract on the exhibit or an
objecting party was confused about the objective of the motion.
Finally, no party has claimed any confusion regarding the relief
the Debtor sought or the Contracts to which the motion referred.
None of the Condo Owners, the proposed purchasers of forty-two of
the forty-three Condominiums, object to assumption. On this record,
strict compliance with Rule 6006(f) is not required and this
objection is overruled.

The Court also holds that the Contracts are executor and may be
assumed or rejected. Even if a Condo Owner had prepaid the purchase
price as of the petition date, it still had material obligations to
the Debtor that are sufficient to render the Contract executor. The
Contracts were executory as of the petition date and so the Debtor
may assume or reject them in accordance with 11 U.S.C. section
365.

On the fifth objection, the Court holds that the business judgment
standard is highly deferential to the decisions of a debtor in
possession, and the record is far from clear that rejection
actually would result in an overall benefit to the estate. The
possibility that an alternative course of action may result in
higher sale proceeds alone will not support a finding that the
Debtor's decision to assume was made in bad faith or a gross abuse
of its business discretion. Accordingly, assumption of the
Contracts is an exercise of the Debtor's sound business judgment
and the Motion to Assume should be granted.

A copy of the Memorandum Opinion dated Feb. 27, 2019 is available
at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/txnb18-32770-11-135.pdf

                    About TM Village, Ltd.

TM Village, Ltd. filed as a Domestic Limited Partnership in the
State of Texas on Oct. 16, 2014, according to public records filed
with Texas Secretary of State.

TM Village commenced a Chapter 11 proceeding (Bankr. N.D. Tex. Case
No. 18-32770) on Aug. 22, 2018.  The petition was signed by John
Chong, president and general partner.  The Debtor estimated $50,000
in assets and $1 million to $10 million in liabilities.  Thomas
Craig Sheils, Esq., and Mark Douglas Winnubst, Esq., at Sheils
Winnubst PC, serve as the Debtor's counsel.


TRANSMONTGAINE PARTNERS: Moody's Cuts CFR to 'B1', Outlook Stable
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service downgraded the ratings of TransMontaigne
Partners LLC (TransMontaigne), including the Corporate Family
Rating (CFR) to B1 from Ba3, the Probability of Default Rating
(PDR) to B1-PD from Ba3-PD and the rating on its senior unsecured
notes to B3 from B2. Moody's affirmed the company's SGL-3
Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating. The action, which follows the
acquisition by an affiliate of ArcLight Energy Partners Fund VI,
L.P. of TransMontaigne's publicly held common units not previously
held by ArcLight Energy Partners Fund VI, L.P. (and subsequent
conversion of TransMontaigne Partners L.P. into a Delaware limited
liability company, TransMontaigne Partners LLC), concludes the
rating review initiated in December 2018. The outlook is stable.

"The new $525 million term loan (not rated by Moody's) at
TransMontaigne's holding company parent used to fund the
acquisition of TransMontaigne's publicly held common units
increases the amount of debt serviced by the company's cash flow,"
stated James Wilkins, Moody's Vice President -- Senior Analyst.

The following summarizes the ratings activity.

Ratings downgraded:

Issuer: TransMontaigne Partners LLC

  - Corporate Family Rating, B1 from Ba3

  - Probability of Default Rating, B1-PD from Ba3-PD

  - Senior unsecured notes due 2026, B3 (LGD5) from B2 (LGD5)

Ratings affirmed:

  - Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating, Affirmed at SGL-3

Outlook Action:

  - Outlook, Stable from rating under review

RATINGS RATIONALE

The downgrade of TransMontaigne's CFR to B1 reflects the increase
in debt that is serviced by the company's cash flows, following the
acquisition by ArcLight. TransMontaigne's existing balance sheet
debt has remained following the acquisition, but a new $525 million
term loan (which is not guaranteed by TransMontaigne and is
structurally subordinated to the debt at TransMontaigne) that
partially funded the purchase of public common units was placed at
a holding company parent of TransMontaigne, increasing the debt
serviced by TransMontaigne's cash flows to $1.13 billion. The
company's leverage was 4.6x as of September 30, 2018 (including
Moody's analytical adjustments), but leverage is higher if one
includes the holdco debt (expected to be around 7.5x at year-end
2019). The interest coverage also deteriorates, if one includes the
holdco debt.

TransMontaigne's CFR reflects the stable nature of its cash flows
(from pipeline, terminal and tankage assets), large proportion of
fee-based revenues under take-or-pay contracts, and diversity of
operations in multiple US regions. The company enjoys strong market
positions in niche markets that have limited competition and
significant barriers to entry. Future growth will be derived from
internal asset expansions as well as acquisition opportunities
sourced from its sponsor or third parties that could be financed
with excess free cash flow, debt and sponsor equity. TransMontaigne
is constrained by its modest scale, execution risks associated with
growth opportunities, significant customer concentration, high
leverage and distributions required to service the debt at its
holdco parent.

The SGL-3 Speculative Grade Liquidity rating reflects adequate
liquidity supported by positive cash flow from operations and
unused borrowing capacity under its $850 million revolving credit
facility due in March 2022. The company keeps minimal cash balances
($4 million as of September 30, 2018). TransMontaigne had
approximately $558 million of revolver availability as of September
30, 2018, after accounting for $850 million of commitments,
borrowings of $291 million and letters of credit (less than $1
million). The company's legacy business has generally had little
variation in working capital levels on a seasonal basis. The credit
facility has three financial maintenance covenants: (1) a maximum
total leverage ratio of 5.25x; (2) a senior secured leverage ratio
of 3.75x; and (3) a minimum interest coverage ratio of 2.75x, all
of which the company should remain in compliance with. The company
has no near-term debt maturities, but the holdco term loan has a
modest 0.25 percent per quarter amortization requirement.

The senior unsecured notes are rated B3, two notches below the B1
CFR, consistent with Moody's loss-given-default rating methodology,
reflecting the more senior priority claim of the secured revolving
credit facility borrowings relative to the notes. The revolver
borrowings are secured by a first priority security interest in the
majority of the company's assets. The $525 million holdco term loan
is not guaranteed by TransMontaigne and is structurally
subordinated to the debt at TransMontaigne.

The stable outlook reflects Moody's expectations that
TransMontaigne will generate steadily growing earnings and ongoing
capital spending for growth projects will not meaningfully impact
leverage metrics. The ratings could be upgraded if the company's
leverage improves, while consolidated leverage (including the
holdco debt) declines below 5.5x, and interest coverage (calculated
considering the holdco debt) exceeds 2.5x . The ratings could be
downgraded if the company's leverage increases or it is not able to
execute on its business plans such that earnings do not grow.

The principal methodology used in these ratings was Midstream
Energy published in December 2018.

TransMontaigne Partners LLC, headquartered in Denver, Colorado,
operates midstream energy assets such as storage terminals and
product pipeline assets in multiple regions across the US,
including along the Gulf Coast, in the Midwest, in Houston and
Brownsville, Texas, along the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers, in the
Southeast and on the West Coast. TransMontaigne is an indirect,
controlled subsidiary of ArcLight Energy Partners Fund VI, L.P.


TRIDENT HOLDING: Seeks to Hire Epiq as Administrative Agent
-----------------------------------------------------------
Trident Holding Company, LLC, and its debtor-affiliates seek
authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District
of New York to employ Epiq Corporate Restructuring, LLC, as
administrative agent to the Debtors.

Trident Holding requires Epiq to:

   (a) assist with, among other things, solicitation, balloting,
       tabulation, and calculation of votes, as well as preparing
       any appropriate reports, as required in furtherance of
       confirmation of plans of reorganization;

   (b) generate an official ballot certification and testify, if
       necessary, in support of the ballot tabulation results;

   (c) gather data in conjunction with the preparation, and
       assist with the preparation, of the Debtors' schedules of
       assets and liabilities and statements of financial
       affairs, if any;

   (d) maintain an electronic filing platform for purposes of
       filing proofs of claim;

   (e) generate, provide and assist, if necessary, with claims
       reports, claims objections, exhibits, claims
       reconciliation, and related matters; and

   (f) provide such other claims processing, noticing,
       solicitation, balloting, distributions, and other
       administrative services described in the Services
       Agreement, but not included in the Section 156(c)
       Application, as may be requested from time to time by the
       Debtors, the Court, or the clerk of the Court.

Epiq will be paid at these hourly rates:


     Executives                                       No Charge
     Executive Vice President, Solicitation             $215
     Solicitation Consultant                            $190
     Consultants/Directors/Vice Presidents           $160 to $190
     Case Managers                                    $70 to $165
     IT/Programming                                   $65 to $85
     Clerical/Administrative Support                  $25 to $45

Epiq will be paid a retainer in the amount of $25,000.

