/raid1/www/Hosts/bankrupt/TCR_Public/191218.mbx          T R O U B L E D   C O M P A N Y   R E P O R T E R

              Wednesday, December 18, 2019, Vol. 23, No. 351

                            Headlines

2034 SUNSET PLAZA: Case Summary & Unsecured Creditor
2200 NORTH ASHLAND: Court Okays Sale of Chicago Property for $4.7MM
A&R COMPLETE: Plan Payments to be Funded by Continued Operations
ABDOUN ESTATE: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
ACERUS PHARMACEUTICALS: Gets Waiver of Certain Financial Covenants

AGMEDICA BIOSCIENCE: Seeks Bankruptcy Protection Under CCAA
ALLISON TRANSPORTATION: Disclosure & Plan Filing Withdrawn
ANDERSON UNIVERSITY: Fitch Assigns BB- IDR & Alters Outlook to Neg.
ARCHROCK PARTNERS: Moody's Rates New $400MM Unsec. Notes 'B2'
ATI HOLDINGS: Moody's Cuts CFR to B3 & Alters Outlook to Stable

AVINGER INC: Appoints Tamara Elias as Class III Director
BAYOU STEEL: Riverside Buying Remaining Equipment for $75K
BRETHREN HOME: Revised Bid Procedures for Business & Property OK'd
BUNGE LIMITED: Egan-Jones Lowers Senior Unsecured Ratings to BB+
CABRERA INVESTMENTS: Unsecureds to Have 10% Recovery Over 5 Years

CAH ACQUISITION 1: Trustee's Dec. 19 Auction of All Assets Set
CENTENNIAL HOTEL: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
CHOICE ONE: Seeks to Extend Exclusivity Period to Feb. 3
CLOVER TECHNOLOGIES: Case Summary & 30 Largest Unsecured Creditors
CONSIS: Amends Plan to Resolve Bolivians, Asesuisa Claims

COSTA HOLLYWOOD: Gets Final OK to Use Cash, Borrow Up to $726,000
DCP MIDSTREAM: Egan-Jones Lowers Senior Unsecured Ratings to BB+
DOCK STREET: Puts Collateral Up for Sale
EAST ALLEGHENY SD: Moody's Lowers Issuer Rating to Caa1
EP ENERGY: Jan. 6, 2020 Disclosure Statement Hearing Set

EPIC COMPANIES: Seeks Approval to Sell Houma Properties for $1MM
ERNEST VICKNAIR: DA's $18K Sale of Thibodaux Property Approved
FOX SUBACUTE: U.S. Trustee Forms 5-Member Committee
GEORGE WASHINGTON: March 3 Auction of All Assets Set
GET HOOKED CHARTERS: Richard Hayslip Objects to Disclosure

GREENBERG TRAURIG: To Settle Claim With SIB, et al.
H.R.H.C.C. INC: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
H.R.P. II: Transport Properties to Buy Hammond Property for $1.2MM
HOOPERS CONCRETE: Seeks OK to Use IRS, et. al, Cash Collateral
HRI HOLDING: Proposed Auction Sale of All Assets Approved

IEC LTD: Gets Court's CCAA Initial Order
ISTAR INC: Fitch Rates $550MM Sr. Unsec. Notes 'BB'
J. ROBERT SCOTT: Has Interim OK to Use Cash Collateral Thru Dec. 31
JOSE HERNANDEZ: Court Approves Sale of Corona Property for $455K
KHRL GROUP: Garcia Acquisition Selected as Winning Bidder

L BRANDS: Egan-Jones Lowers Senior Unsecured Ratings to BB-
LAKEWAY PUBLISHERS: $6K Sale of Equipment Approved
LAMAR ADVERTISING: Egan-Jones Lowers Sr. Unsecured Ratings to BB
MADE MODERN: ABC to Hold Public Sale on Dec. 23
MAJESTIC PROPERTIES: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee

MARK R. RESSEGUIE: Court Okays Sale of Lincoln Property for $161K
MARY R. DOHLER: Court Approves Sale of N.E. Township Property
MCDERMOTT INTERNATIONAL: Receives Noncompliance Notice from NYSE
MERIDIAN MARINA: Needs More Time to Complete Asset Sale, File Plan
MJJW PORTFOLIO: Samarra Durham Objects to Disclosure Statement

MONUMENT BREWING: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
MOTOVAN CORPORATION: Gets Initial Order Under CCAA
MOUNTAIN CREEK: Set Disclosure Statement Hearing
MRPC CHRISTIANA: Court Denies Bid to Reduce Lender's Claim
MURRAY ENERGY: Court Orders Appointment of Retiree Committee

MWM OIL: Evenson Auction of Oil & Gas Leasehold Interests Approved
NEUROPROTEXEON INC: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
NSHE CA BULLS: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
NXT ENERGY: Issues Direction to AGV Regarding Loan Repayment
OWENS & MINOR: Egan-Jones Lowers Senior Unsecured Ratings to B-

PALM BEACH BRAIN: May Use Cash Collateral Through Jan. 31
PLAZA PATISSERIE: Sasa Femic Objects to Disclosure & Plan
POTOMAC CONSTRUCTION: Case Summary & 3 Unsecured Creditors
QUINCY STREET TOWNHOMES 2: Case Summary & 3 Unsecured Creditors
QUINCY STREET TOWNHOMES I: Case Summary & 3 Unsecured Creditors

RAIT FUNDING: Appointment of Equity Committee Sought
RAIT FUNDING: Sale of Assets to CF RFP Approved
RALPH M. BONHAM: Selling 95% Stake in Whitlock for $811K
REGAL ROW: $2.5M Sale of Dallas Property to Victron Approved
RENT RITE: Disclosure Statement Hearing Reset to Jan. 28, 2020

RHC LLC: Case Summary & 9 Unsecured Creditors
RONALD A. GOODWIN: Hearing on Wichita Property Sale Set for Dec. 19
RP BROADCASTING: Court Okays Deal to Sell Radio Stations for $$550K
S&D LONGHORN: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
SERES THERAPEUTICS: Roger Pomerantz Quits as Director & Chairman

SHALE SUPPORT: Court Confirms Amended Joint Chapter 11 Plan
SHANNON STALEY: Seeks to Extend Exclusivity Period to March 3
SKYTEC INC: Disclosure Statement Hearing Reset to Dec. 18
SMOKY MOUNTAIN: Wanted Expedited Hearing on Disclosure Statement
SORENSON MEDIA: Proposed Sale of Interest in Continuum Approved

SOUTHEASTERN METAL: Juno to Contribute $500,000 to Fund Plan
STANLEY C. CHESTNUT: Country Boys Auction of Equipment Approved
STAR COMPUTER: Trustee's $6K Remnant Assets Sale to Oak Point OK'd
STAR WEST: S&P Raises Rating on $450MM Senior Secured Loan to 'BB-'
STEPHEN ZAMIAS: Has $300K Offer for Commercial Property Interests

STORE IT REIT: River Oaks Says No Notice of 2nd Amended Disclosures
TETON BUILDINGS: $800K Cash Sale of All Assets to Asoka Approved
THOMAS HUDSON: Court Okays $1.85MM Sale of Jacksonville Property
TIGIST KEBEDE: $1M Sale of DC Property to Gugda & Jambere Approved
TPC GROUP: Fitch Puts 'B-' LongTerm IDR on Watch Negative

TTM TECHNOLOGIES: Egan-Jones Lowers Senior Unsecured Ratings to B+
UNITED METHODIST: Zane Public Sale of Real Properties Approved
VENTURE WEST: Gets CCAA Stay; MNP Ltd. Named Monitor
VERITY HEALTH: NantWorks' Objection Deadlines in Assets Sale Moved
WAYLAND GROUP: Files for Bankruptcy Under CCAA

WESTERN COMMS: $13M Sale of Bend Property to Next Approved
WINDSTREAM HOLDINGS: Seeks More Time to File Bankruptcy Plan
WOODCREST ACE: Seeks Disclosure Statement Approval
WPX ENERGY: Fitch Puts BB LongTerm IDR on Rating Watch Positive
[*] Olshan Frome Promotes Jonathan Koevary to Bankruptcy Partner


                            *********

2034 SUNSET PLAZA: Case Summary & Unsecured Creditor
----------------------------------------------------
Debtor: 2034 Sunset Plaza Drive, LLC
        1025 N Kings Rd Apt 109
        West Hollywood, CA 90069

Business Description: The Debtor owns in fee simple a real
                      property located at 2034 Sunset Plaza Dr.,
                      Los Angeles, California having a current
                      value of $3 million.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: December 16, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Central District of California

Case No.: 19-24652

Judge: Hon. Sheri Bluebond

Debtor's Counsel: Matthew Abbasi, Esq.
                  ABBASI LAW CORPORATION
                  8889 West Olympic Blvd., Suite 240
                  Beverly Hills, CA 90211
                  Tel: (310) 358-9341
                  E-mail: matthew@malawgroup.com

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Roman James, manager.

The Debtor lists Pivotal Capital Group II, LLC as its sole
unsecured creditor holding a claim of $2.9 million.

A copy of the petition is available from PacerMonitor for free at:

                       https://is.gd/mOVOau


2200 NORTH ASHLAND: Court Okays Sale of Chicago Property for $4.7MM
-------------------------------------------------------------------
2200 North Ashland, LLC received approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Northern District of Illinois to sell its real
property located at 1610 W. Webster Ave., Chicago, Ill.

The property will be sold to Glascott Realty for $4.7 million "free
and clear" of all liens, claims and encumbrances.

2200 North Ashland will use the sale proceeds to pay in full the
secured claim of Continuum Capital Funding and other claims against
the company.  

A copy of the sale agreement is available at
https://tinyurl.com/u9hngh6 from PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

                 About 2200 North Ashland

2200 North Ashland, LLC, a company based in Chicago, filed a
Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. N.D. Ill. Case No. 19-25096) on Sept.
5, 2019.  In its petition, the Debtor was estimated to have $1
million to $10 million in both assets and liabilities.  The
petition was signed by Courtney Rush of Rush Leasing LLC, the
Debtor's managing member.  The Hon. Jacqueline P. Cox oversees the
case. Arthur G. Simon, Esq., at Crane Simon Clar and Dan, is the
Debtor's bankruptcy counsel.


A&R COMPLETE: Plan Payments to be Funded by Continued Operations
----------------------------------------------------------------
Debtor A&R Complete Service Corp. filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the District of Nevada a plan of reorganization and
disclosure statement.

Class 4(a) includes unsecured lender claims on loans made against
future receivables.  The creditors in this class include Lendr, MM
Funding, and Kalamata.  Since the receivables are not currently
booked by the Debtor and no action has been taken to perfect a
UCC-1 claim. These claims amount to $306,443 and are considered
general unsecured creditors.  These lenders will be paid over 36
months pursuant to the plan terms with interest to accrue at the
prime rate + 2%, amounting to an aggregate payment of $10,000 per
month to begin at the end of 24 months from the effective date of
the confirmed plan.

Class 4(b) includes the divorce property settlement awarded to
Heather Snipes, ex-spouse of the principal of the company, David
Snipes. Heather Snipes was awarded the amount of $300,000 in the
divorce decree, to be paid in the amount of $2,500 per month from
the future income of the company. Heather Snipes has received some
portion of payments prior to the filing of the petition and has a
current balance owed of approximately $288,000. Pursuant to the
plan, Heather will receive monthly payments on the settlement award
of $3,000 per month for April through September and $1,500 per
month for October through March toward the satisfaction of the
settlement amount.

Class 4(c) includes vendors of the Debtor, the unsecured portion of
the IRS tax claims, the unsecured portion of the Wells Fargo loans,
pre-petition legal fees and other general unsecured claims to be
paid from the company amounting to $444,361.30. The balance of this
class will be paid from the remaining surplus operating funds in an
amount to be determined and distributed quarterly from available
cash flow. The anticipated percentage of payment is 50%.

The Debtors will implement their Plan by serving as a Plan Agent
for payment of Claims pursuant to the Plan. No compensation will be
paid to the Debtors for serving as Plan Agent; however, he will be
entitled to reimbursement of expenses and compensation for any
professionals who assist him in the performance of their duties as
Plan Agent.

The Plan Agent will make the plan payments from the revenue that is
generated from the operation of the commercial HVAC warranty
business. The revenues are anticipated to generate approximately
$150,000 per month in the lowest cyclical income. Debtor
anticipates that he will continue providing HVAC warranty service
and possibly expanding into plumbing services with qualified
employees.

A full-text copy of the disclosure statement is available at
https://tinyurl.com/u9wcsta from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

The Debtor is represented by:

        Timothy P. Thomas, Esq.
        Law Office of Timothy P. Thomas, LLC
        1771 E. Flamingo Rd., Suite B-212
        Las Vegas, NV 89119
        Tel: (702) 227-0011
        Fax: (702) 227-0334
        E-mail: tthomas@tthomaslaw.com

              About A&R Complete Service

A&R Complete Service, Inc., based in Las Vegas, NV, filed a Chapter
11 petition (Bankr. D. Nev. Case No. 19-10321) on Jan. 21, 2019. In
the petition signed by David L. Snipes III, president, the Debtor
was estimated to have $0 to $50,000 in assets and $1 million to $10
million in liabilities. The Hon. Mike K. Nakagawa oversees the
case. Timothy P. Thomas, Esq., at the Law Office of Timothy Thomas,
LLC, serves as bankruptcy counsel.


ABDOUN ESTATE: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Abdoun Estate Holdings, LLC
        26250 Northwestern Highway, Suite 101
        Southfield, MI 48076

Business Description: Abdoun Estate Holdings is a privately held
                      company in Southfield, Michigan.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: December 17, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Eastern District of Maryland

Case No.: 19-57624

Judge: Hon. Phillip J. Shefferly

Debtor's Counsel: Yuliy Osipov, Esq.
                  OSIPOV BIGELMAN, P.C.
                  20700 Civic Center Drive, Suite 420
                  Southfield, MI 48076
                  Tel: 248.663.1800
                  E-mail: yo@osbig.com

Estimated Assets: $500,000 to $1 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Ahmad Abdulabon, managing member.

A copy of the petition is available from PacerMonitor for free at:

                     https://is.gd/pXycUZ


ACERUS PHARMACEUTICALS: Gets Waiver of Certain Financial Covenants
------------------------------------------------------------------
Acerus Pharmaceuticals Corporation (ASP) on Dec. 16, 2019,
disclosed that it entered into an amendment agreement related to
its existing credit facility with SWK Funding LLC ("SWK") and that
it received a waiver letter related to certain financial covenants
for Q4 2019, namely the December 15, 2019 Unencumbered Liquid Asset
covenant as well as the
December 31, 2019 Adjusted EBITDA and Aggregate Revenue covenants
contained in the credit agreement (the "SWK Waiver").  The nature
of the amendment is to set the minimum threshold for Consolidated
Unencumbered Liquid Assets required to be maintained by the
Company.  This amount is defined in the agreement as cash adjusted
for a certain portion of accounts receivable and payable.  The only
change contemplated by the amendment is to set this level at US$2.0
million up from US$1.0 million at all times after
January 31, 2020.

The SWK Waiver of the covenants is contingent on Acerus raising an
additional US$6.5 million prior to December 23, 2019.  In
connection therewith, Acerus has obtained a commitment letter from
First Generation Capital, Inc. ("First Generation"), a company
affiliated with the Chairman of the Board of Directors of Acerus,
to amend and restate the US$5.0 million subordinated secured term
loan facility previously entered into on July 19, 2019 between
Acerus and First Generation to (i) increase the borrowed amount to
US$11.5 million, thereby providing the capital required to meet the
condition of the SWK Waiver, (ii) extend the maturity date to June
30, 2021 and (iii) cap the total amount of interest payable to
First Generation under the A&R Loan (including interest paid from
the closing of the original US$5.0 million subordinated secured
term loan facility) to an amount equal to 9.99% of the market
capitalization of Acerus at the time of closing ("the A&R Loan").
The transaction has been approved by all the independent directors
of the board of directors of Acerus and the Company expects the
transaction to close in the upcoming days.

The other terms of the A&R Loan will remain unchanged from the
original facility.  The A&R Loan will continue to be subordinated
to the existing US$9.0 million facility with SWK Funding LLC
("SWK") and, subject to the cap on the total interest payable
described above, will bear interest at a rate per annum equal to
the three-month London Inter-Bank Offered Rate, plus an applicable
margin of 10.50%.  Subject to the terms of the subordination and
intercreditor agreement between First Generation and SWK, the A&R
Loan will be repayable in full on June 30, 2021, will continue to
be interest-only until maturity with regularly scheduled payments
of interest to First Generation being permitted subject to certain
conditions related to Acerus' market capitalization and aggregate
annual revenue, and can be prepaid in full or in part without
penalty following repayment in full of indebtedness owing to SWK.
The proceeds from the A&R Loan will be used for ongoing general
working capital.  A copy of the amended and restated promissory
note covering the A&R loan will be filed, following the closing of
the transaction, under the Company's profile on SEDAR at
www.sedar.com.

                         About Acerus

Acerus Pharmaceuticals Corporation (otcqb:ASPCF) --
http://www.aceruspharma.com/-- is a Canadian-based specialty
pharmaceutical company focused on the commercialization and
development of innovative prescription products that improve
patient experience, with a primary focus in the field of men's
health.  The Company commercializes its products via its own
salesforce in the United States and Canada, and through a global
network of licensed distributors in other territories.  Acerus'
shares trade on TSX under the symbol ASP and on OTCQB under the
symbol ASPCF.  



AGMEDICA BIOSCIENCE: Seeks Bankruptcy Protection Under CCAA
-----------------------------------------------------------
AgMedica Bioscience Inc. and its affiliates commenced
court-supervised restructuring proceedings under the Companies'
Creditors Arrangement Act.  Ernst & Young Inc. has been appointed
as monitor of the Companies for these CCAA proceedings pursuant to
the Order of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice (Commercial
List) dated Dec. 2, 2019.

The Monitor's contact details for additional information relating
to these CCAA proceedings are:

   Ernst & Young Inc.
   The Court-Appointed Monitor of AgMedica
   100 Adelaide Street West, P.O. Box 1
   Toronto, ON, M5H 0B3
   Tel: 1-866-220-2247
        416-941-1872
   Email: agmedica.monitor@ca.ey.com

The Companies retained as counsel:

   Thornton Grout Finnigan LLP
   Attn: Rebecca L. Kennedy
         Owen Gaffeny
         Adam Driedger
   100 Wellington Street West
   Suite 3200
   TD West Tower, Toronto-Dominion Centre
   Toronto, ON M5K 1K7
   Tel: 416-304-1616
   Fax: 416-304-1313   
   E-mail: rkennedy@tgf.ca
           ogaffney@tgf.ca
           adriedger@tgf.ca

Copies of the Initial Order and other related documents in
connection with these CCAA proceedings have been posted on the
Monitor's website at: http://www.ey.com/ca/agmedica.

AgMedica Bioscience Inc. -- https://www.agmedica.ca/ -- operates as
a biotechnology company.  The Company focuses on development,
maturation, and accessibility of cannabis for medical and adult-use
purposes through scientific plant and product research.  AgMedica
Bioscience serves customers and patients in Canada.


ALLISON TRANSPORTATION: Disclosure & Plan Filing Withdrawn
----------------------------------------------------------
Allison Transportation LLC has withdrawn its previously filed
Chapter 11 Disclosure Statement and Reorganization Plan on the
court docket.

           About Allison Transportation

Allison Transportation, LLC, owner and operator of a trucking
business in Statesville, NC, sought protection under Chapter 11 of
the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D.N.C. Case No. 19-50072) on Feb. 9,
2019. At the time of the filing, the Debtor was estimated to have
assets of less than $50,000 and liabilities of less than $1
million. The case is assigned to Judge Laura T. Beyer. McELWEE
FIRM, PLLC, is the Debtor's counsel.


ANDERSON UNIVERSITY: Fitch Assigns BB- IDR & Alters Outlook to Neg.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Fitch Ratings downgraded approximately $40.0 million of City of
Anderson, Indiana economic development revenue refunding bonds,
series 2017 issued on behalf of Anderson University to 'BB-' from
'BB'. In addition, Fitch has assigned AU an Issuer Default Rating
of 'BB-'.

The Rating Outlook has been revised to Negative from Stable.

SECURITY

The bonds are a general obligation of the obligated group (AU is
the sole member) payable from any legally available funds. The
bonds are secured under a master indenture by a pledge of the
university's gross revenues, a mortgage on its core campus property
and a cash-funded debt service reserve.

ANALYTICAL CONCLUSION

The downgrade of the bond ratings to 'BB-' and revision of the
Rating Outlook to Negative are driven by continued sharp enrollment
declines through fall 2019. AU has largely maintained its balance
sheet through enrollment-driven revenue pressures by managing
expenses carefully, as well as through fundraising and endowment
support. However, current enrollment trends are not sustainable,
and Fitch believes continued enrollment losses could lead to
balance sheet deterioration and liquidity stress as annual debt
service requirements ramp up in fiscal years 2021 and 2022.

The 'BB-' IDR and bond ratings reflect the university's elevated
credit risk as demographic and competitive pressures will challenge
AU's ability to improve enrollment levels. However, the university
maintains adequate financial flexibility to meet its commitments in
line with a weaker 'BB' category rating due to its resource base
that has been generally stable and remains stronger than
below-investment-grade peers, supported by fundraising capacity
from a loyal alumni base and consistent management of expenses. The
Negative Outlook reflects the increasing difficulty of further cost
reductions and resulting heightened risk of financial deterioration
if AU does not successfully execute plans to improve enrollment and
revenue performance over the next two years.

KEY RATING DRIVERS

Revenue Defensibility: 'bb'; Continued Enrollment Pressure

AU's FTE enrollment has declined sharply to 1,463 in fall 2019 from
1,768 in fall 2017 and was above 2,000 historically. Competitive
pressure from nearby public universities and limited pricing
flexibility have driven weak enrollment and revenue trends despite
moderate selectivity and student quality metrics that suggest AU is
capable of stronger demand trends. Positive considerations include
the university's affiliation with the Church of God (Anderson, IN),
which accounts for nearly a quarter of AU students, and the
university's solid fundraising history.

Operating Risk: 'bbb'; Thin Cash Flow and Limited Capital Plans

Continued revenue pressure has weakened AU's financial performance
slightly, with thinner cash flow margins expected to remain
generally below 10% going forward. The university has consistently
adjusted costs in recent years to offset declining
enrollment-driven revenues. However, Fitch believes AU's ability to
reduce costs further is more limited; sustainably stronger
performance will require some enrollment and revenue growth. AU has
moderate capex requirements with a high degree of flexibility and
limited spending plans during a period of contraction, although
deferred maintenance levels are high.

Financial Profile: 'bb'; High but Steady Leverage Position

AU's leverage is high in context of its operating profile but has
held fairly steady despite revenue pressures in recent years.
Available funds (cash and investments not permanently restricted)
equaled approximately 36% of adjusted debt in fiscal 2019, which
continue to provide a measure of cushion and are adequate for the
current rating category. The university currently has acceptable
operating liquidity, including availability under a line of credit,
and adequate debt service coverage. However, continued enrollment
and revenue declines would risk deterioration of AU's resource base
and liquidity position.

Asymmetric Additional Risk Considerations

No asymmetric additional risk considerations affected the ratings.

RATING SENSITIVITIES

Improving Enrollment and Revenue: Failure to stabilize or improve
the fall 2020 admissions cycle could trigger a further downgrade,
as continued revenue pressure would likely undermine AU's ability
to accommodate rising annual debt service requirements in fiscal
years 2021 and 2022.

Resource Preservation: AU's cost flexibility and thin but adequate
resource base provides some financial flexibility to weather
existing operating pressures at the current rating level. However,
further weakening of cash flow or deterioration of its historically
stable reserves or leverage position would indicate more material
credit risk and would likely trigger a downgrade.

CREDIT PROFILE

Founded in 1917, AU is a small Christian university located in
Anderson, IN, about 35 miles northeast of Indianapolis. It was
founded by and is affiliated with the Church of God (Anderson, IN)
(COG) and is the only college affiliated with the COG in the
Midwest. The university offers various undergraduate programs,
which make up over 80% of enrollment, as well as graduate programs
in business, theology and music education. AU also maintains a
department of adult studies that offers bachelor's and associate
degrees for adult students.

Revenue Defensibility

AU's FTE enrollment has fallen steadily in recent years to 1,463 in
fall 2019 from approximately 2,200 in fall 2014 and from a
historical peak above 2,500 around fall 2011. This trend reflects a
very competitive environment with high price sensitivity in part
related to nearby public institutions and an economically softer
local market. AU draws about 79% of students from in state, mostly
from the local area, while the COG affiliation also supports AU's
larger geographic draw.

Key strategies to stabilize and improve enrollment focus on
recruitment with the local area, within the COG nationally and from
Christian schools more broadly. Anderson plans to fund additional
scholarships directly or is pursuing partnerships to increase
financial aid availability for each of these segments. The
university is also focused on growth in key programs based on
market demand, including nursing, cyber and national security
studies, and its several recently accredited engineering degrees.

Demand indicators, including moderately selective admissions and
average student quality and retention, could potentially support
more stable enrollment trends, though the weaker freshman
matriculation rate below 20% reflects significant competitive and
pricing pressures. AU's incoming freshman class has totaled less
than 400 students since fall 2017, compared with 400-500 students
in prior years. As a result, total enrollment is likely to decline
again somewhat in fall 2020, but stable incoming classes in fall
2020 and 2021 should stabilize total enrollment.

AU relies primarily on net student revenue, which accounted for
approximately 76% of fiscal 2019 operating revenues. The university
will likely continue its trend of modest sticker price increases.
With nearby public competition and a focus on increasing student
aid as part of its enrollment strategy, AU's flexibility to
increase net tuition revenue per student is very limited. However,
AU's all-in discount rate of 46% is still below many private peers,
and increasing enrollment as a result of a more generous aid
strategy would still yield net revenue growth.

Solid fundraising and an endowment draw are also supportive revenue
sources that have helped to soften the effect of pressured net
student revenues. AU has a committed donor base and solid
fundraising track record. Unrestricted gifts and contributions
accounted for 11% of fiscal 2019 revenues and have accounted for
about 9% on average over the past five years. To help defray the
costs of its student aid strategy and help fund other operating
initiatives, Anderson launched a new comprehensive campaign in
October 2018 to raise $20 million by 2021. The campaign has raised
nearly $7 million to date, the majority of which is unrestricted,
and expects to meet the goal on time. Endowment support is also a
key operating revenue source accounting for approximately 4% of
revenue in 2019. AU has typically relied on a draw from its $34
million endowment to make debt service coverage in most years, but
its 4% spending policy is conservative and sustainably below
long-term investment returns.

Operating Risk

AU's financial performance has weakened somewhat in recent years
due to pressured enrollment and revenue trends. Cash flow margins
generally above 10% historically have compressed to 7% in 2018 and
9% in 2019, and Fitch expects they will remain in the 5% to 10%
range going forward. The university has demonstrated good
management of expenses, reducing cash expenses to match lower
revenue each year, including with workforce reductions through
attrition and periodic retirement initiatives. However, Fitch
believes the university's ability to achieve further cost
reductions will be more limited and may not be sufficient to
balance out additional revenue declines; a sustainable budget will
ultimately require some enrollment and revenue growth.

Fitch believes the university has moderate flexibility as to
capital investment and somewhat lower capital spending requirements
than suggested by capital metrics. Capital spending has averaged a
relatively low 40% of depreciation since 2016, following a period
of increased campus investment, and a very high average age of
plant now over 20 years indicates significant deferred maintenance.
However, the university has no material capital plans and now
serves a significantly smaller enrollment base; AU is funding
improvements selectively and is able to consolidate activity in
certain facilities while closing or pursuing disposal of
underutilized facilities.

Financial Profile

AU has a limited resource base and relatively high leverage in
context of its operating profile, though its financial position is
generally stronger than those of similarly rated peers. Available
funds of approximately $18 million as of June 30, 2019 have been
generally stable over the past five years (on a comparable basis
after adjusting for accounting changes related to underwater
endowments) despite operating pressure. The university's debt
totaling $52 million as of June 30, 2019 has also remained fairly
stable, and available funds-to-debt of 36% in 2019 provide adequate
financial flexibility for the rating category.

Liquidity is adequate and currently neutral to the financial
profile. Available funds equal 42% of 2019 operating expenses, and
AU maintains some headroom at 122 days cash on hand in 2019 over
its 75 days liquidity covenant. The university does rely on access
to a $7.5 million bank line of credit, which is property-secured
and annually renewed, to help manage liquidity through seasonal low
points. The line is fully drawn at fiscal year-end, improving
reported liquidity ratios, but management describes peak
utilization for true liquidity needs is around $5.0 million to $5.5
million.

AU reported legal coverage of its $3.3 million series 2017 maximum
annual debt service (MADS) of 2.3x in 2018 and 1.3x in 2019, though
Fitch-calculated economic coverage of annual debt service on all
obligations was 1.2x in 2018 and 1.6x in 2019. Fitch expects AU
will need to maintain or improve enrollment to preserve its
liquidity position and generate coverage comfortably above its 1.2x
MADS covenant. Annual debt service on the 2017 bonds climbs to MADS
over the period of 2021 and 2022.

The university's $52 million of Fitch-adjusted debt includes the
fixed-rate series 2017 bonds ($40 million); project debt related to
a student housing facility owned by Anderson University Properties,
LLC (Properties), which Fitch includes as university debt ($4
million); the line of credit (fully drawn to $7.5 million at
year-end); and various other notes and capital leases. Fitch does
not capitalize Anderson's operating lease to rent the student
housing facility from Properties, as the project debt is already
counted as debt of AU, and the university does not have a defined
benefit pension plan.


ARCHROCK PARTNERS: Moody's Rates New $400MM Unsec. Notes 'B2'
-------------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service assigned a B2 rating to Archrock
Partners, L.P.'s proposed $400 million senior unsecured notes issue
due 2028. The notes are being co-issued by Archrock Partners
Finance Corp., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Archrock. Proceeds from
the offering will be used to repay borrowings under the company's
revolving credit facility and general corporate purposes. None of
Archrock's other ratings are affected by the note issuance. The
outlook is stable.

Assignments:

Issuer: Archrock Partners, L.P.

  $400 million senior unsecured notes due 2028, Assigned B2 (LGD5)

RATINGS RATIONALE

The proposed senior notes are rated B2, one notch below the
company's B1 Corporate Family Rating. The notes are guaranteed by
Archrock's parent, Archrock, Inc., which also guarantees the
company's revolving credit facility and its senior unsecured notes
due 2027. Archrock's senior unsecured notes due 2022 do not have
AROC's guarantee and are rated B3, a notch below the company's
other unsecured debt. Both the parent-guaranteed senior notes and
the notes due 2022 have subsidiary guarantees, and all notes are
junior to the claim of the relatively large $1.25 billion
asset-based revolving credit facility. If the 2022 notes are
redeemed and APLP's debt is comprised only of the revolver and
parent-guaranteed senior notes, it could pressure the
parent-guaranteed notes rating.

Archrock's B1 CFR benefits from its leading position in natural gas
compression services, basin diversity, reasonably stable gross
margins, and growing US natural gas demand driving demand for the
company's compression services. Moody's expects the company's
margins and leverage to gradually improve in 2020 as it continues
to integrate the operations it acquired in the Elite Compression
acquisition mid-2019. Leverage is likely to improve to below 5x by
mid-2020. Consolidated leverage (including AROC) is below 5x.

Archrock's SGL-3 Speculative Grade Liquidity Rating reflects
adequate liquidity supported by access to a $1.25 billion
asset-based revolving credit facility that matures in 2024. Pro
forma paying down the revolver with proceeds from the proposed
notes, Archrock had about $600 million outstanding under the
facility at September 30, 2019. The revolver's financial covenants
include minimum interest coverage of 2.5x, maximum Senior Secured
Debt to EBITDA of 3.5x, and maximum Total Debt to EBITDA through
2019 of 5.75x, dropping to 5.5x through mid-2020 and falling to
5.25x for the third quarter of 2020 and beyond. Moody's expects the
company to remain in covenant compliance through 2020. Alternate
sources of liquidity are limited as its assets are pledged as
collateral to the revolver. Archrock's next maturity is on its
senior unsecured notes due October 2022, which are callable at par
April 1, 2020.

The stable outlook reflects Moody's expectation that gross margins
will stay relatively stable. The ratings could be considered for an
upgrade if the company is able to sustain debt to EBITDA below
4.5x. The ratings could be downgraded if leverage increases, with
debt to EBITDA rising above 5.5x.

The principal methodology used in these ratings was Global Oilfield
Services Industry Rating Methodology published in May 2017.

Archrock Partners, L.P. is a Houston, TX-based limited partnership
and is a leading provider of natural gas contract compression
services to customers throughout the United States. Archrock is a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Archrock, Inc.


