/raid1/www/Hosts/bankrupt/TCR_Public/220901.mbx          T R O U B L E D   C O M P A N Y   R E P O R T E R

              Thursday, September 1, 2022, Vol. 26, No. 243

                            Headlines

ADHERA THERAPEUTICS: Three Proposals Passed at Annual Meeting
AEARO TECHNOLOGIES: 3M Can't Use Bankruptcy to Stop Earplugs Suits
AGILE THERAPEUTICS: Hikes 'At the Market Offering Program' to $75M
ALEX & ANI: Gets $17 Million Loan After Bankruptcy Exit
ART STONES: Files Emergency Bid to Use Cash Collateral

ASSOCIATED FIXTURE: Files Subchapter V Case
ASSOCIATED FIXTURE: UST Appoints Strong as Subchapter V Trustee
AVAYA HOLDINGS: Lenders Send Letter to Demand Cash in Escrow
BED BATH & BEYOND: Plans to Mortgage Buybuy Baby Brand
BELLA VENEZIA: Exclusivity Period Extended to Oct. 7

BENCHMARK HEALTHCARE: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
BRICKHCHURCH ENTERPRISES: Defends Bid to Extend Exclusive Period
BUCKINGHAM HEIGHTS: Exclusivity Period Extended to Nov. 2
BVM THE BRIDGES: Exclusivity Period Extended to Sept. 30
BW HOMECARE: S&P Downgrades ICR to 'CCC-', Outlook Negative

CENTRAL FLORIDA: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
CIV LLC: Has Interim Cash Collateral Access Thru Sept 28
CIV LLC: Hauler Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy
CLEAN ENERGY: Secures $150K in Funding From FirstFire Global
CLEANSPARK INC: Buys Property From SPRE for $15 Million

CORRELATE INFRASTRUCTURE: Incurs $1.7M Net Loss in Second Quarter
DOT COM REALTY: Court OKs Interim Cash Collateral Access
ENVISION HEALTHCARE: S&P Cuts ICR to 'SD' on Debt Exchange
EVOKE PHARMA: Extends Office Lease With SB Corporate Until 2023
FENDER MUSICAL: S&P Alters Outlook to Negative, Affirms 'B' ICR

FORUM ENERGY: Board Appoints Katherine Keller as VP, PAO
FREE SPEECH: Jones Accused of Hiding Assets From Hook Families
FREE SPEECH: Jones Atty Pleads Guilty at Hook Data Leak Hearing
FUSION PROMOTIONS: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
GIRARDI & KEESE: Treasures, Art Set for Auction to Pay Lender

GREEN ACRES: Files Subchapter V Case
GUARDION HEALTH: Incurs $1.7 Million Net Loss in Second Quarter
HOLLOWAY CROSSING: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
INDIGO PALMS: No Resident Complaints, PCO Report Says
INNERLINE ENGINEERING: Seeks Cash Collateral Access Thru Nov 15

J MORALES: Files Emergency Bid to Use Cash Collateral
JA SEEKINS: Gets Cash Collateral Access Thru Sept 8
JACKSON HOSPITAL: S&P Lowers 2015 Long-Term Bond Rating to 'BB'
JOHN V. GALLY: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
KEYS MEDICAL STAFFING: Wins Interim Cash Collateral Access

LIVEWELL ASSISTED: Wins Cash Collateral Access Thru Sept 30
LONESOME VALLEY: Seeks Cash Collateral Access
LOUISVILLE PROCESSING: Has Deal on Cash Collateral Access
LUMILEDS HOLDING: Seeks $275MM DIP Loan from Deutsche Bank
MAGIC DESIGNS: Wins Cash Collateral Access on Final Basis

MARKET STREET: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
MONSTER INVESTMENTS: Gets More Time to File Chapter 11 Plan
MONSTER INVESTMENTS: Seeks Cash Collateral Access
MY ISLAND VISA: Seeks More Time to File Reorganization Plan
NATIONWIDE FREIGHT: Wins Cash Collateral Access Thru Sept 30

NEWAGE INC: Case Summary & 30 Largest Unsecured Creditors
NEXTPLAY TECHNOLOGIES: Schedules Annual Meeting for Oct. 19
NMN HOLDINGS: S&P Lowers ICR to 'B-' on Weaker Cash Flow
NYMD GREEN LAKE: Files for Chapter 11 to Stop Foreclosure
ODYSSEY LOGISTICS: Moody's Hikes CFR to B2, Outlook Stable

OPEN TEXT: Moody's Puts 'Ba1' CFR on Review for Downgrade
ORGANICELL REGENERATIVE: Closes $5.5 Million Funding Round
OXBOW CARBON: S&P Alters Outlook to Positive, Affirm 'B+' ICR
PACKABLE HOLDINGS: Seeks Cash Collateral Access
PANBELA THERAPEUTICS: Gets Noncompliance Notice From Nasdaq

PHIO PHARMACEUTICALS: Gets 180-Day Extension From Nasdaq
QUANTUM CORP: All Four Proposals Passed at Annual Meeting
RTW CONSTRUCTION: Cash Collateral Access, DIP Loan OK'd
S.D.S. DINING: Case Summary & Six Unsecured Creditors
SAS AB: Warns That Much More Needed in Restoring Financial Health

SC SJ HOLDINGS: Chapter 11 Attorney Fee Opposition Reduced
SELECT MEDICAL: S&P Affirms 'B+' ICR, Outlook Stable
SENIOR CARE LIVING VII: Exclusivity Period Extended to Nov. 1
SENIOR CARE LIVING: Cash Collateral Access Continued to November
SEVEN ARTS: Appoints Thom Hazaert as Director

SKAUTO BODY REPAIR: Wins Final Cash Collateral Access
SKILLZ INC: Doris Fritz-Bianchi Quits as Head of People
SOMM INC: Court OKs Deal with SBA on Cash Collateral Access
TUNICA HOSPITALITY: Starts Subchapter V Case
VBI VACCINES: Terminates Sales Agreements With Jefferies

VENUE CHURCH: Files Ch. 11 After Alleged Pastor's Sexual Misconduct
VERTEX ENERGY: Eliminates Four Classes of Preferred Shares
WALL 009 LLC: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
WALL010 LLC: Case Summary & 19 Unsecured Creditors
WALL011 LLC: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors

WINDSOR FALLS: Lender Seeks to Prohibit Cash Collateral Access
ZOSANO PHARMA CORP: Closes $1 Million Sale In Bankruptcy Court
[*] Bankruptcy Filings in Colorado Decreased 16% in July 2022
[^] Recent Small-Dollar & Individual Chapter 11 Filings