Epiq will also be reimbursed for reasonable out-of-pocket expenses
incurred.

Brian Karpuk, director of Consulting Services of Epiq Corporate
Restructuring, LLC, assured the Court that the firm is a
"disinterested person" as the term is defined in Section 101(14) of
the Bankruptcy Code and does not represent any interest adverse to
the Debtors and their estates.

Epiq can be reached at:

     Brian Karpuk
     EPIQ CORPORATE RESTRUCTURING, LLC
     777 Third Ave., 12th Floor
     New York, NY 10017
     Tel: (646)282-2595

                     About Trident Holding

Trident -- http://www.tridentusahealth.com/-- is a national
provider of bedside diagnostic and related services in the United
States, with operations in more than 35 states serving more than
12,000 post -acute care, assisted living facilities, and
correctional facilities. It provides a high volume of services
including X-ray, ultrasound, laboratory, cardiac monitoring,
vascular access services, on-site nurse practitioner-based primary
care and more.  Trident employs approximately 5,600 people.

Trident Holding Company, LLC and its affiliates sought protection
under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Lead Case
No. 19-10384) on Feb. 10, 2019.  The Debtors disclosed $584 million
in assets and $867 million in liabilities as of as of Dec. 31,
2018.

The Debtors tapped Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP and
Togut, Segal & Segal LLP as their legal counsel; PJT Partners LP as
investment banker and financial advisor; Ankura Consulting Group,
LLC as restructuring advisor; and Epiq Corporate Restructuring,
LLC, as claims and noticing agent and administrative advisor.


TRIDENT HOLDING: Seeks to Hire Togut Segal as Co-Counsel
--------------------------------------------------------
Trident Holding Company, LLC, and its debtor-affiliates, seek
authority from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District
of New York to employ Togut Segal & Segal LLP, as co-counsel to the
Debtors.

Trident Holding requires Togut Segal to:

   a. assist the Debtors with obtaining Bankruptcy Court approval
      for the retention of select estate professionals and
      ordinary course professionals as may be needed in these
      Chapter 11 Cases;

   b. assist the Debtors' professionals with preparing monthly
      fee statements and interim fee applications;

   c. assist the Debtors with preparing their monthly operating
      reports;

   d. assist the Debtors with preparing their schedules of assets
      and liabilities and statements of financial affairs;

   e. review, object to, and settle claims and handling related
      matters, including contested matters seeking the setoff,
      allowance, and settlement of (a) priority or secured claims
      and (b) general unsecured claims;

   f. counsel the Debtors in connection with reclamation demands
      and issues;

   g. effectuate the assumption and rejection of executor
      contracts and unexpired leases;

   h. assist the Debtors in connection with utility matters,
      including, but not limited to, demands by utility providers
      pursuant to section 366 of the Bankruptcy Code;

   i. analyze transfers made by the Debtors in the 90-day period
      prior to the commencement of the Chapter 11 Cases for an
      assessment of potential avoidance claims under chapter 5 of
      the Bankruptcy Code;

   j. assist the Debtors in connection with de minimis asset
      sales;

   k. assist the Debtors with certain vendor issues;

   l. advise the Debtors regarding their powers and duties as
      debtors in possession for the tasks assigned;

   m. prepare and file on the Debtors' behalf motions,
      applications, answers, proposed orders, reports, and papers
      necessary for the assigned matters;

   n. attend meetings and negotiating with representatives of
      creditors and other parties in interest;

   o. appear before the Bankruptcy Court and any appellate courts
      to protect the interests of the Debtors' estates in
      connection with the assigned matters;

   p. respond to inquiries and calls from creditors and counsel
      to interested parties regarding pending assigned matters;
      and

   q. perform other necessary legal services for assigned
      matters, or any other discrete matters assigned to the
      Firm, and provide other necessary legal advice to the
      Debtors in connection with these Chapter 11 Cases.

Togut Segal will be paid at these hourly rates:

     Partners                 $750-$1,125
     Associates               $390-$730
     Paralegals               $195-$385

Togut Segal will also be reimbursed for reasonable out-of-pocket
expenses incurred.

Frank A. Oswald, partner of Togut Segal & Segal LLP, assured the
Court that the firm is a "disinterested person" as the term is
defined in Section 101(14) of the Bankruptcy Code and does not
represent any interest adverse to the Debtor and its estates.

Togut Segal can be reached at:

     Frank A. Oswald, Esq.
     Kyle J. Ortiz, Esq.
     Minta J. Nester, Esq.
     TOGUT SEGAL & SEGAL LLP
     One Penn Plaza, Suite 3335
     New York, NY 10119
     Tel: (212) 594-5000
     Fax: (212) 967-4258

                 About Trident Holding Company

Trident -- http://www.tridentusahealth.com/-- is a national
provider of bedside diagnostic and related services in the United
States, with operations in more than 35 states serving more than
12,000 post -acute care, assisted living facilities, and
correctional facilities. It provides a high volume of services
including X-ray, ultrasound, laboratory, cardiac monitoring,
vascular access services, on-site nurse practitioner-based primary
care and more.  Trident employs approximately 5,600 people.

Trident Holding Company, LLC and its affiliates sought protection
under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Lead Case
No. 19-10384) on Feb. 10, 2019.  The Debtors disclosed $584 million
in assets and $867 million in liabilities as of as of Dec. 31,
2018.

The Debtors tapped Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP and
Togut, Segal & Segal LLP as their legal counsel; PJT Partners LP as
investment banker and financial advisor; Ankura Consulting Group,
LLC as restructuring advisor; and Epiq Corporate Restructuring,
LLC, as claims and noticing agent and administrative advisor.


TRUGREEN LP: S&P Affirms 'B' Issuer Credit Rating, Outlook Stable
-----------------------------------------------------------------
CD&R, the private equity owner of TruGreen L.P., is purchasing the
30% ownership stake from The Scotts Miracle-Gro Co. for about $234
million. TruGreen is issuing a new $146 million revolver and a $965
million term loan due in 2024, which with about $80 million cash
from its balance sheet will fund the transaction and refinance its
first-lien credit facility, resulting in $175 million of
incremental first-lien debt.  The transaction increases pro forma
leverage to the low-6x area at the end of 2018 from low-5x.  

On March 4, S&P Global Ratings affirmed its 'B' issuer credit
rating on TruGreen and 'B' issue-level rating on its senior secured
debt; the recovery rating is unchanged.  S&P also assigned its 'B'
issuer credit rating to Outdoor Home Services Holdings LLC, the
group's holding company and financial reporting entity, and
assigned its 'B' issue-level rating to the proposed credit facility
with a '3' recovery rating, reflecting its expectation for
meaningful (50%-70%; rounded estimate: 50%) recovery for lenders in
the event of a default.

"The rating affirmation reflects our expectation that the company
will maintain leverage of 5x-6x as it continues to demonstrate
stable performance trends and shifts its strategy to growth
following the successful integration of the Scotts LawnService
(SLS) merger," S&P said. "We expect the company to pursue small
tuck-in acquisitions that will enhance its organic growth."  

The stable outlook reflects S&P's view that the company will
maintain leverage of 5x-6x as it benefits from stable operating
performance and focuses on tuck-in acquisitions to enhance its
organic growth.

S&P said it would consider a downgrade if leverage rises above 7.5x
or if EBITDA interest coverage weakens toward the mid-1x area. This
could occur if operational performance suffers due to more
competition from local competitors or DIY alternatives, or poor
service levels leading to significant client attrition, according
to S&P.  

"We believe any combination of these events that result in EBITDA
declining by about 20% from current levels would likely increase
leverage above these thresholds. Additionally, we could also lower
the ratings if the company's financial policy remains aggressive
and it pursues debt-funded dividends such that leverage is
sustained above 7.5x," S&P said.

Given the company's financial sponsor ownership, S&P said it is
unlikely that it would consider an upgrade in the next year.
Longer-term, S&P would consider raising the ratings if the company
commits to sustaining debt to EBITDA below 5x with adequate
liquidity. "For this to occur, we believe the company would raise
additional equity capital to reduce the sponsor ownership and repay
debt, possibly from an IPO," S&P said.


TSC SNOWDEN: Seeks to Hire NAI as Real Estate Broker
----------------------------------------------------
TSC/Snowden River North, LLC seeks approval from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the District of Maryland to hire  NAI The
Michael Companies as its real estate broker.

The Debtor intends to lease out its condominium units in Howard
County, Maryland, and needs the services of the firm to market the
properties.  The proposed fee is 6% of the gross rent, which is
contingent upon the actual rental and is payable in installments.

Mr. Cornell, a real estate broker employed with NAI, attests that
he is a "disinterested person" as that term is defined in Section
101(14) of the Bankruptcy Code.