ATI HOLDINGS: Moody's Cuts CFR to B3 & Alters Outlook to Stable
---------------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service downgraded ATI Holdings Acquisition,
Inc.'s Corporate Family Rating to B3 from B2 and Probability of
Default Rating to B3-PD from B2-PD. Moody's also downgraded the
company's secured first lien revolving credit facility and first
lien term loan to B2 from B1. The outlook was changed to stable
from negative.

The downgrade reflects ATI's persistently high leverage. Moody's
estimates the company's adjusted debt/EBITDA to be approximately
7.0 times for the LTM ended September 30, 2019. This estimate adds
back business optimization costs, which have been significant as
the company has been undergoing major restructuring efforts to
improve its back-office operations, reduce bad debt expenses and
optimize collection of payments for its services. While many of
these costs are one-time in nature, there will be some ongoing
costs related to maintenance that will continue. Including these
costs, adjusted EBITDA would approximate 8.3x for the twelve months
ended September 30, 2019.

The change in outlook to stable reflects Moody's expectation that
the company's investments and restructuring efforts have stabilized
the business and resolved back office challenges that had occurred.
Further, Moody's expects that leverage and cash flow will improve
as business optimization costs wind down.

The following ratings were downgraded:

ATI Holdings Acquisition, Inc.

  Corporate Family Rating, downgraded to B3 from B2;

  Probability of Default Rating, downgraded to B3-PD from B2-PD;

  Secured 1st lien revolving credit facility expiring 2021
  downgraded to B2 (LGD3) from B1 (LGD3)

  Secured 1st lien term loan due 2023 downgraded to B2 (LGD3)
  from B1 (LGD3)

Outlook action:

  Outlook changed to stable from negative.

RATINGS RATIONALE

The B3 Corporate Family Rating reflects ATI's high financial
leverage, moderate but growing scale, and geographic concentration
in the mid-western region of the US. The rating also reflects the
company's aggressive growth strategy, primarily focused on new
clinic expansion, which will limit debt repayment. The rating also
incorporates ATI's exposure to workers compensation business, which
can make ATI vulnerable to economic cycles and workers'
compensation reimbursement changes. The B3 also reflects the
relatively low barriers to entry in the industry, which could
increase competitive challenges in the longer-term.

The B3 rating is supported by Moody's view that the demand for
physical therapy will continue to grow given it is relatively
low-cost and can prevent the need for more expensive treatments and
can be a safer alternative to surgery or opioid use. Further, ATI
Holdings is the second largest owner/operator of physical therapy
clinics in the US. The rating is also supported by Moody's
expectation for good liquidity.

Environmental considerations are not considered material to the
overall credit profile of ATI. The rating reflects positive social
considerations, as physical therapy is potentially a less expensive
and safer alternative to surgery or opioid usage. From a governance
perspective, ATI is currently owned by private equity sponsor,
Advent International. Moody's expects de novo growth to continue to
be aggressive, which may require additional debt funding.

The stable outlook reflects Moody's expectation that the company's
investments and restructuring efforts have stabilized the business
and resolved back office challenges that had occurred. Further,
Moody's expects that leverage and cash flow will improve as
business optimization costs wind down.

The ratings could be downgraded if the company's debt to EBITDA
increases due to aggressive growth, weak operating performance,
acquisitions or shareholder initiatives; or if free cash flow to
debt were to continue to be negative. A weakening of liquidity
could also lead to a downgrade.

The ratings could be upgraded should ATI reduce and sustain
adjusted debt to EBITDA below 6.5 times and improve its free cash
flow.

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

ATI Holdings Acquisition, Inc., headquartered in Bolingbrook, IL,
is an outpatient physical therapy and rehabilitation provider. The
company operates over 880 clinics in 25 states concentrated around
the U.S. Midwest and East coast. ATI Holdings' annual revenue
exceeds $775 million. ATI is owned by financial sponsor Advent
International.


AVINGER INC: Appoints Tamara Elias as Class III Director
--------------------------------------------------------
Avinger, Inc., appointed Tamara Elias, MD, as a Class III director,
effective Dec. 12, 2019, to serve for a term expiring at the
Company's 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, or until her earlier
death, resignation or removal.  Dr. Elias will serve on the
Compensation Committee and Nominating and Corporate Governance
Committee of the Company's Board of Directors.  Dr. Elias was
appointed to fill a vacancy created by the Board's adoption of a
resolution to increase the number of directors of the Company from
four to five directors.  In connection with her appointment as a
director, on Dec. 12, 2019, the Company entered into an Offer
Letter with Dr. Elias, pursuant to which Dr. Elias agreed to serve
as a director.

Dr. Elias most recently served as vice president of Clinical
Product Development at Aetna.  From 2015 to 2017, Dr. Elias was
vice president of Corporate Strategy and Business Development for
the $8 billion medical segment at Becton Dickinson.  From
2007-2015, Dr. Elias was a partner with Essex Woodlands Healthcare
Partners, a healthcare only growth equity firm founded in 1985.
Earlier in her career, Dr. Elias was a management consultant at
McKinsey, advising pharmaceutical, diagnostic and device companies
in R&D, product commercialization and M&A.  Dr. Elias holds degrees
in Biology and Anthropology from Yale University, and an M.D. from
The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.  She trained as a general
surgeon at Massachusetts General Hospital.

Dr. Elias's cash compensation as a director will be in accordance
with the Company's Outside Director Compensation Policy.  In
connection with her appointment, Dr. Elias will also enter into the
Company's standard form of indemnification agreement.

                      About Avinger, Inc.

Headquartered in Redwood City, California, Avinger --
http://www.avinger.com/-- is a commercial-stage medical device
company that designs and develops the first-ever image-guided,
catheter-based system that diagnoses and treats patients with
peripheral artery disease (PAD).  PAD is estimated to affect over
12 million people in the U.S. and over 200 million worldwide.
Avinger is dedicated to radically changing the way vascular disease
is treated through its Lumivascular platform, which currently
consists of the Lightbox imaging console, the Ocelot family of
chronic total occlusion (CTO) catheters, and the Pantheris family
of atherectomy devices.

Avinger reported a net loss applicable to common stockholders of
$35.69 million for the year ended Dec. 31, 2018, compared to a net
loss applicable to common stockholders of $48.73 million for the
year ended Dec. 31, 2017.  As of Sept. 30, 2019, the Company had
$28 million in total assets, $19.25 million in total liabilities,
and $8.75 million in total stockholders' equity.

Moss Adams LLP, in San Francisco, California, the Company's auditor
since 2017, issued a "going concern" qualification in its report
dated March 6, 2019, on the Company's consolidated financial
statements for the year ended Dec. 31, 2018, stating that the
Company's recurring losses from operations and its need for
additional capital raise substantial doubt about its ability to
continue as a going concern.


BAYOU STEEL: Riverside Buying Remaining Equipment for $75K
----------------------------------------------------------
Bayou Steel BD Holdings, LLC, and debtor affiliates ask the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware to authorize their
private sale of remaining equipment, described within its Purchase
Agreement with Riverside Metals, LLC, for $75,000, free and clear
of any and all liens, claims, interests, and other encumbrances.

Leading up to the Petition Date, the Debtors as a tenant, occupied
leased premises which are owned by Hero Land Co.  The Debtors and
the Landlord agreed that the Debtors will vacate and relinquish
possession of the leased premises on Nov. 30, 2019, and that the
Landlord will grant the Debtors a full release with respect to any
liability associated with the leased premises, with the exception
of pre-petition rent that the Debtors owe the Landlord.

The Buyer will not only become the Landlord's new tenant who will
occupy the leased premises but with the Court's permission will
also purchase the Debtors' remaining Equipment that remains on the
leased premises.  If the Court approves the proposed Agreement,
then the Debtors and their estates will not have to incur costs
related to removing their remaining Equipment from the leased
premises.

As more fully described in the Agreement, the Debtors propose to
enter into a transaction whereby they will sell certain equipment
to the Buyer and the Buyer will pay the Debtors $75,000.
Furthermore, as detailed in the Agreement, with Court approval at
the Closing, the Landlord will deliver a fully executed release in
favor of the Debtors that releases the Debtors with respect to all
claims and liabilities associated with the leased premises from the
inception of the lease, with the exception of prepetition rent that
the Debtors owe the Landlord.

The Debtors do not believe that the cost and delay arising from a
competitive auction process or pursuing a potential transaction
with an entity other than the Buyer with respect to the Equipment
would be reasonably likely to increase value for the estates.  They
respectfully submit that it is an exercise of their sound business
judgment to sell the Equipment to the Buyer pursuant to the
Agreement via a private sale, which will maximize the value of
these assets for the benefit of creditors.

The Debtors also ask that, to the extent applicable to the relief
requested in the Motion, the Court waives the stay imposed by
Bankruptcy Rule 6004(h).

                       About Bayou Steel

Bayou Steel BD Holdings, L.L.C., is a North American company
focused on the production of long carbon steel products.  The
Company manufactures beams, angles, channels, flats, round bars,
and square bars.  Bayou Steel Group -- https://bayousteelgroup.com/
-- was formed in 2016 and is headquartered in La Place, Louisiana.

Bayou Steel BD Holdings, L.L.C., BD Bayou Steel Investment, L.L.C,
and BD LaPlace, LLC sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. D. Del.
Lead Case No. 19-12153) on Oct. 1, 2019.

The Hon. Karen B. Owens is the case judge.

The Debtors tapped POLSINELLI PC as counsel; and CANDLEWOOD
PARTNERS, LLC, as financial advisor and investment banker.
KURTZMAN CARSON CONSULTANTS LLC is the claims agent.


BRETHREN HOME: Revised Bid Procedures for Business & Property OK'd
------------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Mary P. Gorman of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Central
District of Illinois authorized the revised bidding procedures of
Brethren Home of Girard, Illinois, doing business as Pleasant Hill
Village, in connection with the auction sale of its 48 independent
and assisted living apartments and 19 acres of tillable farmland
and other real estate improved with a now closed nursing home
facility and parking lots.

The Revised Bidding Procedures and scheduling of an auction to
solicit bids for the sale of the Debtor's business and property as
set forth in Debtor's Motion and Supplement thereto are approved
and authorized.  The proposed Asset Purchase and Sale Agreement to
be used with the successful bidder, or subsequent overbid, is
approved.

The stay of the Order under Rule 4001(a)(3) of the Federal Rules of
Bankruptcy Procedure is waived and the Order will take effect
immediately upon entry.

The salient terms of the Revised Bidding Procedures are:

     a. Bid Deadline: Dec. 10, 2019 at 5:00 p.m.

     b. Initial Bid: TBD

     c. Deposit: 5% of proposed purchase price

     d. Auction: Dec. 17, 2019 at 2:00 p.m. (CT) at TBD

     e. Bid Increments: $50,000

     f. Buyer's Premium: 5% of the High Bid

A copy of the Revised Bidding Procedures is available for free at
https://tinyurl.com/s9vqzrb from PaceMonitor.com free of charge.

              About Brethren Home of Girard, Illinois

Brethren Home of Girard, Illinois --
http://pleasanthillvillage.org/-- owns an independent and assisted
living facility known as Pleasant Hill Residence, which houses 48
apartments.  Brethren Home is a non-profit organization founded in
1905 as a ministry of the Church of the Brethren.

Brethren Home sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. C.D. Ill. Case No. 19-70990) on July 10, 2019.  In the
petition signed by its president, Allen Krall, the Debtor disclosed
assets in the amount of $6,513,700 and debts in the amount of
$4,144,550.  

Judge Mary P. Gorman oversees the case.

The Debtor is represented by R. Stephen Scott, Esq., at Scott &
Scott, P.C.  

No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Chapter 11 case.

On Sept. 10, 2019, the Court appointed Hilco Real Estate Auctions,
LLC, as real estate consultants and advisors to the Debtor.


BUNGE LIMITED: Egan-Jones Lowers Senior Unsecured Ratings to BB+
----------------------------------------------------------------
Egan-Jones Ratings Company, on December 12, 2019, downgraded the
foreign currency and local currency senior unsecured ratings on
debt issued by Bunge Limited to BB+ from BBB-.

Bunge Limited is an American agribusiness and food company,
incorporated in Bermuda, and headquartered in White Plains, New
York, United States. As well as being an international soybean
exporter, it is also involved in food processing, grain trading,
and fertilizer.



CABRERA INVESTMENTS: Unsecureds to Have 10% Recovery Over 5 Years
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Debtor Cabrera Investments, LLC filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Southern District of Florida, Miami Division, a
disclosure statement in support of chapter 11 plan of
reorganization.

Class 6 – General Unsecured Creditors shall receive a
distribution of 10% of the amount of their claims, paid over 60
months from the Effective Date of the Plan. Payments shall be made
in 20 equal quarterly payments aggregating $2,795.53 each, with no
interest, which will begin on the first day of the month following
the Effective Date of the Plan and continue on the first day of
every quarter thereafter.

Class 7 consists of all allowed equity interests in the Debtor,
which includes shares in the Debtor, belonging 100% to Ladys
Cabrera. Ladys Cabrera shall retain her 100% stock interest in the
Debtor and shall have the same interest in the Reorganized Debtor.

Ladys Cabrera shall, in exchange, provide the following new value:
(a) her company, DLCPA, shall make any and all payments under the
Plan to all creditors set forth herein, notwithstanding the fact
that such payment(s) may equal amounts above-market rent for the
Real Property; and (b) other good and valuable consideration. Other
than receiving the same Equity Interest in the Reorganized Debtor,
the Equity Security Holder of the Debtor shall not be entitled to
receive any distribution under the Plan on account of such Equity
Interest.

The Plan will be funded solely from the cash flow of the operations
of DLCPA. DLCPA shall, and believes it can, generate sufficient
income to the amount necessary to enable it to make all payments
due under the Plan. The estimated cash on hand necessary as of the
Effective Date of the Plan is $5,000.00.

A full-text copy of the disclosure statement is available at
https://tinyurl.com/qn6nouz from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.


The Debtor is represented by:

      LEIDERMAN SHELOMITH ALEXANDER + SOMODEVILLA, PLLC
      Zach B. Shelomith
      2699 Stirling Road, Suite C401
      Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33312
      Tel: 954.920.5355
      Fax: 954.920.5371
      E-mail: zbs@lsaslaw.com

          - and -

      RODRIGUEZ LAW, P.L.
      Ricardo A. Rodriguez
      900 W 49 Street, Suite 505
      Hialeah, Florida 33012
      Tel: 305.262.8226
      E-mail: ricardo@rdgzlaw.com

                About Cabrera Investments

Based in Hialeah, Florida, Cabrera Investments, LLC, filed a
voluntary petition under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code
(Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No. 18-19175) on June 30, 2018, estimating
$100,001 to $500,000 in total assets and $500,001 to $1 million in
total liabilities.

Ricardo A. Rodriguez, Esq. of the law firm of Rodriguez Law, P.L.
is the Debtor's counsel. Zach B. Shelomith, Esq. of the law firm of
Leiderman Shelomith Alexander + Somodevilla, PLLC, represents the
Debtor as co-counsel.


CAH ACQUISITION 1: Trustee's Dec. 19 Auction of All Assets Set
--------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Joseph N. Callaway of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Eastern District of North Carolina authorized the bidding
procedures of Thomas W. Waldrep, Jr., the duly appointed Chapter 11
Trustee in the case of CAH Acquisition Co. #3, LLC, doing business
as Horton Community Hospital, in connection with the sale of all
real property and associated personal property of the Debtor, at
auction.

The Trustee will have the right, consistent with the procedures, to
sell substantially all of the assets of the Debtor's bankruptcy
estate.

Summary of Important Dates:

     A. Dates if Bids Received Other than the Stalking Horse:

          a. Dec. 12, 2019, 5:00 p.m. (ET) - Deadline for
prospective bidders to submit Bids

          b. Dec. 16, 2019, 5:00 p.m. (ET) - Deadline for Trustee
to file notice of Qualified Bidders

          c. Dec. 18, 2019 - Deadline for Trustee to designate and
communicate Starting Bid to Qualified Bidders

          d. Dec. 19, 2019, 10:00 a.m. (ET) - Auction to be
conducted at the Charlotte Marriott City Center, 100 W. Trade
Street, Charlotte, NC 28202

          e. Dec. 20, 2019 - Deadline for Trustee to file notice of
Successful Bidder and Next-Highest Bidder

          f. Dec. 27, 2019, 5:00 p.m. (ET) - Deadline to object to
Sale and Cure Amount

          g. Jan. 2, 2020, 1:00 p.m. (ET) - Sale Hearing, to be
conducted at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of
North Carolina in Greenville, North Carolina

Other salient terms of the Bidding Procedures are:

     a. Initial Bid: Must state with specificity (i) the
Transferred Assets (including the specific executory contracts and
unexpired leases) contemplated in the Bid any person seeking to
acquire any of the Transferred Assets wishes to bid on, together
with a schedule allocating the value of the Bid across its
component Transferred Assets, and (ii) the liabilities and
obligations (including applicable cure costs) to be assumed by the
Potential Bidder in the Sale;

     b. Deposit: 5% of the Bid amount

     c. Auction: If one or more timely Qualified Bids are received,
an open auction for the Transferred Assets will be conducted on
Dec. 19, 2019, commencing at 10:00 a.m. (ET) or such other time as
the Trustee may announce.

     d. Bid Increments: Each Subsequent Bid at the Auction will
provide net value to the estate in a minimum amount to be announced
at or prior the Auction over the Starting Bid or the Leading Bid,
as the case may be, as determined by the Trustee in the exercise of
his reasonable business judgment and in consultation with the
Consultation Parties.

Immediately after the completion of (a) the Auction and (b) the
auctions of other individual CAH hospitals, as identified in the
Plan, the Trustee will give certain Qualified Bidders the
opportunity to group two or more hospitals for further bidding.
Only Qualified Bidders who are qualified to bid on each of the
hospitals for which they want to bid will be eligible for Further
Bidding.  For purposes of Further Bidding, the minimum bidding
increment for any group of two or more hospitals will be 1% more
than the sum of the highest bid of each individual hospital that
comprises the group that is to be bid upon.  Further Bidding on the
grouped hospitals will be allowed until a best bid is reached for
the grouped hospitals.  This process will continue until no further
groupings are requested by Qualified Bidders.

Within two business days following the entry of the Bidding
Procedures Order, the Trustee will serve a copy of the Bidding
Procedures Order and a notice containing the date of the Auction,
the Sale Hearing, and the deadline to file objections to the Sale
to all interested parties.  Such notice will be sufficient and
proper notice of the sale with respect to known interested parties.


With respect to the Assumed Contracts, on Dec. 6, 2019, the Trustee
will file with the Court and serve on each party to an Assumed
Contract a notice setting forth the amount of cure owed thereunder
according to the Debtor's books and records.  The Cure Objection
Deadline is Dec. 23, 2019.

The Trustee is authorized to take all actions necessary to
effectuate the relief granted pursuant to the Order.

                About Horton Community Hospital

CAH Acquisition Company # 3, LLC, d/b/a Horton Community Hospital,
owns a 25 bed critical access hospital in Saint Louis, Missouri.
Services -- http://www.horton-hospital.com/-- include diagnostic
and therapeutic services, 24 hour emergency care, convenient and
specialized outpatient resources, pharmaceutical services and other
services.  

The Company previously sought bankruptcy protection on Oct. 10,
2011 (Bankr. W.D. Mo. Case No. 11-44741).

The Company again sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. E.D.N.C.
Case No. 19-01180) on March 14, 2019.  The Debtor was estimated to
have assets of $0 to $50,000 and liabilities of $1 million to $10
million.  The Hon. Joseph N. Callaway is the case judge.  SPILMAN
THOMAS & BATTLE, PLLC, is the Debtor's counsel.

On March 15,2019, Thomas W. Waldrep, Jr., was appointed as Chapter
11 Trustee for the Debtor. The Trustee's own firm, WALDREP LLP,
serves as counsel in the Chapter 11 case.

On Oct. 22, 2019, Employ Sherwood Partners, Inc., was appointed as
sales agent for the Trustee.


CENTENNIAL HOTEL: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
---------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Centennial Hotel, LLC
        7700 South Peoria St.
        Englewood, CO 80112

Business Description: Centennial Hotel, LLC is a privately held
                      company in the hotel and motel business.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: December 17, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       District of Colorado

Case No.: 19-20694

Judge: Hon. Thomas B. Mcnamara

Debtor's Counsel: Lee M. Kutner, Esq.
                  KUTNER BRINEN, P.C.
                  1660 Lincoln Street, Suite 1850
                  Denver, CO 80264
                  Tel: 303-832-2400
                  E-mail: lmk@kutnerlaw.com

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Gregory G. Fulton, managing member of
GGF, LLC.

A copy of the petition is available from PacerMonitor for free at:

                    https://is.gd/DZviaK


CHOICE ONE: Seeks to Extend Exclusivity Period to Feb. 3
--------------------------------------------------------
Choice One Staffing Group, Inc. asked the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Western District of Pennsylvania to extend the exclusivity
period to file a Chapter 11 plan to Feb. 3, 2020, and the period to
solicit acceptances for the plan to April 3, 2020.

Choice One has been negotiating with the Internal Revenue Service,
one of the company's largest unsecured creditors, regarding a
universal stipulation which would be incorporated into the plan.
There has been progress in the negotiations and the company
anticipates reaching an agreement with IRS. If an agreement with
the agency can be reached, it will be the centerpiece of the plan.

                 About Choice One Staffing Group

Township, Pennsylvania-based Choice One Staffing Group, Inc. --
https://choice1staffing.com -- is a full-service staffing firm that
assists businesses in filling their administrative, light
industrial, technical, medical, and hospitality employment needs.
It works on both the local and national level.

Choice One Staffing Group sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D. Pa. Case No. 19-21455) on April 9,
2019.  At the time of the filing, the Debtor had estimated assets
of less than $1 million and liabilities of between $1 million and
$10 million.  

The case is assigned to Judge Gregory L. Taddonio.  

The Debtor is represented by Knox McLaughlin Gornall & Sennett,
P.C.

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


CLOVER TECHNOLOGIES: Case Summary & 30 Largest Unsecured Creditors
------------------------------------------------------------------
Lead Debtor: Clover Technologies Group, LLC
             122 W. Madison Street
             Ottawa, Illinois 61350

Business Description: The Debtors collect and recycle electronic
                      devices and provide aftermarket management
                      services for mobile device carriers,
                      manufacturers, retailers, insurance
                      providers and enterprise businesses.  Formed
                      through organic growth and strategic
                      acquisitions, the Debtors and their non-
                      debtor affiliates operate repair centers in
                      North America and abroad and provide
                      services in over 120 countries.  For more
                      information, visit
                      http://www.clovertech.com.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: December 16, 2019

Seven affiliates that concurrently filed voluntary petitions for
relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code:

     Debtor                                    Case No.
     ------                                    --------
     Clover Technologies Group, LLC            19-12680
     4L Holdings Corporation                   19-12681
     4L Technologies Inc.                      19-12682
     Clover Ithaca Properties, LLC             19-12683
     Clover Wireless, LLC                      19-12685
     Refurb Holdings, LLC                      19-12684
     Valu Tech Outsourcing, LLC                19-12686

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       District of Delaware

Judge: Hon. Karen B. Owens

Debtors'
General
Bankruptcy
Counsel:                 Joshua A. Sussberg, P.C.
                         Matthew C. Fagen, Esq.
                         KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
                         KIRKLAND & ELLIS INTERNATIONAL LLP
                         601 Lexington Avenue
                         New York, New York 10022
                         Tel: (212) 446-4800
                         Fax: (212) 446-4900
                         E-mail: joshua.sussberg@kirkland.com
                                 matthew.fagen@kirkland.com

Debtors'
Local
Bankruptcy
Counsel:                 Domenic E. Pacitti, Esq.
                         Michael W. Yurkewicz, Esq.
                         KLEHR HARRISON HARVEY BRANZBURG LLP
                         919 N. Market Street, Suite 1000
                         Wilmington, Delaware 19801
                         Tel: (302) 426-1189
                         Fax: (302) 426-9193
                         E-mail: dpacitti@klehr.com
                                 myurkewicz@klehr.com

                             - and -

                         Morton R. Branzburg, Esq.
                         KLEHR HARRISON HARVEY BRANZBURG LLP
                         1835 Market Street, Suite 1400
                         Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103
                         Tel: (215) 569-3007
                         Fax: (215) 568-6603
                         E-mail: mbranzburg@klehr.com

Debtors'
Restructuring
Advisor:                 ALVAREZ & MARSAL NORTH AMERICA, LLC

Debtors'
Financial
Advisor &
Investment
Banker:                  JEFFERIES LLC

Debtors'
Notice &
Claims Agent:            BANKRUPTCY MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS, INC.
                         d/b/a STRETTO
                         https://case.stretto.com/clover

Clover Technologies'
Estimated Assets: $100 million to $500 million

Clover Technologies'
Estimated Liabilities: $500 million to $1 billion

4L Holdings Corporation's
Estimated Assets: $0 to $50,000

4L Holdings Corporation's
Estimated Liabilities: $500 million to $1 billion

4L Technologies Inc.'s
Estimated Assets: $100 million to $500 million

4L Technologies Inc.'s
Estimated Liabilities: $500 million to $1 billion

Clover Ithaca Properties'
Estimated Assets: $0 to $50,000

Clover Ithaca Properties'
Estimated Liabilities: $500 million to $1 billion

Refurb Holdings'
Estimated Assets: $50 million to $100 million

Refurb Holdings'
Estimated Liabilities: $500 million to $1 billion

Clover Wireless'
Estimated Assets: $10 million to $50 million

Clover Wireless'
Estimated Liabilities: $500 million to $1 billion

Valu Tech's
Estimated Assets: $10 million to $50 million

Valu Tech's
Estimated Liabilities $500 million to $1 billion

The petitions were signed by Andrew Buck, chief financial officer.

Full-text copies of the petitions are available from PacerMonitor
for free at:

                       https://is.gd/RTSvWP
                       https://is.gd/WvYXj2
                       https://is.gd/cMzUy4
                       https://is.gd/JXkJey
                       https://is.gd/ZFmavr
                       https://is.gd/iJuDdW
                       https://is.gd/02dWtL

List of Debtors' 30 Largest Unsecured Creditors:

   Entity                          Nature of Claim    Claim Amount
   ------                          ---------------    ------------
1. Rogers                               Trade          $1,035,573
333 Bloor Street East
10th Floor
Toronto, ON M4W1G9
Canada
Name: Joe Natale
Tel: (416) 883-8650
Email: Joen@rogers.com

2. HP Inc.                              Trade             $743,833
1501 Page Mill Road
Palo Alto, CA 94394
Name: Antonio Neri
Tel: (281) 581-8294
Email: Aneri@hpe.com

3. Portier, LLC                         Trade             $478,000
1455 Market Street 4th Floor
San Francisco, CA 94103
Name: Todd Hamblet
Tel: (866) 576-1039
Email: Thamblet@uber.com

4. Samsung Telecommunications           Trade             $282,396
129, Samsung-Ro
Yeongtong-GuSuwon-Si
Gyeonggi-Do
Seoul Korea
Name: Yang Kyu Kim
Tel: (201) 229-4000
Fax: (201) 229-4039
Email: Kimyangkyu@samsung.com

5. Batteries Plus                       Trade             $272,176
1325 Walnut Ridge Drive
Hartland, WI 53029
Name: Scott Williams
Tel: (479) 616-0487
Email: Swilliams@batteriesplus.com

6. Fido                                 Trade             $271,961
800 De La Gauchetiere Street West
Suite 4000
Montreal H5A 1K3
Name: Joe Natale
Tel: (416) 883-8650
Email: Joen@rogers.com

7. Yuchuang Electro-Optical Co., Ltd.   Trade             $244,830
1 Queen's Road Central
Central Hong Kong
Name: Tony Huang
Tel: 86-13902940849
Fax: 0086-755-23805180
Email: Tonyhuang3@163.com

8. Hong Kong Witzvah Technology         Trade             $231,000
5/F Lucky Centre
165-171 Wan Chai Road
Room 1506Wan Chai
Hong Kong
Name: Andy
Tel: 886-911300589
Email: Andy@witzvahs.com

9. Blackberry Dl                        Trade             $199,748
2300-A University Ave
Waterloo, ON N2K 4P4
Canada
Name: John Chen
Tel: (408) 273-8000
Email: Johnchen@blackberry.com

10. Savino Del Bene                     Trade             $114,823
Via Del Botteghino
24/26/28A
Scandicci
Firenze 50018
Italy
Name: Raffaele Brazzini
Tel: 39 055 52 191
Email: Raffaele.brazzini@savinodelbene.com

11. Nexlink Communications, LLC         Trade             $113,409
3355 Bald Mountain Rd.
Suite 10
Auburn Hills, MI 48326
Name: Jeffrey Messano
Tel: (877) 285-8760 ext. 101
Fax: (248) 409-2520
Email: Jmessano@nexlinkcommunications.com

12. Tangoe                              Trade             $103,219
169 Lackawanna Ave.
Parsippany, NJ 07054
Name: Bob Irwin
Tel: (614) 855-1560
Email: Bob.irwin@tangoe.com

13. Formike Electronic (H.K.) Limited   Trade             $101,839
Dengliang Rd.
Ipark Building No. 26
Nanshan District Block B
Flats 401-403, 4/F, Shenzhen
518054
China
Name: Ivy Du
Tel: 8615875530165
Email: Ivy@wandisplay/com

14. Chester Electronics Limited         Trade             $101,505

1318-20 B/F
Hollywood Plaza 60 Nathan Road
Mongkok, Kowloon
Hong Kong 53143 China
Name: Lily Tan
Email: Lily@chester-elec.com

15. Shenzhen Weikeda                    Trade              $86,758
Industrial Co Ltd
4506B Electronic Technology Building
Futian District Shenzhen, Guangdong 518000
China
Name: Selina Yao
Tel: 0086-13692264241
Fax: 0086-755-82563532
Email: Cnwkd2@outlook.com

16. Hong Kong Zhihe Technology Ltd      Trade              $82,894
Unit 04, 7F Bright Way Tower
No.33 Mong Kok Rc
Block 102 Taoxia
Longfeng Third Rd, Room 1302
Shenzhen, GuangdongChina
Name: Joseph Zhao
Tel: (861) 707-5356
Email: Zhihe_joseph@yeah.net

17. Gemalto, Inc.                       Trade              $66,500
Barbara Strozzilaan 382
1083 Hn
Amsterdam
The Netherland
Name: Virginie Duperat-Vergne
Tel: 31 20 562 06 80
Email: Virginie.duperatvergne@gemalto.com

18. AT&T                                Trade              $59,211
208 S. Akard St.
Dallas, TX 75202
Name: Angela Santone
Tel: (404) 827-5586
Email: Asantone@att.com

19. Djwb Technology Co., Ltd            Trade              $52,549
15F Luck Ctr No.165-171 Wan Chai Rd
Flat 1506
Wan Chai
Hong Kong
Name: Johnson Liu
Tel: (382) 845-6787
Fax: 0755-85298602
Email: 13828456787@139.com

20. Jump Plus                           Trade              $50,283
275 College St.
Toronto, ON M5T 1S2
Canada
Name: Jospeh Schneeweiss
Tel: (416) 927-8000
Email: Jschneeweiss@csctoronto.com

21. Al Alaam Al Akahdar Tr LLC          Trade              $47,739
Warehouse 3Nr Jnp Signal Ind
Area 5
P.O. Box 2999 Sharjah
United Arab Emirate
Name: Pankaj Biyani
Email: Pankajbiyani@gmail.com

22. HTC                                 Trade              $47,279
No. 23
Xinghua Road
Taoyuan District
Taoyuan City
Taiwan
Name: Yves Maitre
Tel: (425) 861-9174
Email: Yves_maitre@htc.com

23. Techtrader                          Trade              $46,993
1204-1940 Ironstone Dr.
Burlington, ON L7L 0E4
Canada
Name: Lembel Lepitkult
Tel: 1905 512 5113
Email: Lem@techtradercanada.com

24. Elisa Oyj                           Trade              $41,227
Ratavartijankatu 5
Pl 100
Helsinki 00061 Finland
Name: Veli-Matti Mattila
Tel: 358 102 6000
Fax: 358 102 6060
Email: Veli-matti.mattila@elisa.com

25. Dell Marketing, L.P.                Trade              $35,469
1 Dell Way
Round Rock, TX 78682
Name: Michael S. Dell
Tel: (512) 289-7777
Email: Michael@dell.com

26. Gsn Solutions, LLC                  Trade              $36,500
400 W. Anderson Ln
Austin, TX 78752 Usa
Name: Pulin Kumar
Tel: (512) 785-9485
Email: Pulin.kumar@gsnsols.com

27. Wistron Corporation                 Trade              $35,448
No. 122
Singshan Rd. Neihu,
Taipei 11469
Taiwan
Name: David Shen
Tel: 886-2-6616-9999
Email: David_shen@wistron.com

28. Swiss Re                            Trade              $34,800
50/60 Mythenquai
Zurich 8022
Switzerland
Name: Andreas Berger
Tel: 41 43 285 2121
Email: Andreas_berger@swissre.com

29. Shun Takcheong Electronic           Trade              $33,950
Technology Industrial LT
Flat Rm 603F 6/F Hang Pont
Commercial Bldg 31 Tonkin Street
Cheung Sha Wan Kwun Tong 999077
Hong Kong
Name: Kevin Fong
Tel: 86 13480975169
Email: Kevin_fong1@outlook.com

30. 7 Star Trade-In, LLC                Trade              $33,864
8871 Research Drive
Irvine, CA 92618
Name: Amir Katanchi
Email:Amir.katanchi@7startradein.com


CONSIS: Amends Plan to Resolve Bolivians, Asesuisa Claims
---------------------------------------------------------
Debtor Consis International, LLC filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Southern District of Florida, Fort Lauderdale
Division, a second amended disclosure statement for second amended
chapter 11 plan of reorganization.