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ADHERA THERAPEUTICS: Three Proposals Passed at Annual Meeting
-------------------------------------------------------------
The 2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Adhera Therapeutics,
Inc. was held at which the Company's stockholders:

   (i) elected Mr. Trond Waerness, Mr. Andrew Kucharchuk, Mr.
Charles Rice, and Mr. Zahed Subhan as members of the Company's
Board of Directors for a one-year term expiring at the next annual
meeting of stockholders;

  (ii) ratified the selection of Salberg & Company as the Company's
independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year
ending Dec. 31, 2022; and

(iii) approved an amendment to the Certificate of Incorporation of
the Company to effect a reverse stock split of all issued and
outstanding shares of the Company's common stock, par value $0.006
per share, at a ratio to be determined in the discretion of the
Company's Board of Directors within a range of one-for-two through
one-for-200, provided that in no event shall such amendment
collectively exceed a reverse stock split ratio of one-for-200.

As there were sufficient votes to approve proposals 1 through 3,
proposal 4 was moot (a proposal to adjourn the 2022 Annual Meeting
to a later date or time, if necessary, to permit further
solicitation and vote of proxies if there are not sufficient votes
at the time of the 2022 Annual Meeting to approve any of the
proposals presented for a vote at the 2022 Annual Meeting, all as
described in more detail in the Company's definitive proxy
statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on June
27, 2022.

                           About Adhera

Headquartered in Durham, NC, Adhera Therapeutics, Inc. (formerly
known as Marina Biotech, Inc.) -- http://www.adherathera.com-- is
a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company engaged in the
development of novel cancer products and a proprietary vaccine
technology.

Adhera reported a net loss of $6.35 million for the year ended Dec.
31, 2021, compared to a net loss of $3.77 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2020.  As of June 30, 2022, the Company had $976,000
in total assets, $20.97 million in total liabilities, and a total
stockholders'deficit of $20 million.

Boca Raton, Florida-based Salberg & Company, P.A., the Company's
auditor since 2021, issued a "going concern" qualification in its
report dated April 15, 2022, citing that the Company has a net loss
and cash used in operations of approximately $6.4 million and
$665,000 respectively, in 2021 and a working capital deficit,
shareholders' deficit and accumulated deficit of $25.1 million,
$25.1 million and $53 million respectively, at Dec. 31, 2021. These
matters raise substantial doubt about the Company's ability
to continue as a going concern.


AEARO TECHNOLOGIES: 3M Can't Use Bankruptcy to Stop Earplugs Suits
------------------------------------------------------------------
3M Co. lost its fight to block jury trials in more than 230,000
lawsuits from military veterans who claim hearing loss from 3M
earplugs.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Jeffrey J. Graham refused to enter a
temporary injunction against lawsuits accusing 3M and its bankrupt
subsidiary, Aearo Technologies, of selling faulty combat earplugs
that damaged the hearing of veterans who used them.

Aearo commenced an adversary proceeding against the named
plaintiffs in the Pending Actions, as well as any party who holds,
or may seek to hold, Aearo and/or 3M liable for injury related to
the CAEv2 (the "Stay Defendants"), to seek to stay the Pending
Actions as to 3M and its affiliates.

3M and the Aearo Entities executed a final funding agreement on
July 25, 2022.  Per the Funding Agreement's Recitals, 3M has
committed to "satisfy all of the respective Aearo Entities'
Liabilities specified herein on the terms set forth herein, such
that each of the respective Aearo Entities will have assets with a
value greater than its Liabilities and will have the financial
capacity to satisfy its obligations as they become due in the
ordinary course of its business . . . ."  An initial $1 billion was
committed to fund a trust to compensate allowed CAEv2 claims and
Respirator Claims, as well as $240 million to fund the chapter 11
cases.  In exchange for this commitment, Aearo has agreed to
indemnify 3M and its non-debtor affiliates for liabilities related
to the CAE2v and Respirator Claims.

"The Court declines Aearo's request to enjoin the Pending Actions
as to 3M pursuant Sec. 105(a).  The Court notes that even if it
were to find that it has subject matter jurisdiction over the
Pending Actions, the Court would reach the same conclusion. An
injunction under Sec. 105(a) should issue only in extraordinary
circumstances where it is "necessary or appropriate" to carry out
the provisions of the Code.  In the end, the Court's focus remains
on the actual economic effect that a continuation of the Pending
Actions would have on Aearo's bankruptcy estate and, ultimately,
its distribution to creditors.  Having found no such effect in
light of the Funding Agreement, the Court finds no basis upon which
to invoke its Sec. 105(a) powers," Judge Jeffrey Graham said in his
38-page opinion.

"Of course, the Court recognizes that this conclusion may
ultimately prove improvident if Dr. Heaton's estimation of 3M's
liability and financial wherewithal ultimately proves accurate.
But as the Seventh Circuit's decision in Bush instructs, this
Court's analysis of "related to" jurisdiction is ex ante. Bush, 939
F.3d at 856.  From the evidence currently before the Court, the
Court is unable to conclude that
3M is unable or unwilling to honor its commitment under the Funding
Agreement and, as such, an injunction of the Pending Actions is
neither necessary nor appropriate."

Judge Graham concluded, "Admittedly, it is tempting to be swayed by
the sheer size of the MDL at issue in this case, but that alone
provides insufficient reason for the Court to conclude that an
injunction is necessary for Aearo's reorganization or that
creditors will be negatively impacted in the absence of an
injunction.  Might a stay influence these proceedings or, more to
the point, provide Aearo and/or 3M with additional leverage to
negotiate a global settlement? And might the Bankruptcy Code
provide certain tools that Aearo and 3M will lack outside of
bankruptcy? The Court believes the answer to both these questions
is a resounding yes. Alas, those questions are not things to be
considered when reviewing the language of Secs. 362(a)(1) and
(a)(3), or in a determination of subject matter jurisdiction for
purposes of Sec. 105(a)."

Reuters notes that the decision's implications extend beyond 3M and
the earplug multidistrict litigation. The ruling by U.S. Bankruptcy
Judge Jeffrey Graham of Indianapolis should also be a warning to
other MDL defendants: A subsidiary's bankruptcy may not be the
escape hatch you're hoping for.

                   About Aearo Technologies

Aearo Technologies -- https://earglobal.com/en -- is a 3M company
that designs, manufactures, and sells personal protection
equipment. The Company offers prescription and non-prescription
safety eye wear, face shields, hard hats, and respirators. Aearo
serves customers worldwide.