The firm can be reached through:

     Allen Cornell
     NAI The Michaels Companies
     10100 Business Pkwy
     Lanham, MD 20706
     Phone: +1 301-459-4400

                  About TSC/Snowden River North LLC

TSC/Snowden River North, LLC is a privately-held company engaged in
activities related to real estate.  It owns three properties in
River Parkway, Columbia, Maryland, having a total current value of
$1.85 million.

TSC/Snowden River North sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Md. Case No. 18-25519) on November 26,
2018.  At the time of the filing, the Debtor disclosed $1,850,400
in assets and $1,321,717 in liabilities.  The Debtor tapped the Law
Office of David W. Cohen as its legal counsel.


TWO STREETS: Plan Not Financially Feasible, Court Rules
-------------------------------------------------------
Bankruptcy Judge Neil P. Olack entered an order denying
confirmation of Two Streets, Inc.'s small business chapter 11 plan
of reorganization.

The Plan designates four classes of claims. In Article 2:
Classification of Claims & Interests, Class 1 consists of all
priority claims; Class 2 consists of the BancorpSouth Claim and the
secured claim of Ally Capital; Class 3 consists of all non-priority
unsecured claims; and Class 4 consists of the equity interests of
Two Streets. In Article 4: Treatment of Claims and Interests Under
the Plan, the classification of the claims is different, assumedly
not by design. In Article 4, Class 1 consists of the BancorpSouth
Claim rather than all priority claims, and Class 2 consists solely
of the secured claim of Ally Capital rather than both the
BancorpSouth Claim and the secured claim of Ally Capital.

Regardless, Two Streets proposes in Article 4 to treat Class 1 by
continuing to make monthly adequate protection payments to
BancorpSouth in the amount set forth in the Cash Collateral Order
and liquidating the BancorpSouth Collateral with the approval of
the Court and the agreement of BancorpSouth. In Class 2, Two
Streets proposes to abandon the Truck to Ally Capital and to treat
any deficiency as an unsecured claim. Two Streets proposes to pay
nothing to the unsecured creditors that comprise Class 3. The
equity security holders in Class 4 will receive no distribution
under the Plan.

Upon review, the Court finds that the Plan fails to demonstrate
financial feasibility. Two Streets failed to demonstrate that there
will be sufficient funds to pay the administrative and priority
claims of Mississippi Department of Revenue totaling $31,344.91 and
adequate protection payments to BancorpSouth of $4,500 per month
within the time frame proposed in the Plan. Two Streets relies on
anticipated profits of $25,000 from three unfinished jobs to fund
these payments. The only evidence presented at the Confirmation
Hearing in that regard was the testimony of Danny Street, who
provided the contract price for each job and a brief description of
each installation before estimating the total profit. Absent from
the record were copies of the contracts or a set of plans for each
job, or a list of the costs for materials and labor. Such detailed
evidence was necessary under these facts where the monthly
operating reports (MORs) show that Two Streets’ business
operations are not yielding a consistent profit. The most recent
MOR shows a negative net cash flow of $13,413. A test of the
reliability of a debtor’s projections as to its earning power is
its performance during the period of the bankruptcy case. Here, the
MORs demonstrate that Two Streets has struggled to maintain a
positive cash flow during the Corporate Case when its adequate
protection payments to BancorpSouth are 40% less than they are in
the Plan.

Because Two Streets has not demonstrated by a preponderance of the
evidence that the Plan is feasible, the Court finds that the Plan
should not be confirmed.

A copy of Court's Memorandum Opinion and Order dated Feb. 26, 2019
is available at:

     http://bankrupt.com/misc/mssb18-02103-118.pdf

                   About Two Streets

Two Streets, Inc., doing business as All-Metro Fence Company --
http://www.allmetrofence.com/-- is a family owned and operated
company located in Jackson, Mississippi, that builds every type of
fence, including: chain link, custom wood, remote controlled
entrances, PVC, aluminum, and wrought iron for residential,
commercial, and industrial customers.

Two Streets, Inc., sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection (Bankr.
S.D. Miss. Case No. 18-02103) on May 29, 2018.  In the petition
signed by Danny Wayne Street, president, the Debtor estimated
assets of less than $1 million and debt of less than $10 million.
The Hon. Edward Ellington presides over the case. R. Michael Bolen,
Esq., of Hood & Bolen, PLLC, serves as counsel to the Debtor.


USA GYMNASTICS: Taps APCO Worldwide as Communications Advisor
-------------------------------------------------------------
USA Gymnastics received approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Southern District of Indiana to hire APCO Worldwide LLC as
communications advisor in the ordinary course of its business.

The firm will assist the Debtor with its overall communications
strategy.  It will also assist the Debtor in providing public
notice of the claims bar date, any proposed plan of reorganization
and other matters critical to its restructuring.

APCO and its employees neither hold nor represent any interest
adverse to the interests represented by the Debtor, according to
court filings.

The firm can be reached through:

     Pete Wentz
     APCO Worldwide LLC
     30 South Wacker Drive, Suite 1270
     Chicago 60606
     Phone: +1.312.440.8686
     Email: pwentz@apcoworldwide.com

                      About USA Gymnastics

USA Gymnastics -- https://www.usagym.org/ -- is a not-for-profit
organization incorporated in Texas. Based in Indianapolis, Indiana,
USAG's organization encompasses six disciplines: women's
gymnastics, men's gymnastics, trampoline and tumbling, rhythmic
gymnastics, acrobatic gymnastics, and group gymnastics.  USAG
provides educational opportunities for coaches and judges, as well
as gymnastics club owners and administrators, and sanctions
approximately 4,000 competitions and events throughout the United
States annually.  More than 200,000 athletes, professionals, and
clubs are members of USAG.  USAG sets the rules and policies that
govern the sport of gymnastics in the United States, including
selecting and training the United States gymnastics teams for the
Olympics and World Championships.  As of the Petition Date, USAG
employs 53 individuals, nearly all of whom work for USAG
full-time.

USA Gymnastics sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. S.D. Ind. Case
No. 18-09108) on Dec. 5, 2018.  The Debtor estimated $50 million to
$100 million in assets and liabilities as of the bankruptcy
filing.

The Hon. Robyn L. Moberly is the case judge.

The Debtor tapped Jenner & Block LLP as counsel; Alfers GC
Consulting, LLC, and Scramble Systems, LLC, as business consulting
services providers; and OMNI Management Group, Inc., as claims
agent.


USA GYMNASTICS: Taps Barnes as 'Ordinary Course' Counsel
--------------------------------------------------------
USA Gymnastics received approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Southern District of Indiana to hire Barnes & Thornburg LLP as
legal counsel in the ordinary course of its business.

The firm will provide legal services in connection with a civil
investigative demand issued by the Indiana Attorney General.

Barnes & Thornburg's 2019 billing rates range from $505 to $740 per
hour for partners and from $345 to $475 per hour for associates.
Paralegals charge an hourly fee of $300.  The firm will provide a
15% discount on their standard hourly rates.

The attorneys expected to represent the Debtor are:

     Mark Stuaan            Partner       $740
     Kathleen Matsoukas     Partner       $570
     Brian Weir-Harden      Partner       $505
     Neal Brackett          Associate     $475
     Ladene Mendoza         Associate     $370
     Alejandra Reichard     Associate     $345
     Allison Scarlott       Associate     $345
     Amber Hammond          Associate      N/A
     Patricia Ellis         Paralegal     $300
     Brooke Aurs            Paralegal     $280

Barnes & Thornburg and its attorneys neither hold nor represent any
interest adverse to the interests represented by the Debtor,
according to court filings.

The firm can be reached through:

     Mark Stuaan, Esq.
     Barnes & Thornburg LLP
     11 South Meridian Street
     Indianapolis, IN 46204-3535
     Phone: 317-231-7720
     Fax: 317-231-7433

                      About USA Gymnastics

USA Gymnastics -- https://www.usagym.org/ -- is a not-for-profit
organization incorporated in Texas. Based in Indianapolis, Indiana,
USAG's organization encompasses six disciplines: women's
gymnastics, men's gymnastics, trampoline and tumbling, rhythmic
gymnastics, acrobatic gymnastics, and group gymnastics.  USAG
provides educational opportunities for coaches and judges, as well
as gymnastics club owners and administrators, and sanctions
approximately 4,000 competitions and events throughout the United
States annually.  More than 200,000 athletes, professionals, and
clubs are members of USAG.  USAG sets the rules and policies that
govern the sport of gymnastics in the United States, including
selecting and training the United States gymnastics teams for the
Olympics and World Championships.  As of the Petition Date, USAG
employs 53 individuals, nearly all of whom work for USAG
full-time.

USA Gymnastics sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. S.D. Ind. Case
No. 18-09108) on Dec. 5, 2018.  The Debtor estimated $50 million to
$100 million in assets and liabilities as of the bankruptcy
filing.