As of the Petition Date, unsecured claimants included numerous
insiders, employees and service providers: Oscar Carrera
$139,889.00; Consis International CA Venezuela $641,930.00; Consis
de Mexico CA de CV $90,000.00; Leonardo Lucena $22,500.00; German
Marcano, $161,402.00. Consis had an additional unsecured debt to
unrelated service providers and third parties. Accordingly,
Debtor’s initial Plan and Disclosure Statement reflected
treatment accordingly. This second amended plan takes into
consideration amended proofs of claim and/or clarification by
general unsecured creditors the Bolivians as well as the Asesuisa
Group of El Salvador.

Class 3 consists of the allowed general unsecured claims including
Claims filed and numbered #1,# 3, #4; #9, #12 as well as #6, #7
[the Bolivians] (in amount to be determined by the Court or by
agreement of the parties, but estimated at $5M for Plan purposes)
and #10, #11 [Asesuisa] (in amount to be determined by the Court or
by agreement of the parties, but estimated at $2.8M for Plan
purposes). This class shall receive their pro-rata share of amounts
available for distribution as set forth in the budget attached to
the Amended Plan. Payments approximately totaling $1,300,000 shall
be made pro-rata, in installments, over a period of time as set
forth in the Amended Cash Flow, within forty-eight months from the
Effective Date of the Plan.

Class 4 consists of the allowed general unsecured claims of
insiders in Debtor’s Schedule F (German Marcano, Oscar Carrera,
Leonardo Lucena, and Juan Medina). The cumulative amount of these
general, unsecured insiders is $387,542.00. This class shall
receive no distribution from the Plan.

Class 6 consists of the Members’ equity interest in the Debtor.
In a limited liability company, the equity interest holders are the
members. Members of this class will not withdraw capital or receive
Accumulated Adjustment Account distributions. Members of this class
will provide new value to the reorganized Debtor as necessary to
fund the Plan. Specifically, the new value provided will be the sum
to fund the Convenience Class Claim: $28,052.00.

The Debtor will fund the Plan with funds collected from its
accounts receivables, cash in hand and funds received from its
continued operations. The Debtor’s Insiders’ new value will
fund the Convenience Class Claim and will address any shortfalls or
variations from the Cash Flow projections. The debtor will set
aside sufficient funds for amounts due pursuant to the plan as of
the Effective Date. The Administrative Claims not paid in full on
the Effective Date will be paid in installments after the Effective
Date.

A full-text copy of the amended plan is available at
https://tinyurl.com/uvt5lu4 from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

The Debtor is represented by:

       Aleida Martinez Molina, Esq.
       Weiss Serota Helfman Cole Bierman, PL
       2525 Ponce de Leon Boulevard, Suite 700
       Coral Gables, Florida 33134
       Tel: 305-854-0800
       Fax: 305-854-2323
       E-mail: amartinez@wsh-law.com

                   About Consis International

Consis International LLC -- https://www.consisint.com/ -- provides
computer systems design and related services. It was founded in
August 1987 in Caracas, Venezuela.

Consis International sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No. 18-22233) on Oct. 2,
2018.  In the petition signed by Oscar Carrera, manager, the Debtor
was estimated to have assets of less than $1 million and
liabilities of $1 million to $10 million.  Judge John K. Olson
oversees the case.  Weiss Serota Helfman Cole & Bierman, P.L., is
the Debtor's legal counsel.


COSTA HOLLYWOOD: Gets Final OK to Use Cash, Borrow Up to $726,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Judge A. Jay Cristol authorized Costa Hollywood Property Owner, LLC
to obtain secured postpetition financing in the total amount of
$726,000 through April 30, 2020 from its prepetition secured lender
777 North Ocean Drive, LLC.

The Debtor has sought to obtain post-petition financing to cover
shortfalls in the operating budget in order to operate successfully
its business, propose a plan and proceed to sell substantially all
of its assets as a going concern.  A copy of the Motion is
available at https://is.gd/G9AMZe from PacerMonitor.com at no
charge.

The post-petition financing bears interest at 12% per annum, which
is the contractual "Floor Rate" set forth in the loan documents.
All amounts outstanding under the post-petition financing will
become due and payable on the earlier of (i) April 30, 2020, (ii)
dismissal of this Chapter 11 case, (ii) conversion of this Chapter
11 case to a case under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code, or (iii)
the effective date of the Debtor's plan of reorganization.

Any sum advanced on account of the post-petition financing from the
Secured Lender will be deemed an advance under the Certificate of
Future Advance and Amended and Restated Mortgage and Security
Agreement from the Debtor to the Secured Lender, recorded on July
20, 2016 in Broward County, Florida Official Records.  Said advance
will be added to the prepetition indebtedness to the Secured
Lender, with interest to accrue on any said advance, and be secured
by a first priority priming lien, mortgage and security interest in
favor of the Secured Lender on all of the Debtor's property (except
the avoidance actions and proceeds thereof) senior to any and all
liens, security interests and mortgages on the Debtor's property
existing as of the Petition Date.

In the Final Order, the Debtor admitted that:
    (i) the principal amount owed to the Secured Lender is not less
than $47,098,757.81 plus interest, costs and attorneys' fees;

   (ii) the lien and security interest the Debtor granted to the
Secured Lender is a valid, binding, perfected and enforceable
first-priority lien on and security interest on the Debtor's
property; and

  (iii) no portion of the indebtedness due to the Secured Lender or
the liens and security interests granted to the Secured Lender is
subject to avoidance, subordination of any kind pursuant to the
Bankruptcy Code or applicable non-bankruptcy law.  

All creditors and all other parties-in-interest, including any
Chapter 7 or Chapter 11 trustee appointed or elected for the Debtor
may challenge the Secured Lender's pre-petition indebtedness no
later than the date that is 50 days from the date of the entry of
the Final Order.

Prior to entry of the Final Order, the Court has granted the Debtor
interim authority to obtain up to $75,000 of the post-petition
financing.  At the time, the Court also granted interim approval to
use cash collateral through Nov. 20, 2019.  

With this Final Order, the Court authorized the Debtor to use cash
collateral through and including April 30, 2020 on a final basis.

Subject only to the DIP Liens, the Secured Lender is granted valid,
binding, continuing, enforceable, fully-perfected, non-avoidable
first priority liens and/or replacement liens on, and security
interest in all of the Debtor's  property, whether real property or
personal property, located at or used in connection with the
operations of the property commonly known as 327 & 319 Pierce
Street and 330 & 348 Indiana Street, Hollywood, Florida, to the
same extent that said liens and security interests existed
pre-petition and subject to any valid, perfected, non-avoidable
senior liens existing as of the Petition Date, as well as all
post-petition assets of the Debtor of the same type and nature as
the Debtor's property, and the proceeds thereof, provided, that the
replacement liens granted to the Secured Lender will not encumber
any causes of actions under Chapter 5 of the Bankruptcy Code or any
proceeds thereof.

As further adequate protection, the Secured Lender is granted an
allowed super-priority administrative expense claim against the
Debtor and the Debtor's estate for any diminution in cash
collateral or failure of adequate protection based on the
replacement liens.

A copy of the Final DIP Order is available at https://is.gd/MqdkN7
from PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

A copy of the 2nd Interim Order is also available at
https://is.gd/kqBWGl free of charge from PacerMonitor.com.

                     About Costa Hollywood

Costa Hollywood Property Owner, LLC --
https://www.costahollywoodresort.com/ -- is a privately held
company in the traveler accommodation industry.  It owns and
operates Costa Hollywood Beach Resort, a resort hotel in Hollywood
Beach, Florida.  Costa Hollywood Beach Resort offers rooms and
suites featuring an elevated design aesthetic and luxe decor.

Costa Hollywood sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No. 19-22483) on Sept.
19,2019.  In the petition signed by Moses Bensusan, manager and
sole member, the Debtor estimated between $50 million and $100
million in both assets and liabilities.  The Hon. A. Jay Cristol is
the case judge.  Peter D. Russin, Esq., at Meland Russin & Budwick,
P.A. serves as the Debtor's bankruptcy counsel.


DCP MIDSTREAM: Egan-Jones Lowers Senior Unsecured Ratings to BB+
----------------------------------------------------------------
Egan-Jones Ratings Company, on December 11, 2019, downgraded the
foreign currency and local currency senior unsecured ratings on
debt issued by DCP Midstream Partners, LP to BB+ from BBB-.

DCP Midstream Partners, LP is a Fortune 500 company for midstream
petroleum services, headquartered in Denver, Colorado. As a
publicly traded partnership, the company does not have directors,
officers, or employees of its own, but relies on its general
partner for managing its operations.




DOCK STREET: Puts Collateral Up for Sale
----------------------------------------
Dock Street Capital Management LLC, on behalf of The Bank of New
York Mellon Trust Company, National Association, in its capacity as
trustee, will be conducting sales of certain collateral pledged to
the trustee.

The collateral will be offered and sold by the trustee without
recourse, representations or covenants, express or implied, being
made by the trustee with respect to the collateral or with respect
to any other information then in the trustee's possession,
including without limitation any offering circular or other
financial information.

The sale will be held at 575-B Riverside Avenue, Westport, CT
06880.

For additional information on the sale, contact:

   David Crowle
   Jeffrey Holtman
   Tel: (212) 457-8258
   Fax: (212) 457-8269
   E-mail: dcrowle@dockstreetcap.com
           jholtman@dockstreetcap.com


EAST ALLEGHENY SD: Moody's Lowers Issuer Rating to Caa1
-------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service downgraded East Allegheny School
District, PA's issuer rating to Caa1 from B3. Concurrently, Moody's
has downgraded the district's general obligation unlimited tax and
general obligation limited tax ratings to Caa1 from B3, affecting
$18.0 million and $5.6 million in debt outstanding, respectively.
The outlook has been revised to stable from negative.

The pledge supporting a portion of the district's rated debt is
limited tax based on the limited ability of Pennsylvania school
districts to increase their property tax levy above a preset
index.

RATINGS RATIONALE

The district's Caa1 Issuer, GOULT and GOLT ratings reflect its
persistently negative fund balance, highly elevated debt burden,
limited taxable base, and below average wealth. The rating
furthermore reflects the recent loss of a legal action by the
district that will further strain its finances. The Caa1 rating
reflects its view that the district will be increasingly unlikely
to cover debt service in the absence of significant structural
changes or assistance from the commonwealth.

The absence of distinction between the Issuer/GOULT and GOLT
ratings reflect Pennsylvania school districts' ability to apply for
exceptions to the cap on property tax increases in order to cover
debt service, the Commonwealth's history of granting such
exceptions, and the district's full faith and credit pledge
supporting all general obligation debt.

RATING OUTLOOK

The stable outlook on the district's underlying rating reflects its
expectation that its financial position will remain highly
pressured in the near term.

FACTORS THAT COULD LEAD TO AN UPGRADE

  - Significant revenue increase, such that cash flow is positive
    in all months of the year

  - Sustained structural balance that moderates the current fund
    balance deficit or leads to material growth in reserves and
    liquidity

FACTORS THAT COULD LEAD TO A DOWNGRADE

  - Failure to provide for timely principal or interest payments
    on any debt obligation

LEGAL SECURITY

The district's Series of 2014 and Series of 2015 bonds are secured
by its general obligation unlimited tax (GOULT) pledge, as they
were issued to refund debt that was originally incurred prior to
the 2006 implementation of Pennsylvania's Act 1 "Taxpayer Relief
Act."

The district's Series of A of 2018 and Series B of 2018 bonds are
secured by the district's GOLT pledge, which is subject to the
limits of Act 1.

PROFILE

East Allegheny School District is a small, suburban school district
serving 1,557 students in the Boroughs of East McKeesport, Wall,
and Wilmerding and North Versailles Township in Allegheny County,
Pennsylvania.

METHODOLOGY

The principal methodology used in these ratings was US Local
Government General Obligation Debt published in September 2019.


EP ENERGY: Jan. 6, 2020 Disclosure Statement Hearing Set
--------------------------------------------------------
On November 18, 2019, EP Energy Corporation and its affiliated
debtors filed the proposed Disclosure Statement for the Joint
Chapter 11 Plan of Debtors dated November 18, 2019.

Jan. 6, 2020, at 2:00 p.m. is the hearing to be held before the
Honorable Marvin Isgur, United States Bankruptcy Judge, in the
United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas,
515 Rusk Avenue, Courtroom 404, 4th Floor, Houston, Texas 77002.

Dec. 19, 2019, at 4:00 p.m. is the deadline for objections to
approval of the Proposed Disclosure Statement.

The Debtors are represented by:

        WEIL, GOTSHAL & MANGES LLP
        Alfredo R. Pérez (15776275)
        Clifford W. Carlson (24090024)
        700 Louisiana Street, Suite 1700
        Houston, Texas 77002
        Telephone: (713) 546-5000
        Facsimile: (713) 224-9511
        E-mail: Alfredo.Perez@weil.com
                Clifford.Carlson@weil.com

                - and -

        WEIL, GOTSHAL & MANGES LLP
        Matthew S. Barr
        Ronit Berkovich
        Scott R. Bowling
        David J. Cohen
        767 Fifth Avenue
        New York, New York 10153
        Telephone: (212) 310-8000
        Facsimile: (212) 310-8007
        E-mail: Matt.Barr@weil.com
                Ronit.Berkovich@weil.com
                Scott.Bowling@weil.com
                DavidJ.Cohen@weil.com

                       About EP Energy

EP Energy Corporation and its direct and indirect subsidiaries(OTC
Pink: EPEG) -- http://www.epenergy.com/-- are a North American oil
and natural gas exploration and production company headquartered in
Houston, Texas. The Debtors operate through a diverse base of
producing assets and are focused on the development of drilling
inventory located in three areas: the Eagle Ford shale in South
Texas, the Permian Basin in West Texas, and Northeastern Utah.

EP Energy Corporation and its subsidiaries sought Chapter 11
protection on Oct. 3, 2019, after reaching a deal with Elliott
Management Corporation, Apollo Global Management, LLC, and certain
other noteholders on a bankruptcy exit plan that would reduce debt
by 3.3 billion.

The lead case is In re EP Energy Corporation (Bankr. S.D. Tex. Lead
Case No. 19-35654).

EP Energy was estimated to have $1 billion to $10 billion in assets
and liabilities as of the bankruptcy filing.

The Hon. Marvin Isgur is the case judge.

The Debtors tapped Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP as counsel; Evercore
Group L.L.C. as investment banker; and FTI Consulting, Inc., as
financial advisor. Prime Clerk LLC is the claims agent.


EPIC COMPANIES: Seeks Approval to Sell Houma Properties for $1MM
----------------------------------------------------------------
Epic Companies, LLC and its affiliates asked the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Southern District of Texas to approve the sale of
their real properties to Hope Services, Inc. for $1 million.

The properties are located at (i) 168 Menard Road, Houma, La.; (ii)
306 Menard Road, Houma, La.; (iii) 403 Menard Road, Houma, La.; and
(iv) 600 Thompson Road, Houma, La.

A copy of the sale agreement is available at
https://tinyurl.com/ubdnerx from PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

                       About Epic Companies

Headquartered in Houston, Epic Companies, LLC, is a full-service
provider to the global decommissioning, installation and
maintenance markets.  Its services include heavy lift, diving and
marine, specialty cutting and well plugging and abandonment
services. It has limited ongoing operations and is owned 50 percent
by Orinoco and 50 percent by Oakridge Natural Resources, LLC, and
Oakridge Energy Partners LLC.

Epic Companies and six affiliates sought Chapter 11 protection
(Bankr. S.D. Tex. Lead Case No. 19-34752) on Aug. 26, 2019.  At the
time of the filing, Epic Companies had estimated assets of between
$10 million and $50 million and liabilities of between $100 million
and $500 million.

The Debtors tapped Porter Hedges LLP as bankruptcy counsel; S3
Advisors, LLC as restructuring advisor; Epiq Corporate
Restructuring, LLC as claims agent; and Lugenbuhl Wheaton Peck
Rankin & Hubbard as special counsel.

Henry Hobbs Jr., acting U.S. trustee for Region 7, appointed a
committee of unsecured creditors on Sept. 6, 2019.  The committee
is represented by Munsch Hardt Kopf & Harr, P.C.



ERNEST VICKNAIR: DA's $18K Sale of Thibodaux Property Approved
--------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Jerry A. Brown of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern
District of Louisiana authorized Patrick J. Gros, the Disbursing
Agent of Ernest A. Vicknair, Jr., to sell the Debtor's real
property and improvements thereon located in the Parish of
Lafourche, State of Louisiana and described as 1499 Ridgefield
Avenue, Thibodaux, Louisiana, Lafourche Parish Parcel No.
0020333900, for $18,000.

A hearing on the Motion is set for Dec. 4, 2019.

The sale is free and clear of all liens, claims, or interests, with
the liens, claims, or interests being referred and attaching to the
proceeds of the sale.

Upon the closing of the Sale, all liens, claims, or interests are
unconditionally released as to 1499 Ridgefield, but not from the
proceeds of the Sale, and the Clerk of Court for Lafourche Parish
is authorized to cancel all such liens, claims, and interests as to
only the Debtor's interest in the 1499 Ridgefield.

The Disbursing Agent is authorized to receive and retain the net
proceeds of the Sale of 1499 Ridgefield for distribution pursuant
to the terms of the Plan.

The Disbursing Agent is authorized to execute any purchase
agreement, and all other related documents that are reasonably
necessary or appropriate to complete the Sale, and to undertake
such other actions as may be reasonably necessary or appropriate to
complete the Sale.

The 1499 Ridgefiled will be sold, transferred, and delivered to
Purchaser on an "as is, where is" basis without warranties.

The Purchase Agreement and any related documents or other
instruments may be modified, amended, or supplemented by the
parties thereto, in a writing signed by both parties without
further Order of the Court, provided that any such modification,
amendment, or supplement does not have a material adverse effect
(i) on the estate or (ii) upon the holder of any mortgage, lien, or
other security interest in 1499 Ridgefield.

The counsel for the Disbursing Agent will serve the Order on the
required parties who will not receive notice through the ECF system
pursuant to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure and the Local
Rules of the Court and file a Certificate of Service to that effect
within three days.

                        About the Debtor

Ernest A. Vicknair, Jr., sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. E.D.
La. Case No. 17-11059) on April 27, 2017.

The Debtor tapped Eric J. Derbes, Esq., at The Derbes Law Firm,
LLC, as counsel.

On April 9, 2018, the Court confirmed the Debtor's Plan of
Reorganization as of Dec. 4, 2017 with Immaterial Modifications as
of Feb. 28, 2018, recognizing and appointing Patrick J. Gros as the
Disbursing Agent.

On June 21, 2018, the Court approved Tiffany Mohre and Kathy
Neugent as realtors.


FOX SUBACUTE: U.S. Trustee Forms 5-Member Committee
---------------------------------------------------
The Office of the U.S. Trustee on Dec. 11, 2019, appointed five
creditors to serve on the official committee of unsecured creditors
in the Chapter 11 cases of Fox Subacute at Mechanicsburg, LLC.
  
The committee members are:

     (1) American Health Care Services, Inc.
         2014 Ford  Road, Suite M
         Bristol, PA 19007
         Attn: Gary J. Romett, President
         Tel: (215) 788-7692
         Fax: (215) 788-7694   
         E-mail: gromett@ahcsmed.com
   
     (2) HSE Staffing Agency
         5585 Barbara Drive              
         Mechanicsburg, PA 17050      
         Attn: Hagir Elsheikh, President    
         Tel: (717) 379-1964
         E-mail: hsestaffing@gmail.com

     (3) Infiniti Medical Solutions, LLC
         50 Randolph Road, Suite A2
         Somerset, NJ 08873
         Attn: Andrew Bythell, President
         Tel: (908) 226-0444
         Fax: (908) 226-3569     
         E-mail: qualitymedical@verizon.net

     (4) Prominent Medical Staffing, Inc.
         651 Market Street, Suite C
         Lemoyne, PA 17043
         Attn: Denice Gipe, President
         Tel: (717) 918-6107
         Fax: (717) 918-6108
         E-mail: dgipe@prominentmedicalstaffing.com

     (5) Specialty Medical Products, Inc.
         187 Pennsylvania Avenue
         Malvern, PA 19355
         Attn: George J. Walmsley, III, CPA
         Vice President of Operations
         Tel: (610) 644-1370
         Fax: (610) 644-3992            
         E-mail: gjwalmsley@smpcares.com
  
Official creditors' committees serve as fiduciaries to the general
population of creditors they represent.  They may investigate the
debtor's business and financial affairs. Committees have the right
to employ legal counsel, accountants and financial advisors at a
debtor's expense.

                        About Fox Subacute

Fox Subacute At Mechanicsburg, LLC is a skilled nursing facility in
Pennsylvania that specializes in pulmonary, neurological, and
rehabilitative care for patients with degenerative neurological and
neuromuscular disease; and pulmonary care and ventilator
requirements with an emphasis on vent weaning.  Its facilities are
located in Plymouth Meeting, Warrington, Mechanicsburg, and
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and are licensed by the PA Department of
Health.

On Nov. 1, 2019, Fox Subacute At Mechanicsburg and its affiliates
sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. M.D. Pa. Lead Case No.
19-04714).  Fox Subacute at Mechanicsburg was estimated to have $1
million to $10 million in assets and liabilities as of the
bankruptcy filing.  Cunningham, Chernicoff & Warshawsky, P.C., led
by Robert E. Chernicoff, is the Debtors' counsel.


GEORGE WASHINGTON: March 3 Auction of All Assets Set
----------------------------------------------------
Judge Shelley C. Chapman of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of New York authorized George Washington Bridge
Bus Station Development Venture, LLC's proposed bidding procedures
in connection with the sale of business at auction.

The salient terms of the Bidding Procedures are:

     a. Bid Deadline: Feb. 28, 2020 at 4:00 p.m. (EST)

     b. Purchase Price: Each Bid must clearly identify the purchase
price to be paid, which Purchase Price will be paid in cash only or
such other form of consideration acceptable to the Senior Lenders,
with the exception of any Credit Bid.

     c. Deposit: 10% of the Purchase Price

     d. Auction: March 3, 2020 at 10:00 a.m. (EST), is the date and
time the Auction, which will be held at the offices of counsel to
the Debtor: Cole Schotz P.C., 1325 Avenue of the Americas, 19th
Floor, New York, New York 10019, or such other place and time as
the Debtor will notify all Qualified Bidders that have submitted
Qualified Bids and any official committee appointed in the Debtor's
chapter 11 case and its counsel.

     e. Bid Increments: Not less than $1 million

     f. Sale Hearing: March 11, 2020 at 11:00 a.m. (EST)

     g. Sale Objection Deadline: March 4, 2020 at 4:00 p.m. (EST)

     h. Credit Bid: Persons or entities holding a perfected
security interest in the Debtor's assets may submit a credit bid on
such assets, to the extent permitted by applicable law, any
Bankruptcy Court orders and the documentation governing the
Debtor's prepetition or post-petition secured credit facilities.

No person or entity will be entitled to any expense reimbursement,
break-up fee, "topping," or other similar fee or payment (except
the Stalking Horse Bidder, if any, as set forth).  The deposits
provided by all Qualified Bidders will be held in escrow by the
Debtor or its agent and will not become property of the Debtor's
bankruptcy estate unless and until released from escrow to the
Debtor pursuant to the terms of the applicable escrow agreement or
Order of the Court.

The Assumption Procedures are approved and will govern the
assumption and assignment of all of the Debtor's executory
contracts and unexpired leases to be assumed and assigned in
connection with the Sale under the Purchase Agreement, subject to
the payment of any payments necessary to cure any defaults arising
under any Assigned Contract, the provision of adequate assurance by
the Debtor or the Successful Bidder, as applicable, that it will
promptly cure any non-monetary defaults existing prior to the
Closing under the Assigned Contracts, and the provision of adequate
assurance of future performance by the Successful Bidder under the
Assigned Contracts.

No less than 21 days prior to the Sale Objection Deadline, the
Debtor will serve the Contract Assumption Notice on all
counterparties to all potential Assigned Contracts and provide a
copy of the Contract Assumption Notice to the Consultation
Parties.

The payment of the applicable Cure Payments by the Debtor or
Successful Bidder, as applicable, the provision of adequate
assurance by the Debtor or the Successful Bidder, as applicable,
that it will promptly cure any non-monetary defaults existing prior
to the Closing under the Assigned Contracts, and the provision of
adequate assurance of future performance by the Successful Bidder
under the Assigned Contracts will (i) effect a cure of all defaults
existing thereunder, and (ii) compensate for any actual pecuniary
loss to such counterparty resulting from such default.

The Successful Bidder may designate, up to three business days
before the Sale Hearing, additional executory contracts and/or
unexpired leases as agreements to be assumed by the Debtor and
assigned to the Successful Bidder.  Within one business day of
notice of the Additional Assigned Contracts by the Successful
Bidder, the Debtor will serve a Contract Assumption Notice on each
of the counterparties to such Additional Assigned Contracts and
their counsel of record, if any, indicating (i) that the Debtor
intends to assume and assign the counterparty's executory contract
or unexpired lease, as applicable, to the Successful Bidder, and
(ii) the corresponding Cure Payment.  

The Cure Objection Deadline is 14 days after service of the
Contract Assumption Notice.  The deadline to object to assumption
and assignment solely with respect to the adequate assurance of
future performance by the Successful Bidder will be extended to the
date that is two days after the conclusion of the Auction, but any
such objection must be received before the start of the Sale
Hearing.

Notwithstanding Bankruptcy Rule 6004(h), the terms and conditions
of the Order are immediately effective and enforceable upon its
entry.

A copy of the Bidding Procedures and Notices is available at
https://tinyurl.com/svo3jtg from PaceMonitor.com free of charge.

                About George Washington Bridge

George Washington Bridge Bus Station Development Venture LLC is the
entity contracted to renovate the George Washington Bridge Bus
Station in New York. The bus station was reopened in 2016 following
a delayed and costly renovation. As part of the deal, the company
was granted a 99-year lease to operate and maintain the retail
portion of the bus station.

George Washington Bridge Bus Station Development Venture LLC sought
Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-13196) on Oct.
7, 2019.

The company's assets are estimated between $50 million and $100
million, and liabilities between $100 million and $500 million,
according to bankruptcy documents.

The Hon. Shelley C. Chapman is the case judge.

Cole Schotz P.C. is the Debtor's counsel.  BAK Advisors Inc., is
the Debtor's financial advisor, and BAK's Bernard A. Katz is
presently serving as the Debtor's sole manager.


GET HOOKED CHARTERS: Richard Hayslip Objects to Disclosure
----------------------------------------------------------
Richard Hayslip files his objection to the Disclosure Statement in
Support of Plan of Reorganization filed by Debtor Get Hooked
Charters, LLC on September 17, 2019, and in support would show the
Court as follows:

* Hayslip is a personal injury claimant with claims pending against
the Debtor in Cause No. CV-0075155 in County Court at Law Number
Three (3), Galveston County, Texas, Richard Hayslip, et al. v. Get
Hooked Charters, L.L.C., et al. (the County Court Case). As a
personal injury claimant, Hayslip’s pending claims are currently
unliquidated with the final determination of these claims reserved
for Article III adjudication by jury trial.

* The Disclosure Statement omits material information—the pending
personal injury litigation; Hayslip's and other personal injury
claimants’ unliquidated claims; the substantial discrepancy
between the Debtor’s limited estimation of Hayslip’s claims and
the damages sought by Hayslip; and the reservation of Article III
adjudication and jury trial for final valuation of Hayslip’s
claims.

* Further, by failing to identify or account for the pending
litigation and Hayslip’s unliquidated personal injury claims, the
Disclosure Statement fails to provide sufficient information to
allow holders of claims to make informed decisions about the plan.

* The Disclosure Statement describes a plan that would unfairly
discriminate against Hayslip by providing 100% repayment to other
unsecured creditors but limiting Hayslip's claims to less than
100%. The Disclosure Statement describes a plan that is not fair
and equitable and violates the absolute priority rule by permitting
Michael Short and Melody Short to retain their membership interests
in Get Hooked Charters, L.L.C. without assuring Hayslip's
unliquidated claims are paid in full.

A full-text copy of the objection is available at
https://tinyurl.com/rebhay6v from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

Richard Hayslip is represented by:

     Ryan E. Chapple
     CAIN & SKARNULIS PLLC
     400 W. 15th Street, Suite 900
     Austin, Texas 78701
     Tel: 512-477-5000
     Fax: 512-477-5011
     E-mail:rchapple@cstrial.com

                    About Get Hooked Charters

Get Hooked Charters, LLC, sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Tex. Case No. 19-80079) on March 21,
2019.  At the time of the filing, the Debtor was estimated to have
assets of less than $500,000 and liabilities of less than $500,000.
The case is assigned to Judge Jeffrey P. Norman.  Waldron &
Schneider, PLLC, is the Debtor's counsel.


GREENBERG TRAURIG: To Settle Claim With SIB, et al.
---------------------------------------------------
The court-appointed receiver for Stanford International Bank Ltd.
("SIB") and related entities, and certain plaintiffs, have reached
an agreement to settle all claims asserted or that could have been
asserted against Greenberg Traurig P.A. and Greenberg Traurig LLP,
relating to or in any way concerning SIB.

As part of the settlement agreement, the receiver and plaintiffs
have requested orders that permanently enjoin, among others, all
interested parties, including Stanford Investors from bringing any
legal proceeding or cause of action arising from or relating to the
Stanford entities agains Greenberg Traurig P.A., and Greenberg
Traurig LLP, or the Greenberg released parties.

Complete copies of the settlement agreement, the proposed bar
orders, and settlement documents are available on the receiver's
website at http://www.stanfordfinancialreceivership.com/

Interested parties may file written objections with the United
States District Court for the Northern District of Texas on or
before Jan. 31, 2019.


H.R.H.C.C. INC: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
--------------------------------------------------------
The Office of the U.S. Trustee on Dec. 11, 2019, disclosed in a
court filing that no official committee of unsecured creditors has
been appointed in the Chapter 11 case of H.R.H.C.C., Inc.

                      About H.R.H.C.C., Inc.

H.R.H.C.C., Inc., doing business as H.R.H. Carriage Company, sought
protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D.
Tex. Case No. 19-52673) on Nov. 6, 2019, disclosing assets of less
than $50,000 and debts under $500,000. Judge Ronald B. King is
assigned to the case.  The Debtor tapped James Samuel Wilkins,
Esq., at Willis & Wilkins, LLP, as its legal counsel.


H.R.P. II: Transport Properties to Buy Hammond Property for $1.2MM
------------------------------------------------------------------
H.R.P. II, LLC received approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Northern District of Indiana to sell properties to Transport
Properties, LLC for $1.2 million.

Included in the sale are the company's personal properties,
intangible assets and a 19.384-acre real property located at 1717
Summer Street, Hammond, Ind.  The properties will be sold "free and
clear" of any liens, claims and encumbrances, according to the
court order signed by Judge James Ahler.

The court order also authorized H.R.P. to enter into a title
indemnity agreement with Chicago Title and to fund such indemnity
from the sale proceeds to insure payment of the disputed property
taxes pending resolution of the lawsuit between H.R.P. and Lake
County Treasurer.

A copy of the sale agreement is available at
https://tinyurl.com/s25xyku from PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

                      About H.R.P. II LLC

H.R.P. II LLC sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. N.D. Ind. Case No. 17-21695) on June 15, 2017.  At the
time of the filing, the Debtor estimated assets of less than $1
million and liabilities of less than $500,000.  Judge James R.
Ahler presides over the case.  Fox Rothschild LLP is the Debtor's
bankruptcy counsel.


HOOPERS CONCRETE: Seeks OK to Use IRS, et. al, Cash Collateral
--------------------------------------------------------------
Hoopers Concrete & Block, LLC seeks authority from the Bankruptcy
Court for the Middle District of Florida to use cash collateral in
order to fund its operating expenses and the costs of administering
its Chapter 11 case, pursuant to a proposed budget.

As adequate protection for the Debtor's use of cash collateral, the
Debtor proposes to grant replacement liens to the Internal Revenue
Service and Argos Ready Mix, LLC to the same extent, validity, and
priority as existed on the Petition Date.