To address claims related to the Combat Arms Earplugs Version 2,
Aearo Technologies LLC and its affiliates sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Ind. Lead Case
No. 22-02890) on July 26, 2022.  In the petition filed by John R.
Castellano, as authorized signatory, Aearo Technologies estimated
assets and liabilities between $1 billion and $10 billion each.

3M is not a debtor in the Chapter 11 cases.  3M has committed $1
billion to fund a trust allocated for Combat Arms claims.

Kirkland & Ellis LLP is serving as legal counsel and AlixPartners
LLP is serving as restructuring advisor to Aearo Technologies. Ice
Miller LLP, is serving as bankruptcy co-counsel to the Debtors.
Kroll is the claims agent.

PJT Partners is serving as financial advisor and White & Case LLP
is serving as legal counsel to 3M.


AGILE THERAPEUTICS: Hikes 'At the Market Offering Program' to $75M
------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board of Directors of Agile Therapeutics, Inc. authorized the
increase of the existing at the market offering program for which
H.C. Wainwright & Co., LLC acts as agent.  As increased, the
Company may now offer and sell, from time to time through the
Agent, shares of the Company's common stock having an aggregate
offering price of up to $75.0 million.  The Company has filed with
the Securities and Exchange Commission a prospectus supplement,
dated Aug. 23, 2022, to describe the increase, which supersedes and
replaces the April 27, 2022 prospectus supplement.

                     About Agile Therapeutics

Agile Therapeutics, Inc. is a women's healthcare company dedicated
to fulfilling the unmet health needs of today's women.  The
Company's product and product candidates are designed to provide
women with contraceptive options that offer freedom from taking a
daily pill, without committing to a longer-acting method.  Its
initial product, Twirla, (levonorgestrel and ethinyl estradiol), a
transdermal system, is a non-daily prescription contraceptive.

Agile reported a net loss of $74.89 million for the year ended Dec.
31, 2021, a net loss of $51.85 million for the year ended Dec. 31,
2020, and a net loss of $18.61 million for the year ended Dec. 31,
2019.  As of June 30, 2022, the Company had $32.83 million in total
assets, $29.41 million in total liabilities, and $3.42 million in
total stockholders' equity.

Iselin, New Jersey-based Ernst & Young LLP, the Company's auditor
since 2010, issued a "going concern" qualification in its report
dated March 30, 2022, citing that the Company has generated losses
since inception, used substantial cash in operations, anticipates
it will continue to incur net losses for the foreseeable future,
requires additional capital to fund its operating needs and has
stated that substantial doubt exists about the Company's ability to
continue as a going concern.


ALEX & ANI: Gets $17 Million Loan After Bankruptcy Exit
-------------------------------------------------------
Michelle Graff of National Jeweler reports that Alex and Ani LLC
has secured a multimillion-dollar loan that will go toward working
capital and business operations as it continues to rebuild after
emerging from bankruptcy.

Second Avenue Capital Partners (SACP) announced the closing of the
$17.5 million senior secured credit facility on Wednesday, August
23, 2022.

Scott Burger, the former Pandora executive who was named CEO of
Alex and Ani in January, said the loan is an "affirmation of the
resiliency”"of the Alex and Ani brand.  

"We create jewelry that connects with a customer's emotions. It was
essential for us to partner with a lender that could appreciate the
intangible value of that emotional connection and recognize the
benefit it will have on our continued evolution," he said, noting
SACP's commitment to the company's goals and its experience in
jewelry.

The Boston-based lender closed on a $10 million loan to myGemma, an
online resale site for luxury goods including jewelry and watches,
in April 2022.

In May 2022, it provided a senior secured credit facility to Maria
Tash, the brand founded by designer Maria Tashjian and known as an
innovator in piercings. The amount of the loan was not disclosed.

Regarding the loan to Alex and Ani, SPAC President Chris O’Connor
said: "Alex and Ani has embarked on a new journey this 2022.
Expanded leadership has allowed the company to take a step back and
focus on the foundation of the business. Alex and Ani cornered this
market years ago and now they're assembling the underlying
structure to support the volume."

"They have an enormous opportunity for growth and we're eager to
help them achieve their objectives and execute on their strategy."


                      About Alex and Ani LLC

Founded in 2004 by Carolyn Rafaelian, Alex and Ani has become a
premier jewelry brand,  quickly gaining popularity because of the
novel and customizable nature of its signature expandable wire
bracelet. Alex and Ani has been headquartered in East Greenwich,
Rhode Island since 2014.  Since opening its first retail store in
Newport, Rhode Island in 2009, Alex and Ani has expanded to over
100 retail store locations across the United States, Canada, and
Puerto Rico. On the Web: HTTP://www.alexandani.com/

Alex and Ani LLC and its affiliates sought Chapter 11 protection
(Bankr. D. Del. Lead Case No. 21-10918) on June 9, 2021.  In its
petition, Alex and Ani listed assets and liabilities of $100
million to $500 million each.

The Debtors tapped Kirkland & Ellis LLP as general bankruptcy
counsel; Klehr Harrison Harvey Branzburg LLP as local bankruptcy
counsel; and Portage Point Partners, LLC, as financial advisors and
investment bankers.  Kurtzman Carson Consultants LLC is the notice
and claims agent.


ART STONES: Files Emergency Bid to Use Cash Collateral
------------------------------------------------------
Art Stones Design Corp. asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Middle District of Florida, Jacksonville Division, for authority to
use cash collateral, nunc pro tunc to the date through September
30, 2022.

The Debtor requires the use of the cash, receivables and inventory
to operate its business.

The Debtor anticipates the amount required to pay September
operating costs at $54,113.

On April 4, 2019, the Debtor financed the purchase of an SL Laser
Projector for Piece Projector and a vacuum lifter and water
filtration system. CIT filed a UCC Financing Statement on April 10,
2019 which listed both the financed equipment and all accounts,
inventory, all machinery, equipment, etc. At the time of the
filing, the balance owed to CIT was $20,003. The Debtor values the
equipment at $20,003. The Debtor believes CIT is fully secured
based on the value of the equipment alone. The Debtor proposes to
make $368 in monthly adequate protection payments to CIT starting
on September 25, 2022. The Debtor will also maintain insurance on
the equipment. As additional adequate protection, the Debtor
proposes to provide CIT with a first priority postpetition lien on
cash collateral in the amount of $5,000.