The Hon. Robyn L. Moberly is the case judge.

The Debtor tapped Jenner & Block LLP as counsel; Alfers GC
Consulting, LLC, and Scramble Systems, LLC, as business consulting
services providers; and OMNI Management Group, Inc., as claims
agent.


USA GYMNASTICS: Taps Pierce Atwood as 'Ordinary Course' Counsel
---------------------------------------------------------------
USA Gymnastics received approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Southern District of Indiana to hire Pierce Atwood LLP as legal
counsel in the ordinary course of its business.

The firm will represent the Debtor in a case captioned Marcia
Frederick v. United States Olympic Committee, USA Gymnastics, et
al., Case No. 18-cv-11299-IT (D. Mass. June 20, 2018).

Pierce Atwood and its attorneys neither hold nor represent any
interest adverse to the Debtor, according to court filings.

The firm can be reached through:

     Donald R. Frederico, Esq.
     Pierce Atwood LLP
     100 Summer Street
     Boston, MA 02110
     Tel: (617) 488-8141
     Fax: (617) 824-2020
     Email: dfrederico@pierceatwood.com

                      About USA Gymnastics

USA Gymnastics -- https://www.usagym.org/ -- is a not-for-profit
organization incorporated in Texas. Based in Indianapolis, Indiana,
USAG's organization encompasses six disciplines: women's
gymnastics, men's gymnastics, trampoline and tumbling, rhythmic
gymnastics, acrobatic gymnastics, and group gymnastics.  USAG
provides educational opportunities for coaches and judges, as well
as gymnastics club owners and administrators, and sanctions
approximately 4,000 competitions and events throughout the United
States annually.  More than 200,000 athletes, professionals, and
clubs are members of USAG.  USAG sets the rules and policies that
govern the sport of gymnastics in the United States, including
selecting and training the United States gymnastics teams for the
Olympics and World Championships.  As of the Petition Date, USAG
employs 53 individuals, nearly all of whom work for USAG
full-time.

USA Gymnastics sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. S.D. Ind. Case
No. 18-09108) on Dec. 5, 2018.  The Debtor estimated $50 million to
$100 million in assets and liabilities as of the bankruptcy
filing.

The Hon. Robyn L. Moberly is the case judge.

The Debtor tapped Jenner & Block LLP as counsel; Alfers GC
Consulting, LLC, and Scramble Systems, LLC, as business consulting
services providers; and OMNI Management Group, Inc., as claims
agent.


USA GYMNASTICS: Taps Zuckerman as 'Ordinary Course' Counsel
-----------------------------------------------------------
USA Gymnastics received approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Southern District of Indiana to hire Zuckerman Spaeder LLP as
legal counsel in the ordinary course of its business.

The firm will represent the Debtor in a case captioned William O.
West v. USA Gymnastics, Case No. 18-cv-1616-T-36JSS (M.D. Fla. July
5, 2018).

Zuckerman Spaeder and its attorneys neither hold nor represent any
interest adverse to the interests represented by the Debtor,
according to court filings.

The firm can be reached through:

     Jack Fernandez, Esq.
     Zuckerman Spaeder LLP
     101 East Kennedy Boulevard, Suite 1200
     Tampa, FL 33602-5838
     Tel: 813.321.8215 / 813.221.1010
     Fax: 813.223.7961

                      About USA Gymnastics

USA Gymnastics -- https://www.usagym.org/ -- is a not-for-profit
organization incorporated in Texas. Based in Indianapolis, Indiana,
USAG's organization encompasses six disciplines: women's
gymnastics, men's gymnastics, trampoline and tumbling, rhythmic
gymnastics, acrobatic gymnastics, and group gymnastics.  USAG
provides educational opportunities for coaches and judges, as well
as gymnastics club owners and administrators, and sanctions
approximately 4,000 competitions and events throughout the United
States annually.  More than 200,000 athletes, professionals, and
clubs are members of USAG.  USAG sets the rules and policies that
govern the sport of gymnastics in the United States, including
selecting and training the United States gymnastics teams for the
Olympics and World Championships.  As of the Petition Date, USAG
employs 53 individuals, nearly all of whom work for USAG
full-time.

USA Gymnastics sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. S.D. Ind. Case
No. 18-09108) on Dec. 5, 2018.  The Debtor estimated $50 million to
$100 million in assets and liabilities as of the bankruptcy
filing.

The Hon. Robyn L. Moberly is the case judge.

The Debtor tapped Jenner & Block LLP as counsel; Alfers GC
Consulting, LLC, and Scramble Systems, LLC, as business consulting
services providers; and OMNI Management Group, Inc., as claims
agent.


VEROBLUE FARMS: Taps CliftonLarsonAllen to Provide Tax Services
---------------------------------------------------------------
VeroBlue Farms USA, Inc., received approval from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Iowa to hire
CliftonLarsonAllen, LLP to provide tax services.

The firm will be paid between $19,500 and $22,500 for tax
compliance services and between $650 and $1,000 for the preparation
of income tax returns.

Patrick Hoppa, an accountant and tax manager employed with
CliftonLarsonAllen, disclosed in a court filing that his firm does
not represent any entity with an interest contrary to the Debtor's
interest.

The firm can be reached through:

     Patrick Hoppa
     CliftonLarsonAllen, LLP
     12721 Metcalf Avenue, Suite 104
     Overland Park, KS 66213-2619
     Tax: 913-491-6655 / 913-232-4331
     Fax: 913-491-0429

                  About Veroblue Farms USA Inc.

Headquartered in Webster City, Iowa, VeroBlue Farms USA, Inc. --
http://verobluefarms.com/-- operates a fish farm specializing in
Barramundi, a freshwater fish found in the Indo-Pacific waters of
Australia. It created an innovative aquaculture system that
utilizes the natural elements of air, water and care.

VeroBlue Farms USA, Inc., VBF Operations Inc., VBF Transport Inc.,
VBF IP Inc., and Iowa's First Inc. sought protection under Chapter
11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D. Iowa Lead Case No. 18-01297)
on Sept. 21, 2018. In the petitions signed by Norman McCowan,
president, VeroBlue estimated assets of less than $50,000 and
liabilities of $50 million to $100 million.

The Debtors tapped Elderkin & Pirnie, PLC and Ag & Business Legal
Strategies, P.C. as their legal counsel; and Alex Moglia and his
firm Moglia Advisors as chief restructuring officer.

On October 24, 2018, the Office of the U.S. Trustee appointed an
official committee of unsecured creditors.  The Committee retained
Goldstein & McClintock LLLP as its counsel.


WALTER SCHWAB: Order Dismissing Suit vs T. Jackson, et al., Flipped
-------------------------------------------------------------------
In the cases captioned W. HENRY SCHWAB, JR., v. THEODORE JACKSON et
al. W. HENRY SCHWAB, JR., v. THEODORE JACKSON et al., A18A2071,
A19A0112 (Ga. App.), W. Henry Schwab, Jr. appeals from the Superior
Court of Fulton County's order dissolving a temporary restraining
order, which had been imposed to prevent the appellees from
proceeding with the judicial sale of Schwab's condominium, and
dismissing the case with prejudice. Upon review of the case, the
Court of Appeals of Georgia reverses the Superior Court of Fulton
County's order.

Following the defendants' filing of a motion for judgment on the
pleadings and motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, and,
in the alternative, request for dissolution of the TRO, the trial
court found that dismissal of the action on the pleadings, and/or
for failure to state a cause of action, pursuant to was
appropriate. Alternatively, the trial court noted that dismissal of
the TRO "would also be appropriate under OCGA section 9-11-65 (b)."


Schwab argues on appeal that: (1) the trial court did not apply the
correct standard in ruling on the motion, failed to treat it as a
motion for summary judgment, and denied Schwab an opportunity to be
heard; (2) the trial court erred in dismissing the case with
prejudice; and (3) the trial court erred in concluding that Schwab
breached his obligations under his approved bankruptcy
reorganization plan.

Likewise, Schwab appeals from the superior court's subsequent entry
of an order imposing sanctions on Schwab for filing the underlying
action, in violation of a Bill of Peace entered in prior litigation
between the parties, which prevented Schwab in relevant part "from
filing any lawsuit in this jurisdiction regarding the subject
property1 without the prior written approval of th[e] Court[.]" He
argues on appeal that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter
the sanctions order, and erred in concluding that his filing of the
underlying petition violated the Bill of Peace.

The Court finds that Schwab has made a sufficient showing that he
was harmed by the court's failure to give him proper notice.
Specifically, because he failed to get the requisite notice, he was
denied an opportunity to fully brief his argument to the court that
the Bill of Peace was inapplicable to the underlying action, or why
the emergency TRO otherwise should not be dissolved. As a result,
the TRO was dissolved, the judicial sale proceeded and his
condominium was sold-which was the exact harm that Schwab was
trying to prevent in obtaining the emergency TRO. Moreover, his
cause of action was dismissed with prejudice, which prevents him
from litigating these issues further.