Argos, prior to the Petition Date, has obtained a writ of
garnishment on the Debtor's deposit accounts held at Synovus Bank.
The IRS has filed tax liens approximately totaling $50,000 for
various tax periods.

A copy of the motion is available free of charge at
https://is.gd/q0bYQO from PacerMonitor.com.  

                   About Hoopers Concrete & Block

Hoopers Concrete & Block, LLC, a Florida limited liability company
established in 2014, provides services and specialized concrete
products and materials for general and specialized construction
projects, including light commercial, gas stations, retail stores,
high-rise buildings, and light residential.

The Company sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No.
19-11198) on Nov. 25, 2019 in Tampa, Florida.  Stichter, Riedel,
Blain & Postler, PA represents the Debtor as counsel.

The firm can be reached through:

       Mark F. Robens, Esq.
       Stichter, Riedel, Blain & Postler, P.A.
       110 East Madison Street, Suite 200
       Tampa, Florida 33602
       Telephone: (813) 229-0144
       E-mail: mrobens.ecf@srbp.com


HRI HOLDING: Proposed Auction Sale of All Assets Approved
---------------------------------------------------------
Judge Mary F. Walrath of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District
of Delaware authorized the bidding procedures of HRI Holding Corp.
and debtor affiliates in connection with their sale of
substantially all assets to Landry's, LLC or permitted successors,
assigns and designees for $40 million, cash, subject to overbid.

The Bidding Procedures Key Dates are approved in their entirety.
The Debtors are authorized to take any and all actions necessary or
appropriate to implement the Bidding Procedures.

Landry's, LLC, together with its permitted successors, assigns and
designees, is approved as the Stalking Horse Bidder for the
Debtors' Assets, pursuant to the terms of the Agreement is
approved.

If the Debtors receive more than one Qualified Bid, an auction will
take place on Dec. 18, 2019 at 10:00 a.m. (ET) at the offices of
Landis Rath & Cobb LLP, or such other place and time as the Debtors
will notify all Qualified Bidders, including the Stalking Horse
Bidder, the counsel for the Stalking Horse Bidder and other
invitees in accordance with the Bidding Procedures.  The Auction
will be conducted in accordance with the Bidding Procedures.

Any Overbid after the Auction Baseline Bid will be made in
increments valued at not less than $100,000 as determined by the
Debtors.  

In the event another party other than the Stalking Horse Bidder is
the Successful Bidder for the Debtors' Assets, subject to the terms
of the Agreement, notwithstanding anything contrary in the Motion,
the Debtors will pay the Breakup Fee to the Stalking Horse Bidder
in an amount equal to $1.2 million and will reimburse the Stalking
Horse Bidder for the actual and reasonable out of pocket expenses
up to a cap of $300,000 incurred by the Stalking Horse Bidder in
performance of the Stalking Horse Bidder's due diligence
investigation, review, research, and analysis regarding the
Debtors' assets and the negotiations and documentation of the
Agreement.

The Termination Fee will constitute an allowed superpriority
administrative expense claim against the Debtors' bankruptcy
estates, with priority over any and all administrative expenses of
any kind, including as provided in Bankruptcy Code sections 363,
364, 365, 503(b) and 507(a)(2).

The Termination Fee will be payable by the Debtors out of the
proceeds of an Alternative Transaction within three Business Days
following the closing thereof, and will be paid to the Stalking
Horse Bidder prior to the payment of the proceeds of such sale to
any third party asserting a Lien on the Purchased Assets (and no
Lien of any third party will attach to the portion of the sale
proceeds representing the Termination Fee).  No further or
additional order from the Court will be required in order to give
effect to such provisions relating to the terms of payment of the
Termination Fee and the Stalking Horse Bidders' professional
advisors are not obligated to comply with any provisions of the
Bankruptcy Code regarding Court approval of professional fees
payable by the Debtors and included in the Expense Reimbursement.

Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, prior to payment of the
Expense Reimbursement, the Stalking Horse Bidder will provide the
Debtors and the Committee with invoices detailing its expenses and
the Debtors and the Committee will have three Business Days to
object to the reasonableness of the expenses incurred.  The Expense
Reimbursement will be paid within three Business Days following the
expiration of the Expense Reimbursement Objection Deadline if no
objections are received.

In the event the Purchased Assets are acquired in an Alternative
Transaction by any secured lender pursuant to a credit bid
authorized by the Court, such secured lender will be responsible
for the payment of the Breakup Fee and the Expense Reimbursement in
cash at a closing on such sale.

The Sale Hearing will be held before the Court on Dec. 20, 2019 at
2:00 pm. (ET) and may be adjourned from time to time.  The Sale
Objection Deadline is Dec. 13, 2019 at 4:00 p.m. (ET).

The Sale Notice is approved.  On Dec. 6, 2019, the Debtors will
cause the Sale Notice and the Order upon all Sale Notice Parties.

The Contract Notice of potential assumption and assignment of
certain of the Debtors' executory contracts and unexpired leases to
be listed in the Contract Notice is approved in its entirety.  The
Procedures in Section 7.5 of the Agreement, including with respect
to the Stalking Horse Bidder's rights to designate or change the
character of Assigned Contracts by the applicable Contract
Designation Deadline, are approved.

On Nov. 26, 2019, the Debtors served the Contract Notice on all
non-Debtor parties to the Scheduled Contracts.  The Contract Notice
identified the Scheduled Contracts and provided the cure costs that
the Debtors believe must be paid to cure all prepetition defaults
under the Scheduled Contracts.

The Debtors will serve the Stalking Horse Bidder Adequate Assurance
Package on Dec. 6, 2019.  Upon written request of a landlord made
prior to the expiration of the Contract Objection deadline (Dec.
13, 2019 at 4:00 p.m.), the Debtors will serve the confidential
portion of the Stalking Horse Bidder Adequate Assurance Package, on
a confidential basis to such requesting landlord within 24 hours of
receipt of any such requests.  The Contract Objection Deadline is
Dec. 13, 2019 at 4:00 p.m. (ET).

The Stalking Horse Bidder is entitled to make any additioual bids
at the Auction in compliance with the Bidding Procedures.  For
purposes of any Overbid, the Stalking Horse Bidder will be entitled
to a credit in the amount of the Termination Fee.

The Sale Hearing may be continued, from time to time, without
further notice to creditors or other parties in interest other than
by announcement of said continuance before the Court on the date
scheduled for such hearing or in the hearing agenda for such
hearing.

Section 7.4(e)(i) of the Agreement is approved, as modified in the
Order.  In connection therewith, the Debtors' obligation to pay the
Termination Fee, as provided by the Agreement, is approved and will
survive termination of the Agreement and will be payable out of the
proceeds of an Alternative Transaction as provided in Section
7.4(c)(i) of the Agreement.

Notwithstanding the possible applicability of Bankruptcy Rules
6004(h), 6006(d), 7062, 9014 or any other provisions of the
Bankruptcy Rules or the Local Rules stating the contrary, the terms
and conditions of the Order will be immediately effective and
enforceable upon its entry and no automatic stay will apply to the
Order.  

All time periods set forth in the Order will be calculated in
accordance with Bankruptcy Rule 9006(a).

A copy of the Bidding Procedures is available at
https://tinyurl.com/sjpcc9d from PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

                    About HRI Holding Corp.

Formed in September 1992 under the name "Gilbert/Robinson, Inc.,"
and headquartered in Leawood, Kansas, HRI Holding Corp. and 39
affiliated debtors own and operate 47 restaurants in 14 states
(Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Michigan,
Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania,
Texas, and Virginia).  The Debtors own Houlihan's Restaurant + Bar,
J. Gilbert's Wood-Fired Steak + Seafood, Bristol Seafood Grill,
and
Devon Seafood Grill restaurants.  As of the Petition Date, the
Debtors have approximately 3,450 employees.

The Debtors sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. D. Del. Lead Case
No. 19-12415) on November 14, 2019.  On the Petition Date, the
Debtors were estimated with assets of between $50 million and $100
million, and liabilities within the same range.  The petitions
were
signed by Matthew R. Manning, chief restructuring officer.

LANDIS RATH & COBB LLP serves as the Debtors' counsel.  PIPER
JAFFRAY & CO. is the Debtors' investment banker.  HILCO REAL
ESTATE, LLC is the Debtors' real estate advisor.  KURTZMAN CARSON
CONSULTANTS, LLC serves as the Debtors' claims and noticing agent,
as well as administrative agent.


IEC LTD: Gets Court's CCAA Initial Order
----------------------------------------
The Honorable Madam Justice K.M. Horner of the Court approved the
application of IEC Ltd., Audeamus Capital Corp. and various other
entities to the Court of Queen's Bench of Alberta seeking
protection under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act.  The
Court appointed Hardie & Kelly Inc. as monitor of the CCAA
proceedings.  A copy of the relevant filing materials and the CCAA
Order can be accessed at https://relieffromdebt.ca/iec-audeamus/

Monitor can be reached at:

   Hardie & Kelly Inc.
   Attn: Marc Kelly
   110, 5800 - 2nd Street SW
   Calgary, AB T2H 0H2
   Email: mkelly@insolvency.net

Counsel to the Monitor:

   Norton Rose Fulbright Canada LLP
   Attn: Howard Gorman, Q.C.
         Aaron Stephenson
   400 3rd Avenue SW, Suite 3700
   Calgary, AB T2P 4H2
   E-mail: howard.gorman@nortonrosefulbright.com
           aaron.stephenson@nortonrosefulbright.com

Counsel to the Companies:

   McCarthy Tetrault LLP
   Attn: Sean Collins
         Stephen Livergant
         Walker W. MacLeod
         Pantelis Kyriakakis
   4000, 421 - 7th Avenue SW
   Calgary, AB T2P 4K9   
   E-mail: scollins@mccarthy.ca
           slivergant@mccarthy.ca
           wmacleod@mccarthy.ca
           pkyriakakis@mccarthy.ca

IEC Ltd. owns, manages, leases, develops, and redevelops large
portfolios of commercial office, residential, retail, and
industrial properties.


ISTAR INC: Fitch Rates $550MM Sr. Unsec. Notes 'BB'
---------------------------------------------------
Fitch Ratings assigned a 'BB' rating to iStar Inc.'s (iStar) $550
million 4.25% senior unsecured notes maturing in August 2025.

The assignment of the final rating follows the receipt of documents
conforming to information already received. The final rating is the
same as the expected rating assigned to the unsecured notes on Dec.
6, 2019. Following the assignment of the expected rating, iStar
announced that it priced a $550 million senior unsecured notes
offering, which was increased by $50 million from the previously
announced offering size of $500 million. Fitch does not expect the
upsize of the offering to have an impact on iStar's leverage as
proceeds from the issuance will be used to repay existing debt.

KEY RATING DRIVERS

SENIOR DEBT

The rating on the new senior unsecured notes is equalized with the
ratings assigned to iStar's existing senior unsecured debt, as the
new notes rank equally in the capital structure. The unsecured debt
rating is one notch above iStar's Long-Term Issuer Default Rating
(IDR) and reflects the availability of sufficient unencumbered
assets, which provide support to unsecured creditors, and
relatively low levels of secured debt in the firm's funding
profile. This profile indicates good recovery prospects for
unsecured debtholders under a stressed scenario. In addition, the
company adheres to a 1.2x unencumbered assets-to-unsecured debt
covenant, which provides protection to bondholders during periods
of market stress.

Existing ratings for iStar reflect its unique platform and strategy
relative to other commercial real estate (CRE) finance and
investment companies, improvement in asset quality resulting from
declining exposure to legacy land assets and non-performing loans,
appropriate leverage level, meaningful proportion of unsecured debt
funding relative to similarly rated finance and leasing companies,
and solid liquidity profile.

Rating constraints include the material shift in the firm's
strategy in early 2019 and execution risk associated with the
continued monetization of legacy assets in the near term, which
have negatively affected iStar's earnings; increased performance
pressures on certain CRE sub-sectors; continued exposure to certain
longer-term legacy land assets; variable earnings resulting from a
reliance on gain on sale income; and a reliance on wholesale
funding. Additionally, Fitch believes that key person risk
associated with CEO Jay Sugarman has increased following turnover
among executive officers in recent years.

The Stable Rating Outlook reflects Fitch's expectations for
continued improvements in iStar's earnings and asset quality over
the outlook horizon. However, exposure to certain legacy assets
could continue to cause earnings volatility in the near term until
the portfolio is rotated into more consistent earning investments.
The Stable Outlook also reflects expectations for the maintenance
of appropriate leverage levels, sufficient liquidity and a heavily
unsecured funding profile.

RATING SENSITIVITIES

SENIOR DEBT

The unsecured debt rating is sensitive to changes in iStar's
Long-Term IDR as well as changes in the firm's secured and
unsecured funding mix and collateral coverage for each class of
debt. If secured debt were to meaningfully increase as a proportion
of the firm's debt funding and/or unencumbered asset coverage of
unsecured debt were to decline, it is possible that the upward
notching for the unsecured debt, relative to the IDR, could begin
to compress.

Positive rating momentum will depend on iStar's ability to
successfully execute on its efforts to monetize legacy assets and
redeploy proceeds in assets viewed as core under its new operating
strategy, thereby resulting in improved operating performance and a
reduced reliance on gain on sale income. Positive rating momentum
would also be conditioned upon continued growth and solid
performance in the Safehold Inc. business, consistent
profitability, the maintenance of sufficient liquidity and the
maintenance of Fitch-calculated leverage below 4.0x.

Negative rating pressure could arise if iStar is unable to execute
on its strategic plan, including monetizing additional legacy
investments and redeploying proceeds into new net lease and real
estate finance assets, thereby improving the firm's profitability
and resulting in a more a stable earnings profile. Negative rating
action could also be driven by material deterioration in the
quality of iStar's loan portfolio, a significant reduction in
long-term unsecured funding and/or a sustained increase in
Fitch-calculated leverage above 5.0x.


J. ROBERT SCOTT: Has Interim OK to Use Cash Collateral Thru Dec. 31
-------------------------------------------------------------------
J. Robert Scott, Inc., asked the Bankruptcy Court to authorize the
use of cash collateral to pay ordinary and necessary operating
expenses, pursuant to an operating budget, to allow continued
business operations during its reorganization under Chapter 11.

The Debtor also proposed to grant any of its secured creditor
replacement liens on the estate's property for the use of the cash
collateral.  A copy of the Motion is available at
https://is.gd/hZ4AmH from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

Subsequently, the Court granted interim approval to use cash
collateral through Dec. 31, 2019, pursuant to the budget.

The budget provided for $108,614.67 in total operating expenses for
the month of December 2019, including $45,000 in payroll and
payroll taxes, among others.

As adequate protection, the Court granted the secured creditors
replacement liens upon all post-petition assets of the Debtor's
estate, to the same extent, validity and priority of their
pre-petition liens and security interests in the Debtor's assets.

Final hearing and the status conference hearing on the motion is
scheduled for Dec. 18, 2019 at 11 a.m. (Pacific Time).  A copy of
the Interim Order, with the approved operating budget, is available
at https://is.gd/BuH08Q from PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

                     About J. Robert Scott

J. Robert Scott, Inc., -- http://www.jrobertscott.com/-- is a
luxury home furnishings manufacturer founded in 1972 in Los Angeles
by designer Sally Sirkin Lewis.  J. Robert Scott is well known in
the interior design industry for utilizing rare and exotic veneers,
as well as shagreen, snake and goatskin parchment in the
manufacturing of its products.

J. Robert Scott, Inc., sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. C.D.
Cal. Case No. 19-13871) on April 5, 2019, in Los Angeles,
California.  In the petition signed by CEO Richard I. Chilcott, the
Debtor estimated between $1 million and $10 million in both assets
and liabilities.  Judge Sheri Bluebond oversees the case.
WEINTRAUB & SELTH APC is the Debtor's attorney.


JOSE HERNANDEZ: Court Approves Sale of Corona Property for $455K
----------------------------------------------------------------
Jose De Jesus Hernandez received approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Central District of California to sell real property
located at 30954 Ocelot Circle, Corona, Calif.

The property will be sold to Christopher Morales and Cynthia
Morales for $455,000.

A copy of the sale agreement is available at
https://tinyurl.com/rgugs8p from PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

Jose De Jesus Hernandez sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. C.D.
Cal. Case No. 18-10155) on Jan. 9, 2018.  The Debtor tapped Eric
Bensamochan, Esq., as his legal counsel.


KHRL GROUP: Garcia Acquisition Selected as Winning Bidder
---------------------------------------------------------
Garcia Acquisition Holdings, LLC emerged as the winning bidder at
the Dec. 6 auction for KHRL Group, LLC's and Papa Grande Gourmet
Foods, LLC's assets.

Garcia Acquisition offered $4.8 million to acquire assets of the
companies, which include the real property located at 1802 Jackson
Keller Road, San Antonio, Texas.

The company beat out rival bidder, Yash Properties Palm Royale,
LLC, which placed a $4.65 million bid on the assets, according to a
notice filed by KHRL and Papa Grande's Chapter 11 trustee with the
U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Texas.

                  About KHRL Group and Papa Grande
                           Gourmet Foods

Papa Grande Gourmet Foods LLC -- http://garciafoods.com/-- is a
producer of a growing line of Mexican food products including
tamales, fajitas, chorizo, shredded chicken, picadillo, carne
guisada, carnitas, chili, refried beans and rice.  Founded in 1956
by Andy Garcia, Papa Grande conducts business under the name Garcia
Foods.

KHRL Group, LLC owns the real estate used in the business.

KHRL Group and Papa Grande filed voluntary Chapter 11 petitions
(Bankr. W.D. Tex. Lead Case No. 19-50390) on Feb. 25, 2019.  At the
time of filing, both Debtors estimated their assets and liabilities
under $10 million.  The Hon. Ronald B. King is the case judge.
Ronald J. Smeberg, Esq., at The Smeberg Law Firm, PLLC, is the
Debtors' counsel.

On June 11, 2019, the Court appointed William R. Patterson as the
Chapter 11 trustee.  The trustee is represented by the Law Offices
of William B. Kingman, P.C.


L BRANDS: Egan-Jones Lowers Senior Unsecured Ratings to BB-
-----------------------------------------------------------
Egan-Jones Ratings Company, on December 12, 2019, downgraded the
foreign currency and local currency senior unsecured ratings on
debt issued by L Brands, Incorporated to BB- from BB.

L Brands, Inc. is an American fashion retailer based in Columbus,
Ohio. Its flagship brands include Victoria's Secret and Bath & Body
Works. L Brands posted $12.63 billion in revenue in 2017, and was
listed as 231 on the 2018 Fortune 500 list of largest United States
companies by revenue.



LAKEWAY PUBLISHERS: $6K Sale of Equipment Approved
--------------------------------------------------
Judge Marcia Phillips Parsons of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Eastern District of Tennessee authorized Lakeway Publishers, Inc.'s
sale of (i) a Graph Tec Brand Cutting Plotter, Model FC8600-130,
and (ii) a US Tec Brand Cold Laminator, Model TX—600H, 65" for
$6,000.

A hearing on the Motion was held on Aug. 13, 2019.

The sale is free and clear of any and all lien rights of creditors
with any lien rights attaching to the proceeds of the sale.  

There will be no auctioneer or sales fees paid pursuant to the
sale.  

The Debtor will pay $6,000 to BB&T Commercial Capital Corp. upon
completion of the sale in satisfaction of its secured claim in the
assets. The Debtor will pay any additional funds to Pinnacle Bank
in partial satisfaction of its secured claim in the assets should
those funds exist.

The Debtor will provide an itemization breaking down the amount
that each piece of equipment is to be sold for.  The itemization
will be provided to BB&T Commercial Capital Corp. and Pinnacle Bank
10 days prior to the consummation of the sale.

The 14-day stay that would otherwise be applicable under Fed. R.
Bankr. P. 6004(h) will not apply and the Order will be immediately
effective as of the date of its entry.

                    About Lakeway Publishers

Lakeway Publishers, Inc., is a multi-state publisher of newspapers,
magazines and special publications. Lakeway owns and operates
community newspapers and magazines in Tennessee, Missouri,
Virginia, and Florida.  Lakeway Publishers was incorporated in 1966
and is based in Morristown, Tenn.

Lakeway Publishers, Inc., and affiliate Lakeway Publishers of
Missouri, Inc. each filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 11 of
the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E.D. Tenn. Lead Case No. 19-51163) on
May 31, 2019.  In the petitions signed by Jack R. Fishman,
president, Lakeway Publishers, Inc., disclosed $20,884,027 in
assets and $9,245,645 in liabilities while Lakeway Publishers of
Missouri listed $7,047,972 in assets and $9,206,193 in liabilities.
The Debtors tapped Quist, Fitzpatrick & Jarrard, PLLC, led by Ryan
E. Jarrard, as bankruptcy counsel; and Burnette Dobson & Pinchak,
as special counsel.


LAMAR ADVERTISING: Egan-Jones Lowers Sr. Unsecured Ratings to BB
----------------------------------------------------------------
Egan-Jones Ratings Company, on December 11, 2019, downgraded the
foreign currency and local currency senior unsecured ratings on
debt issued by Lamar Advertising Company to BB from BB+.

Lamar Advertising is an outdoor advertising company which operates
billboards, logo signs, and transit displays in the United States
and Canada. The company was founded in 1902 by Charles W. Lamar and
J.M. Coe, and is headquartered in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.




MADE MODERN: ABC to Hold Public Sale on Dec. 23
-----------------------------------------------
Secured party Assembled Brands Capital Funding LLC will conduct a
public sale on Dec. 23, 2019, at 11:00 a.m. (Eastern Standard
Time), at the offices of Cohen Tauber Spievack & Wagner P.C., 420
Lexington Avenue, Suite 2400, New York, New York 10170.

The secured party has a first priority perfected lien and security
interest in and to all of the personal assets of Made Modern LLC
("borrower").

Any parties interested in further information regarding the sale
should contact:

   Cohen Tauber Spievack & Wagner P.C.
   420 Lexington Avenue, Suite 2400
   New York, New York 10170
   Attn: Robert A. Boghosian, Esq.
   Tel: (212) 381-8726
   Email: rboghosian@ctswlaw.com

Made Modern LLC develops products and media aimed at fostering
creativity in children.


MAJESTIC PROPERTIES: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
-------------------------------------------------------------
The Office of the U.S. Trustee on Dec. 11, 2019, disclosed in a
court filing that no official committee of unsecured creditors has
been appointed in the Chapter 11 case of Majestic Properties of
Tennessee, LLC.

               About Majestic Properties of Tennessee
  
Majestic Properties of Tennessee, LLC, sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D. Tenn. Case No.
19-28593) on Oct. 28, 2019.  At the time of the filing, the Debtor
had estimated assets of less than $50,000 and liabilities of
between $100,001 and $500,000.  The case is assigned to Judge David
S. Kennedy.  The Debtor tapped the Law Office of Ted I. Jones as
its legal counsel.


MARK R. RESSEGUIE: Court Okays Sale of Lincoln Property for $161K
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Mark Richard Resseguie received approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the District of Nebraska to sell real property located at
2786 South 34th St., Lincoln, Neb.

The property will be sold to Douglas and Elizabeth Thompson for
$161,000.

Mr. Resseguie initially proposed to sell the property for $165,000
but eventually agreed to reduce the sales price.

A copy of the sales agreement is available at
https://tinyurl.com/ssb74ua from PacecrMonitor.com free of charge.

The Debtor is represented by:

       Carly Bahramzad, Esq.
       Knudsen, Berkheimer, Richardson & Endacott, LLP
       3800 VerMaas Place, Suite 200
       Lincoln, NE 68502
       Telephone: (402) 475-7011

Mark Richard Resseguie filed a Chapter 13 case on April 11, 2019.
The case was converted to a Chapter 11 proceeding (Bankr. D.Neb.
Case No. 19-40618) on Oct. 9, 2019.  Carly Bahramzad, Esq., at
Knudsen, Berkheimer, Richardson & Endacott, LLP is the Debtor's
legal counsel.


MARY R. DOHLER: Court Approves Sale of N.E. Township Property
-------------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania
approved the sale of Mary Dohler's real property in North East
Township, Pa., at the hearing held on Dec. 12.

The property -- a 10-acre vacant, wooded real estate -- will be
sold to Timothy Kelly who was selected as the winning bidder.

Mary R. Dohler sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. W.D. Pa. Case
No. 19-10976) on Sept. 26, 2019.  The Debtor tapped Guy C. Fustine,
Esq., at Knox McLaughlin Gornall & Sennett, P.C., as legal counsel.


MCDERMOTT INTERNATIONAL: Receives Noncompliance Notice from NYSE
----------------------------------------------------------------
McDermott International, Inc. was formally notified by the New York
Stock Exchange that the average closing price of the Company's
shares of common stock had fallen below $1.00 per share over a
period of 30 consecutive trading days, which is the minimum average
share price for continued listing on the NYSE.

The Company plans to notify the NYSE of its intent to cure the
deficiency and return to compliance with the NYSE continued listing
requirements.  Under the NYSE's rules, the cure period extends for
six months following receipt of the notification.

The company's shares of common stock continue to trade on the NYSE,
subject to compliance with other continued listing requirements.

Under the NYSE rules, the Company can regain compliance at any time
during the six-month cure period if on the last trading day of any
calendar month during the cure period, its common stock has a
closing share price of at least $1.00 and an average closing share
price of at least $1.00 over the 30 trading-day period ending on
the last trading day of that month.  Failure to satisfy the
conditions of the cure period or to maintain other listing
requirements could lead to a delisting.

The NYSE notification does not affect the Company's business
operations or its SEC reporting requirements and does not conflict
with or cause an event of default under any of the Company's
material debt or other agreements.

                        About McDermott

Headquartered in Houston, Texas, McDermott --
http://www.mcdermott.com/-- is a provider of engineering,
procurement, construction and installation and technology solutions
to the energy industry.  Its common stock is listed on the New York
Stock Exchange under the trading symbol MDR.

McDermott reported a net loss attributable to common stockholders
of $2.69 billion for the year ended Dec. 31, 2019, following net
income attributable to common stockholders of $179 million for the
year ended Dec. 31, 2017.  As of Sept. 30, 2019, McDermott had
$8.75 billion in total assets, $9.86 billion in total liabilities,
$271 million in redeemable preferred stock, and a total
stockholders' deficit of $1.38 billion.

                           *   *   *

As reported by the TCR on Dec. 5, 2019, S&P Global Ratings lowered
its issuer credit rating on McDermott International Inc. to 'SD'
(selective default) from 'CC'.  The downgrade follows McDermott's
missed Nov. 1, 2019, interest payment on its senior unsecured notes
due in 2024.


MERIDIAN MARINA: Needs More Time to Complete Asset Sale, File Plan
------------------------------------------------------------------
Meridian Marina & Yacht Club of Palm City, LLC asked the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Florida to extend the
exclusivity period to file a Chapter 11 plan to Feb. 18, 2020, and
the period to solicit acceptances for the plan to April 18, 2020.

Extending the exclusivity period will give the company the
opportunity to close on the sale of its assets and file a plan of
liquidation. Recently, the company filed a motion to sell its
assets.  The sale agreement contemplates that all creditors will be
paid in full.

             About Meridian Marina & Yacht Club

Meridian Marina & Yacht Club of Palm City, LLC, based in Palm City,
FL, filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No.
19-18585) on June 27, 2019.  In the petition signed by Timothy
Mullen, member and manager, the Debtor disclosed $8,528,155 in
assets and $5,790,533 in liabilities.  The Hon. Erik P. Kimball
oversees the case. Craig I. Kelley, Esq. at Kelley Fulton & Kaplan,
P.L., serves as bankruptcy counsel.

No official committee of unsecured creditors has been appointed in
the Chapter 11 case.


MJJW PORTFOLIO: Samarra Durham Objects to Disclosure Statement
--------------------------------------------------------------
Samarra Durham has filed an objection to the Plan and Disclosure
Statement proposed by filedMJJW Portfolio, Inc.

Durham holds an unsecured claim in the amount of $1,000,000 and
timely filed a Proof of Claim.

Durham asserts that the Plan is not confirmable as a matter of law
because the Plan is not feasible; it violates the absolute priority
rule; it is not in the best interests of the creditors; and it is
not fair and equitable to the creditors.

The Debtor is electing to retain almost $1,000,000 of equity in
real estate and yet is now seeking to cram down its creditors and
is not proposing to sell any assets, Durham points out.

Durham asserts that the Debtor can give no reasonable assurance of
success of the Plan as the Disclosure Statement provides that the
Debtor's Plan will be funded by current and future income or
alternatively will be funded by certain insiders, Marlon Wright and
Vondalyn Crawford, or alternatively refinancing of Debtor’s
post-confirmation secured debt. Yet the very secured creditor,
Eugene O'Steen, whose debt is purported to be modified by the plan
or refinanced, has alleged that the Debtor's ability to obtain
financing from a third party has been completely unsuccessful, that
Osteen has not agreed to restructure the debt owed, and that the
case has been filed in bad faith, Durham points out.

The Disclosure Statement does not contain adequate information
pursuant to 11 U.S.C. Sec. 1125, Durham argues. The Disclosure
Statement fails to disclose what, if any, investigation has been
completed with respect to potential causes of action, preference
actions and fraudulent transfer actions against principals of the
Debtor or any other third parties, he says.

A full-text copy of the Objection is available at
https://tinyurl.com/slomzen from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

Samarra Durham is represented by:

IURILLO LAW GROUP, P.A.
CAMILLE J. IURILLO, Esq.
ciurillo@iurillolaw.com
ALEXANDER ZESCH, Esq.
azesch@iurillolaw.com
5628 Central Avenue
St. Petersburg, Florida 33707
Tel No: (727) 895-8050

          About MJJW Portfolio

MJJW Portfolio, Inc., owns in fee simple a night club known as Club
1828 in Tampa, Florida, with an appraised value of $730,000. It
also owns in fee simple a six-unit strip mall with an appraised
value of $540,000, also in Tampa, Fla.

MJJW Portfolio sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case
No. 19-08680) on Sept. 13, 2019. In the petition signed by Marlon
Wright, its president, the Debtor listed total assets at $1,270,420
and total liabilities at $384,207. Buddy D. Ford, P.A., is the
Debtor's legal counsel.


MONUMENT BREWING: U.S. Trustee Unable to Appoint Committee
----------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Trustee, until further notice, will not appoint an
official committee of unsecured creditors in the Chapter 11 case of
Monument Brewing LLC, according to court dockets.
    
                  About Monument Brewing
  
Monument Brewing LLC sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 19-10832) on Nov. 14,
2019.  At the time of the filing, the Debtor had estimated assets
of between $50,001 and $100,000 and liabilities of between $100,001
and $500,000.  
The case is assigned to Judge Caryl E. Delano.  The Debtor tapped
Samantha L. Dammer, Esq., at Tampa Law Advocates, P.A., as its
legal counsel.


MOTOVAN CORPORATION: Gets Initial Order Under CCAA
--------------------------------------------------
The Commercial Division of the Quebec Superior Court of the
District of Montreal has issued an order pursuant the Companies'
Creditors Arrangement Act.  The order provides a stay of
proceedings against Motovan Corporation and Motorcycle Tires &
Accessories LLC until Dec. 12, 2019.  Pursuant to the Initial
Order, KPMG was appointed Monitor of the Company.

The Monitor can be reached at:

   KPMG Inc.
   Attn: Isabelle Jones
   Tel: 1-855-393-3546 (Toll)
        514-840-8331 (Local Number)
   E-mail: motovan@kpmg.ca

Copies of the Initial Order and other related documents in
connection with these CCAA proceedings have been posted on the
Monitor's website at http://www.kpmg.com/ca/motovan

Motovan Corporation and Motorcycle Tires & Accessories LLC --
http://www.motovan.com/-- sells motorcycle parts and accessories.


MOUNTAIN CREEK: Set Disclosure Statement Hearing
------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Jersey was
suppose to hold a hearing to consider approval of the Disclosure
Statement for the Second Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization of
Mountain Creek Resort, et al.  The hearing was supposed to held
last Dec. 9.

A full-text copy of the Notice is available at
https://tinyurl.com/uuub5ko from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

The Debtors are represented by:

LOWENSTEIN SANDLER LLP
Kenneth A. Rosen, Esq.
Jeffrey D. Prol, Esq.
Nicole Fulfree, Esq.
Michael Papandrea, Esq.
One Lowenstein Drive
Roseland, New Jersey 07068
(973) 597-2500 (Telephone)
(973) 597-2400 (Facsimile)

                    About Mountain Creek Resort

Mountain Creek Resort, Inc., owns and operates the Mountain Creek
Resort, a four-season resort located in Vernon, New Jersey. The
Resort is the New York/New Jersey Metro area's closest ski resort
with 167 skiable acres on four mountain peaks, 1,040 vertical feet,
46 trails, and 11 lifts. The Resort also operates and manages the
Appalachian Hotel and the Black Creek Sanctuary townhomes.