On October 21, 2020, the Debtor executed a Master Equipment Lease
No. 2020-0270 with NFS Leasing, Inc. for the purchase of Poseidon
Trident polisher and attachments. Although the agreement is
designated as a lease, the Debtor believes it is actually a
financing agreement. The distinction is likely irrelevant as the
Debtor intends to immediately surrender the equipment to NFS. At
the time of the filing, the balance owed to NFS was $143,862.  NFS
filed two UCC Financing Statements, one on October 28, 2020, UCC
#202005171172, which lists the collateral as the financed equipment
and all attachments.

On March 15, 2022, the Debtor obtained a loan of $110,486 and
entered into a Business Loan and Security Agreement with FinWise
Bank, the servicer for which loan is Mulligan Funding, LLC. The
Debtor obtained an additional loan of $50,000 from FinWise on June
25, 2022, and executed a similar Business Loan and Security
Agreement. At the time of the filing of the petition, the balance
owed to FinWise on the First Loan was $86,734. The balance owed on
the Second Loan was $64,903. FinWise filed one UCC-1 Financing
Statement on July 15, 2022.  The Debtor believes that the validity
and extent of the FinWise security interest is only as to the
Second Loan in the amount of $64,903 and that this security
interest is second in priority to the interest held by CIT.

At the time of the filing of the petition, the Debtor had
approximately $68,062 in collectible receivables; $12,600 in
inventory; and $15,476 in bank accounts, for total cash collateral
of $96,138. The Debtor also had $6,600 in office equipment and
$12,000 in equipment that was not purchase money financed.

The Debtor proposes to make monthly adequate protection payments to
FinWise of $1,065 starting on September 25, 2022.  As additional
adequate protection, the Debtor proposes to provide FinWise with a
second priority postpetition lien in inventory and receivables to
the validity and extent of its prepetition lien.

A copy of the motion and the Debtor's for the period from August
2022 to January 2023 is available at https://bit.ly/3R3gB4c from
PacerMonitor.com.

The budget provides for total expenses, on a monthly basis, as
follows:

       $88,093 for August 2022;
       $91,923 for September 2022;
      $116,133 for October 2022;
      $119,553 for November 2022;
      $119,453 for December 2022; and
       $95,243 for January 2023.

                   About Art Stones Design Corp.

Art Stones Design Corp.'s  primary business activity is the custom
fabrication and installation of natural stones and man made
material for countertops.

The Debtor sought protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Fla. Case No. 3:22-bk-01716) on August
26, 2022. In the petition filed by Marco Pertile, president, the
Debtor disclosed up to $500,000 in assets and up to $1 milion in
liabilities.

Lisa C. Cohen, Esq. at Ruff & Cohen, P.A. is the Debtor's counsel.




ASSOCIATED FIXTURE: Files Subchapter V Case
-------------------------------------------
Associated Fixture Manufacturing Inc. filed for chapter 11
protection without stating a reason.  The Debtor filed as a small
business debtor seeking relief under Subchapter V of Chapter 11 of
the Bankruptcy Code.

The Company's balance sheet at May 31, 2022, showed $902,800 in
assets against total liabilities of $840,400.  The business had net
profit of $268,200 on sales of $3.854 million from January through
May 2022.

According to court filings, the Associated Fixture Manufacturing
estimates between 50 and 99 unsecured creditors.

             About Associated Fixture Manufacturing

Associated Fixture Manufacturing Inc. --
https://www.associatedfixture.com/ -- is a millwork shop in Utah.

The Debtor filed a petition for relief under Subchapter V of
Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Utah Case No.
22-23317) on Aug. 26, 2022.  In the petition filed by Scott T.
Colledge, as director, the Debtor reported assets between $500,000
to $1 million and liabilities between $1 million and $10 million.

D. Ray Strong has been appointed as Subchapter V trustee.

The Debtor is represented by T. Edward Cundick of Workman Nydegger.


ASSOCIATED FIXTURE: UST Appoints Strong as Subchapter V Trustee
---------------------------------------------------------------
Patrick S. Layng, the United States Trustee for Region 19, has
appointed D. Ray Strong as Subchapter V trustee for Associated
Fixture Manufacturing, Inc.

The Subchapter V trustee is covered by a blanket bond.

The Subchapter V Trustee's connections with the Debtor, creditors,
any other parties-in-interest, their respective attorneys and
accountants, the United States Trustee, and persons employed in the
Office of the United States Trustee, are limited to the connections
set forth in the Verified Statement of Subchapter V trustee D. Ray
Strong.

A copy of the appointment is available for free at
https://bit.ly/3e8N2zP from PacerMonitor.com.

The Subchapter V trustee can be reached at:

     D. Ray Strong
     Berkeley Research Group
     201 South Main Street, Suite 450
     Salt Lake City, UT 84111
     Tel: (801) 364-6233
     E-mail: rstrong@thinkbrg.com

            About Associated Fixture

Magna, UT-based Associated Fixture Manufacturing, Inc. sought
Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. D. Utah Case No. 22-23317) on August
25, 2022.

The Debtor estimated assets in the range of $500,001 to $1 million
and $1,000,001 to $10 million in debt. The Debtor is represented by
T. Edward Cundick, Esq., at Workman Nydegger.


AVAYA HOLDINGS: Lenders Send Letter to Demand Cash in Escrow
------------------------------------------------------------
Rachel Butt of Bloomberg Law reports that a group of Avaya Holdings
Corp. lenders who saw their recently issued loan holdings plunge
nearly 25% in two months sent a letter to the struggling
telecommunications software company asking it to preserve cash and
provide new business projections, according to people with
knowledge of the matter.

The lenders, who hold more than half of the company's new $350
million loan, are asking the company to hold on to funds it had
placed in an escrow account to pay off convertible bonds due next
year, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the
matter is private.

                  About Avaya Holdings Corp.

Avaya Holdings Corp. (NYSE: AVYA) is an American multinational
technology company headquartered in Durham, North Carolina, that
specializes in cloud communications and workstream collaboration
solutions.  Avaya says it is shaping what's next for the future of
work, with innovation and partnerships that deliver game-changing
business benefits.  On the Web: http://www.avaya.com/

On July 12, 2022, Avaya completed a $250 million exchangeable
notes
offering and raised an additional $350 million through a term loan
add-on.

The Wall Street Journal reported in August 2022 that Avaya Holdings
Corp. is working with legal and financial advisers to evaluate the
company's
options following an earnings miss that tanked prices of a $600
million debt deal completed in June.  Avaya is being advised by law
firm Kirkland & Ellis LLP and turnaround adviser AlixPartners LLP
as the company contends with blowback from credit markets,
according to The Journal's sources.