The appellees argue that 30 days' notice and an opportunity to
respond was "not an option" because Schwab had petitioned for, and
been granted, an emergency ex parte TRO only a day before the
judicial sale was scheduled to proceed. However, their argument is
misplaced. Once the trial court opted to consider the exhibits
attached to their motion and took judicial notice of other
proceedings, it converted the motion into one for summary judgment.
Schwab then was entitled to notice and an opportunity to be heard.

Accordingly, based on the facts of this case, the Court finds that
the trial court committed reversible error. Therefore, the Court
reverses and remands for further proceedings. On remand, the court
is directed to provide Schwab with an opportunity to respond to the
defendants' motion and request a hearing, if desired, in accordance
with OCGA section 9-11-56. The trial court is directed to consider
all issues raised by both parties in their pleadings, including
whether the Bill of Peace bars this litigation.

Additionally, Schwab appeals the trial court's subsequent order
imposing $3,000 in sanctions for violating the Bill of Peace.
Because the sanctions order was predicated on the trial court's
prior order finding that the underlying petition was barred by the
Bill of Peace, which the Court is reversing, the Court vacates the
sanctions order at this time.

A copy of the Court's decision dated Jan. 23, 2019 is available at
https://bit.ly/2UkwrdA from Leagle.com.

Leon Strickland Jones, for Appellant.

Tyler Warren Henderson, for Appellant.

Leslie M. Pineyro, for Appellant.

Theodore Jackson, for Appellee.

Shawn Michael Winterich, for Appellee.

Walter Henry Schwab Jr. filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
(Bankr. N.D. Ga. Case No. 15-66300) on August 27, 2015.


WINDSOR MARKETING: 20th Interim Cash Collateral Use Approved
------------------------------------------------------------
The Hon. James J. Tancredi of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Connecticut has signed a Twentieth Interim Order
authorizing Windsor Marketing Group, Inc., to use cash collateral
in the ordinary course of its business.

A further hearing on the Debtor's use of cash collateral will be
held on March 8, 2019 at 10:15 a.m. Written objections to Debtor's
continued use of cash collateral is due on March 6.

The approved 8-Week Budget provides total cash disbursements of
approximately $2,351,451 through week ending March 29, 2019.

As of the Petition Date, the Debtor's books and records reflect
that the Debtor was indebted and liable to People's United Bank
under: (a) a Revolver for $3,412,977; (b) a first capex loan for
$190,024; (c) a term loan for $642,857; and (d) a second capex loan
for $126,945.  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 State of Connecticut Department of Economic and Community
Development ("DECD") may assert interests in some portion of the
cash collateral.  As of the Petition Date, the DECD asserts that
the Debtor was indebted and liable to the DECD under: (a) a First
Assistance Agreement for $207,994.79; and (b) a Second Assistance
Agreement for $1,502,223.21, subject to reinstatement of
indebtedness that was subject to a loan forgiveness credit under
the First Assistance Agreement.

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 postpetition 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.

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, as well as the protections of and the priority set
forth in 11 U.S.C. Section 507(b) 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.

The Debtor will pay the DECD an adequate protection payment of
$5,000.

Moreover, the Debtor is authorized to pay only those obligations --
with respect to the Premises located 100 Marketing Drive, Suffield
CT -- owed by Marketing Research Park, LLC (Landlord) for ordinary
course or outstanding mortgage obligations, real estate taxes,
municipal charges, insurance, reasonable maintenance and other
reasonable and necessary expenses of operation of the Premises and
all such payments must be made directly from the Debtor to the
applicable creditor of the Landlord (the "Pass-Through Expenses").

The Debtor will maintain a schedule of all payments of such
Pass-Through Expenses and provide a copy of the schedule to counsel
to Lender, the Committee, DECD and the US Trustee on a bi-weekly
basis.

The Debtor's right to use Cash Collateral will terminate
immediately if the Debtor fails to comply with any of the following
deadlines:

      (i) The Debtor will pay $325,000.00 to Lender from the
proceeds of the tax refund, as soon as practicable after the entry
of the Order, and such sum will be applied to the amount of the
allowed secured claim of Lender.

      (ii) The Debtor will provide counsel for Lender, DECD and the
Committee with a preliminary draft of a plan of reorganization by
Feb. 19, 2019.

      (iii) The Debtor will file a plan of reorganization and
disclosure statement by Feb. 21, 2019.

      (iv) The Debtor's proposed refinance lender will have
provided evidence of loan committee approval for account receivable
financing by March 6, 2019 and by any equipment lender by April 4,
2019. From March 6, 2019 through the date of the closing of any
such loan(s), the Debtor will obtain, on Lender's reasonable
request, prompt written confirmation that the proposed lender is
proceeding to close pursuant to the deadlines set forth herein.

      (v) Subject to scheduling by the Court, the initial hearing
on confirmation of the plan will be held on or before April 15,
2019, with an order confirming the plan to be entered by April 30,
2019.

      (vi) Closing of the refinance by May 17, 2019 and the payment
to Lender and Peoples Capital Leasing Corp. the total sum of
$3,675,000 in full satisfaction of their respective allowed secured
claims.

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

           http://bankrupt.com/misc/ctb18-20022-413.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 an official committee of unsecured creditors.
Lowenstein Sandler LLP, serves as counsel to the Committee; and
Neubert, Pepe & Monteith, P.C., as its Connecticut counsel.



WINDSOR MARKETING: Unsecureds Get $53K for 28 Quarters
------------------------------------------------------
Windsor Marketing Group, Inc., filed a Chapter 11 plan and
accompanying disclosure statement.

Class 6 -- Allowed Unsecured Claims Against the Debtor are
impaired. Holders of Class 6 Claims shall receive, in full,
complete and final satisfaction and release of their Allowed
Unsecured Claims, the following: Holders of Allowed Unsecured
Claims in Class 6 shall receive their Pro Rata share of $53,571.42
paid each quarter for a total of twenty-eight (28) quarters
commencing six months after the Effective Date of the Plan. The
Reorganized Debtor reserves the right to prepay any of these
payments to each and/or all of these creditors in this class under
the Plan without penalty at the discount rate of five percent (5%)
per annum.  The total payout to holders of Allowed Unsecured Claims
in Class 6 shall not exceed $1,500,000.00 in the aggregate and
there shall be no interest that accrues on any distributions to
Class 6 holders.

Class 1 -- People's United Bank and Peoples Leasing Corp. are
impaired. Peoples' Allowed Secured Claim will be paid within one
week of the Effective Date. The Debtor anticipates paying off the
Peoples' Secured Claim using the balance of the proceeds of its
federal tax refund (approximately $325,000.00) and paying the
balance from the proceeds of a refinancing of its assets and any
cash infusion from the Debtor’s principal.

Class 2 -- Secured Claim of Connecticut Department of Economic and
Community Development are impaired.  The Allowed Secured Claim of
the DECD will be amortized and paid such that DECD receives
$5,000.00 per month for first three months following the Effective
Date, with the balance of the Allowed Secured Claim to be amortized
and paid thereafter, with interest, as provided in the Assistance
Agreement between the parties. Section 2.10(G) of the Assistance
Agreement between the parties will remain enforceable, such that if
the Debtor relocates its entire operation out of state, the
forgiveness credit in the amount of $1 million will be
automatically added to Allowed Secured Claim of the DECD, together
with a one-time penalty charge of 7.5% as set forth in the
Assistance Agreement, all of which would be immediately due and
payable upon relocation.

Class 3 -- Allowed Secured Claim of Fujifilm North America
Corporation ("Fuji") are impaired. The Allowed Secured Claims of
Fujifilm will be amortized over thirty-six (36) months with no
interest. The Reorganized Debtor will pay to Fujifilm the sum of
Thirteen Thousand Eight Hundred Eighty-Eight and 89/100 Dollars
($13,888.89) per month for thirty-six (36) months commencing sixty
(60) days after the Effective Date in full satisfaction of its
Secured Claims. The Debtor or Reorganized Debtor shall continue to
make adequate protection payments of $9,000 per month pursuant to
the Fujifilm Adequate Protection Agreement until Fujifilm receives
the first Plan payment provided for in this paragraph, which
adequate protection payment shall be prorated for the month in
which the Plan payments commence.