Mountain Creek Resort, Inc., and five affiliated debtors filed
voluntary petitions for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. D.N.J. Lead Case No. 17-19899) on May 15, 2017. The
cases are pending before the Honorable Judge Stacey L. Meisel, and
jointly administered.

Mountain Creek estimated $10 million to $50 million in assets and
debt.

The Debtors hired Lowenstein Sandler LLP as bankruptcy counsel;
Houlihan Lokey Capital, Inc., as business consultant and investment
banker; and Prime Clerk LLC as claims and noticing agent.

On May 24, 2017, the Office of the U.S. Trustee appointed an
official committee of unsecured creditors. Trenk, DiPasquale, Della
Fera & Sodono, P.C., is the Committee's bankruptcy counsel.


MRPC CHRISTIANA: Court Denies Bid to Reduce Lender's Claim
----------------------------------------------------------
Judge Stacey L. Meisel of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of New Jersey granted the request of Crown Bank to enforce
the Final DIP Order, which granted Crown Bank an allowed claim
against the estate of MRPC Christiana, LLC, in the amount of
$17,618,599.39.

Simultaneously and consequent to the Enforcement Motion approval,
the Court denied with prejudice, the request of Paresh K. Patel,
Ranjan P. Patel, Chirag Patel, Paresh Patel and Ranjan Patel
Irrevocable Trust, Krishnas LLC, Ganesa LLC, and BWI MRPC Hotels,
LLC, collectively the Patel Parties, which sought to reduce Crown
Bank's liens or claims by approximately $4.2 million.

Three years prior to the August 17, 2018 filing of the Debtor's
bankruptcy case, on Jan. 31, 2015, the Debtor together with the
Patel Parties filed a complaint against Crown Bank in the Superior
Court of Delaware in the case captioned MRPC Christiana, LLC et
al., Plaintiff, v. Crown Bank, Defendant.

Crown Bank and Chirag P. Patel (one of the Patels) were parties to
a guaranty of payment dated December 19, 2012.  The Debtor would
later grant Paresh K. Patel and Ranjan P. Patel mortgages on the
Debtor's real property after the Delaware Superior Court trial, but
before the decision on the complaint.  Crown Bank, during the
proceedings to resolve its Enforcement Motion, would later purport
that the Guaranty Agreement is one of the prepetition Loan
Documents covered by the Final DIP Order.  

On December 26, 2017, the Delaware State Court awarded a judgment
of $19,589,758.87 in favor of Crown Bank.  The Delaware State Court
also awarded Crown Bank an additional $422,323.85 for attorneys'
fees and costs advanced in connection with the parties'
litigation.

On January 18, 2018, Crown Bank filed an action for preliminary
injunction in the Superior Court of the State of New Jersey,
seeking to foreclose on its security interest in MRPC.  The Patel
Parties removed the NJ Action to the United States District Court
for the District of New Jersey.  On April 11, 2018, the New Jersey
District Court entered an order that granted Crown Bank's
preliminary injunction; and determined that as of April 16, 2018,
Crown Bank owned 100% membership interests in the Debtor.

On July 23, 2018, the Partel Parties, for the first time, sought
relief from the Delaware Judgment under Delaware Superior Court
Rules 59 and 60, seeking to reduce Crown Bank's liens and claims
against the Debtor.  

The Debtor filed a Chapter 11 petition August 17, 2018, in the New
Jersey Bankruptcy Court.  Throughout the Bankruptcy Court
proceedings -- from the first through the fifth interim hearing,
and through the final hearing on the DIP Motion -- the Debtor has
resolved issues between it and its creditors.

At the Debtor's request for a mediator on Sept. 21, 2018, Judge
John K. Sherwood conducted mediation among the Debtor, the Patel
Parties, and BCD, LLC, one of the Debtor's creditor.  On October
11, 2018, Crown Bank, Access Point Financial, LLC and the Debtor
informed the Court that they have reached a settlement as a result
of the mediation.  The Court would later approve the Access Point
Settlement Agreement at the final hearing.   At the October 25,
2018 hearing, BCD, the Debtor, and Crown Bank announced to the
Court that they, too, reached a settlement.  

In between these period, the Patel Parties have filed joinders to
separate motions of parties-in-interest in the Debtor's case,
including the separate motions to appoint a trustee filed by Access
Point and the acting United States Trustee.  At the time, Access
Point was objecting the Debtor's Amended Proposed Interim DIP
Order.  The Patel Parties filed a Joinder to the UST's Motion to
Appoint Trustee, and an Omnibus Objection, on October 19, 2018.  

The Patel Parties also filed an Omnibus Objection which opposed the
Access Point Settlement Motion filed by the Debtor.  They also
opposed the Debtor's motion to appoint a mediator, but would later
agree to it as long as the Patel Parties and BCD were able to fully
participate in the mediation and benefit from any extension of the
challenge deadline.  At the Oct. 25, 2018 hearing, the Patel
Parties were the only remaining party on the Joinder and Omnibus
Objection to all other pending motions for final orders scheduled
at that hearing.  

The Amended Proposed Interim DIP Order provided that any party in
interest, including the Committee, if any, appointed in these
Chapter 11 cases, may challenge the prepetition liens of the DIP
Lender, to the extent such a right exists, and provided that any
challenges to the validity, extent or priority of the liens or
claims of the DIP Lender, including the assertion of any claims
under sections 510, 544, 547 or 548 of the Bankruptcy Code must be
commenced, subject to obtaining standing, within 60 days after the
appointment of the Committee, but in no event later than within 75
days from the Petition Date.  The Oct. 31, 2018 challenge deadline
was extended to Nov. 14, 2018 by the Third Interim DIP Order, and
to Nov. 28, 2018 by the Final DIP Order.
   
Rabinowitz, Lubetkin & Tully, LLC substituted Fox Rothschild LLP as
counsel to the Patel Parties at the hearing on Oct. 25, 2018.  Fox
Rothschild LLP has been representing the Patel Parties until that
date.  

As part of its presentation at the Oct 25, 2018 hearing, counsel to
Crown Bank specifically used the Patel Parties and the Delaware
Action as an example of a potential challenge and stated that the
Patel Parties ". . . have pending challenges on the claim. If they
want to come before Your Honor, seek standing, and say the Delaware
court missed it by $4 million [. . .] they can come in here and do
that."

After the Court overruled the Patel Parties' objection in the
Joinder and the Omnibus Objection, which were not withdrawn, the
Court entered the Final DIP Order.

The Final DIP Order established Crown Bank's allowed claim against
the estate in the amount of $17,618,599.39.  No one appealed any of
the DIP financing orders or sought any relief under Federal Rules
of Civil Procedure 59 and 60(b), made applicable to the bankruptcy
court by Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure 9023 and 9024.

On November 7, 2018, Crown Bank filed a Notice to remove the
Delaware Action from the Delaware State Court to the United States
District Court for the District of Delaware, to which the Patel
Parties filed a Motion for Permissive Abstention, or, in the
Alternative, for Remand.

On November 14, 2018, two weeks after entry of the Final DIP Order
before the Challenge Deadline, Paresh K. Patel filed an unsecured
claim in the Debtor's case for $1,888,916.81, based on a guarantee
on a note.  

On November 30, 2018, Crown Bank then filed a motion to transfer
the venue of the Delaware Action from the Delaware District Court
to the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey.
The New Jersey District Court, by stipulation and order, referred
the matter to the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District
of New Jersey on January 24, 2019.  

On February 14, 2019, the parties informed the New Jersey
Bankruptcy Court that they came to an agreement and would submit a
consent order that withdraws the Remand Motion, but that they
agreed to establish consensual dates for the Patel Parties to file
a motion under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 59 and 60 with the
Bankruptcy Court.    

On March 21, 2019, the Patel Parties filed the Bankruptcy 59 and 60
Motion, which seeks to reduce the Delaware Judgment in the amount
of $4,194,757.93, which if reduced would concomitantly reduce Crown
Bank's claim in the Debtor's bankruptcy case.  

On April 1, 2019, Crown Bank filed the Enforcement Motion asserting
that the Bankruptcy 59 and 60 Motion to Reduce Claim violates the
Final DIP Order because the Patel Parties failed to challenge Crown
Bank's liens or claims on or before the Challenge Deadline.  The
Debtor filed a joinder to Crown Bank's Enforcement Motion.  Crown
Bank expressly stated that while it agreed to scheduling dates, it
reserved all of its rights to object to the relief sought by the
Patel Parties because as per Crown Bank, the Patel Parties failed
to act prior to the expiration of the Nov. 28, 2019 Challenge
Deadline.

The Patel Parties, in an opposition filed on April 16, 2019, argued
that their challenge to Crown Bank's claim is timely, since the
Final DIP Order does not explicitly state that a challenge must be
brought in the Bankruptcy Court.  The Patel Parties alleged that
Crown Bank should be judicially estopped from raising untimeliness
and other arguments based on Crown Bank's purported "sharp
practices".  At the May 9, 2019 hearing, the Patel Parties argued
that their failure to file a formal challenge prior to the
expiration of the Challenge Deadline is a mere technicality.

According to Crown Bank, the Motion to Reduce Claim violates the
Final DIP Order because the Final DIP Order determined certain
Prepetition Loan Documents were valid and enforceable, including
the Guaranty Agreement by and among Chirag P. Patel and Crown
Bank.

The Patel Parties contend that the Final DIP Order only addresses
Prepetition Loan Documents executed by the Debtor to Crown, and
that because Debtor did not execute the Guaranty Agreement, the
Guaranty Agreement is excluded.  The Patel Parties also assert that
the Final DIP Order's provision regarding Prepetition Loan
Documents does not apply to the Patel Parties because they are not
explicitly named in the provision.

After reviewing transcripts of hearings and pleadings from four
court dockets spanning different jurisdictions, the Bankruptcy
Court concludes that the Patel Parties failed to merit the
extraordinary relief they seek.  The Patel Parties neither set
forth a legal basis nor equitable grounds to establish a basis to
disregard the Final DIP Order.

According to the Court, despite being present and active in this
case's proceedings, the Patel Parties failed to timely challenge
the protections granted in the Final DIP Order or to appeal the
Order itself.  In short, the Patel Parties missed their opportunity
and are enjoined from any further attempts to challenge Crown
Bank's liens or claims allowed by this Court.

A copy of the Court's Opinion dated December 5, 2019 is available
from Leagle.com at
https://www.leagle.com/decision/inbco20191206793

Counsel for MRPC Christiana, LLC, Plaintiff:

     Robert S. Roglieri, Esq.
     Richard D. Trenk, Esq.
     McManimon, Scotland & Baumann, LLC
     1037 Raymond Boulevard, 3rd Floor
     Newark, NJ 07102

          - and -

     Barry J. Roy, Esq.
     Rabinowitz Lubetkin & Tully, LLC
     293 Eisenhower Parkway Suite 100
     Livingston, NJ 07039

Counsel to Krishnas, LLC, Ganesa, LLC, BWI MRPC Hotels, LLC, Paresh
Patel, Ranjan Patel, Chirag Patel & Paresh Patel and Ranjan Patel
Irrevocable Trust, Plaintiffs:

     Barry J. Roy, Esq.
     Rabinowitz Lubetkin & Tully, LLC
     293 Eisenhower Parkway Suite 100
     Livingston, NJ 07039

Counsel to Crown Bank, Defendant:

     Ryan T. Jareck, Esq.
     Cole Schotz P.C.
     Court Plaza North
     25 Main Street
     Hackensack, NJ 07601

                      About MRPC Christiana

Based in Elizabeth, New Jersey, MRPC Christiana, LLC, filed for
relief under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D.N.J. Case
No. 18-26567) on Aug. 17, 2018.  At the time of filing, the Debtor
estimated $10 million to $50 million in both assets and
liabilities.  The Debtor tapped McManimon, Scotland and Baumann,
LLC, as its legal counsel.



MURRAY ENERGY: Court Orders Appointment of Retiree Committee
------------------------------------------------------------
Judge John Hoffman Jr. of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of Ohio ordered the appointment of a committee to
represent Murray Energy Holdings Co.'s retired workers.
workers.  

Murray Energy said the appointment is necessary so that the company
can start negotiating for the modification of retirement benefits.


                       About Murray Energy

Headquartered in St. Clairsville, Ohio, Murray Energy --
http://murrayenergycorp.com/-- is the largest privately owned coal
company in the United States, producing approximately 76 million
tons of high quality bituminous coal each year, and employing
nearly 7,000 people in the United States, Colombia and South
America.

Murray Energy now operates 15 active mines in five regions in the
United States, plus two mines in Colombia, South America.  It
operates 12 underground longwall mining systems, 42 continuous
mining units, 10 transloading facilities, and five mining equipment
factory and fabrication facilities.

Murray Energy and its affiliates sought protection under Chapter 11
of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Ohio Lead Case No. 19-56885) on
Oct. 29, 2019.

At the time of the filing, the Debtors disclosed assets of between
$1 billion and $10 billion and liabilities of the same range.

The cases have been assigned to Judge John E. Hoffman Jr.

The Debtors tapped Kirkland & Ellis LLP and Kirkland & Ellis
International LLP as general bankruptcy counsel; Dinsmore & Shohl
LLP as local counsel; Evercore Group L.L.C. as investment banker;
Alvarez and Marsal L.L.C. as financial advisor; and Prime Clerk LLC
as notice and claims agent.

The U.S. Trustee for Region 9 appointed creditors to serve on the
official committee of unsecured creditors on Nov. 7, 2019.  The
committee is represented by Morrison & Foerster LLP.


MWM OIL: Evenson Auction of Oil & Gas Leasehold Interests Approved
------------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Robert E. Nugent of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Kansas authorized RAG Oil Co., Inc. and MWM Oil Co.,
Inc. to sell their oil and gas leasehold interests as designated on
Exhibit A, and all of their oil and gas equipment, other than
equipment in active use on leaseholds (the latter being sold as a
part of leasehold interests), by auction to be conducted by Evenson
Auctioneers, Inc.

The foregoing assets will be sold "as-is, where-is," without
warranties or representations of any kind.

The Motion of Mahoney to intervene in the matter is granted.  These
cases were initiated by the filing of voluntary bankruptcy
petitions under Chapter 11 on July 26, 2019; the Debtors have
continued as DIP.

The Debtors filed their Joint Plan of Liquidation on Oct. 17, 2019,
and the Plan was amended and confirmed by Order entered Dec. 2,
2019.  Pursuant to the Confirmed Plan, the Debtors will be
liquidating all of their assets, with distributions to creditors as
provided in the Confirmed Plan.

The Debtors are authorized to sell their oil and gas leasehold
interests as designated on Exhibit A to the Sale Motion, and all of
their oil and gas equipment, other than equipment in active use on
leaseholds, and the Pumping Units Group 2 by auction conducted by
Evenson Auctioneers, Inc. on Dec. 5, 2019 at 2:00 p.m. (CST) at the
DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Wichita Airport, 2098 S. Airport Rd.,
Wichita, KS 67209.  The foregoing assets will be sold "as-is,
where-is," without warranties or representations of any kind.

The oil and gas leases described on Exhibit A to the Sale Motion do
not constitute unexpired leases or executory contracts; however,
without prejudice to that finding, the Debtors are hereby
authorized to assume all oil and gas leases described on Exhibit A
to the Sale Motion, with such working interests to be assigned to
the successful purchasers at the subject auction.

The Debtors have received from Darrah Oil Co., LLC, an initial bid
on the Debtors' leasehold interests in the leases designated on
Exhibit A as groups A, C, F, G, and I ("Initial Group Offer");
copies of the Initial Group Offer have been made available to the
counsel for the Debtors, the Unsecured Creditors' Committee,
Community National Bank & Trust, and the Bankruptcy Court, but will
otherwise be kept confidential pending disclosure as provided at
the subject auction.

The following bid procedures for the subject auction, in addition
to standard auction terms as published and/or announced by Evenson
Auctioneers, are approved:

      a. Leasehold interests will first be offered in the groups
designated on Exhibit A to the Sale Motion as groups A through N
("Individual Lease Auction"); high bidders for groups B, D, E, H,
J, K, L, M and N will be the successful purchasers for those groups
without further proceedings;

      b. The leasehold interests in groups A, C, F, G, and I will
then be auctioned as a group ("Group Lease Auction"), with the
initial bid being the Initial Group Offer, as announced by Evenson
Auctioneers at the start of this portion of the auction; the next
bid must exceed the greater of the Initial Group Offer by $35,000
or more, or the aggregate of the Individual Lease Auction for
groups A, C, F, G, and I ("Aggregate Price"); subsequent bid
increases must be in minimum increments of $10,000;

      c. Darrah Oil may bid for lease groups in the Individual
Lease Auction, and may also bid more than the Initial Group Offer
at the Group Lease Auction;

      d. At the conclusion of the Group Lease Auction, the
successful bidder(s) of groups A, C, F, G, and I will be determined
by the results of the Individual Lease Option and the Group Lease
Auction; if the Aggregate Price in the Individual Lease Auction
exceeds the greater of the high bid in the Group Lease Auction, or
the Initial Group Offer plus $35,000, the high bidders in the
Individual Lease Auction for groups A, C, F, G, and I will be the
successful purchasers; if the Aggregate Price is less than the
greater of the high bid of the Group Lease Auction, or the Initial
Group Offer plus $35,000, the high bidder of the Group Lease
Auction will be the successful purchaser of the leasehold interests
in these groups; and

      e. In the event the high bidder of the Group Lease Auction is
the successful purchaser over the bidders in the Individual Lease
Auction, the purchase price for groups A, C, F, G, and I will be
allocated to each such group in the same proportion as the high
bids for each such group in the Individual Lease Auction bears to
the aggregate of such bids in the Individual Lease Auction.

      f. Sales will be closed as soon as practicable after the
auction, with the effective date of transfers to be Dec. 1, 2019.

The Initial Group Offer is beneficial to the bankruptcy estates as
effectively establishing a floor recovery on the leasehold
interests in the groups included in the Group Lease Auction; in the
event that Darrah Oil is not the successful purchaser based upon
results of the Group Lease Auction, Darrah Oil will be granted a
"break-up fee" of $35,000.

The foregoing assets will be sold free and clear of liens and
encumbrances of record, with all liens and encumbrances in these
assets, as provided in the Confirme
d Plan, transferred to the net proceeds of sale, after payment of
costs of sale; distributions of the net sale proceeds will be
controlled by the Confirmed Plan.

The Debtors are authorized to disburse the proceeds of sale as
follows:

     a. Auctioneer's fee – 6% of gross sale proceeds of the oil
and gas leasehold interests as described on the attached Exhibit A;


     b. Auctioneer's fee - 10% of the gross sale proceeds of oil
and gas equipment;

     c. Prorated 2019 ad valorem taxes on the foregoing assets to
the Butler and Sedgwick County Treasurers; and

     d. Break-up Fee to Darrah Oil, if payable under the approved
bidding procedures set forth; with the balance to be distributed
and/or held for distribution as provided in the Confirmed Plan, or
as otherwise ordered by the Court.

Mahoney claims ownership of nine pumping units, to-wit: Three units
located on the Debtors' leases: Salzgitter unit C228, SN 41991; 456
Darcos unit, SN 1012; and 320 Titan unit, SN 406-046 "Pumping Units
Group 1"); and six units in the possession of MIC:  456 Darcos
units, SN's 1016, 1032, 1042, 1058, 1059, and Titan unit, SN
17-282-186 ("Pumping Units Group 2"); all issues concerning
ownership and liens on these units, as well as any related issues
regarding any violations of the automatic stay with respect to such
units, are reserved.

Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in the Order, the
following orders will apply to the pumping units described in the
preceding paragraph:

     a. The Pumping Units Group 1 will be sold at the scheduled
auction, with the proceeds of sale, net of costs of sale, held by
the Debtors pending adjudication of ownership of these units and
liens thereon;

     b. The Pumping Units Group 2 will not be sold at the scheduled
auction, and Mahoney will retain, secure and preserve these units
pending adjudication of ownership of the units and liens thereon;
and

     c. Mahoney will grant access to representatives of Midland
National Bank to inspect and photograph the Pumping Units Group 2.


A copy of the Exhibit A is available at https://tinyurl.com/s66sql3
from PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

                     About RAG Oil Co., Inc.

Based in Towanda, Kansas, RAG Oil Co., Inc. & MWM Oil Company, Inc.
filed voluntary bankruptcy petitions under Chapter 11 (Bankr. D.
Kan. Case No. 19-11405 & Case No. 19-11404, respectively) on July
26, 2019. The Debtors are represented by William B. Sorensen, Jr.
at Morris Laing Evans Brock And Kennedy.


NEUROPROTEXEON INC: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Lead Debtor: NeuroproteXeon, Inc.
             50 Cobham Drive
             Orchard Park, NY 14127

Business Description: NeuroproteXeon, Inc. and its subsidiaries --
                      https://www.neuroprotexeon.com -- are
                      generally engaged in the development,
                      commercialization and marketing of
                      pharmaceutical agents, medical devices
                      and/or other life sciences technologies.
                      Since 2018, the Group has concentrated
                      on developing, testing and obtaining
                      worldwide regulatory approval of a product
                      consisting of pharmaceutical grade xenon gas
                      for inhalation, which has been trademarked
                      under the name XENEXTM, and a propriety
                      device which delivers a combination of
                      XENEXTM and oxygen to the respiratory
                      system of persons who experience Post-
                      Cardiac Arrest Syndrome.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: December 16, 2019

Four affiliates that concurrently filed voluntary petitions for
relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code:

     Debtor                                         Case No.
     ------                                         --------
     NeuroproteXeon, Inc. (Lead Case)               19-12676
     NPXe PLC                                       19-12677
     NeuroproteXeon Limited                         19-12678
     NeuroproteXeon GmbH                            19-12679

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       District of Delaware

Debtors'
General
Bankruptcy
Counsel:          William P. Bowden, Esq.
                  Gregory A. Taylor, Esq.
                  Stacy L. Newman, Esq.
                  Katharina Earle, Esq.
                  ASHBY & GEDDES, P.A.
                  500 Delaware Ave.
                  P.O. Box 1150
                  Wilmington, DE 19899
                  Tel: (302) 654-1888



                  Fax: (302) 654-2067
                  Email: wbowden@ashbygeddes.com
                         GTaylor@ashbygeddes.com
                         SNewman@ashbygeddes.com
                         kearle@ashbygeddes.com

Debtors'
Special
Counsel:          BROWN RUDNICK, LLP

Debtors'
Financial
Advisor:          EMERALD CAPITAL ADVISORS, CORP.

Debtors'
Investment
Banker:           LINCOLN PARTNERS ADVISORS LLC

Debtors'
Claims &
Noticing
Agent:            OMNI AGENT SOLUTIONS, INC.
                  https://is.gd/6OfWXk

Lead Debtor's
Estimated Assets: $0 to $50,000

Lead Debtor's
Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

NPXe PLC's
Estimated Assets: $0 to $50,000

NPXe PLC's
Estimated Liabilities: $100,000 to $500,000

NeuroproteXeon Limited's
Estimated Assets: $0 to $50,000

NeuroproteXeon Limited's
Estimated Liabilities: $500,000 to $1 million

NeuroproteXeon GmbH's
Estimated Assets: $0 to $50,000

NeuroproteXeon GmbH's
Estimated Liabilities: $100,000 to $500,000

The petitions were signed by James McAuliffe, CFO.

Full-text copies of the petitions are available from PacerMonitor
for free at:

                      https://is.gd/scgyG7
                      https://is.gd/tis5Ol
                      https://is.gd/H7FmnJ
                      https://is.gd/xNJqSd

List of Debtors' 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors:

   Entity                           Nature of Claim   Claim Amount
   ------                           ---------------   ------------
1. CATO Research                      Trade Vendor      $1,432,853
4364 South Alston Ave.
Durham, NC 27713
Cheryl King
Email: cking@cato.com

2. Praxair Healthcare Services        Trade Vendor        $509,921
175 E. Park Drive
Tonawanda, NY 14150
Randy Vinson
Tel: (225) 247-7920
Email: randy.vinson@praxair.com

3. Brown Rudnick LLP                  Professional        $221,685
8 Clifford St.                          Services
London UK W1S 2LQ
Lena Hodge
Tel: 44.20.7851.6083
Email: LHodge@brownrudnick.com

4. The Krog Corp                      Trade Vendor        $182,433
4 Centre Drive
Orchard Park, NY 14124
Peter Krog
Tel: (716) 818-6700
Email: plkrog2@kroggrp.com

5. Hodgson Russ                       Professional         $96,781
The Guaranty Building                   Services
140 Pearl Street
Buffalo, NY 14202
Kevin Talbot
Tel: (716) 848-1392
Email: ktalbot@hodgsonruss.com

6. WG Partners                        Professional         $82,176
85 Gresham Street                       Services
London UK EC2V 7NQ
Olga Holme
Tel: 44.20.3705.9321
Email: olga@wgpartners.co.uk

7. Potter Clarkson                    Professional         $71,594
The Belgrace Centre                     Services
Talbot Street
London UK NG1 5GG
Chris Taylor
Tel: 44.20.3005.0010
Email: info@potterclarkson.com

8. Ranstad Life Sciences              Trade Vendor         $53,750
32462 Collection Centre Drive
Chicago, IL 60693
Jeff Henry
Tel: (484) 588-5572
Email: jeff.henry@randstadusa.com

9. J.F. Machining Co., Inc.           Trade Vendor         $39,000
2382 Balmar Road
Ransomville, NY 14131
Joseph Fleckenstein
Tel: (716) 791-3910
Email: j.fleckenstein@jpmachining.com

10. IMP Pharmaceutical Services       Trade Vendor         $38,783
Heolddu Farm
Heolddu Lane
Caerphilly, Wales NP12 2GX
Tel: 44.14.9523.1700
Amanda Furnell
Email: Whiteamandafurnellwhite@imppharma.com

11. KPMG LLP                          Professional         $29,945
Dept 0511                               Services
P.O. Box 120511
Dallas, TX 75312-0511
Sam Quinn
Tel: 44.20.7311.1000
Email: Sam.Quinn@kpmg.co.uk

12. Black & Callow                    Trade Vendor         $26,235
80 Colman Street
London UK EC2R 5BJ
Tel: 44.20.3794.1720
Email: london@blackandcallow.com

13. Imperial Innovations               Trade Vendor        $25,000
52 Princess Gate
Exhibition Road
London UK SW7 2PG
Tel: 44.20.3053.8850
Email: info@imperialinnovations.co.uk

14. Consilium Strategic Communications  Professional       $21,313
41 LothburyLondon UK EC2R 7HU             Services
Jonathan Birt
Tel: 44.20.3709.5700
Email: info@consilium-comms.com
  
15. Penlon Limited                      Trade Vendor       $16,341
Abingdon Science Park
Barton Lane
Abingdon UK OX14 3NB
Craig Thompson
Tel: 44.12.3554.7001
Email: craig.thompson@penlon.com

16. Tronconi Segarra & Associates LLP   Professional       $15,954
8321 Main Street                          Services
Buffalo, NY 1422
Charles Pezzino
Tel: (716) 633-1373
Email: cpezzino@tsacpa.com

17. The Kane Firm                       Professional       $15,232
5225 Sheridan Drive                       Services
The Kane Firm Suite
Williamsville, NY 14221
Lauren Robinson
Tel: (716) 6 33-7022 ext. 136
Email: LRobinson@kanefirm.com

18. Haver & Mailander                   Professional       $15,186
Lenzhalde 83- 85                          Services
Stuttgart DE 70192
Tel: 49.71.1227.4420
Email: kr@haver-mailaender.de

19. AFCO                                Trade Vendor       $11,547
P.O. Box 4795
Carol Stream, IL 2097-4795
Tel: (585) 736-5899
Email: marketin@AFCO.com

20. RSM Tax and Advisory Services LLP   Professional       $11,484
25 High Street, Crawley                   Services
West Sussex UK RH10 1BG
Marion Hannon
Tel: 44.20.7601.1080
Email: marion.hannon@rsm.global


NSHE CA BULLS: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
------------------------------------------------
Debtor: NSHE CA Bulls, LLC
        4040 E. Camelback R., Suite 160
        Phoenix, AZ 85018

Business Description: NSHE CA Bulls, LLC is a Single Asset Real
                      Estate debtor (as defined in 11 U.S.C.
                      Section 101(51B)).

Chapter 11 Petition Date: December 17, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Southern District of California

Case No.: 19-07519

Debtor's Counsel: Kit James Gardner, Esq.
                  LAW OFFICES OF KIT J. GARDNER
                  501 W. Broadway, Suite 800
                  San Diego, CA 92101
                  Tel: 619-525-9900
                  E-mail: kgardner@gardnerlegal.com

Estimated Assets: $10 million to $50 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Bruce Gray, authorized signer.

A copy of the petition is available from PacerMonitor for free at:

                     https://is.gd/gLYHDu


NXT ENERGY: Issues Direction to AGV Regarding Loan Repayment
------------------------------------------------------------
NXT Energy Solutions Inc. has issued a direction to Alberta Green
Ventures Limited Partnership to deliver for cancellation the number
of common shares in the capital of the Company held by AGV that is
equivalent to the US$250,000 principal amount previously loaned by
the Company to AGV, the price per Common Share being the volume
weighted average trading price of the Common Shares as reported and
traded on the Toronto Stock Exchange for the five trading days
immediately preceding the date of repayment, and to pay by wire
transfer or other immediately available funds all accrued and
unpaid interest thereon, all in accordance with the terms of the
promissory note dated Sept. 6, 2019.

Calculated at market close on Dec. 13, 2019, the last business and
trading day before the date of repayment, being Dec. 15, 2019, NXT
has elected to receive from AGV, subject to receipt of necessary
regulatory approvals:

   * 543,673 Common Shares, calculated as (i) the product of (A)
     US$250,000, being the Principal Amount, and (B) 1.3183,
     being the daily average US$/C$ exchange rate as quoted on
     the Bank of Canada's website for Dec. 13, 2019 (the last
     business date for which a daily average exchange rate was
     published before the Repayment Date), (ii) divided by
     C$0.6062, being the volume weighted average trading price of
     the Common Shares as reported and traded on the Toronto
     Stock Exchange for the five trading days immediately
     preceding the Repayment Date, and

   * US$1,366.12 in Interest, satisfied by way of wire transfer
     or other immediately available funds.

Repayment of the Principal Amount by way of Common Shares
constitutes an "issuer bid" under applicable securities laws, and
the acquisition of the Common Shares is therefore conditional upon
NXT being exempt from the requirements typically applicable to such
transactions.  The Company intends to file an application for
exemptive relief with the Alberta Securities Commission now that
the Direction has been issued to AGV and an election to receive
Common Shares as repayment of the Principal Amount has been made
thereunder.  The Company may change its election to receive the
entire Loan Repayment by way of wire transfer or other immediately
available funds if the ASC does not approve the Company's
application and the Requested Relief is not granted, or for any
other reason at any time if the Company so decides, in its sole and
absolute discretion.

                         About NXT Energy

NXT Energy Solutions Inc. is a Calgary-based technology company
whose proprietary SFD survey system utilizes quantum-scale sensors
to detect gravity field perturbations in an airborne survey method
which can be used both onshore and offshore to remotely identify
areas with exploration potential for traps and reservoirs.  The SFD
survey system enables the Company's clients to focus their
hydrocarbon exploration decisions concerning land commitments, data
acquisition expenditures and prospect prioritization on areas with
the greatest potential.  SFD is environmentally friendly and
unaffected by ground security issues or difficult terrain and is
the registered trademark of NXT Energy Solutions Inc.  NXT Energy
Solutions Inc. provides its clients with an effective and reliable
method to reduce time, costs, and risks related to exploration.

NXT Energy reported a net loss and comprehensive loss of C$6.96
million for the year ended Dec. 31, 2018, compared to a net loss
and comprehensive loss of C$8.97 million for the year ended Dec.
31, 2017.  At March 31, 2019, the Company had total assets of
C$27.39 million in total assets, total liabilities of C$4.93
million, and C$22.45 million in total shareholders' equity.

The Company's independent accounting firm KPMG LLP, in Calgary,
Canada, issued a "going concern" qualification in its report dated
April 1, 2019, on the Company's consolidated financial statements
for the year ended Dec. 31, 2018, citing that the Company's current
and forecasted cash position is not expected to be sufficient to
meet its obligations for the 12 months period beyond the date that
these financial statements have been issued. These conditions,
along with other matters, indicate the existence of a material
uncertainty that casts substantial doubt about the Company's
ability to continue as a going concern.


OWENS & MINOR: Egan-Jones Lowers Senior Unsecured Ratings to B-
---------------------------------------------------------------
Egan-Jones Ratings Company, on December 11, 2019, downgraded the
foreign currency and local currency senior unsecured ratings on
debt issued by Owens & Minor, Incorporated to B- from B.

Owens & Minor, Incorporated is a global healthcare solutions
company with integrated technologies, products, and services
aligned to deliver significant and sustained value for healthcare
providers and manufacturers across the continuum of care.