BED BATH & BEYOND: Plans to Mortgage Buybuy Baby Brand
------------------------------------------------------
Eliza Ronalds-Hannon and Rachel Butt of Bloomberg News report that
Bed Bath & Beyond's grasp for cash has put its baby brand on the
line.

Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. is looking to mortgage its prized Buybuy
Baby brand in its urgent effort to raise financing as sales slump,
cash runs low and unpaid vendors withhold shipments.

Company management is in exclusive talks with Sixth Street Partners
for a new line of credit of around $375 million, which would be
backed by assets including the baby brand, according to people with
knowledge of the discussions who asked not to be named because they
are private.  The loan isn't final and could change.

                    About Bed Bath & Beyond

The Union, NJ-based Bed Bath & Beyond Inc., together with its
subsidiaries, is an omnichannel retailer selling a wide assortment
of merchandise in the Home, Baby, Beauty & Wellness markets and
operates under the names Bed Bath & Beyond, buybuy BABY, and
Harmon, Harmon Face Values.  The Company also operates Decorist, an
online interior design platform that provides personalized home
design services.

The Company reported a net loss of $559.62 million for the fiscal
year ended Feb. 26, 2022, a net loss of $150.77 million for the
year ended Feb. 27, 2021, a net loss of $613.82 million for the
year ended Feb. 29, 2020, and a net loss of $137.22 million for the
year ended March 2, 2019.  As of May 28, 2022, the Company had
$4.94 billion in total assets, $5.16 billion in total liabilities,
and a total stockholders' deficit of $220.30 million.

Much of Bed Bath & Beyond's bonds and loans are trading at
distressed levels.

In August 2022, Bloomberg reported that Bed Bath hired law firm
Kirkland & Ellis to help it address a debt load that's become
unmanageable, and is late on its payments to vendors, leading some
to restrict shipments or halt them altogether.  Kirkland, typically
known for its dominance in restructuring and bankruptcy situations,
was tapped to advise the retailer on options for raising new money,
refinancing existing debt, or both.


BELLA VENEZIA: Exclusivity Period Extended to Oct. 7
----------------------------------------------------
Bella Venezia 211, LLC obtained a court order extending its
exclusive right to file a Chapter 11 plan and solicit votes in
favor of the plan to Oct. 7 and Dec. 7, respectively.

The ruling by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District
of Florida gives the company enough time to negotiate and pursue a
plan to exit bankruptcy without the threat of a competing plan from
creditors.

                        About Bella Venezia

Bella Venezia 211, LLC filed a petition for Chapter 11 protection
(Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No. 22-11738) on March 2, 2022, listing as
much as $500,000 in both assets and liabilities.  Laurent Bezaquen,
authorized representative, signed the petition.

Judge Robert A. Mark oversees the case.

The Debtor tapped Joel M. Aresty P.A. as legal counsel.


BENCHMARK HEALTHCARE: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
-------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Benchmark Healthcare of Dane County, Inc.
          d/b/a Heartland Country Village
        634 Center Street
        Black Earth, WI 53515

Business Description: The Debtor operates nursing care facilities
                      (Skilled Nursing Facilities).

Chapter 11 Petition Date: August 30, 2022

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Middle District of Tennessee

Case No.: 22-02782

Judge: Hon. Marian F. Harrison

Debtor's Counsel: Robert Gonzales, Esq.
                  EMERGELAW, PLC
                  4000 Hillsboro Pike 1112
                  Nashville, TN 37215
                  Tel: 615-815-1535
                  Email: robert@emerge.law

Estimated Assets: $0 to $50,000

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Thomas Johnson as president.

The Debtor failed to include in the petition a list of its 20
largest unsecured creditors.

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

https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/YHQJVMI/Benchmark_Healthcare_of_Dane_County__tnmbke-22-02782__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA


BRICKHCHURCH ENTERPRISES: Defends Bid to Extend Exclusive Period
----------------------------------------------------------------
Brickchurch Enterprises, Inc. asked the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Eastern District of New York to grant its earlier request to
remain in control of its bankruptcy while it pursues a sale of its
Southampton beachfront luxury residential estate.

In court papers, Brickchurch's attorney, Camisha Simmons, Esq., at
Simmons Legal, PLLC, said the property has "significant income
potential" to fund the company's plan to exit bankruptcy and that
the company has already tapped a broker to ensure the sale and
rental of the property.

"Despite JGB's and area brokers' efforts to manipulate the market
and price for the property, the property is worth over $20 million
more than JGB's loan amount," Ms. Simmons said, referring to the
company's largest creditor JGB Partners, LP and its affiliates.

The attorney is responding to the objection filed by the JGB
companies to Brickchurch's motion to extend its exclusive right to
file a Chapter 11 plan to Dec. 28 and solicit acceptances from
creditors to Feb. 28 next year.

In its motion, Brickchurch said it will use the extension to market
the Southampton property for sale, pursue refinancing of its
secured loan from the JGB companies, and formulate a plan. The JGB
companies, however, opposed the extension, saying Brickchurch has
made "absolutely zero progress" in its bankruptcy case since its
Chapter 11 filing, and there is small chance it will exit
bankruptcy given the lack of refinancing options or prospective
sales.

As of April 30, Brickchurch owes the JGB companies as much as $39.9
million. Meanwhile, the company's property was worth approximately
$63 million as of April 30 although a more recent appraisal
reflects a higher value, court filings show.

                  About Brickchurch Enterprises

Brickchurch Enterprises Inc. is the fee simple owner of a
residential single-family guest house which is part of a four-acre
residential ocean-front estate property compound. The property,
which is located at 366 Gin Lane Southampton, N.Y., has an
appraised value of $63 million.

Brickchurch sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection (Bankr.
E.D.N.Y. Case No. 22-70914) on May 1, 2022, listing $50 million to
$100 million in both assets and liabilities. Louise Blouin,
Brickchurch director, signed the petition.

The case is assigned to Judge Alan S. Trust.

Craig D. Robins, Esq., at the Law Offices of Craig D. Robins, is
the Debtor's counsel.


BUCKINGHAM HEIGHTS: Exclusivity Period Extended to Nov. 2
---------------------------------------------------------
Buckingham Heights Business Park received court approval to remain
in control of its bankruptcy while it pursues a sale of its
assets.

The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California
extended Buckingham's exclusive right to file a plan to Nov. 2 and
solicit acceptances to Jan. 2 next year, allowing the company to
pursue an asset sale without the threat of a competing plan from
creditors.