Class 4 -- Secured Claim of Agfa, Corporation ("Agfa") are
impaired. Agfa will retain its liens on the equipment securing the
Secured Claim of Agfa. Agfa has filed two proofs of claim, and the
Debtor believes one claim is a duplicate and will object to at
least one of the claims if not withdrawn. On the Effective Date,
(i) the Debtor will cure any default on the Class 4 Allowed Secured
Claim by extending the term of the underlying Rebate agreement for
a period of up to two (2) years so that Agfa can repay itself on
the Allowed Secured Claim through rebates based on the underlying
agreement of the parties.

Class 7 -- Equity Interests are impaired. The holder of Equity
Interests in the Debtor shall retain his Equity Interests, as
modified by the terms of the Plan.

Except as otherwise provided in the Plan or the Confirmation Order,
all Cash necessary for the Reorganized Debtor to make payments
required pursuant to the Plan will be obtained from the Reorganized
Debtor’s Cash balances, including Cash from operations, from
financing or other capital investment to be obtained by the Debtor,
and from net proceeds from the sale of any assets of the
Reorganized Debtor and the remaining balance of an escrow account
holding the proceeds of a federal tax refund subject to the lien of
Peoples of approximately $325,000.00 (which is net of the remaining
balance of a prior carveout to counsel to the Committee).

A full-text copy of the Disclosure Statement dated February 25,
2019, is available at https://tinyurl.com/y5z43v8c from
PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

              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 an official committee of unsecured creditors.
Lowenstein Sandler LLP, serves as counsel to the Committee; and
Neubert, Pepe & Monteith, P.C., as its Connecticut counsel.


WINDSTREAM HOLDINGS: Egan-Jones Lowers Sr. Unsec. Ratings to D
--------------------------------------------------------------
Egan-Jones Ratings Company, on February 27, 2019, downgraded the
foreign currency and local currency senior unsecured ratings on
debt issued by Windstream Holdings, Inc. to D from CCC+. EJR also
downgraded the rating on commercial paper issued by the Company to
D from C.

Windstream Holdings, Inc., also doing business as Windstream
Communications or Windstream, is a provider of voice and data
network communications, and managed services, to businesses in the
United States.


WORLD ACCEPTANCE: S&P Alters Outlook to Stable, Affirms 'B+' ICR
----------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings said it revised the outlook on World Acceptance
Corp. to stable from negative and affirmed its 'B+' issuer credit
rating.

The outlook revision to stable from negative reflects S&P's view
that World Acceptance Corp. will be able to absorb the potential
impact, if any, of the investigation into its former Mexico
operations without impairing its creditworthiness given its very
low leverage as well as its increased and extended revolving credit
facility. Based on its projections, S&P does not expect related
penalties, if any, to materially increase leverage, and they will
not result in the company needing to materially change its ongoing
business practices.  Also, in December of 2018, the company upsized
the accordion feature in its revolving credit facility to $600
million from $480 million while extending the maturity to June
2020, providing the company with additional financial flexibility.

The company has made some improvements during the year to grow its
domestic operations, albeit at lower margins during this growth
stage. Gross loans outstanding in the U.S. increased to $1.26
billion as of Dec. 31, 2018, an 11.7% increase from the $1.13
billion of gross loans outstanding as of Dec. 31, 2017. The
company's unique borrowers in the U.S. increased by 139,105 -- or
17.8% -- during the nine months ended Dec. 31, 2018. However, net
charge-offs from continuing operations as a percentage of average
net loans on an annualized basis increased to 15.5% in the nine
months ended Dec. 31, 2018, from from 14.3% in the same period the
year before. S&P expects the company's net charge-offs to remain at
this elevated level as the company focuses on growing its domestic
operations, while not materially worsening.

"The stable outlook reflects our expectation that the company
continues to operate with leverage below 1.0x, as measured by debt
to adjusted total equity, while maintaining controlled levels of
net charge-offs," S&P said. "Further, the stable outlook reflects
our expectation of a manageable, if any, financial penalty arising
from the investigation into the company's Mexico operations, which
would not materially increase leverage or require any substantial
changes to the company's ongoing business model."

S&P said it could lower the rating in the next 12 months if the
result of the Mexico investigation is significantly worse than its
current expectations. S&P could also lower the rating if the
company's charge-offs increase materially or if it has difficulty
renewing its credit facility on acceptable terms.

"An upgrade is unlikely over the next 12 months. However, over the
longer term, we could raise the rating if the company is able to
sufficiently resolve the ongoing Mexico investigation, maintain
controlled levels of net charge-offs, and diversify its funding
profile," S&P said.


WORLD LIQUIDATORS: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
-----------------------------------------------------------
No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Chapter 11 case of World Liquidators, Inc. as of March 4,
according to a court docket.
   
                     About World Liquidators

World Liquidators, Inc. sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No. 19-10100) on Jan. 4,
2019.  At the time of the filing, the Debtor estimated assets of
less than $50,000 and liabilities of less than $1 million.  The
case has been assigned to Judge John K. Olson.  Mancuso Law, P.A.,
is the Debtor's counsel.


XENETIC BIOSCIENCES: Prices $3.1-Mil. Registered Direct Offering
----------------------------------------------------------------
Xenetic Biosciences, Inc., has entered into a securities purchase
agreement with a single accredited institutional investor to
purchase approximately $3.1 million of the Company's common stock
(or pre-funded warrants to purchase Common Stock in lieu thereof)
in a registered direct offering and warrants to purchase shares of
Common Stock in a concurrent private placement.  The combined
purchase price for one share of Common Stock (or pre-funded
warrants to purchase Common Stock in lieu thereof) and each warrant
will be $2.00.

Under the terms of the securities purchase agreement, Xenetic has
agreed to sell 1,549,000 shares of Common Stock (or pre-funded
warrants to purchase Common Stock in lieu thereof).  In a private
placement, which will be consummated concurrently to the Offering,
Xenetic also agreed to issue warrants to purchase up to an
aggregate of 1,549,000 shares of Common Stock.  The warrants will
be exercisable six months following the date of issuance, will
expire on the seventh anniversary of the initial exercise date and
have an exercise price of $2.25 per share of Common Stock.

The gross proceeds to Xenetic from the registered direct offering
are expected to be approximately $3.1 million before deducting
placement agent fees and other offering expenses.  The offering is
expected to close on or about March 7, 2019, subject to the
satisfaction of customary closing conditions.

Maxim Group LLC is acting as the exclusive placement agent for the
Offering.

The shares of Common Stock and pre-funded warrants are being
offered pursuant to a shelf registration statement on Form S-3
(File No. 333-227572), which was declared effective by the United
States Securities and Exchange Commission on Oct. 12, 2018.  The
warrants are being issued in a private placement concurrent to the
Offering and Common Stock issuable upon the exercise of such
warrants were offered under Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act
of 1933, as amended, and Regulation D promulgated thereunder and
have not been registered under the Act or applicable state
securities laws.  Accordingly, the warrants and underlying shares
of Common Stock may not be offered or sold in the United States,
except pursuant to an effective registration statement or an
applicable exemption from registration requirements of the Act and
such applicable state securities laws.

                    About Xenetic Biosciences

Lexington, Massachusetts-based Xenetic Biosciences, Inc., is a
clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on the discovery,
research and development of next-generation biologic drugs and
novel orphan oncology therapeutics.  Xenetic's lead investigational
product candidate is oncology therapeutic XBIO-101 (sodium
cridanimod) for the treatment of progesterone resistant endometrial
cancer.

Xenetic incurred a net loss of $3.59 million in 2017 compared to a
net loss of $54.21 million in 2016.  As of Sept. 30, 2018, the
Company had $15.53 million in total assets, $4.23 million in total
liabilities and $11.29 million in total stockholders' equity.

The report from the Company's independent accounting firm Marcum
LLP, the Company's auditor since 2015, on the consolidated
financial statements for the year ended Dec. 31, 2017, includes an
explanatory paragraph stating that the Company has had recurring
net losses and continues to experience negative cash flows from
operations.  These conditions raise substantial doubt about its
ability to continue as a going concern.


ZAKINTOS & PLATANOS: Taps Alla Kachan as Legal Counsel
------------------------------------------------------
Zakintos & Platanos Cab Corp. received approval from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of New York to hire the
Law Offices of Alla Kachan, P.C. as its legal counsel.

The firm will assist the Debtor in administering its Chapter 11
case; represent the Debtor in prosecuting adversary proceedings to
collect assets of its bankruptcy estate; negotiate with creditors
to formulate a plan of reorganization; and provide other legal
services in connection with the bankruptcy case.

The firm will charge these hourly fees:

     Attorneys                    $400
     Clerks/Paraprofessionals     $200

Zakintos President Anastasios Stithos paid the firm an initial
retainer of $15,000.

Alla Kachan, Esq., disclosed in a court filing that his firm is
"disinterested" as defined in section 101(14) of the Bankruptcy
Code.