PALM BEACH BRAIN: May Use Cash Collateral Through Jan. 31
---------------------------------------------------------
Palm Beach Brain and Spine, LLC, and its affiliates Midtown
Outpatient Surgery Center, LLC (MOSC), and Midtown Anesthesia
Group, LLC (MAG) have the authority to use cash collateral through
the end of January next year after its creditor, The Northern Trust
Company, agreed to the continued use of cash collateral.

Judge Mindy A. Mora had authorized the Debtors to use cash
collateral on an interim basis, pursuant to a Fourth Interim Cash
Collateral Order.  Continued hearing on the use of Cash Collateral
was set for Dec. 19, 2019 at 1:30 p.m. unless by Dec. 16, Northern
Trust files a Notice of Consent to the Debtors' Continued Use of
Cash Collateral, in which case the Debtors may continue using cash
collateral through Jan. 31, 2020, pursuant to the terms of the
Fourth Interim Order.  The Notice of Consent may include reduced,
and not increased, budgeted expenses.  The Dec. 19 hearing will
then be rescheduled on Jan. 28, 2020 at 2:30 p.m.

On Dec. 16, a Consent to Continued Use of Cash Collateral and
Resetting Hearing to January 28, 2020, was filed by Northern
Trust.

The Fourth Interim Order provides that:

    (a) Income collected by the Debtors from medical receivables
and related "Letters of Protection" that have been sold to factors
will not be used to pay expenses during the interim period, but
will be held by the applicable Debtor, until further Court order,
and segregated in separate DIP bank accounts.  The Debtor will
immediately notify the affected factor and Northern Trust Company,
and disburse the same to the affected factor without prejudice to
Northern Trust's asserted superior claim, which claim the factors
dispute.  

Northern Trust asserts a lien in substantially all of the assets of
MOSC, with respect to certain promissory notes issued by MOSC.
Prepetition, Debtor PBBS was a party to various factoring
agreements with factors, including Echelon Medical Capital, LLC;
Momentum Funding, LLC; Medlink Capital, LLC; and Well States
Healthcare dba Well State Servicing.

    (b) As adequate protection for MOSC's use of cash collateral,
Northern Trust is granted as of the Petition Date, a replacement
lien to the same extent as any pre-petition lien on the property
set forth in its security agreements on an interim basis through
and including the next hearing in this matter.

    (c) As adequate protection for the Debtors' use of any cash
collateral, as well as for any decrease in the value of the cash
collateral as of the Petition Date, factors Echelon; Momentum;
Medlink; and Well States are granted as of the Petition Date, an
assignment of and replacement lien on sold and assigned medical
receivables and related "letters of protection" of equal or greater
value, to the same extent as any pre-petition lien or ownership
interest, on an interim basis through the interim hearing in this
matter.  

    (d) The monthly fees and costs authorized by separate Court
Order pursuant to Local Rule 2016-1(B)(3) will be paid to the
authorized professionals by the Debtors only after payment of the
monthly expenses as set forth in the Cash Collateral Budget, other
than compensation to the Debtors' manager, Amos Dare, as that
compensation has been deferred.  

In the event of insufficient funds, the Debtors may pay the
shortfall of professional fees and costs in the following months
from available funds.   If there remains outstanding fees and costs
that cannot be paid from operations, Amos Dare, and/or his
affiliates or related entities will make new value contributions to
fund and pay the  shortfall in the monthly fees and costs allowed
pursuant this Order and Local Rule 2016-1(B)(3).  

    (e) MOSC, as subtenant under the Lease between RIPA, LLC and
landlord Linton Grove, LLC, will pay the rent due directly to the
Landlord.

A copy of the Fourth Interim Order is available at
https://is.gd/9fqqcf from PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

                  About Palm Beach Brain & Spine

Palm Beach Brain & Spine -- http://www.pbbsneuro.com/-- is a
medical practice providing neurosurgery, minimally invasive spine
surgery and treatment for cancer of the brain and spine.

Palm Beach Brain & Spine and two affiliates, Midtown Outpatient
Surgery Center, LLC and Midtown Anesthesia Group, LLC, filed
voluntary petitions for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Lead Case No. 19-20831) on Aug. 15, 2019.
The petitions were signed by Dr. Amos O. Dare, manager.

Palm Beach Brain disclosed $13,412,202 in assets and $2,685,278 in
liabilities. Midtown Outpatient disclosed $6,857,558 in assets and
$2,920,846 in liabilities while Midtown Anesthesia listed
$5,081,861 in assets and under $50,000 in liabilities.

Dana L. Kaplan, Esq. and Craig I. Kelley, Esq., at Kelley Fulton &
Kaplan, P.L. are the Debtors' counsel.

The U.S. Trustee has not appointed an official committee of
unsecured creditors in the Debtors' bankruptcy cases.



PLAZA PATISSERIE: Sasa Femic Objects to Disclosure & Plan
---------------------------------------------------------
Sasa Femic urges the Bankruptcy Court to deny approval and
confirmation of Plaza Patisserie, Inc.'s proposed Plan of
Reorganization and Disclosure Statement.

Mr. Femic declares that he is a holder of 50% of shares in Plaza
Patisserie, Inc. d/b/a Akrotiri, and a Plaintiff in a suit pending
before the Supreme Court of New York, Queens County, against three
non-debtor parties, entitled Sasa Femic, Individually, and OBO
Plaza Patisserie, Inc., DBA Plaza Kitchen and Bar v. Christos
Kouvaros, Anastasia Kouvaros and John Pittas (Index No.
701285/2017) (the Supreme Court suit).  Mr. Femic is also the
holder of a general unsecured claim against the Debtor.

Mr. Femic complains that the Disclosure Statement does not
acknowledge his shares in the Debtor.

Mr. Femic asserts that the Disclosure Statement does not contain
truthful or adequate information.

A full-text copy of the Objection is available at
https://tinyurl.com/t4l42wq from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

            About Plaza Patisserie

Plaza Patisserie, Inc., sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-40361) on Jan. 22,
2019. At the time of the filing, the Debtor was estimated to have
assets of less than $500,000 and liabilities of $500,000. The case
is assigned to Judge Carla E. Craig. Pick & Zabicki LLP is the
Debtor's counsel.


POTOMAC CONSTRUCTION: Case Summary & 3 Unsecured Creditors
----------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Potomac Construction Flats LLC
        1734 20th Street NW
        Washington, DC 20009

Business Description: Potomac Construction Flats LLC is a
                      privately held company engaged in activities
                      related to real estate.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: December 16, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       District of Columbia

Case No.: 19-00825

Judge: Hon. Martin S. Teel, Jr.

Debtor's Counsel: Nelson C. Cohen, Esq.
                  WHITEFORD, TAYLOR & PRESTON LLP
                  111 Rockville Pike
                  Suite 800
                  Rockville, MD 20850
                  Tel: 1-301-804-3618

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Matt Shkor, managing member.

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

                    https://is.gd/Sau6PS


QUINCY STREET TOWNHOMES 2: Case Summary & 3 Unsecured Creditors
---------------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Quincy Street Townhomes 2 LLC
        1734 20th Street NW
        Washington, DC 20009

Business Description: Quincy Street Townhomes 2 LLC is engaged in
                      activities related to real estate.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: December 16, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       District of Columbia

Case No.: 19-00827

Judge: Hon. Martin S. Teel, Jr.

Debtor's Counsel: Nelson C. Cohen, Esq.
                  WHITEFORD, TAYLOR & PRESTON LLP
                  111 Rockville Pike, Suite 800
                  Rockville, MD 20850
                  Tel: 1-301-804-3618

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Matt Shkor, managing member.

A copy of the petition containing, among other items, a list of the
Debtor's three unsecured creditors is available from
PacerMonitor.com free of charge at:

                     https://is.gd/pdYcEx


QUINCY STREET TOWNHOMES I: Case Summary & 3 Unsecured Creditors
---------------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Quincy Street Townhomes I LLC
        1734 20th Street NW
        Washington, DC 20009

Business Description: Quincy Street Townhomes I LLC is engaged in
                      activities related to real estate.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: December 16, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       District of Columbia

Case No.: 19-00826

Judge: Hon. Martin S. Teel, Jr.

Debtor's Counsel: Nelson C. Cohen, Esq.
                  WHITEFORD, TAYLOR & PRESTON LLP
                  111 Rockville Pike, Suite 800
                  Rockville, MD 20850
                  Tel: 1-301-804-3618

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Matt Shkor, managing member.

A copy of the petition containing, among other items, a list of the
Debtor's three unsecured creditors is available from
PacerMonitor.com free of charge at:

                     https://is.gd/ExV1bs


RAIT FUNDING: Appointment of Equity Committee Sought
----------------------------------------------------
The ad hoc committee representing holders of preferred equity
issued by RAIT Financial Trust is seeking the appointment of an
official committee of equity security holders in the Chapter 11
cases of RAIT Funding LLC and its affiliates.

In a filing with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of
Delaware, the ad hoc committee said an equity committee must be
appointed to investigate "potential causes of action" against
former and present directors and officers of the companies in light
of the admission made at the Dec. 5 sale hearing that the companies
have directors and officers liability insurance in the total amount
of $35 million.

"With $35 million of D&O insurance available to the estates as well
as other potential litigation sources of recovery, it behooves the
court to appoint an official equity committee to, inter alia,
investigate potential causes of action against Debtors' former and
present directors and officers," the ad hoc committee said.

"While the official creditors' committee is reported to have been
investigating potential litigation claims, it actually has little
or no economic incentive to fully engage in that pursuit," the ad
hoc committee also said.

The ad hoc committee had previously made an informal request to
Appoint an equity committee.  By letter dated Dec. 10, the U.S.
trustee again denied the request but did so "without prejudice"
should circumstances change or new evidence come to light,
according to court filings.

The ad hoc committee is represented by:

     Joseph H. Huston, Jr., Esq.       
     Stevens & Lee, P.C.        
     919 North Market Street, Suite 1300       
     Wilmington, DE 19801       
     Phone: (302) 425-3310       
     Fax: (610) 371-7972       
     Email: jhh@stevenslee.com

                     About RAIT Funding

RAIT -- https://www.rait.com/ -- is an internally-managed real
estate investment trust focused on managing a portfolio of
commercial real estate loans and properties.

RAIT Funding, LLC and its affiliates, including RAIT Financial
Trust, sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code
(Bankr. D. Del. Lead Case No. 19-11915) on Aug. 30, 2019. At the
time of the filing, the Debtors were estimated to have assets of
between $100 million and $500 million, and liabilities of the same
range.  

The cases are assigned to Judge Brendan Linehan Shannon.

The Debtors tapped Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP as bankruptcy
counsel; UBS Securities LLC as investment banker; M-III Partners
L.P. as restructuring and financial advisor; Ledgewood PC as tax
counsel; and Epiq Corporate Restructuring, LLC as claims and
noticing agent.


RAIT FUNDING: Sale of Assets to CF RFP Approved
-----------------------------------------------
Judge Brendan L. Shannon of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Delaware authorized (i) the Equity and Asset Purchase
Agreement, dated as of Aug. 30, 2019, and as amended as of Oct. 4,
2019, of RAIT Funding, LLC and affiliates with CF RFP Holdings,
LLC; and (ii) the sale by the Sellers of the Purchased Assets
pursuant to the Purchase Agreement.

The Purchase Agreement defines the Purchased Assets to include not
only those assets being acquired directly by the Buyer (or a Buyer
Designee) from the Debtors, but also assets owned by direct or
indirect non-debtor subsidiaries that are being acquired indirectly
by the Buyer by virtue of its purchase of the equity interests of
RAIT Partnership, L.P. from RAIT General and RAIT Limited.  Sold
Assets, on the other hand, includes only those Purchased Assets
that are being acquired directly by the Buyer (or a Buyer Designee)
from the Debtors.  Neither Sold Assets nor Purchased Assets include
Causes of Action held by the Debtors or their Estates, other than
as set forth in the definition of "Intellectual Property" in the
Purchase Agreement.  

Pursuant to sections 105 and 363 of the Bankruptcy Code, the
Debtors are authorized to continue performance under and make all
payments required by the Purchase Agreement and all other ancillary
documents as and when due thereunder without further order of the
Court.

The sale is free and clear of all Interests and Claims, with all
such Interests or Claims to attach to the proceeds of the Sale.

The automatic stay pursuant to section 362 is lifted with respect
to the Debtors solely to the extent necessary, without further
order of the Court.

Notwithstanding the provisions of Bankruptcy Rules 6004(h) or 7062
or any applicable provisions of the Local Bankruptcy Rules, the
Sale Order will not be stayed after its entry, but will be
effective and enforceable immediately upon entry, and the 14-day
stay provided in Bankruptcy Rules 6004(h) is expressly waived and
will not apply.

                     About RAIT Funding

RAIT -- https://www.rait.com/ -- is an internally-managed real
estate investment trust focused on managing a portfolio of
commercial real estate loans and properties.

RAIT Funding, LLC and its affiliates, including RAIT Financial
Trust, sought protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code
(Bankr. D. Del. Lead Case No. 19-11915) on Aug. 30, 2019.  At the
time of the filing, the Debtors were estimated to have assets of
between $100 million and $500 million, and liabilities of the same
range.  

The cases are assigned to Judge Brendan Linehan Shannon.

The Debtors tapped Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP as bankruptcy
counsel; UBS Securities LLC as investment banker; M-III Partners
L.P. as restructuring and financial advisor; Ledgewood PC as tax
counsel; and Epiq Corporate Restructuring, LLC as claims and
noticing agent.


RALPH M. BONHAM: Selling 95% Stake in Whitlock for $811K
--------------------------------------------------------
Ralph Bonham is selling his stake in Whitlock Service Corp.

In his motion, Mr. Bonham asked the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Colorado to approve the sale of 9,500 shares of WSC
stock to H.E. Whitlock President Emily Bonham for $811,000.

Under the deal, Ms. Bonham is required to make a monthly payment of
$18,132 for 47 months pursuant to the terms of a promissory note.
The note accrues interest at the rate of 2.5 percent per annum and
is secured by a first priority security interest in the stock.

A copy of the agreement is available at https://tinyurl.com/s86s7ho
from PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

The shares owned by Mr. Bonham equal 95 percent of the equity in
WSC, which owns 100 percent of H.E. Whitlock, the oldest general
contracting company in Colorado.

Ralph M. Bonham sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. D. Colo. Case
No. 19-18679) on Oct. 7, 2019.  The Debtor tapped David Wadsworth,
Esq., at Wadsworth Garber Warner Conrardy, P.C., as his legal
counsel.  




REGAL ROW: $2.5M Sale of Dallas Property to Victron Approved
------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Stacey G.C. Jernigan of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Northern District of Texas authorized Regal Row Fina, Inc.'s sale
of the real property located in Dallas County, Texas and more
commonly known as 1607 Regal Row, Dallas, Texas and certain items
of personal property, to Victron Stores, L.P., for $2.5 million.

The Property is more fully described as:

     (a) the tract of land, including the improvements, located in
Dallas County, Texas being described more fully as being Lot 2,
Block A/6375, Kings Row Industrial District, Eleventh Installment,
an addition to the City of Dallas, Dallas County, Texas, according
to the Plat recorded in Volume 73137, Page 1545, Deed Records,
Dallas County, Texas; and

     (b) the Debtor's inventory and personal property used in its
business such as racks, equipment, fixtures and furnishings, all as
defined in the Contract of Purchase of Business Assets.

The Article 25, Section 4 of the Contract is amended as follows:
Prior to closing, Seller agrees to allow EMI Environmental Group
Inc. ("EMI") to commence immediately the necessary work in order to
complete the Assessment Report Form ("ARF") as required by TCEQ
pursuant to that letter dated Sept. 6, 2019, and to request an
extension of the deadlines stated in such letter.  The Seller will
be listed as the responsible party on the ARF to be submitted to
TCEQ, and Seller agrees that it shall, both before and after
Closing, cooperate fully with EMI in completing and submitting all
filings required and shall, both before and after closing, execute
any necessary paperwork in a timely manner.  At closing, Seller
will pay EMI the sum of $30,000 for such work required for the ARF
submitted, and Seller will deposit $500,000 ("Remediation Deposit")
out of the Purchase Price with the Escrow Agent for the remediation
of the environmental contamination located on, under or around the
Property to be performed after the Closing Date.  Based on TCEQ's
findings and determination of the contamination located on, under
or around the Property and remediation required, the Purchaser will
remediate the contamination in accordance with the rules and
standards of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality ("TCEQ")
and will request, once remediation is complete, a "No Further
Action" letter or its equivalent from the TCEQ "NFA Letter") (such
NFA Letter collectively, with the efforts set forth above, the
"Remediation Work").  Throughout remediation, the Purchaser may
submit invoices for the reasonable and customary charges from EMI
for such Remediation Work to the Escrow Agent, with a copy to the
Seller, and Escrow Agent will disburse funds out of the Remediation
Deposit.  Neither the Purchaser nor the Escrow Agent will be
required to obtain the Seller's consent to any such disbursements,
provided the Seller is copied on all written communications between
and among the Purchaser, EMI, and the TCEQ.  Upon the Purchaser's
receipt of the NFA Letter any remaining Remediation Deposit will be
returned to the Seller.

All reasonable and necessary closing costs will be paid at closing
in accordance with the terms of the Contract.

From the proceeds of the sale the Debtor (and/or Republic Title of
Texas, Inc., 2626 Howell Street, 10th Floor, Dallas, Texas, 75204,
its agents, attorneys, and employees acting as escrow agent/officer
to close the subject sale ["Escrow Officer"]) is/are authorized to:


     (a) pay usual and customary closing costs, including, but not
limited to, the premium for the owner policy of title insurance for
the insured amount equal to the Purchase Price (subject to any
allocations in the Contract), the Debtor's half of the escrow fee,
etc.;  

     (b) pay to the holder(s) thereof, as the case may be, any
amount necessary to satisfy the Property Tax Liens then due against
the Property along with a pro rata share of the then current
year’s property taxes as follows:

          Business Personal Property taxes for 2017 – 2019
$17,358
          Real Estate Taxes for 2019 - $15,865
          Plus any additional penalties and interest that may
accrue thereon after Nov. 30, 2019

     (c) to the extent the same is valid and subsisting and
encumbers all or a portion of the Property, pay Wallis Bank the
approximate amount of $843,682.04 plus accrued interest and fees to
satisfy the Wallis Bank Liens, in exchange for a recordable release
of said liens;

     (d) to the extent the same is valid and subsisting and
encumbers all or a portion of the Property, pay to Providence Bank
the amount of $200,000 plus accrued interest and fees to satisfy
this portion of the Providence Liens;  

     (e) to the extent the same is valid and subsisting and
encumbers all or a portion of the Property, pay to the holder
thereof the approximate amount of $103,354 plus accrued interest
and fees to satisfy the IRS Lien, via a check payable to the
Department of Justice, c/o Donna K. Webb, 1100 Commerce Street,
Suite 300, Dallas, Texas 75242;

     (f) pay to EMI Environmental Group Inc., 14850 Montfort Drive,
Suite 205, Dallas, Texas 75254, the sum of $30,000;

     (g) reserve in escrow, to be held with Republic Title of
Texas, Inc., $500,000 to be used in accordance with the terms of
the Order and the terms of the Contract; and

     (h) pay to the Debtor the balance of the sale proceeds, which
will be maintained in a separately segregated DIP account, for
distribution in accordance with further orders of the Court.

The sale is free and clear of any and all liens, claims and
encumbrances, with the validity, amount and priority of any such
lien, claim or encumbrance, other than the Wallis Bank Lien, the
IRS Lien, and Property Tax Liens, to be determined by the Court at
a later date and to attach to the sale proceeds.

Notwithstanding the foregoing paragraph, the year of closing ad
valorem tax liens will be expressly retained on the Property until
the payment by the Purchaser of the year of closing ad valorem
taxes, plus any penalties or interest which may ultimately accrue
thereon, in the ordinary course of business.

The stay provisions of Bankruptcy Rule 6004(h) will not apply to
the order and the closing may occur without a 14-day waiting
period.

                       About Regal Row Fina

Regal Row Fina, Inc., sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. N.D.
Tex. Case No. 19-33060) in Dallas, Texas, on Sept. 11, 2019.  Joyce
W. Lindauer Attorney, PLLC, is the Debtor's counsel.  No trustee or
examiner, nor an official committee has been appointed in the
Debtor's case.


RENT RITE: Disclosure Statement Hearing Reset to Jan. 28, 2020
--------------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Colorado convened a
hearing on the motion of Debtor Rent Rite Superkegs West, Ltd.,
d/b/a Wright Group Event Services, for a continuance of the hearing
on the adequacy of Debtor's Amended Disclosure Statement currently
set in this matter for January 16, 2020, at 1:30 p.m.

On Nov. 19, 2019, Judge Thomas B. McNamara granted the motion and
ordered that:

  * The hearing on the adequacy of the Debtor's Amended Disclosure
Statement currently set in this matter for Jan. 16, 2020, at 1:30
p.m., is vacated and is hereby rescheduled for Tuesday, January 28,
2020, at 1:30 p.m.

  * The deadline for creditors and parties in interest to file
objections to the adequacy of the Debtor's Amended Disclosure
Statement is hereby extended to Jan. 14, 2020.

  * The Debtor shall serve a copy of this Order on all creditors
and parties in interest in the case and will file a certificate of
service evidencing such service on or before Nov. 22, 2019.

                  About Rent Rite SuperKegs

Headquartered in Denver, Colorado, Rent Rite SuperKegs West Ltd.
leases warehouse space to tenants. It owns a warehouse building
located at 3850 to 3900 E. 48th Ave., Denver, Colo.  

The Debtor first filed for Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. D. Colo.
Case No. 12-31592) on Oct. 18, 2012.

Rent Rite SuperKegs West sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Colo. Case No. 17-21236) on Dec. 11,
2017.  In the petition signed by Thomas S. Wright, president, the
Debtor was estimated to have assets and liabilities of $1 million
to $10 million.  Judge Thomas B. McNamara oversees the case.  The
Debtor hired Weinman & Associates, P.C., as counsel, and Allen
Vellone Wolf Helfrich & Factor P.C., as special counsel.

The Office of the U.S Trustee appointed an official committee of
unsecured creditors on Feb. 2, 2018. The committee retained Appel,
Lucas & Christensen, P.C., as its legal counsel.


RHC LLC: Case Summary & 9 Unsecured Creditors
---------------------------------------------
Debtor: RHC LLC
        1001 Tenth Ave South #102
        Naples, FL 34102

Business Description: RHC LLC is a privately held company in
                      Naples, Florida.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: December 17, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Middle District of Florida

Case No.: 19-11853

Debtor's Counsel: Michael R. Dal Lago, Esq.
                  DAL LAGO LAW
                  999 Vanderbilt Beach Road, Suite 200
                  Naples, FL 34108
                  Tel: 239.571.6877
                  E-mail: mike@dallagolaw.com
            
Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Harry M. Zea, authorized agent.

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

                    https://is.gd/LCfeWD


RONALD A. GOODWIN: Hearing on Wichita Property Sale Set for Dec. 19
-------------------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Kansas is set to hold
a hearing on Dec. 19 to consider the sale of Ronald and Michelle
Goodwin's real estate located at 1540 N. 135th St. W., Wichita,
Kansas.

The Goodwins proposed to sell the property to Galena Liberty Hall,
L.L.C. for $508,294.
  
A copy of the sale agreement is available at
https://tinyurl.com/s86s7ho from PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

Ronald A. Goodwin and Michelle L. Goodwin sought Chapter 11
protection (Bankr. D. Kan. Case No. 16-12205) on Nov. 8, 2017.  The
Debtors tapped Mark J. Lazzo, Esq., as their legal counsel.


RP BROADCASTING: Court Okays Deal to Sell Radio Stations for $$550K
-------------------------------------------------------------------
A U.S. bankruptcy judge approved a deal to sell RP Broadcasting
Idaho, LLC's radio broadcast stations based in or near Jackson,
Wyo., to Jackson Hole Radio, LLC.

The order signed by Judge William Thurman of the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the District of Utah authorized Mark Hashimoto, the
Chapter 11 trustee appointed in RP Broadcasting's Chapter 11 case,
to sell the company's right, title and interest in and to the
stations for $550,000, to be paid at closing or pursuant to the
terms of a promissory note acceptable to the company's secured
creditor, Chaparral Broadcasting, Inc.

Also included in the sale are the licenses and permits issued by
the Federal Communications Commission.

Among the features of the sale agreement deemed beneficial to
unsecured creditors and other stakeholders of the company is the
assumption of certain liabilities, and the retention of claims and
causes of action against third-parties.

A copy of the agreement is available at https://tinyurl.com/thea3sh
from PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

                  About RP Broadcasting Idaho

RP Broadcasting Idaho, LLC, filed a Chapter 11 petition (Bankr. D.
Utah Case No. 16-28578) on Sept. 28, 2016. The petition was signed
by Richard O. Mecham, president and chief executive officer.  At
the time of the filing, the Debtor disclosed assets of between
$1,000,001 and $10 million and liabilities of the same range.

Judge William T. Thurman oversees the case.  The Debtor is
represented by Penrod W. Keith, Esq., at Durham Jones & Pinegar,
P.C.

Mark Hashimoto was appointed as the Debtor's Chapter 11 trustee on
March 29, 2017.  The trustee is represented by Dorsey & Whitney
LLP.


S&D LONGHORN: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
-----------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: S&D Longhorn Partners, LLC
        3824 Cedar Springs Road
        Suite 229
        Dallas, TX 75219

Business Description: S&D Longhorn Partners, LLC is a privately
                      held company in Dallas, Texas.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: December 17, 2019

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Nothern District of Texas

Case No.: 19-34149

Judge: Hon. Harlin Dewayne Hale

Debtor's Counsel: Eric A. Liepins, Esq.
                  ERIC LIEPINS PC
                  12770 Coit Road
                  Suite 100
                  Dallas, TX 75251
                  Tel: 972-991-5591
                  E-mail: eric@ealpc.com

Total Assets: $5,000,000

Total Liabilities: $4,966,827

The petition was signed by Jay LaFrance, managing member.

A copy of the petition containing, among other items, a list of the
Debtor's 20 largest unsecured creditors is available from
PacerMonitor for free at:

                    https://is.gd/2Jtmi5


SERES THERAPEUTICS: Roger Pomerantz Quits as Director & Chairman
----------------------------------------------------------------
Roger J. Pomerantz, M.D., resigned from his position as a member of
the board of directors of Seres Therapeutics, Inc. and as Chairman
of the Board, effective Dec. 12, 2019.  Dr. Pomerantz will continue
to serve the Company as an advisor.  The Board has appointed
Stephen Berenson to replace Dr. Pomerantz as Chairman of the
Board.

                    About Seres Therapeutics

Seres Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: MCRB) --
http://www.serestherapeutics.com/-- is a microbiome therapeutics
platform company developing a novel class of biological drugs that
are designed to treat disease by restoring the function of a
dysbiotic microbiome, where the state of bacterial diversity and
function is imbalanced.  Seres' SER-287 program has obtained Fast
Track and Orphan Drug designation from the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration and is being evaluated in a Phase 2b study in
patients with active mild-to-moderate ulcerative colitis. Seres'
SER-109 program has obtained Breakthrough Therapy and Orphan Drug
designations from the FDA and is in Phase 3 development for
recurrent C. difficile infection.  Seres is also developing SER-401
in a Phase 1b study in patients with metastatic melanoma.

Seres Therapeutics incurred a net loss of $98.94 million in 2018
following a net loss of $89.38 million in 2017.  As of Sept. 30,
2019, the Company had $124.15 million in total assets, $156.37
million in total liabilities, and a total stockholders' deficit of
$32.22 million.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, in Boston, Massachusetts, the Company's
auditor since 2014, issued a "going concern" opinion in its report
dated March 6, 2019, on the Company's consolidated financial
statements for the year ended Dec. 31, 2018, citing that the
Company has incurred losses and negative cash flows from operations
since its inception that raise substantial doubt about its ability
to continue as a going concern.


SHALE SUPPORT: Court Confirms Amended Joint Chapter 11 Plan
-----------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas
confirmed the amended joint Chapter 11 plan of reorganization of
Shale Support Global Holdings LLC and its debtor-affiliates, and
BSP Agency LLC pursuant to the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.  The effective
date of the plan occured on Nov. 21, 2019.

As reported by the Troubled Company Reporter on Nov. 6, 2019, Shale
Support Global Holdings, LLC, et al., and BSP Agency, LLC filed an
Amended Plan of Reorganization for the resolution of the
outstanding claims against and interests in the Debtors pursuant to
chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code.

Under the Plan, general unsecured creditors who are owed not in
excess of $30,000 or who elect to reduce their claims to $30,000
will split the $250,000 allocated for the class.  Other general
unsecured creditors will split at least $1 million plus their share
of the Cudd Litigation proceeds.

The Reorganized Debtors shall fund distributions under the Plan
with:

   1) Cash on hand, including Cash from operations;

   2) the new membership interests; and

   3) the proceeds from the exit facility, as applicable.

A full-text copy of the Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization (as
modified) dated Oc,. 25, 2019, is available at
https://tinyurl.com/y69x8q3y from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

                      About Shale Support

Shale Support Global Holdings, LLC -- https://shalesupport.com/ --
is a privately owned, vertically integrated proppant supplier to
the exploration and production sector of the oil and gas industry.
Their proppants are comprised of monocrystalline sand (i.e., "frac
sand") designed to keep an induced hydraulic fracture open to
enhance oil and gas product recovery in unconventional shale
deposits.

On July 11, 2019, Shale Support Global Holdings, LLC, and seven
affiliates sought Chapter 11 protection (S.D. Tex. Lead Case No.
19-33884).

Shale Support Global disclosed total assets of $3,150,225 and
$127,899,025 as of May 31, 2019.

The Hon. David R. Jones is the case judge.

The Debtors tapped Greenberg Traurig, LLP, as counsel; Alvarez &
Marsal as financial advisor; Piper Jaffray & Co. as investment
banker; and Donlin, Recano & Company, Inc., as claims agent.

The U.S Trustee on July 29, 2019, appointed five creditors to serve
on an official committee of unsecured creditors in the Chapter 11
cases.  The Committee has retained Foley Gardere, Foley & Lardner
LLC as its legal counsel and GlassRatner Advisory & Capital Group,
LLC, as its financial advisors.


SHANNON STALEY: Seeks to Extend Exclusivity Period to March 3
-------------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania
extended the exclusivity period for Shannon Staley & Sons, LLC to
file a Chapter 11 plan to March 3, 2020, and the period to solicit
acceptances for the plan to May 2, 2020.

Shannon Staley is anticipating a liquidity injection into its
estate that would allow for a reorganization plan that the company
believes would be successfully implemented and satisfy its
creditors. Although the funding is expected to occur, it has not
been effectuated as of Dec. 4.

                      About Shannon Staley

Shannon Staley & Sons LLC -- https://shannonstaleyandsons.com/ --
is a full-service construction services firm offering on demand
construction services, turn key real estate, contract construction
services, and property management services.

Shannon Staley sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. W.D. Pa. Case
No. 19-23101) on Aug. 6, 2019, in Pittsburgh, Pa.  As of the
petition date, Debtor was estimated to have total assets between
$500,000 and $1 million, and liabilities of between $1 million and
$10 million.  The Hon. Carlota M. Bohm oversees the Debtor's case.
Robert O. Lampl Law Office is the Debtor's counsel.

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


SKYTEC INC: Disclosure Statement Hearing Reset to Dec. 18
---------------------------------------------------------
Judge Edward A. Godoy of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District
of Puerto Rico ordered that the hearing on approval of disclosure
statement of Skytec Inc. is rescheduled for December 18, 2019 at
10:00 AM at the United States Bankruptcy Court, Southwestern
Divisional Office, MCS Building, Second Floor, 880 Tito Castro
Avenue, Ponce, Puerto Rico.

A full-text copy of the order is available at
https://tinyurl.com/tdsmcdy from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

           About Skytec Inc.

Skytec, Inc., is a privately-held company based in Puerto Rico that
provides wireless telecommunication solutions. Skytec sought
protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D.P.R.
Case No. 18-05288) on Sept. 12, 2018. In the petition signed by
Henry L. Barreda, president, the Debtor disclosed $2,119,734 in
assets and $5,848,090 in liabilities. Judge Enrique S. Lamoutte
Inclan oversees the case. The Debtor tapped Fuentes Law Offices,
LLC as its legal counsel.


SMOKY MOUNTAIN: Wanted Expedited Hearing on Disclosure Statement
----------------------------------------------------------------
Smoky Mountain Country Club Property Owners' Association, Inc.
previously sought an expedited hearing on the Disclosure Statement
for its Plan of Reorganization.  The date they sought was for last
Dec. 3.

They requested that if no objections to the approval of the
Disclosure Statement are filed on or before Nov. 29, 2019, the
Court may enter an order approving the disclosure statement without
the need for a hearing.

A full-text copy of the motion is available at
https://tinyurl.com/uyt9gu3 from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

              About Smoky Mountain Country Club Property
                   Owners Association, Inc.