Buckingham has recently signed a letter of intent with a buyer for
the sale of its leasehold estate in the commercial and industrial
business park in Culver City, Calif. It is currently negotiating a
sale agreement with the said buyer, and plans to shortly file a
motion to approve a bid process governing the sale of the
property.

"To allow the exclusive periods to terminate so that a competing
plan could be filed would disrupt the sale process at a point when
a signed offer is in hand," said the company's attorney, Michael
Lauter, Esq., at Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton, LLP.

              About Buckingham Heights Business Park

Culver City, Calif.-based Buckingham Heights Business Park (a
California Limited Partnership) filed a petition for Chapter 11
protection (Bankr. C.D. Calif. Case No. 21-17060) on Sept. 8, 2021,
listing up to $50 million in assets and up to $500,000 in
liabilities. Judge Sheri Bluebond oversees the case.

Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton, LLP and KB&T Tax & Consulting,
Inc. serve as the Debtor's legal counsel and accountant,
respectively.


BVM THE BRIDGES: Exclusivity Period Extended to Sept. 30
--------------------------------------------------------
BVM The Bridges, LLC and BVM Coral Landing, LLC obtained a court
order extending their exclusive right to file a Chapter 11 plan to
Sept. 30 and solicit votes in favor of the plan to Nov. 25.

The ruling by Judge Caryl Delano of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the Middle District of Florida gives BVM The Bridges more time to
resolve a case filed by Pallardy, LLC against the company.

The case stemmed from a dispute over the ownership of real estate
associated with a pre-bankruptcy tax deed sale. It needs to be
resolved prior to BVM The Bridges filing a plan, according to the
motion filed by the company in court.

The next court hearing on the Pallardy case is scheduled for Sept.
7.

Meanwhile, BVM Coral Landing will use the extension of its
exclusivity period to pursue a sale of most of its assets. The
hearing on the company's bid to sell its assets is scheduled for
Sept. 19.

BVM Coral Landing anticipates that the sale will close by Nov. 15
pursuant to the terms of its Chapter 11 plan filed on Aug. 1.

                       About BVM The Bridges

BVM The Bridges, LLC operates 69-unit assisted living facility
known as The Bridges Assisted Living & Memory Care and The Claridge
House at the Bridges located at 11202 Dewhurst Drive in Riverview,
Fla. Its average census is 70 residents.

BVM The Bridges and its affiliate, BVM Coral Landing, LLC, sought
protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (Bankr.
M.D. Fla. Lead Case No. 22-00345) on Jan. 28, 2022. Both listed up
to $10 million in assets and up to $50 million in liabilities.

Judge Caryl Delano oversees the cases.

Alberto F. Gomez, Jr., Esq., at Johnson, Pope, Bokor, Ruppel &
Burns, LLP is the Debtors' counsel.


BW HOMECARE: S&P Downgrades ICR to 'CCC-', Outlook Negative
-----------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings lowered its issuer credit rating on BW Homecare
Holdings LLC (d/b/a Elara Caring) to 'CCC-' from 'CCC'. The outlook
is negative. At the same time, S&P lowered its issue-level rating
on the first-lien debt to 'CCC-' from 'CCC' (the recovery rating
remains '3') and lowered its issue-level rating on the second-lien
debt to 'C' from 'CC' (the recovery rating remains '6').

The negative outlook reflects BW Homecare's unsustainable capital
structure and leverage, and the potential for a distressed exchange
or debt restructuring.

S&P said, "Our 'CCC-' issuer credit rating reflects our belief the
company will pursue a debt restructuring of distressed exchange
over the next six months. As of June 30, 2022, Elara had about $72
million in liquidity consisting of $46 million of cash and
approximately $26 million of availability on its $75 million
revolving credit facility (currently undrawn) based on a springing
consolidated net first-lien leverage ratio of 6.5x (which is tested
when outstanding borrowings exceed 35%) which matures May 2023.

"The company may have no sources of liquidity by year-end of 2022
or early 2023. Based on our liquidity analysis, we believe there is
substantial risk the company could run out of liquidity by the end
of the year, or early 2023. We project a cash flow deficit of about
$50 million in 2022, with fixed charges of about $100 million to
$115 million for 2022, which includes $7 million of mandatory debt
amortization, $85 million to $90 million of cash interest expense,
$1 million of maintenance capex, and $22 million in nonrecurring
cash outflows related to deferred payroll taxes ($13 million) and
Medicare Advance repayments ($9 million).

"We do not believe the company has enough near-term upside
potential that would avoid a restructuring. The company's
operations are burdened by significant labor challenges which is
limiting its capacity and badly hurting margins. We expect these
conditions to improve somewhat but to continue to burden the
company for the rest of 2022 and into 2023. The company is
producing sizable cash flow deficits, and even assuming a
reasonable improvement, we do not believe the company will have the
ability to meet its debt obligations."

The negative outlook reflects the company's unsustainable leverage,
upcoming debt maturity, and the elevated likelihood it will pursue
a distressed exchange or debt restructuring over the next 12
months.

S&P would downgrade Elara if the company announces a debt exchange
or debt restructuring we viewed as distressed.

S&P could raise its rating if it no longer view a distressed
exchange or debt restructuring as highly probable. It would take a
much stronger-than-anticipated improvement in the business.

ESG credit indicators: E-2, S-2, G-3

S&P said, "Governance factors are a moderately negative
consideration in our credit rating analysis. Our assessment of the
company's financial risk profile as highly leveraged reflects
corporate decision-making that prioritizes the interests of the
controlling owners, in line with our view of most rated entities
owned by private-equity sponsors. Our assessment also reflects the
generally finite holding periods and a focus on maximizing
shareholder returns."



CENTRAL FLORIDA: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
--------------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Central Florida Civil, LLC
        1904 NE Jacksonville Road
        Ocala, FL 34470

Business Description: The Debtor provides a full range of services
                      relating to site preperation for
                      commercial projects.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: August 31, 2022

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Middle District of Florida

Case No.: 22-01736

Debtor's Counsel: Bryan K. Mickler, Esq.
                  LAW OFFICES OF MICKLER & MICKLER, LLP
                  5452 Arlington Expy.
                  Jacksonville, FL 32211
                  Tel: (904) 725-0822
                  Email: bkmickler@planlaw.com

Total Assets: $2,469,641

Total Liabilities: $4,873,621

The petition was signed by Chad M. Converse as manager.