The firm can be reached through:

     Alla Kachan, Esq.
     Law Offices of Alla Kachan, P.C.
     3099 Coney Island Avenue, 3rd Floor
     Brooklyn, NY 11235
     Tel: (718) 513-3145
     Fax: (347) 342-3156
     Email: alla@kachanlaw.com

               About Zakintos & Platanos Cab Corp.

Zakintos & Platanos Cab, Corp., a privately held company in the
taxi and limousine service industry, sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No.
19-40195) on January 10, 2019.  At the time of the filing, the
Debtor disclosed $400,138 in assets and $3,342,022 in liabilities.
The case has been assigned to Judge Carla E. Craig.


[*] P. Tomasco & D. Newman Joins Quinn Emmanuel's New York Office
-----------------------------------------------------------------
BankruptcyData.com reported that Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan
has added restructuring partners Patricia Tomasco to its Houston
office and Deborah Newman to it New York office.

Ms. Tomasco, who joins from Jackson Walker’s Houston office, has
more than 30 years' experience solving corporate insolvency
problems. She focuses on workouts, distressed acquisitions and
corporate restructuring, and debtor and creditor representation in
chapter 11 cases and related litigation. Ms. Tomasco frequently
represents clients in the energy and telecommunications industries
and high-tech debtors in both reorganizations and litigation.

Ms. Tomasco graduated from Rice University in 1985 and received her
J.D. from South Texas College of Law Houston in 1988.

Ms Newman, who joins Quinn Emanuel from Akin Gump, has a practice
that focuses on bankruptcy-related litigation and complex
commercial litigation. Ms. Newman represents creditors,
bondholders, indenture trustees, hedge funds, institutional
investors, creditor committees and debtors in the full range of
complex litigation matters arising in the course of chapter 11
restructurings, cross-border insolvencies and other bankruptcy
contexts, as well as other complex commercial litigations occurring
in state and federal courts.

Ms. Newman graduated from the University of Michigan with honors in
1997 and received her J.D. from Columbia University School of Law
in 2002.


[^] Recent Small-Dollar & Individual Chapter 11 Filings
-------------------------------------------------------
In re Fabio Rene Fajardo
   Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 19-10326
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 13, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re Michael Serkis Hur
   Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 19-10330
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 13, 2019
         represented by: Leslie A. Cohen, Esq.
                         LESLIE COHEN LAW PC
                         E-mail: leslie@lesliecohenlaw.com

In re Sam Hanna Dabbas
   Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 19-11551
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 13, 2019
         represented by: David B. Golubchik, Esq.
                         LEVENE NEALE BENDER YOO & BRILL LLP
                         E-mail: dbg@lnbyb.com

In re Alverna Stanley
   Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 19-11555
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 13, 2019
         represented by: Lane K. Bogard, Esq.
                         HABERBUSH & ASSOCIATES LLP
                         E-mail: lbogard@lbinsolvency.com

In re Clean! The Series LLC
   Bankr. E.D. Cal. Case No. 19-20854
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 13, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re Wood Street Plaza, LLC
   Bankr. N.D. Cal. Case No. 19-40334
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 13, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/canb19-40334.pdf
         represented by: Donald Charles Schwartz, Esq.
                         LAW OFFICES OF DONALD CHARLES SCHWARTZ
                         E-mail: triallaw@cruzio.com

In re Jerry Michael Smith
   Bankr. N.D. Cal. Case No. 19-40341
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 13, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re Robert Pasteure
   Bankr. D. Del. Case No. 19-10290
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 13, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re Thomas Aquinas Martin
   Bankr. D. Kan. Case No. 19-10205
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 13, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/ksb19-10205.pdf
         represented by: William H. Zimmerman, Jr., Esq.
                         ERON LAW, P.A.
                         E-mail: zim@eronlaw.net

In re Waycross Vista Inc.
   Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-40865
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 13, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re Jubilee USA Inc.
   Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-40875
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 13, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/nyeb19-40875.pdf
         represented by: John C. Kim, Esq.
                         THE LAW OFFICE OF JOHN C. KIM, P.C.
                         E-mail: johnckim1@gmail.com

In re McNeely Construction, LLC
   Bankr. W.D. Pa. Case No. 19-20566
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 13, 2019
         represented by: Samuel M. DiFatta, Esq.
                         E-mail: difatta1015@comcast.net

In re Seed to Scale Academy LLC
   Bankr. D. Alaska Case No. 19-00046
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re Melissa Gross
   Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 19-10522
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         represented by: Raymond H. Aver, Esq.
                         LAW OFFICES OF RAYMOND H. AVER
                         E-mail: ray@averlaw.com

In re Gordon Jones and Vicki L. Jones
   Bankr. D. Idaho Case No. 19-00138
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re Richland Farms, Inc.
   Bankr. D. Minn. Case No. 19-30424
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/mnb19-30424.pdf
         represented by: Erik A. Ahlgren, Esq.
                         AHLGREN LAW OFFICE
                         E-mail: erikahlgren@charter.net

In re Casal Investments, LLC
   Bankr. S.D. Miss. Case No. 19-00567
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/mssb19-00567.pdf
         represented by: R. Michael Bolen, Esq.
                         HOOD & BOLEN, PLLC
                         E-mail: rmb@hoodbolen.com

In re Yasmin M. Pendergraft
   Bankr. E.D.N.C. Case No. 19-00679
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         represented by: Trawick H. Stubbs, Jr., Esq.
                         STUBBS & PERDUE, P.A.
                         E-mail: efile@stubbsperdue.com

In re Kae Chul Lee
   Bankr. D.N.J. Case No. 19-13121
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         represented by: Michael S. Kopelman, Esq.
                         KOPELMAN & KOPELMAN LLP
                         E-mail: kopelaw@kopelmannj.com

In re Esperanza Enterprises, Inc. a New Mexico S Corporation
   Bankr. D.N.M. Case No. 19-10311
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/nmb19-10311.pdf
         represented by: Dennis A. Banning, Esq.
                         NEW MEXICO FINANCIAL LAW
                         E-mail: nmfl@nmfinanciallaw.com

In re Jeffrey David Gross
   Bankr. D. Nev. Case No. 19-10865
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         represented by: Zachariah Larson, Esq.
                         LARSON ZIRZOW & KAPLAN, LLC
                         E-mail: carita@lzklegal.com

In re Jedi Development LLC
   Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-71083
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re 13 LL Square, Inc.
   Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-10471
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/nysb19-10471.pdf
         represented by: Gabriel Del Virginia, Esq.
                         LAW OFFICES OF GABRIEL DEL VIRGINIA
                         E-mail: gabriel.delvirginia@verizon.net

In re Actual Brewing Company, LLC
   Bankr. S.D. Ohio Case No. 19-50813
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/ohsb19-50813.pdf
         represented by: Mark Kenneth Stansbury, Esq.
                         STANSBURY WEAVER LTD.
                         E-mail: mark@stansburyweaver.com

In re Dovetail Gallery Limited
   Bankr. W.D. Pa. Case No. 19-10134
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/pawb19-10134.pdf
         represented by: Michael P. Kruszewski, Esq.
                         QUINN LAW FIRM
                         E-mail: mkruszewski@quinnfirm.com

In re Hogar Cristy De Mayaguez, Inc.
   Bankr. D.P.R. Case No. 19-00764
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/prb19-00764.pdf
         represented by: Angel Miguel Roman Ongay, Esq.
                         E-mail: mitchroman@hotmail.com

In re Hogar San Miguel Arcangel, Inc.
   Bankr. D.P.R. Case No. 19-00766
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/prb19-00766.pdf
         represented by: Angel Miguel Roman Ongay, Esq.
                         E-mail: mitchroman@hotmail.com

In re Hogar Nuevo Amanecer De Anasco, Inc.
   Bankr. D.P.R. Case No. 19-00768
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 14, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/prb19-00768.pdf
         represented by: Angel Miguel Roman Ongay, Esq.
                         E-mail: mitchroman@hotmail.com

In re Shela Rogers LLC
   Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-40923
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 15, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/nyeb19-40923.pdf
         represented by: Charles Wertman, Esq.
                         LAW OFFICES OF CHARLES WERTMAN P.C.
                         E-mail: cwertmanlaw@gmail.com

In re New Generation Hair Design Corp
   Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-10481
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 15, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/nysb19-10481.pdf
         represented by: Irene M Costello, Esq.
                         CABANILLAS & ASSOCIATES, PC
                         E-mail: icostello@cabanillaslaw.com

In re Print Plus Corporation
   Bankr. D.P.R. Case No. 19-00797
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 15, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/prb19-00797.pdf
         represented by: Noemi Landrau Rivera, Esq.
                         LANDRAU RIVERA & ASSOCIATES
                         E-mail: nlandrau@landraulaw.com