The Debtor, a North Carolina nonprofit corporation, is an
association of homeowners of the Smoky Mountain Country Club, a
residential planned community, in Whittier, North Carolina.

Smoky Mountain Country Club Property Owners Association, Inc. filed
a voluntary petition for relief under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. W.D.N.C. Case No. 19-10286) on July 26, 2019. In the
petition signed by Paul DeCarlo, president, the Debtor estimated
$50,000 in assets and $1 million to $10 million in liabilities.

The case is assigned to Judge George R. Hodges.

John R. Miller Jr., Esq. at Rayburn Cooper & Durham, P.A.
represents the Debtor as counsel.


SORENSON MEDIA: Proposed Sale of Interest in Continuum Approved
---------------------------------------------------------------
Judge William T. Thurman of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
District of Utah authorized Sorenson Media, Inc.'s sale of its
interest in Continuum Media Network, Inc., to Continuum Media
Partnership, Inc., pursuant to the terms of their Stock Purchase
Agreement ("SPA").

The SPA provides for the following consideration: (a) cash payment
in the amount of $2.5 million at closing, with the same to be
allocated between the Debtor, JLS Holdings, LLC and Silverwood as
described in the Sale Motion, (b) delivery, at Closing, of two
promissory notes secured by a junior position security interest in
Continuum's assets, one in the amount of $2.59 million payable to
JLS, and one in the amount of $1.11 million payable to the Debtor
with a 5-year term at an interest rate of 5%, payment quarterly and
with no pre-payment penalty; (c) the assumption of all known and
unknown obligations of Continuum, including the TBK Debt; and (d)
the cancellation of obligations between the Debtor and Continuum,
as memorialized in the Mutual Release Agreement.

The Sale Hearing was held on Dec. 5, 2019.

The SPA and all other ancillary documents, including the Mutual
Release Agreement, and all of the terms and conditions thereof, are
approved.   

The sale is free and clear of all Liens, claims, interests, and
encumbrances.  Any Liens, claims, interests, and encumbrances that
exist on or in any of the Purchased Shares will attach to the
proceeds of the Sale.

Gil Miller, in his capacity as the Debtor's Chief Restructuring
Officer, is authorized and directed to sign and deliver any and all
documents and instruments or take any other further actions by the
Debtor necessary or desirable to consummate the transactions
contemplated by the SPA or otherwise comply with the SPA or the
Order, including, if applicable, paying, whether before or after
the Closing, any expenses or costs that are required to be paid in
order to consummate the transactions contemplated by the SPA or to
perform its obligations under the SPA or any related agreements.

Notwithstanding Bankruptcy Rules 7062, 9014, and 6004(h) or any
applicable Local Rules, the Order will be effective immediately
upon entry and the Debtor and the Purchaser are authorized to close
the Sale immediately upon entry of the Order.

All time periods set forth in the Order will be calculated in
accordance with Bankruptcy Rule 9006(a).

Pursuant to and consistent with the Order Approving Sale
Concessions in Connection with the Auction and Sale of
Substantially All of the Debtor's Assets, entered on Feb. 15, 2019,
and the Order Approving Stipulation Authorizing Use of Cash
Collateral and Granting Adequate Protection, entered April 26,
2019, the cash proceeds of the Sale ($2.5 million) will be
distributed as follows:

     i. The first $357,224 will be used to pay Silverwood its
agreed upon commission per its approved Application;

     ii. The next $160,000 will be paid to JLS in repayment of the
Bankruptcy Code Section 506(c) surcharges described in items 2(iii)
and 2(iv) of the Sale Concessions Order;

     iii. Subject to repayment of the first $160,000 described, JLS
waives and releases any claim it may have to the remaining amounts
paid to the Debtor;

     iv. The next $151,794 will be paid to JLS in repayment of Cash
Collateral advanced by JLS, described as the Repayment in the Cash
Collateral Order;

     v. The balance of the Continuum cash proceeds will be paid, as
and when received, as follows;

          1. 30% to the Debtor’s estate; and

          2. 70% to JLS in partial satisfaction of the balance of
the JLS Allowed Secured Claim.

     vi. As further described, the balance of the consideration
($3.7 million) will be paid pursuant to two promissory notes, one
to JLS ($2.59 million) and one to the Debtor ($1.11 million), in
accordance with 30%/70% distribution required by the Sale
Concessions Order.

Pursuant to and consistent with the Order Approving Silverwood
Partners, LLC as Financial Advisor and Investment Banker, the
Debtor is authorized to pay Silverwood a commission of $357,224
from the proceeds of the Sale, which commission will be paid prior
to the split described.

A copy of the SPA is available at https://tinyurl.com/tbqlcc7 from
PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

                       About Sorenson Media

Founded in 1995, Sorenson Media, Inc. --
http://www.sorensonmedia.com/-- provides trusted solutions to the
television industry and is an innovator in driving the future of
television advertising, fusing the power and scale of linear TV
with the data and addressability of digital.

Sorenson Media, Inc., filed a voluntary petition for relief under
chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr D. Utah Case No.
18-27740)
on Oct. 16, 2018.  In the petition signed by CEO Pat Nola, the
Debtor estimated $10 million to $50 million in assets and $100
million to $500 million in liabilities.

Cohne Kinghorn, P.C., led by George B. Hofmann, is the Debtor's
counsel.  The law firm Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP is
serving as special corporate, intellectual property, litigation,
and commercial law counsel.



SOUTHEASTERN METAL: Juno to Contribute $500,000 to Fund Plan
------------------------------------------------------------
Debtors Southeastern Metal Products LLC and SEMP Texas LLC filed
with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware an
amended disclosure statement for the amended joint plan of
reorganization.

The purpose of the Plan is to reorganize the Debtors and allow for
continued operations while providing payment to holders of certain
claims, and for the transfer of property to other holders of
claims, such that all such creditors will receive more money or
property value under the Plan than such creditors would receive if
the Debtors were instead liquidated. If successful, the Debtors
will be able to continue to pay current the Fairview Secured Claim
and payoff such claim through a refinance, and also provide equity
interests in the Reorganized Debtors to pre-Petition Date unsecured
creditors, with a present value exceeding the amount that such
unsecured creditors would receive in a liquidation.

Class 4 consists of the Allowed Unsecured Claims. As of the
Petition Date, the total scheduled claims of Class 4 and Class 5
creditors were $6,206,027.40, of which approximately $685,000.00
relates to claims that may be entitled to treatment in accordance
with Code section 503(b)(9). As of the Bar Date, the total filed
unsecured claims is in the amount of $7,294,562.43.

Each such Holder of an Allowed Class 4 Claim shall receive a
pro-rata share of 40% of the membership interests to be issued in
the Reorganized Debtors. All distributions from the Reorganized
Debtors on account of the membership interests to be issued to the
Holders of Allowed Class 4 Claims shall be made strictly in
accordance with the terms of the Operating Agreement. Each Member
shall have the right, but not the obligation, to make additional
capital contributions to the Reorganized Debtors.

The Interest Holders shall not retain their interest in the
Debtors, which shall instead be cancelled effective as of the
Effective Date. The Holder of Class 6 Interests will receive no
distribution under the Plan and are deemed to reject the Plan.

On the Effective Date, Juno Investments LLC or its affiliate shall
receive membership interests equal to 60% in each of the
Reorganized Debtors in consideration of (a) the capital
contribution from Juno in the amount of $500,000.00; (b) Juno's
agreed cancellation of its entire Class 3 Allowed Claim; and (c)
Juno’s continued guaranty of the Fairview Secured Claim.

The Debtors' Plan is essentially funded by the collection of
pre-Effective Date Accounts Receivable, cash on hand and future
cash flows of the Reorganization Debtors, as well as contributions
and forbearance from Juno.

A full-text copy of the amended disclosure statement is available
at https://tinyurl.com/rweq9y9 from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

The Debtors are represented by:

      WEIR & PARTNERS LLP
      Jeffrey S. Cianciulli, Esquire
      Bonnie R. Golub, Esquire
      824 Market Street, Suite 800
      Wilmington, DE 19899
      Telephone: (302) 652-8181
      Telecopy: (302) 652 8909
      E-mail: jcianciulli@weirpartners.com
              bgolub@weirpartners.com

                About Southeastern Metal Products

Southeastern Metal Products LLC is a contract manufacturing company
that specializes in fabrication and stampings for various
industries including telecommunications, transportation, appliance
and health and safety industries.

Southeastern Metal Products and its affiliates SEMP Texas, LLC and
Hospital Acquisition LLC sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Del. Lead Case No. 19-10998) on May 6,
2019. At the time of the filing, Southeastern Metal disclosed
assets of between $1,000,001 and $10 million and liabilities of the
same range. SEMP Texas had estimated assets of less than $1 million
and liabilities of less than $500,000 while Hospital Acquisition
had estimated assets of less than $50,000 and liabilities of less
than $50,000.   

The Debtors hired Weir & Partners LLP as counsel; Finley Group as
financial advisor; and Omni Management Group as claims and noticing
agent.

Andrew Vara, acting U.S. trustee for Region 3, appointed an
official committee of unsecured creditors on May 20, 2019.
Lowenstein Sandler LLP is the committee's legal counsel.


STANLEY C. CHESTNUT: Country Boys Auction of Equipment Approved
---------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Joseph N. Callaway of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Eastern District of North Carolina authorized Stanley Claxton
Chestnut's sale of personal property listed on Exhibit A by public
auction to be conducted by Country Boys Auction & Realty, Inc.

The public sale of the Equipment will be free and clear of all
liens, claims, encumbrances, rights, or interests, subject to the
following provisions:

      1. Such liens, claims, encumbrances, rights, or interests
will attach to the Net Proceeds of sale in accordance with the
relative priorities of the interests as they appear of record,
subject to any orders that may be entered by the Court;

      2. The Net Proceeds of the sale will be paid to the counsel
for the Debtor for payment to lien or interest holders as their
interests appear of record, then on allowed administrative claims
and thereafter as allowed by the Code, a confirmed Plan, or Court
Order; and  

      3. The 14- day stay applicable pursuant to Rule 6004(h) is
waived.

The Debtor will liquidate the Equipment by way of a public auction
on Dec. 6, 2019, at 10:00 a.m. at Country Boys Auction & Realty,
Inc. Warehouse, 1211 W. 5th Street, Washington, NC 27889.

Stanley Claxton Chestnut sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr.
E.D.N.C. Case No. 19-00698) on Feb. 15, 2019.  The Debtor tapped
David F. Mills, Esq., as counsel.



STAR COMPUTER: Trustee's $6K Remnant Assets Sale to Oak Point OK'd
------------------------------------------------------------------
Judge A. Jay Cristol of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern
District of Florida authorized Joseph Luzinski, as the Creditor
Trustee for the Star Computer Group Creditors Trust, to sell the
remnant assets of the Trust to Oak Point Partners, LLC for $6,000,
subject to overbid.

The Purchase Agreement and all of its terms and conditions, and the
Bidding Procedures are approved in their entireties.

The overbid procedures are:

     a. Each Competing Bidder who wants to participate in the
overbid process must notify the Creditor Trustee of their intention
to do so on or before the deadline to respond to the Motion;  

     b. the first overbid for the Remnant Assets by a Competing
Bidder must be at least $2,000 more than the Purchase Price, or a
total of $8,000;

     c. each Competing Bidder must submit a Cashier’s Check to
the Creditor Trustee in the amount of such Competing Bidder’s
first overbid at the time such overbid is made;

     d. each subsequent overbid for the Remnant Assets must be in
additional increments of $1,000, unless otherwise agreed by the
parties or directed by the Court;

     e. the bidder must purchase the Remnant Assets under the same
terms and conditions set forth in the Purchase Agreement, other
than the purchase price; and  

     f. in the event of an overbid that meets the foregoing
conditions, the Creditor Trustee will schedule an auction of the
Remnant Assets in advance of the hearing date and will request that
the Court approve the winning bidder at the auction as the
purchaser at the hearing on the Motion.

The sale will be free and clear of any and all liens, claims,
interests, and encumbrances, with such liens, claims, interests,
and encumbrances to attach to the proceeds of the Sale.

The 14-day stay under Bankruptcy Rule 6004(h) is waived.

A copy of the Agreement is available at https://tinyurl.com/tmqeuvu
from PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

                   About Star Computer Group

Founded in 1994 with its office located at 2175 N.W. 115 Avenue,
Miami, FL 33172, Star Computer Group, Inc., was engaged in the
business of supplying wholesale computers, smart phones, and
related equipment and software to dealers and wholesales in Latin
America.  The company is jointly owned by Henry Waissmann (54%) and
Henry Aguilar (46%).

Star Computer Group sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection (Bankr.
S.D. Fla. Case No. 15-28100) on Oct. 12, 2015.  In the petition
signed by CRO James S. Howard, the Debtor listed assets of $22.7
million and liabilities of $68.3 million.

Judge Jay Cristol is assigned to the case.

The Debtor has engaged Kozyak, Tropin & Throckmorton, P.A., as
bankruptcy counsel, GlassRatner as financial advisor, Fuerst
Ittleman David & Joseph PL as special tax counsel, and Cherry
Bekaert, LLP as accountants.

The U.S. Trustee for Region 21 appointed an official committee of
unsecured creditors.  The committee is represented by Stearns
Weaver Miller Weissler Alhadeff & Sitterson, P.A., as counsel.

On June 14, 2016, the court confirmed the Debtor's Second Amended
Plan of Liquidation.  On July 8, 2016, the effective date under the
Plan occurred and a creditors trust was formally established to
liquidate the Debtor's unencumbered property.



STAR WEST: S&P Raises Rating on $450MM Senior Secured Loan to 'BB-'
-------------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings raised the rating on Star West Generation LLC's
(SWG) $450 million senior secured loan ($64.5 million outstanding)
and $50 million senior secured revolving credit facility (RCF),
both due Sept. 30, 2020, to 'BB-' from 'B+'.

S&P also revised its recovery rating to '1' from '2', indicating
its expectation of very high recovery (rounded estimate: 95%) in
the event of a payment default; and revised its outlook on the
company's debt to stable from positive.

Star West was a portfolio until the end of 2018, but now consists
of a single power asset, Griffith. The plant is a 570-megawatt (MW)
natural gas-fired combined-cycle power plant in Arizona near the
California and Nevada borders. It operates in the U.S. Desert
Southwest power market. Griffith has operated as a fully merchant
facility for 2018 and 2019, and from 2020-2026 is backed by a power
purchase agreement (PPA) with a major utility for the summer
months.

In its last review, S&P revised the outlook to positive as a result
of the announced sale of Arlington Valley (579 MW) to Capital Power
for around $300 million. S&P stated that it could raise the rating
in the next 1-2 years if the sale was executed as planned, and
depending on both the financial performance and refinancing plans
in 2019. S&P anticipated a one- or two-notch improvement based on
minimum coverage improving to the upper end of the 1x-1.5x range
from 0.73x (which was forecast for 2022), primarily because almost
all the proceeds were used to pay down the term loan B, which stood
at $97.5 million after the repayment.

The stable outlook reflects S&P's expectation that the project's
spark spreads will be aligned with forward pricing. Although it
expects the project to be sold before the term loan B is due, S&P
does not assume that in its analysis. The rating agency expects
coverages to be above 1.5x for the remainder of the term loan B,
with its minimum DSCR of 1.29x in its hypothetical refinancing
scenario, which assumes mortgage-style amortization.

"We could lower the rating if significant operational issues lead
to reduced availability or lower market pricing, and DSCRs drop to
the lower end of the 1x-1.5x range on a sustained basis. A
downgrade might also follow indicators of stressed liquidity, such
as constant inability to pay down outstanding credit balances or
use of the debt-service reserve to meet a required payment," S&P
said. The project is most vulnerable after 2026 when the current
summer PPA expires, and particularly 2028 due to relatively higher
capital expenditure (capex) forecast for that year, according to
the rating agency.

"Although we do not expect to raise the rating, we would likely do
so if power prices significantly improve or the project signs
additional PPAs that provide strong contracted cash flows over an
extended period. In either case, projected DSCRs would need to be
in the upper end of the 1x-1.5x range," the rating agency said.


STEPHEN ZAMIAS: Has $300K Offer for Commercial Property Interests
-----------------------------------------------------------------
A sale of various commercial property interests of Stephen Gregory
Zamias, Sr., and George Demo Zamias, Sr., was scheduled to take
place on Dec. 13, 2019,  in Courtroom B in the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, Penn Traffic
Building, First Floor, 319 Washington Street, Johnstown,
Pennsylvania 15901.  The trustee has received an offer for the
Debtors' assets of $300,000.  A higher and better offers will be
considered at thehearing.

For more information regarding the sale, contact:

   David Rudov
   Rudov Law
   437 Grant Street, 1806 Suite
   Pittsburgh, PA 15219
   Tel: 412-223-5030
   E-mail: David@RudovLaw.com

           or

   Scott M. Hare
   Whiteford Taylor Preston LLP
   200 First Avenue, Floor 3
   Pittsburgh, PA 15222
   Tel: 412-275-2399
   E-mail: share@wtplaw.com

Attorneys for the trustee:

   Eric E. Bonini
   Bononi & Company, P.C.
   20 N Pennsylvania Avenue, Suite 201
   Greensburg, PA 15601
   Tel: 724-972-4180
   Fax: 724-836-0370


STORE IT REIT: River Oaks Says No Notice of 2nd Amended Disclosures
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Creditor River Oaks Storage LLC objects to Emergency Motion of
Debtor Store It Reit, Inc., to Conditionally Approve Amended and/or
Second Amended Disclosure Statement.  The creditor was finalizing
its Objections to the First Amended Disclosure Statement and First
Amended Plan and discovered that Debtor had, in fact, filed a
Second Amended Disclosure Statement and Second Amended Plan.

Since Creditor is trying to wrap up this Objection, it will file it
as to the First Amended Disclosure Statement and the emergency
motion related to the same and will present an argument as the
hearing as to the Second Amended Disclosure Statement.

Since the Motion fails to provide information so to any emergency,
this Motion should be denied in its entirety.  The parties in
interest are being railroaded into a disclosure statement and plan
without adequate notice and opportunity to object or seek
additional information and without adequate information and which
contains incomplete and misleading information.

The Debtor has failed to provide any information or documents
explaining how it acquired its interest in Evergreen and how
Evergreen acquired any interest in River Oaks TIC 4. There are no
minutes, purchase agreements, shareholder or partner or member
meetings notes or minutes, nothing showing that the Debtor and its
alleged subsidiaries had any interest in the River Oaks Property
has been produced other than filings with the Delaware Divisions of
Corporations, but no underlying corporate or transactional
documents have been produced. Without such information and
documentation River Oaks, LLC cannot adequately understand the
position of the Debtor, its treatment under the plan or what it may
or may not expect to receive under the Plan and the disclosure is
inadequate.

The Court should set the amended disclosure statement hearing on
regular notice and require the debtor to file a redline version of
the amended disclosure statement and the plan at least 21 days
before the hearing on the same and/or set this hearing out at least
10 days to allow the Debtor and the Creditor to discuss its
concerns to the disclosure statement and plan before it is approved
by the Court and circulate to creditors.

A full-text copy of the objection is available at
https://tinyurl.com/uhjz9ts from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

River Oaks is represented by:

      Alexandre Ian Cornelius, Esq.
      Cornelius & Cohanghadosh APC
      23801 Calabasas Rd., Suite 100
      Calabasas, California 91302
      Tel: (818) 835-9159
      Fax: (818) 396-3160
      E-mail: cornelius@thecalaw.com

                     About Store It REIT

Store It REIT, Inc., formerly known as Evergreen Realty REIT, Inc.,
and American Spectrum REIT I, Inc., is a privately held company in
Ketchum, Idaho engaged in activities related to real estate. The
Company has 98.64% equity interest in Evergreen REIT, LP.

Evergreen REIT, LP, is a real estate investment trust owning
interest in entities that own tenant in common, limited
partnership, and/or general partnership interest in three
self-storage facilities.

Store It REIT filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection (Bankr.
S.D. Tex. Case No. 18-32179) on April 27, 2018, listing $13.18
million in total assets and $127,143 in total liabilities. The
petition was signed by William J. Carden, president, and director.
Judge Marvin Isgur presides over the case.  The Debtor tapped
Deirdre Carey Brown, Esq., at Hoover Slovacek LLP, as its
bankruptcy counsel.

On July 3, 2018, the Office of the U.S. Trustee appointed an
official committee of equity security holders. The equity committee
tapped Polsinelli PC as its legal counsel.

The equity committee has sought the appointment of an examiner in
the company's Chapter 11 case.

The Debtor has filed a plan of liquidation and disclosure
statement.


TETON BUILDINGS: $800K Cash Sale of All Assets to Asoka Approved
----------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Marvin Isgur of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern
District of Texas authorized Teton Buildings, LLC's sale of
substantially all assets to Asoka, LLC, and its permitted
successors and assigns for $1 million, pursuant to their Asset
Purchase Agreement, dated as of Oct. 31, 2019.

The Purchaser will pay the Seller an aggregate sum in cash of
$800,000 less the actual amounts paid by the Purchaser to the
Landlord for arrearages owed by the Seller under the terms of the
Lease and less the Deposit.  In addition to the Cash Consideration,
15 months following the Closing, the Purchaser will pay the Seller
an aggregate amount in cash equal to the lesser of (i) Net Profit
multiplied by 0.10, or (ii) $200,000.

The relief requested in the Sale Motion is granted in its entirety
and the Agreement is approved, subject to the terms and conditions
contained in the Order.

The sale is free and clear of all Liens of any kind (other than the
Permitted Liens).

At the Closing, the Debtor will be, and is, authorized, empowered,
and directed to sell the Acquired Assets, including the Assumed
Contracts and Assumed Leases, to the Purchaser.

For the avoidance of doubt, and notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in the Order or the Agreement with Purchaser, the
substantially completed modular unit paid for by Helmerich and
Payne International Drilling Co. ("H&P") and located at the
Debtor's Warehouse, as well as other modular unit frames or
materials owned by H&P at the Warehouse, are Excluded Assets under
the terms of the Agreement and are not being sold or transferred to
the Purchaser as part of the Acquired Assets.  

Subject to the terms of the Agreement and the occurrence of the
Closing, the assumption by the Debtor of the Assumed Contracts and
Assumed Leases and the sale and assignment of the same to the
Purchaser, as provided for or contemplated by the Agreement, is
authorized and approved.

In accordance with its rights under the Agreement, the Purchaser
has designated the contract entered into on June 22, 2018 between
the Debtor and Camp Young Judaea, Inc. ("CYJ") as an executory
contract to be assumed by the Debtor and assigned to the Purchaser
at the Closing, and the Debtor and the Purchaser have amended
Schedule 2.1 of the Agreement to reflect that the CYJ Contract is
included among the Acquired Assets.  

The Purchaser and CYJ have agreed to the following terms relating
to the completion of the project described in the CYJ Contract:

     a. Upon assignment of the CYJ Contract to the Purchaser at the
Closing, the CYJ Contract will by modified to provide that: (i) the
Purchaser will complete the CYJ Project at no additional cost to
CYJ; (ii) the Purchaser will give the CYJ Project priority over all
other projects and will complete the CYJ Project prior to the
completion of any new project; (iii) CYJ will complete the site
preparation necessary for completion of the CYJ Project (including
obtaining all necessary permits and approvals) by March 16, 2020;
(iv) the Purchaser will deliver the buildings to CYJ Project site
by April 30, 2020; (v) CYJ will obtain a certificate of occupancy
for the CYJ Project by May 15, 2020; and (vi) the Purchaser will
complete all open punch list items by June 1, 2020.

     b. To the extent not already provided, CYJ will provide the
Purchaser as soon as practicable with copies of all plans, drawings
and other materials that relate to the CYJ Project.  In addition,
CYJ will provide such additional documents, information and
cooperation as may be reasonably requested by the Purchaser from
time to time in connection with completion of the CYJ Project at
the earliest possible date.

     c. Promptly following the Closing, CYJ will take such action
as is necessary to abate the lawsuit styled Camp Young Judaea, Inc.
v. Arthur Hollingsworth, et al., pending before the 269th Judicial
District Court of Harris County, Texas.  Promptly following
completion of the CYJ Project, CYJ will take such action as is
necessary to dismiss with prejudice all claims asserted in the
lawsuit.  

     d. The Purchaser will keep CYJ regularly updated by providing
a telephonic report every two weeks on the progress of the CYJ
Project and the steps that are being taken toward completion.  At
the request of the Purchaser, CYJ will provide telephonic reports
on its progress in completing site preparation and in obtaining
necessary permits and approvals.

As adequate protection for personal property tax claims asserted
by following tax entities: Brazoria County Tax Office, Dimmit
County, and Harris County, et al. ("Certain Taxing Entities”"),
and prior to the distribution of any sale proceeds to any other
creditor, the total amount of  $265,304 ("Reserve Amount") will be
reserved by the Debtor in the DIP bank account at Plains Capital
Bank (Account # xxxxxx6903) as adequate protection for the secured
claims of the Certain Taxing Entities.  

Specifically, the Reserve Amount consists of the following amounts:
(i) $90,117 for Brazoria County Tax Office; (ii) $52,347 for Dimmit
County; and (iii) $122,841 for Harris County, et al.  The liens of
the Certain Taxing Entities will attach to their respective portion
of the Reserve Amount to the same extent and with the same priority
as the liens they now hold against the tangible personal property
of the Debtor.  The Reserve Amount will be adequate protection and
will constitute neither the allowance of the claims of the Certain
Taxing Entities, nor a floor on the amounts they may be entitled to
receive in satisfaction of their claims against the Debtor.  All
parties' rights to object to the priority, validity, amount, and
extent of the claims and liens asserted by the Certain Taxing
Entities are fully preserved.  The Debtor will distribute the
respective Reserve Amount to the Certain Taxing Entities as soon as
practicable after the date the claims of the Certain Taxing
Entities become allowed claims.

The automatic stay provisions of section 362 of the Bankruptcy Code
are vacated and modified to the extent necessary to implement the
terms and conditions of the Agreement and the provisions of the
Order.

Unless the Purchaser defaults on its performance, CYJ will not
assert any new claims and will abate all present assertions of
claims governed by paragraphs 23 and 24 of the Order.

A copy of the APA is avaialble at https://tinyurl.com/ql29cgw from
PacerMonitor.com free of charge.

                     About Teton Buildings

Teton Buildings, LLC -- http://tetonbuildings.com/-- is a modular
building construction company located in Houston, Texas, serving
the multi-family, hospitality, oil field service, energy &
industrial, government, disaster recovery, medical, park model, and
tiny housing industries.  The Company builds man camps and
workforce housing, worker villages, commercial kitchens, offices,
heli-camps and all other space needs.  For ore than 45 years, Teton
Buildings has served the US with modular building solutions for
public and private sectors.

The Debtor sought Chapter 11 (Bankr. S.D. Tex. Case No. 19-35811)
on Oct. 16, 2019.  In the petition signed by Phil Hickman,
authorized representative, the Debtor was estimated to have assets
and liabilities in the range of $1 million to $10 million.  The
Debtor tapped Ryan Anthony O'Connor, Esq., and Matthew Scott Okin,
Esq., at Okin Adams LLP as counsel.  The case is assigned to Judge
Marvin Isgur.


THOMAS HUDSON: Court Okays $1.85MM Sale of Jacksonville Property
----------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Jerry Funk of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle
District of Florida authorized Thomas Hudson and Lyudmila Hudson to
sell the real property located at 128-130 West Adams St.,
Jacksonville, Fla.

The property will be sold to Nouveau Management Group, LLC for
$1.85 million "free and clear" of liens, claims, and encumbrances.

The sale proceeds will be used to pay off all secured claims at
closing.

Thomas Hudson and Lyudmila Hudson sought Chapter 11 protection
(Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 19-02992) on Aug. 5, 2019.  The Debtors
tapped Jason A. Burgess, Esq., at The Law Offices of Jason A.
Burgess, LLC as their legal counsel.


TIGIST KEBEDE: $1M Sale of DC Property to Gugda & Jambere Approved
------------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Klinette H. Kindred of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Eastern District of Virginia authorized Tigist Kebede's sale of the
real property located at 5808 14th Street NW, Washington DC to
Samson Gugda and Lukedey Jambere for $915,000, plus a buyer's
premium of $91,500, pursuant to their Sale Agreement.

The Debtor is authorized to pay compensation to Tranzon Fox in the
sum of $64,050 at closing from the proceeds of sale.

The Order is effective immediately and will not be subject to a
14-day stay as provided in Bankruptcy Rule 6004(h).

The Debtor will retain the net proceeds from the sale pending
confirmation of a Plan of Reorganization or other Order from the
Court.

Within 30 days of the closing on the sale of the Property, the
Debtor will file a Report of Sale with the Court.

Tigist Kebede sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. E.D. Va. Case
No. 18-12086) on June 13, 2018.  The Debtor tapped Jeffrey M.
Sherman, Esq., at Law Offices of Jeffrey M. Sherman as counsel.  On
Aug. 30, 2019, the Court appointed Fox & Associates Partners, Inc.,
trading as Tranzon Fox, as auctioneer/realtor.



TPC GROUP: Fitch Puts 'B-' LongTerm IDR on Watch Negative
---------------------------------------------------------
Fitch Ratings placed TPC Group, Inc.'s ratings on Negative Watch,
including the company's 'B-' Long-Term Issuer Default Rating,
'BB-'/'RR1' ABL rating and 'B-'/'RR4' secured notes rating,
following the Port Neches plant explosion.

The Negative Watch reflects heightened cash flow and financial
flexibility risks following the Port Neches plant explosion, which
resulted in the facility halting operations indefinitely. The
incident is recent and many of the details, including short- to
medium-term cash outflows, the cost of rebuilding the plant, and
insurance outcomes, remain unclear. TPC's ratings are otherwise
supported by strong industry dynamics and a favorable contract
structure. Additional ratings concerns include the company's small
size and scale (the company now relies on just one manufacturing
plant) which heightens the impact of unplanned utilization issues,
and the potential for MTBE volatility as contract floors roll off.

Fitch intends to resolve the Watch during 1H 2020 following further
clarity on the events that caused the explosion, expectation of
insurance payouts which sufficiently cover lost cash flows and
match the anticipated Port Neches rebuild in both cost and
duration, the retention of customers under force majeure
provisions, and a successful transfer of some operations to the
Houston plant such that Houston can operate near full capacity.

KEY RATING DRIVERS

Port Neches Plant Incident: On Nov. 27, 2019, Port Neches, Texas
residents reported two explosions and an ongoing fire at TPC's Port
Neches plant. The situation is still being monitored and damage
assessment is in the very early stages, as the company still does
not have access to the plant itself. The plant seems to have
sustained significant damage, and Fitch understands that it will
take significant time and capital investment in order to resume
operations. The company maintains a comprehensive insurance policy
tower; however, at this time, the extent of any potential payout is
uncertain. The operations at Port Neches accounted for roughly 25%
of total EBITDA, and management has indicated that it currently
intends to reestablish operations at the plant. However, in the
absence of cost or time estimates, the company has yet to make a
final determination. Management has also indicated that it has
invoked force majeure provisions on all of its contracts, which it
expects will be sufficient to maintain the integrity of the
contracts. Fitch believes that the insurance claims and
enforceability of force majeure anchors on the events that caused
the explosions and will monitor the situation and its potential
impact on credit risks.

Limited Size and Scale: Following the Port Neches incident, TPC now
relies on one manufacturing complex which generates all of its
earnings (Port Neches had been its second plant). Any operational
disruptions can significantly affect its cash flow generation, as
evidenced by the company's pressured financial profile when the
dehydro unit went down for nearly all of 1Q18. In the near term,
Fitch will monitor the company's ability to take on additional
capacity at the Houston plant, including running the hydrotreating
unit at maximum rates.

Heightened Importance of Liquidity: Fitch views much of the short
to medium-term risk related to the Port Neches incident as stemming
from cash burn and financial flexibility, rather than credit
metrics. Fitch believes the company has sufficient liquidity to
meet insurance deductibles and pay expenses related to the
emergency response. Though Fitch believes that the short-term
operational risks are manageable, additional cash costs related to
the incident are uncertain. Until the event is resolved, assets at
Port Neches are unlikely to count toward the company's borrowing
base, leading to a period of lower liquidity.

New Contracts Reduce Volatility: Under its new C4 processing
agreements, the company is able to price in a fixed margin from its
C4 suppliers with the potential for further upside based on
end-market prices. This generally allows TPC to realize a
predictable gross profit margin during the course of year subject
to temporary margin swings during months where prices have
drastically changed. Nevertheless, the risk is mitigated over the
course of a year.

In particular, Fitch intends to monitor the enforceability of the
force majeure provisions within TPC's contracts. While Fitch
understands that incidents like the one at Port Neches are
typically covered under most force majeure provisions, the duration
may vary; and in the event that the incident was the result of
negligence or was otherwise not out of TPC's control, may not be
enforceable. However, Fitch notes that since TPC is the only
significant C4 processor in the United States, there is economic
incentive for both customers and suppliers to continue their
relationship with TPC if they can.