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

https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/5YPOFUY/Central_Florida_Civil_LLC__flmbke-22-01736__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA


CIV LLC: Has Interim Cash Collateral Access Thru Sept 28
--------------------------------------------------------
CIV, LLC sought and obtained interim authority from the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Ohio, Eastern
Division, to use cash collateral and provide adequate protection to
U.S. Bank National Association, following a hearing on August 29.

The Court authorized the Debtor to use cash collateral on an
interim basis in accordance with the budget, pending conclusion of
a final hearing.  The final hearing was set for September 28, 2022
at 2 p.m.

The Debtor requires the use of cash collateral to fund operations
of the Debtor throughout its bankruptcy case.

The Debtor's primary pre-petition secured lender was U.S. Bank. The
obligations owed by the Debtor arise out of the Debtor's PPP loan
that has a balance of $42,399 as of August 16, 2022, and a "Quick
Loan" with a balance of $28,241 as of July 27, 2022.

Each of the US Bank loans contain a grant of a security interest in
all assets of the Debtor. A UCC Financing Statement was filed on
behalf of U.S. Bank with the Ohio Secretary of State on March 12,
2020, at FS Number OH00238133663.

Funding Metrics, LLC, Corporation Service Company and CHTD Company
also assert a lien in the Debtor's cash collateral.

As adequate protection, all amounts owed by the Debtor to U.S. Bank
will be subject to replacement liens in the same order and priority
as the liens held by U.S. Bank against the Debtor's assets on a
prepetition basis. The Other Lien Claimants will be provided with
automatically perfected security interests in and liens on cash
collateral in existence on the Petition Date, to the same extent,
amount, and priority as their respective pre-petition security
interests, if any, in cash collateral in existence on the Petition
Date.

The Debtor will pay to U.S. Bank, starting 15 calendar days after
entry of the Interim Order and continuing monthly thereafter,
adequate protection payments in an amount equal to interest-only
payments based on the value of the cash collateral at a rate of
prime plus 1%. The Debtor's cash collateral is worth $62,748,983
and the prime rate is presently 5.5% per annum. The Debtor will
therefore pay $340 per month to U.S. Bank in adequate protection
payments.

The proposed Order provides that the replacement liens and security
interests granted to U.S. Bank be subject and subordinate to i)
allowed claims of professionals of the Debtor, ii) all fees
required to be paid to the Clerk of the Court and to the Office of
the United States Trustee under 28 U.S.C. section 1930(a), and iii)
the fees of the Subchapter V Trustee.

A copy of the motion is available at https://bit.ly/3PNZ92t from
PacerMonitor.com.

A copy of the order and the Debtor's budget 26-week budget through
February 25, 2023 is available at https://bit.ly/3e9skQ6 from
PacerMonitor.com.

The budget provides for total expenses, on a weekly basis, as
follows:

     $26,468 for the week ending September 2, 2022;
     $42,742 for the week ending September 10, 2022;
     $26,468 for the week ending September 17, 2022;
     $26,948 for the week ending September 24, 2022;
     $26,468 for the week ending October 1, 2022;
     $31,529 for the week ending October 8, 2022;
     $37,681 for the week ending October 15, 2022;
     $26,948 for the week ending October 22, 2022;
     $26,468 for the week ending October 29, 2022;
     $31,529 for the week ending November 5, 2022;
     $37,681 for the week ending November 12, 2022;
     $26,468 for the week ending November 19, 2022;
     $26,948 for the week ending November 26, 2022;
     $42,742 for the week ending December 3, 2022;
     $22,981 for the week ending December 10, 2022;
     $26,948 for the week ending December 17, 2022;
     $26,468 for the week ending December 24, 2022;
     $31,529 for the week ending December 31, 2022;
     $34,194 for the week ending January 7, 2023;
     $23,461 for the week ending January 14, 2023;
     $26,468 for the week ending January 21, 20232;
     $26,468 for the week ending January 28, 2023;
     $42,742 for the week ending February 4, 2023;
     $26,468 for the week ending February 11, 2023;
     $26,948 for the week ending February 18, 2023; and
     $26,468 for the week ending February 25, 2023.

                         About CIV, LLC

CIV, LLC  provides vehicle hauling services on a regional and local
basis. The Debtor operates primarily within a 12-hour drive of
Columbus, Ohio transporting both new and used vehicles to and from
manufacturers, dealers, auction houses, and consumers.

The Debtor sought protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Ohio. Case No. 2:22-bk-52479) on
August 25, 2022. In the petition signed by Clarence Clay, president
and sole member, the Debtor disclosed up to $1 million in assets
and up to $10 million in liabilities.

James A. Coutinho, Esq. at Allen Stovall Neuman & Ashton LLP is the
Debtor's counsel.



CIV LLC: Hauler Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy
-----------------------------------------------
Hauling services provider CIV LLC has filed for chapter 11
protection.

The Debtor is an Ohio limited liability company owned and operated
by Clarence Clay.  The Debtor provides vehicle hauling services on
a regional and local basis. The Debtor operates primarily within a
12-hour drive of Columbus, Ohio transporting both new and used
vehicles to and from manufacturers, dealers, auction houses, and
consumers.

When the company started, it operated with several one-car hauler
trucks and trailers, but it slowly upgraded its fleet to have
larger multi-car trailers, including multiple 3-car trailers, a
5-car trailer, and an 8-car trailer.  Presently, CIV hauls over 150
cars per week.

The Debtor has experienced financial hardship due to multiple
factors, including the recent doubling of the price of diesel;
maintenance and upkeep problems caused COVID-19 labor and supply
shortages; and the doubling of insurance rates.

The Debtor seeks to restructure through the filing of this chapter
11 proceeding and intends to submit a plan of reorganization

CIV's debts consist of both secured and unsecured debt. The secured
debt consists of obligations to various purchase money lenders for
the acquisition of trucks and trailers.  There is also an all-asset
lien against the company for a loan obligation to U.S. Bank.  In
addition, there are multiple MCA loans, some of which are alleged
to be secured based on the filing of UCC financing statement, but
most of which are general unsecured loans.  The other unsecured
debts are general trade creditors, operating obligations
(utilities, etc.), several credit cards, and a Small Business
Administration loan that is subject to a security interest but may
not be perfected.

According to court filings, CIV LLC estimates between 1 and 49
creditors.  The petition states funds will be available to
unsecured creditors.

The Debtor on the Petition Date filed motions to use cash
collateral, pay prepetition employee wages, grant adequate
assurance to utilities, use its bank accounts, and pay critical
vendors.  The Debtor also filed a motion to set a claims bar date.