In re Bruce Reyner
   Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 19-10552
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 15, 2019
         represented by: Jeffrey I. Golden, Esq.
                         WEILAND GOLDEN GOODRICH LLP
                         E-mail: jgolden@wgllp.com

In re Rebecca Primicias Prudencio
   Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 19-11638
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 15, 2019
         represented by: William E. Krall, Esq.
                         E-mail: Wmesq77@gmail.com

In re Vincent K. Brown, Sr.
   Bankr. D. Md. Case No. 19-11999
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 15, 2019
         represented by: Richard B. Rosenblatt, Esq.
                         THE LAW OFFICES OF RICHARD B. ROSENBLATT
                         E-mail: rrosenblatt@rosenblattlaw.com

In re Mark A. Fetterly and Yvette Fetterly
   Bankr. E.D. Mich. Case No. 19-42055
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 15, 2019
         represented by: Tracy M. Clark, Esq.
                         E-mail: clark@steinbergshapiro.com

In re Stanley Claxton Chestnut
   Bankr. E.D.N.C. Case No. 19-00698
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 15, 2019
         represented by: David F. Mills, Esq.
                         E-mail: david@mills-law.com

In re Frutta Bowls Franchising, LLC
   Bankr. D.N.J. Case No. 19-13230
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 15, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/njb19-13230.pdf
         represented by: Joel Lee Schwartz, Esq.
                         SPADEA LIGNANA
                         E-mail: esqinac@aol.com

In re Adolphus M. Grant
   Bankr. D.D.C. Case No. 19-00105
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 17, 2019
         represented by: Jamison Bryant Taylor, Esq.
                         E-mail: jtaylor@rismllc.com

In re Modern Poultry Systems, LLC
   Bankr. N.D. Ala. Case No. 19-40259
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/alnb19-40259.pdf
         represented by: Tameria S. Driskill, Esq.
                         TAMERIA S. DRISKILL LLC
                         E-mail: tsdriskill@aol.com

In re Mohammad Ali Kharazmi
   Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 19-10567
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         represented by: Leonard Pena, Esq.
                         E-mail: lpena@penalaw.com

In re Anthony Yue Ming Liu
   Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 19-11267
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         represented by: Robert B Rosenstein, Esq.
                         ROSENSTEIN & ASSOCIATES
                         E-mail: robert@thetemeculalawfirm.com

In re Pepita Baysa Millan
   Bankr. N.D. cal. Case No. 19-50334
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         represented by: John G. Downing, Esq.
                         JOHN G. DOWNING, APC
                         E-mail: john@downinglaw.com

In re David R. Foley
   Bankr. N.D. Cal. Case No. 19-50335
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         represented by: Lars T. Fuller, Esq.
                         THE FULLER LAW FIRM
                         E-mail: Fullerlawfirmecf@aol.com

In re CSI-Absolute Clean, Inc.
   Bankr. N.D. Ill. Case No. 19-04406
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/ilnb19-04406.pdf
         represented by: Ben L. Schneider, Esq.
                         SCHNEIDER & STONE
                         E-mail: ben@windycitylawgroup.com

In re 13 Hope Avenue Junction, LLC
   Bankr. D. Mass. Case No. 19-40268
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/mab19-40268.pdf
         represented by: Robert W. Kovacs, Jr  , Esq.
                         KOVACS LAW, P.C.
                         E-mail: bknotices@rkovacslaw.com

In re Kristal Cedell Owens Gayle
   Bankr. D. Md. Case No. 19-12081
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         represented by: Kerry J. Davidson, Esq.
                         LAW OFFICE OF KERRY J. DAVIDSON
                         E-mail: kerry@kjdavidsonlaw.com

In re Pedro Barona
   Bankr. D.N.J. Case No. 19-13387
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re Randaull Andrew Cobb
   Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-40941
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re Trece Corp.
   Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-40949
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/nyeb19-40949.pdf
         represented by: Lawrence Morrison, Esq.
                         MORRISON TENENBAUM, PLLC
                         E-mail: lmorrison@m-t-law.com

In re 54 East Entertainment Inc.
   Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-40950
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/nyeb19-40950.pdf
         represented by: Lawrence Morrison, Esq.
                         MORRISON TENENBAUM, PLLC
                         E-mail: lmorrison@m-t-law.com

In re Florence F Smith
   Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-40962
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re Ok Sim Yoo
   Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-71179
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         represented by: Dong Sung Kim, Esq.
                         KIM CHOI & KIM PC
                         E-mail: kimchoikim@gmail.com

In re Roger W. ten Pas
   Bankr. W.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-10266
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         represented by: Daniel F. Brown, Esq.
                         ANDREOZZI BLUESTEIN LLP
                         E-mail: dfb@andreozzibluestein.com

In re Wadiya Legette
   Bankr. E.D. Pa. Case No. 19-11016
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re Ruth Greer
   Bankr. N.D. Tex. Case No. 19-30584
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         represented by: Joyce W. Lindauer, Esq.
                         JOYCE W. LINDAUER ATTORNEY, PLLC
                         E-mail: joyce@joycelindauer.com

In re S.P. Trucking LLC
   Bankr. E.D. Va. Case No. 19-10521
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re Gary Michael Pittman
   Bankr. E.D. Va. Case No. 19-10542
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 19, 2019
         represented by: Jonathan Baird Vivona, Esq.
                         JONATHAN B. VIVONA, PLC
                         E-mail: vivonalaw@gmail.com

In re Lilian Morris
   Bankr. N.D. Cal. Case No. 19-40398
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 20, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re Enrique Victor Greenberg
   Bankr. S.D. Cal. Case No. 19-00878
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 20, 2019
         represented by: David Thomson Egli, Esq.
                         LAW OFFICE OF DAVID T. EGLI
                         E-mail: eglilaw80@gmail.com

In re Deep End, LLC
   Bankr. N.D. Ga. Case No. 19-52818
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 20, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/ganb19-52818.pdf
         represented by: William A. Rountree, Esq.
                         ROUNTREE & LEITMAN, LLC
                         E-mail: wrountree@randllaw.com

In re Cadvoc Realty Management, Inc.
   Bankr. D. Md. Case No. 19-12114
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 20, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/mdb19-12114.pdf
         represented by: Alexander Sanchez, Esq.
                         SANCHEZ GARRISON & ASSOCIATES, LLP
                         E-mail: sanchez@sanchezgarrison.com

In re Jesse P. Ware, III
   Bankr. D. Maine Case No. 19-20063
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 20, 2019
         represented by: Christopher J. Keach, Esq.
                         Molleur Law Office
                         E-mail: chris@molleurlaw.com

In re Mira J. Bailey
   Bankr. E.D.N.C. Case No. 19-00767
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 20, 2019
         represented by: J.M. Cook, Esq.
                         J.M. Cook, P.A.
                         E-mail: J.M.Cook@jmcookesq.com

In re Julio Echeverri
   Bankr. D.N.J. Case No. 19-13488
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 20, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re 1706 ENY Corp
   Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-40989
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 20, 2019
         Filed Pro Se

In re Hilary Hamann
   Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-71210
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 20, 2019
         represented by: Julio E Portilla, Esq.
                         E-mail: jp@julioportillalaw.com

In re Eight Zero Eight of WNY, Inc.
   Bankr. W.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-10281
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 20, 2019
         See http://bankrupt.com/misc/nywb19-10281.pdf
         represented by: Robert B. Gleichenhaus, Esq.
                         GLEICHENHAUS, MARCHESE & WEISHAAR, P.C.
                         E-mail: RBG_GMF@hotmail.com

In re Cory Lyn Kenyon
   Bankr. M.D. Tenn. Case No. 19-01021
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 20, 2019
         represented by: LEFKOVITZ AND LEFKOVITZ, PLLC
                         E-mail: slefkovitz@lefkovitz.com

In re Theadore Lyons, II and Merica Yvette Lyons
   Bankr. W.D. Tenn. Case No. 19-21480
      Chapter 11 Petition filed February 20, 2019
         represented by: John Edward Dunlap, Esq.
                         E-mail: jdunlap00@gmail.com


                            *********

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
assets.  A company may establish reserves on its balance sheet for
liabilities that may never materialize.  The prices at which
equity securities trade in public market are determined by more
than a balance sheet solvency test.

On Thursdays, the TCR delivers a list of recently filed
Chapter 11 cases involving less than $1,000,000 in assets and
liabilities delivered to nation's bankruptcy courts.  The list
includes links to freely downloadable images of these small-dollar
petitions in Acrobat PDF format.

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
http://www.bankrupt.com/books/to order any title today.

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 2019.  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
not guaranteed.

The TCR subscription rate is $975 for 6 months delivered via
e-mail.  Additional e-mail subscriptions for members of the same
firm for the term of the initial subscription or balance thereof
are $25 each.  For subscription information, contact Peter A.
Chapman at 215-945-7000.

                   *** End of Transmission ***