DERIVATION SUMMARY

TPC Group has operated with similar leverage to SK Blue Holdings,
LP (B/Stable) and substantially lower leverage than Calumet
Specialty Products Partners, L.P. (B-/Stable). Following the Port
Neches incident, Fitch still expects TPC's gross leverage to be
consistent with a 'B-' rating; however, Fitch notes that a sizable
portion of the company's cash flow and growth prospects will be
determined by the size and duration of the insurance claims related
to the incident. Additionally, should the determination be made
that the incident was the result of negligence or was otherwise not
out of TPC's control, the company will likely find it difficult to
retain customers and receive the anticipated insurance claims. This
heightened event risk sets TPC apart from its peers, who are larger
in size and scale as evidenced by access to an expansive and
flexible logistics/production networks both globally (SK Blue) and
domestically (SK Blue & Calumet). This compares against TPC's
reliance on its remaining functional manufacturing facility in
Houston. Calumet and TPC are similarly exposed to commodity prices
and have historically had high single-digit margins as opposed to
SK Blue's specialized product mix, as evidenced by the company's
slightly higher EBITDA margins of around 17% by 2021. These credit
strengths enable SK Blue to support a higher debt load than TPC and
Calumet a subsequently higher IDR.

KEY ASSUMPTIONS

  - Insurance claims sufficient to largely fund the Port Neches
    rebuild;

  - Successful transfer of some operations to Houston, with close
    to full utilization;

  - Stable results in the Performance Products segment;

  - Margins roughly flat, with minimal additional competitive
    pressures.

KEY RECOVERY RATING ASSUMPTIONS

The recovery analysis assumes that TPC would be reorganized as a
going-concern in bankruptcy rather than liquidated. Fitch believes
that a going-concern approach is more likely given the high
greenfield costs. Fitch's recovery scenario depicts a prolonged
period of further unplanned disruptions or other operational
hurdles at the Houston plant that signal a weakness of the
company's asset base and operations, alongside an inability to
fully fund the rebuild of the Port Neches plant. As a result, the
company loses market share, worsening the negotiating power and
renewal rates of the existing contracts, resulting in increased
cash flow risk and potential for losses. The unplanned disruptions
also stress the financial flexibility of the company, as repairs
can be both cost and time extensive.

Going-Concern (GC) Approach

Fitch assumed a going-concern EBITDA of $122 million, reflective of
the Houston plant operating at nearly full capacity, retention of
customer contracts, and no contribution from Port Neches.

The 4.0x multiple reflects Fitch's view that the C4 and isobutylene
derivatives have minimal cash flow risk while the MTBE assets are
rolling off minimum floor contracting and being renewed at spot.
The isobutylene derivatives are high margin, low growth and have
historically operated at high utilization rates. The single
facility risk, uncertainty surrounding customer contracts, and
potential for competition due to the loss of capacity at Port
Neches weigh on the multiple.

Fitch assumes a borrowing base of $90 million on the ABL, fully
drawn at default as the company would borrow for added liquidity.

The enterprise value, $489 million, is deducted by 10% for
administrative claims, leaving $440 million available to creditors.
The ABL facility (revolver and FILO tranche) recover within the RR1
level and are rated 'BB-' and the senior secured notes recover at
RR4 level and are rated 'B-'.

RATING SENSITIVITIES

Developments That May, Individually or Collectively, Lead to
Positive Rating Action

  -- Improved operational stability signaled by high utilization
     across both segments, a decreased risk of unplanned
     disruptions and increased size and scale;

  -- Continued, favorable contract terms, allowing TPC to
     maintain its low margin volatility;

  -- Continued strong operational performance with Total Debt
     with Equity Credit/Operating EBITDA sustained around 3.5x
     and/or FFO Adjusted Leverage around 4.0x

Developments That May, Individually or Collectively, Lead to
Negative Rating Action

  -- Insurance payouts insufficiently cover lost cash flows and
     match the anticipated Port Neches rebuild;

  -- Continued unplanned disruptions (outside of weather/third
     party incidents), signaling a continued weakness in the
     company's asset base;

  -- Inability to renew contracts at current terms leading to
     greater cash flow volatility;

  -- Reduced liquidity driven by negative FCF increasing
     refinance risk;

  -- FFO Fixed Charge Coverage trending below 1.5x.

LIQUIDITY AND DEBT STRUCTURE

Fitch expects the borrowing base under TPC's ABL to be lowered,
following the Port Neches incident. The inventory at Port Neches,
much of which is being prepared to be transferred, currently does
not contribute to the borrowing base - however, Fitch expects the
company's cash on hand to be sufficient to bridge any gap in ABL
availability. The ABL has a FILO tranche of $7.5 million.

The company's maturity profile is otherwise solid, with no
significant maturities until 2024, when the $930 million in secured
notes come due.

ESG CONSIDERATIONS

Unless otherwise disclosed in this section, the highest level of
ESG credit relevance is a score of 3 - ESG issues are credit
neutral or have only a minimal credit impact on the entity, either
due to their nature or the way in which they are being managed by
the entity.

TPC has an ESG Relevance Score of 4 for Waste & Hazardous Materials
- related to its Port Neches plant explosion and its associated
environmental impact in Port Neches and neighboring towns.


TTM TECHNOLOGIES: Egan-Jones Lowers Senior Unsecured Ratings to B+
------------------------------------------------------------------
Egan-Jones Ratings Company, on December 10, 2019, downgraded the
foreign currency and local currency senior unsecured ratings on
debt issued by TTM Technologies, Incorporated to B+ from BB-.

TTM Technologies, Incorporated is a leading global printed circuit
board manufacturer, focusing on quick-turn and volume production of
technologically advanced PCBs, backplane assemblies and
electro-mechanical solutions as well as a global designer and
manufacturer of radio frequency (RF) and microwave components.



UNITED METHODIST: Zane Public Sale of Real Properties Approved
--------------------------------------------------------------
Judge William V. Altenberger of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of Illinois authorized The United Methodist
Village, Inc.'s live public auction of the real property,
consisting of housing for the independent living and assisted
living portions of the business.

The Debtor is allowed to employ Zane Parrott of Parrot Real Estate
& Auction Co., Inc. to sell the following real property by live,
public auction with online bidding:

      Address          Reserve     Amount of Lien
      -------          -------     --------------
     1800 Pine         $30,000         $0
     1802 Pine         $30,000         $0
     1804 Pine         $30,000         $0
     1806 Pine         $30,000         $0
     1808 Pine         $30,000         $0
     1812 Pine         $30,000         $0
     1814 Pine         $30,000         $0
     1816 Pine         $30,000         $0
     1811 Pine     32 units with    $426,000
  (McKiou Center)   a reserve of
                    $25,000 each
     1801 Pine       3 units at        $0
                    $20,000 each
     1701 16th St      $30,000         $0
     1516 17th St      $70,000         $0
     1650 Methodist  4 units at        $0  
        Street      $20,000 each
     1652 Methodist  3 units at        $0  
        Street      $20,000 each
     1654 Methodist  5 units at        $0  
        Street      $20,000 each
     1656 Methodist  5 units at        $0  
        Street      $20,000 each
     1701 Ash St.     $60,000          $0
     1703 Ash St.     $30,000          $0          
     1705 Ash St.     $30,000          $0          
     1709 Ash St.     $30,000          $0          
     1711 Ash St.     $30,000          $0
     1517 Cedar St. 4 units at         $0
                   $20,000 each
     1520 Cedar St. 4 units at         $0
                   $25,000 each
     1616 Cedar St.   $25,000          $0
     1158 Pine        $20,000          $0

    Approximately 10  $1,250/acre      $0
     acres of scrub
        ground

The lien of Citizens National Bank will attach to the proceeds of
the sale to the extent, priority, and validity of such lien.

The Debtor will segregate the proceeds of the sale in a separate
debtor in possession account and will not disburse the proceeds
without first seeking leave of Court.

The 14-day waiting period under Bankruptcy Rule 6004(h) is waived
so that the sale can proceed expeditiously to closing.

The counsel for the moving party will serve a copy of the Order on
all interested parties not served electronically.

            About The United Methodist Village Inc.

The United Methodist Village, Inc., is a non-profit nursing home
based in Lawrenceville, Illinois.

The United Methodist Village, Inc. filed for bankruptcy protection
under Chapter 11 (Bankr. S.D. Ill. Case No. 19-60046) on Feb. 22,
2019.  In the petition signed by Ashli Wesley, administrator, the
Debtor disclosing $13,779,571 in assets and $7,164,533 in
liabilities.  The case has been assigned to Judge Laura K. Grandy.
Roy J. Dent, Esq., at Dent Law Office, Ltd. represents the Debtor
as counsel.


VENTURE WEST: Gets CCAA Stay; MNP Ltd. Named Monitor
----------------------------------------------------
An initial order was granted by the Court of Queen's Bench of
Alberta under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act, as amended,
in respect of Tlicho Landtran Transport Ltd., 1456998 Alberta Ltd.,
1456982 Alberta Ltd. and Ventures West Transport Limited
Partnership.  The Initial Order provides for relief including a
stay of proceedings until and including Dec. 8, 2019 pursuant to
which creditors are restrained from enforcing or exercising any
rights or remedies against the Companies.  Under the CCAA, the Stay
may be extended on such terms and with such modifications as the
Court considers appropriate.

MNP Ltd. was appointed as Monitor in the CCAA proceedings.

On Dec. 6, 2019, a further Court application is scheduled at which
the Companies will be seeking the further relief, including an
extension of the Stay until and including Feb. 14, 2019, and
approval of a sale process for the Companies' assets.  In addition,
the Court granted an order approving the Companies entering into a
sale process with respect to all of the Companies' transportation
equipment consisting of approximately 230 trucks, tanker trailers
and mobile office trailers, shipping containers and miscellaneous
shop equipment.

Binding Offers must be delivered, mailed or emailed so as to be
received by the Monitor on or before 5:00 p.m. (Mountain Standard
Time) on Feb. 14, 2020.

Further information, contact:

   Julie Kennedy
   Tel: 403-537-7610
   Email: Julie.Kennedy@mnp.ca

Monitor can be reached at:

   MNP Ltd.
   1500, 640 - 5th Avenue SW
   Calgary, AB T2P 3G4
   Attention: Vanessa Allen
   Tel: (403) 477-9661
   Email: vanessa.allen@mnp.ca

Counsel for the Monitor:

   Cassels Brock & Blackwell LLP
   Suite 3810, Bankers Hall West
   888 3rd Street SW Calgary, AB T2P 5C5
   Attention: Jeffrey Oliver
   Tel: (403) 351-2921
   Email: joliver@cassels.com

Counsel for the Companies:

   McMillan LLP
   1700, 421 - 7th Avenue SW
   Calgary, AB T2P 4K9

   Adam C. Maerov
   Tel: (403) 215-2752
   Email: adam.maerov@mcmillan.ca

   Kourtney Rylands
   Tel: (403) 355-332
   Email: kourtney.rylands@mcmillan.ca6

   Preet Saini
   Tel: (403) 531-4716
   Email: preet.saini@mcmillan.ca

Copies of the Initial Order and other related documents in
connection with these CCAA proceedings have been posted on the
Monitor's website at https://mnpdebt.ca/ventures.

Ventures West Transport -- http://www.ventureswest.net/--
specializes in bulk commodities, and focusing on operations in the
four western provinces, the Yukon, and the Northwest Territories.


VERITY HEALTH: NantWorks' Objection Deadlines in Assets Sale Moved
------------------------------------------------------------------
Judge Ernest M. Robles of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Central
District of California continued the hearing and extended the
objection deadline for NantWorks, LLC regarding the order (1)
approving the form of asset purchase agreement for stalking horse
bidder and for prospective overbidders; and (2) approving auction
sale format, bidding procedures and stalking horse bid protections
in connection with the sale by Verity Health System of California,
Inc. and its affiliated Debtors of assets, as stipulated.

All of the parties to the Stipulation stipulated and the Court
granted as follows:

     A. The Hearing Date will be continued from Dec. 11, 2019 at
10:00 a.m. (PT), to Dec. 18, 2019 at 10:00 a.m. (PT).

     B. The Objection Deadline for NantWorks will be extended from
Nov. 27, 2019 at 4:00 p.m. (PT) to Dec. 4, 2019 at 4:00 (PT).

     C. The Reply Deadline for the Debtors will be extended from
Dec. 4, 2019 at 4:00 (PT) to Dec. 11, 2019 at 4:00 p.m. (PT).

                  About Verity Health System

Verity Health System -- https://www.verity.org/ -- operates as a
non-profit health care system in the state of California, with
approximately 1,680 inpatient beds, six active emergency rooms, a
trauma center, and a host of medical specialties, including
tertiary and quaternary care.  Verity's two Southern California
hospitals are St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood and St. Vincent
Medical Center in Los Angeles.  In Northern California, O'Connor
Hospital in San Jose, St. Louise Regional Hospital in Gilroy, Seton
Medical Center in Daly City and Seton Coastside in Moss Beach are
part of Verity Health.  Verity Health also includes Verity Medical
Foundation.  

With more than 100 primary care and specialty physicians, VMF
offers medical, surgical and related healthcare services for people
of all ages at community-based, multi-specialty clinics
conveniently located in areas served by the Verity hospitals.
Verity Health System was created in a transaction approved by
California Attorney General Kamala Harris and completed in December
2015.

Verity Health System of California, Inc., and its affiliates sought
protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. C.D.
Cal. Lead Case No. 18-20151) on Aug. 31, 2018.  In the petition
signed by CEO Richard Adcock, Verity Health estimated assets of
$500 million to $1 billion and liabilities of $500 million to $1
billion.  

Judge Ernest M. Robles oversees the cases.

The Debtors tapped Dentons US LLP as their bankruptcy counsel;
Berkeley Research Group, LLC, as financial advisor; Cain Brothers
as investment banker; and Kurtzman Carson Consultants as claims
agent.

The Office of the U.S. Trustee appointed an official committee of
unsecured creditors on Sept. 17, 2018.


WAYLAND GROUP: Files for Bankruptcy Under CCAA
----------------------------------------------
Wayland Group Corp.,  Maricann Inc. and Nanoleaf Technologies Inc.
applied for and received an order for protection pursuant to the
Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act, as amended, from the Ontario
Superior Court of Justice Commercial List.  The Initial Order was
amended on Dec. 4, 2019.

The Amended and Restated Initial Order includes among other things,
a stay of proceedings against the Companies, and the appointment of
PricewaterhouseCoopers Inc., LIT as monitor of the Companies.

The Initial Order, among other things:

a) Approved a stay of proceedings up to and including Dec. 16,
2019, which applies
   against the Applicants and its Non-Filing Affiliates and their
property and
   business;

b) Authorized the Companies to borrow under a debtor-in possession
credit facility
   with The House of Turlock Ltd.;

c) Granted a first ranking charge, in the amount of $1,000,000,
over all of the
   property of the Companies, as security for fees and
disbursements of the
   Monitor, the Monitor's counsel and the Companies' counsel;

d) Granted a second ranking charge, in the amount of $200,000, over
all of the
   property of the Companies, as security for the indemnity granted
to the
   Companies’ directors and officers;

e) Granted a third ranking charge over the property of the
Companies in favor of
   the DIP Lender as security for the DIP Facility; and

f) Granted a fourth priority charge, in the amount of $250,000 over
the property
   of the Companies as security for the indemnity granted to the
Companies'
   directors and officers.

In accordance with section 23 (1)(ii)(b) of the CCAA and the
Amended and Restated Initial Order, a notice was sent to all of the
Companies' creditors who are owed $1,000 or more.

Monitor can be reached at:

   PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS INC.
   18 York Street, Suite 2600
   Toronto, ON M5J 0B2

   Michael McTaggart
   Tel: 416-687-8924
   Email: michael.mctaggart@pwc.com

   Gregory Prince
   Tel: 416-814-5752
   Email: gregory.n.prince@pwc.com

   Tracey Weaver
   Email: tracey.weaver@pwc.com

   Christine Sinclair
   Email: christine.l.sinclair@pwc.com
   
   Tyler Ray
   Email: tyler.ray@pwc.com

   Wilson Kwan
   Email: wilson.kwan@pwc.ca

Counsel to the Monitor:

   BENNETT JONES LLP
   3400 One First Canadian Place
   P.O. Box 130
   Toronto, ON M5X 1A4
   Fax: 416-863-1716

   Sean Zweig
   Tel: 416-777-6254
   Email: ZweigS@bennettjones.com

   Michael Shakra
   Tel: 416-777-6236
   Email: ShakraM@bennettjones.com

Counsel to the Companies:

   OSLER, HOSKIN & HARCOURT LLP
   Box 50, 1 First Canadian Place
   100 King Street West, Suite 6200
   Toronto, ON M5X 1B8
   Fax: 416-862-6666

   Marc Wasserman
   Tel: 416-862-4908
   Email: mwasserman@osler.com

   Shawn Irving
   Tel: 416-862-4733
   Email: sirving@osler.com

   Karin Sachar
   Tel: 416-862-5949
   Email: KSachar@osler.com

   Dave Rosenblat
   Tel: 416-862-5673
   Email: drosenblat@osler.com

Counsel to the DIP Lender:

   AIRD & BERLIS LLP
   Brookfield Place
   181 Bay Street, Suite 1800
   Toronto, ON M5J 2T9

   Kathryn Esaw
   Tel: 416-865-4707
   Email: kesaw@airdberlis.com

Copies of the Initial Order and other related documents in
connection with these CCAA proceedings have been posted on the
Monitor's website at http://www.pwc.com/ca/wayland.

Wayland Group Corp. -- http://www.waylandgroup.com/-- operates as
a specialty pharmaceutical company.  The Company offers a variety
of medical cannabis products in oil and flower forms.  Wayland
Group provides cultivation, extraction, formulation, and
distribution services.  Wayland Group serves patients worldwide.


WESTERN COMMS: $13M Sale of Bend Property to Next Approved
----------------------------------------------------------
Judge Trish M. Brown of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District
of Oregon authorized Western Communications, Inc.'s sale of the
real property and improvements located at 1777 SW Chandler Avenue,
Bend, Oregon to Next Development, LLC or its assigns, pursuant to
the terms of their Real Estate Purchase and Sale Agreement, for
$13.15 million.

The sale is free and clear of all Interests, with any and all
Interests attaching to the sale proceeds.

The sale proceeds will be distributed as follows:

     (a) A commission as authorized by the Order Authorizing
Employment of CBRE, Inc. and Compass Commercial Real Estate
Services & Real Estate Brokers for Debtor (Bend Property) entered
on May 6, 2019;

     (b) Real estate taxes owing to Deschutes County;

     (c) United States Trustee fee of $132,500;

     (d) $10,988,783 to Sandton Credit Solutions Master Fund III,
LP;

     (e) Closing costs to the extent such costs are usual and
customary for a transaction of the kind authorized by the Order;

     (f) $100,000 as a reduction in the purchase price of the
Property under the Purchase Agreement in exchange for the Buyer
accepting title subject to that certain Revised City of Bend
Development Agreement recorded July 15, 1999 (Vol. 1999, Page
34639, Deschutes County Records);

     (g) $300,000 to be held back by Debtor for payment of allowed
professional fees and expenses; and

     (h) The remaining proceeds to be distributed pursuant to
further Court order.

The Order is without prejudice to the right of Debtor to recover
from the proceeds of Sandton's collateral the reasonable, necessary
costs and expenses of preserving or disposing of, such property,
pursuant to Section 506 (e) of the Bankruptcy Code, and such rights
are preserved.

All stays, including, without limitation, those arising under
Bankruptcy Rule 6004, are inapplicable and the Order will go into
effect immediately upon its entry.

                  About Western Communications

Western Communications, Inc., is a small market newspaper, niche
publishing, printing, and digital media company with publications
spread throughout Oregon (six publications) and California (two
publications).  It is headquartered in Bend, Oregon.

Western Communications sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Ore. Case No. 19-30223) on Jan. 22,
2019.  It previously sought bankruptcy protection (Bank. D. Oregon
Case No. 11-37319) on Aug. 23, 2011.

At the time of the filing, the Debtor estimated assets of $10
million to $50 million and liabilities of $10 million to $50
million.  The case has been assigned to Judge Trish M. Brown.
Tonkon Torp LLP is the Debtor's counsel.


WINDSTREAM HOLDINGS: Seeks More Time to File Bankruptcy Plan
------------------------------------------------------------
Windstream Holdings, Inc. and its debtor affiliates asked the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York to extend
the exclusivity period to file a Chapter 11 plan to Aug. 25, 2020,
and the period to solicit votes for the plan to Oct. 26, 2020.

Due to time spent investigating, mediating, and litigating issues
surrounding the Uniti arrangement, additional time is needed to
facilitate further plan discussions, according to Windstream's
attorney Stephen Hessler, Esq.

"The litigation against Uniti is a gating item in these chapter 11
cases that must be resolved in order for the Debtors to formulate a
go-forward business model and file a viable Chapter 11 plan," Mr.
Hessler said.

                   About Windstream Holdings

Windstream Holdings, Inc. and its subsidiaries provide advanced
network communications and technology solutions for businesses
across the United States.  They also offer broadband, entertainment
and security solutions to consumers and small businesses primarily
in rural areas in 18 states.

Windstream Holding Inc. and its subsidiaries filed for bankruptcy
protection (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Lead Case No. 19-22312) on Feb. 25,
2019.

The Debtors had total assets of $13,126,435,000 and total debt of
$11,199,070,000 as of Jan. 31, 2019.

The Debtors tapped Kirkland & Ellis LLP and Kirkland & Ellis
International LLP as counsel; PJT Partners LP as financial advisor
and investment banker; Alvarez & Marsal North America LLC as
restructuring advisor; and Kurtzman Carson Consultants as notice
and claims agent.

The U.S. Trustee for Region 2 appointed an official committee of
unsecured creditors on March 12, 2019. The committee tapped
Morrison & Foerster LLP as its legal counsel, AlixPartners, LLP as
its financial advisor, and Perella Weinberg Partners LP, as its
investment banker.


WOODCREST ACE: Seeks Disclosure Statement Approval
--------------------------------------------------
On Jan. 7, 2020, at 2:00 p.m., Woodcrest Ace Hardware, Inc. and its
Affiliated Debtors will move the Court for an order approving their
joint disclosure statement, filed November 15, 2019, as having
adequate information.

The Debtors believe that the disclosure statement provides
sufficient information to creditors affected by the plan.  Among
other things, the disclosure statement addresses the events that
led to the Debtor's bankruptcy filings.

It is based upon this notice of motion and motion, the supporting
memorandum of points and authorities, the declaration of Paul
Shanabarger, exhibits filed, the arguments of counsel, and any and
all other evidence presented to the court at or before the
scheduled hearing.

A full-text copy of the motion is available at
https://tinyurl.com/v3la9eu from PacerMonitor.com at no charge.

                 About Woodcrest Ace Hardware
  
Based in Riverside, California, Woodcrest Ace Hardware Inc. filed a
voluntary petition under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr.
C.D. Cal. Case No. 19-13127) on April 12, 2019.  In the petition
signed by Paul Douglas Shanabarger, president, the Debtor was
estimated to have $1 million in both assets and liabilities.
Rosenstein & Associates, led by Robert B. Rosenstein, is the
Debtor's counsel.


WPX ENERGY: Fitch Puts BB LongTerm IDR on Rating Watch Positive
---------------------------------------------------------------
Fitch Ratings placed WPX Energy, Inc.'s 'BB' Long-Term Issuer
Default Rating on Rating Watch Positive following the announcement
of WPX's proposed acquisition of Delaware Basin assets. In
addition, Fitch has placed the senior unsecured debt ratings on
Positive Watch, and has affirmed the senior secured credit
facility.

The Rating Watch Positive considers WPX's announcement that it was
acquiring Delaware Basin assets in a deal valued at approximately
$2.5 billion to be funded with new senior unsecured notes, equity
to the seller and cash from the balance sheet. The transaction,
which adds approximately 58,500 net acres, daily production of 53
mboe/d and 578 mmboe of proved reserves, at YE 2018, largely in
Winkler and Ward counties. In total, WPX will have approximately
184,000 Permian acres, total production of 226.4 mboe/d and almost
5,000 Delaware drilling locations. The assets are immediately
accretive to WPX's FCF profile.

As part of the transaction, WPX will issue up to $900 million of
new senior unsecured notes. At the time of the launch, Fitch will
rate the notes 'BB'/'RR4' and place the notes on Ratings Watch
Positive, consistent with the other unsecured debt ratings. Upon
closing of the transaction, which is expected to occur in 2Q20
after a shareholder vote, Fitch anticipates resolving the Positive
Watch and upgrading WPX's IDR and subsequently all unsecured debt
issuances. Fitch believes WPX's pro-forma financial and operational
profile is in line with the agency's investment grade thresholds.

WPX's ratings are supported by the company's measured capital
program and hedge book, which provides double-digit production
growth, substantial forecast positive FCF, and strong leverage
metrics. The ratings also consider WPX's manageable maturity
profile, ample liquidity, and operational and financial flexibility
provided by its midstream agreements. Offsetting factors include
increasing shareholder friendly activity and future operational
risks associated with potentially further M&A.

KEY RATING DRIVERS

Acquisition Deepens Permian Footprint: WPX's acquisition adds
substantial inventory in the over pressured, oil-weighted core of
Winkler and Ward counties (53.0 mboe/d of production [70% oil] and
58,500 net acres). The transaction accelerates WPX's Permian
development program, which Fitch expects to exceed 175 mboe/d for
2020, and expands longer-term unit cost potential given the added
oil-weighted inventory. Fitch believes the transaction supports
additional operational efficiencies and financial flexibility as
the assets are integrated into WPX's development program.

Conservatively Financed: Fitch believes the $2.5 billion
transaction is conservatively funded given the large equity
component (approximately $1.6 billion or 65% of the total value).
The deal is structured to be leverage neutral, with no acquired
debt. Fitch believes the Felix transaction establishes a track
record for future M&A (location, asset profile, and funding mix) if
WPX elects to add further oil-weighted, Permian inventory.

Positive FCF, Strong Credit Metrics: WPX's conservative operational
strategy - capital program developed to meet net leverage target of
1.0x-1.5x and set at $50/bbl WTI - has enabled the company to
optimize financial flexibility. Under base case assumptions, Fitch
is forecasting greater than $500 million of FCF in 2020 and robust
credit metrics. Fitch forecasts debt/EBITDA will be 1.5x in 2019
and 1.3x in 2020. Debt/flowing barrel metrics are also projected to
remain strong at $13,653/bbl in 2019 and trending towards
$10,000/bbl in 2021.

Revolver Rating Affirmed: Fitch affirmed the revolver rating at
'BBB-.' The two-notch uplift from WPX's IDR reflects the
over-collateralization of the facility. Future upgrades to WPX's
IDR could result in a convergence of the IDR and revolver ratings.

DERIVATION SUMMARY

WPX is a liquids-oriented independent E&P company with pro-forma
net production of 226.4 thousand barrels of oil equivalent per day
(mboe/d), inclusive of the acquired assets. Production size is
greater than Murphy Oil Corporation (BB+/Stable; 203.1mboe/d [67%
liquids]) but smaller than Permian focused 'BBB' category peers.
WPX's unhedged cash netback of $19.5/boe (53% margin) is lower than
Murphy at $26.1/boe (66% margin). However, Fitch expects WPX's
unit-economics to improve as the percentage of production coming
from the Delaware Basin increases.

WPX's leverage profile, specifically total debt/EBITDA, which was
1.8x at YE 2018 and is forecasted to be 1.5x at YE 2019 is in line
with the 'BB' and 'BBB' category peer groups. Murphy had
debt/EBITDA ratios of 1.9x. From a debt/flowing barrel perspective,
at $12,855/bbl, WPX is stronger than Murphy and investment grade
peers Diamondback Energy, Inc (BBB/Stable) and Concho Resources,
Inc. (BBB/Stable) at Sept. 30, 2019.

KEY ASSUMPTIONS

Fitch's Key Assumptions Within its Rating Case for the Issuer

  - WTI oil prices of $57.50/bbl in 2019 and 2020, and $55/bbl
thereafter;

  - Henry Hub natural gas prices of $2.50/mcf through the
forecast;

  - NGLs priced to 25% of WTI;

  - Robust double digit production growth, annually;

  - 2022 maturity paid with FCF;

  - Increasing shareholder friendly activity.

RATING SENSITIVITIES

Developments That May, Individually or Collectively, Lead to
Positive Rating Action

For an upgrade:

  - Successful execution of the transaction;

For an upgrade to 'BB+' excluding the announced acquisition:

  - Continued Bakken execution and demonstrated ability to de-risk

    its non-Stateline Delaware development plans that lead to
    favorable unit economics and increased size, scale and
    diversification;

  - Mid-cycle Debt/EBITDA maintained below 2.0x (FFO Adjusted
    Leverage below 2.0x) on a sustained basis;

  - Debt/flowing barrel sustained below $20,000/bbl.

Unsuccessful execution of the transaction would result in a removal
of the Ratings Watch Positive. Leverage sensitivities are
consistent with higher-rated peers and are unlikely to change upon
future rating upgrades.

Developments That May, Individually or Collectively, Lead to
Negative Rating Action

  - Mid-cycle Debt/EBITDA above 3.0x (FFO Adjusted Leverage
    below 3.0x) on a sustained basis;

  - Debt/flowing barrel above $25,000/bbl;

  - Production trending below 120 mboe/d;

  - Change in capital allocation strategy resulting in neutral-
    to-negative FCF profile.

LIQUIDITY AND DEBT STRUCTURE

Undrawn $1.5 billion Revolver: As of Sept. 30, 2019, WPX had an
undrawn $1.5 billion revolving credit facility due April 17, 2023
and cash on hand of $13 million. Successful execution of the
transaction will like result in an increased borrowing base, which
was $2.1 billion as of Sept. 30, 2019. The revolver is subject to a
springing maturity on Oct. 15, 2021 if available liquidity minus
outstanding 2022 notes ($73 million outstanding) is less than $500
million.

Manageable Maturity Profile: WPX's maturity profile should permit
optimal financial flexibility for a pro-longed $55/bbl oil price
environment. WPX has $73 million due in 2022 and $400 million in
2023.

Sources of Information

Unless otherwise disclosed in this section, the highest level of
ESG credit relevance is a score of 3 - ESG issues are credit
neutral or have only a minimal credit impact on the entity, either
due to their nature or the way in which they are being managed by
the entity.


[*] Olshan Frome Promotes Jonathan Koevary to Bankruptcy Partner
----------------------------------------------------------------
Olshan Frome Wolosky LLP, one of the premier mid-sized law firms in
the country, on Dec. 16 disclosed that Jonathan Koevary has been
promoted to partner in the firm's Bankruptcy & Financial
Restructuring practice effective January 1, 2020.

"We are delighted to welcome Jonathan to the partnership," said
Michael Fox, leader of the firm's Bankruptcy & Financial
Restructuring practice.  "Jonathan is an excellent lawyer and
bankruptcy strategist, and a valuable member of the Bankruptcy team
who serves our clients with excellence."

Mr. Koevary handles bankruptcy and restructuring matters on behalf
of creditors, debtors, and investors and represents clients in
bankruptcy-related litigation.  He represents clients in all
aspects of Chapter 11 cases, in-court and out-of-court
restructurings, and bankruptcy and distressed related lawsuits.  He
also represents asset purchasers in distressed asset and M&A
transactions, and provides company and credit-specific legal
analysis to distressed investors and transactional advice to
businesses dealing with distressed entities.  Additionally,
Mr. Koevary represents international and domestic clients in
Chapter 15 foreign insolvency matters.

Mr. Koevary is an active member of the bankruptcy and restructuring
community, as a member of the Turnaround Management Association,
and as an author for publications, including The Bankruptcy
Strategist.  Prior to joining Olshan, he practiced in the
bankruptcy and restructuring groups of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind,
Wharton & Garrison LLP and Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP.  He
earned a J.D. from Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, where he was
Supervising Editor of the Cardozo Law Review and the recipient of a
Dean's Scholarship.  He earned a B.A. from Columbia University.

                About OlshanOlshan Frome Wolosky

OlshanOlshan Frome Wolosky LLP is a law firm based in New York,
representing major businesses and entrepreneurs in their most
significant transactions, problems and opportunities.  Olshan's
clients range from public companies, hedge, venture capital,
private equity and other investment funds to entrepreneurs and
private companies worldwide.  Clients choose Olshan for innovative
strategies and sophisticated, game-changing advice in corporate,
securities law, equity investment and shareholder activism, complex
commercial, corporate and securities litigation, real estate,
intellectual property, bankruptcy and creditors' rights, and
advertising.  Since its founding, Olshan has offered an alternative
to the AmLaw 50 law firm business model with responsive,
independent and client-focused legal counsel provided by the firm's
senior lawyers.


                            *********

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,
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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
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                   *** End of Transmission ***