                          About CIV LLC

CIV LLC -- https://www.jettstowing.com/ -- doing business as Red
Tails Transport and Jetts Towing, specializes in single vehicle
orders and small multi-vehicle orders. It focuses on customer
service and making car shipping as easy as paper mail.

CIV LLC sought protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. S.D. Ohio Case No. 22-52479) on August 26, 2022. In
the petition filed by Clarence Clay, president and sole member, the
Debtor reported assets between $500,000 and $1 million and
liabilities between $1 million and $10 million.

The Debtor is represented by James A Coutinho of Allen Stovall
Neuman & Ashton LLP.


CLEAN ENERGY: Secures $150K in Funding From FirstFire Global
------------------------------------------------------------
Clean Energy Technologies, Inc. consummated a funding pursuant to a
Securities Purchase Agreement with FirstFire Global Opportunities
Fund, LLC whereby the Company issued to FirstFire a $150,000
Convertible Promissory Note, due Aug. 17, 2023, for a purchase
price of $135,000.00 plus an original issue discount in the amount
of $15,000.00, and an interest rate of 15% per annum.

The principal and interest of the Note may be converted in whole or
in part at any time on or following the earlier of (i) upon an
event of default or (ii) the date that the Company consummates an
IPO and up listing to a national exchange, into common stock of the
Company, par value $.001 share, subject to anti-dilution
adjustments and for certain other corporate actions subject to a
beneficial ownership limitation of 4.99% of FirstFire and its
affiliates.  The per share conversion price into which principal
amount and accrued interest may be converted into shares of Common
Stock equals $0.025.  However, if the Company consummates the Up
List Offering on or before Feb. 13, 2023, then the conversion price
will equal 75% of the offering price per share of Common Stock (or
units) as set in the Up List Offering.  Upon an event of default,
the Note will become immediately payable and the Company shall be
required to pay a default rate of interest of 15% per annum.  If
the Company issues an equity security or security convertible into
Common Stock following the issue date of the Note, the conversion
price of the Note will be lowered to such price. Certain existing
convertible debt is excluded from these antidilution provisions.
At anytime prior to an event of default, the Note may be prepaid by
the Company at a 115% premium.  The note contains customary
representations, warranties and covenants of the Company.

The Company issued FirstFire a five-year warrant to purchase
1,875,000 shares of Common Stock in connections with the
transactions.  The Warrant may be exercised, in whole or in part,
on the earlier of (i) on or after Feb. 13, 2023, or (ii) the date
that the Company consummates an Up List Offering.  The exercise
price of the Warrant is $0.04 per share, however, that if the
Company consummates an Up List Offering on or before Feb. 13, 2023,
then the exercise price equals 120% of the offering price per share
of Common Stock (or unit) as set in the Up List Offering.  If (i)
the date of an exercise notice is on or after Feb. 13, 2023 and
(ii) the per share price of Common Stock is greater than the
exercise price, then, unless there is an effective non-stale
registration statement the Warrant may be exercised on a cashless
exercise basis.

                        About Clean Energy

Headquartered in Costa Mesa, California, Clean Energy Technologies,
Inc. -- http://www.cetyinc.com-- designs, produces and markets
clean energy products and integrated solutions focused on energy
efficiency and renewables.

Spokane, Washington-based Fruci & Associates II, PLLC, the
Company's auditor since 2015, issued a "going concern"
qualification in its report dated April 15, 2022, citing that the
Company has an accumulated deficit, net losses, and working capital
deficit from operations.  These factors raise substantial doubt
about the Company's ability to continue as a going concern.


CLEANSPARK INC: Buys Property From SPRE for $15 Million
-------------------------------------------------------
CleanSpark, Inc., through its wholly owned subsidiary, CSRE
Properties Washington, LLC, a Georgia limited liability company,
completed its acquisition of a property from SPRE Commercial Group,
Inc. f/k/a WAHA, Inc., for a purchase price of $15,000,000, under
the terms of the previously-announced Land Purchase Agreement, as
amended by the Amendment.

CleanSpark, entered into the First Amendment to Purchase and Sale
Agreement with SPRE which amended the previously announced Purchase
and Sale Agreement, dated as of Aug. 5, 2022, pursuant to which the
Company agreed to purchase certain real property located in Wilkes
County, Georgia, from the Seller.  The Amendment (i) reduced the
purchase price of the Property from $16,200,000 to $15,000,000 and
(ii) correspondingly reduced the portion of the purchase price to
be financed through a loan from the Seller from $3,161,747 to
$1,961,747.

Additionally, on Aug. 17, 2022, the Company, through its wholly
owned subsidiary, CleanSpark DW, LLC, a Georgia limited liability
company, completed its acquisition of a mix of S19 and S19 J Pro
bitcoin miners equal to approximately 341,985 terahashes from WAHA
Technologies, Inc., a Georgia corporation, an affiliate of the
Seller, for a purchase price of $8,891,610, under the terms of the
previously announced Equipment Purchase and Sale Agreement, dated
as of Aug. 5, 2022, by and between CleanSpark DW, LLC and the
Equipment Seller.

                        About CleanSpark

Headquartered in Bountiful, Utah, CleanSpark, Inc. --
www.cleanspark.com -- is a sustainable bitcoin mining and energy
technology company that is solving modern energy challenges.

CleanSpark reported a net loss of $21.81 million for the year ended
Sept. 30, 2021, a net loss of $23.35 million for the year ended
Sept. 30, 2020, and a net loss of $26.12 million for the year ended
Sept. 30, 2019.  As of June 30, 2022, the Company had $411.06
million in total assets, $34.19 million in total liabilities, and
$376.87 million in total stockholders' equity.


CORRELATE INFRASTRUCTURE: Incurs $1.7M Net Loss in Second Quarter
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Correlate Infrastructure Partners Inc. filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission its Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q reporting
a net loss of $1.70 million on $236,690 of revenues for the three
months ended June 30, 2022, compared to a net loss of $4,208 on
$1,584 of revenues for the three months ended June 30, 2021.

For the six months ended June 30, 2022, the Company reported a net
loss of $2.67 million on $305,098 of revenues compared to a net
loss of $7,715 on $9,235 of revenues for the six months ended June
30, 2021.

As of June 30, 2022, the Company had $2.74 million in total assets,
$3.21 million in total liabilities, and a total stockholders'
deficit of $463,504.

At June 30, 2022, the Company had a cash balance of $414,940, as
compared to a cash balance of $252,189 at Dec. 31, 2021.  The
Company incurred negative cash flow from operations of $1,337,249
for the six months ended June 30, 2022, as compared to negative
cash flow from operations of $42,961 in the prior year.  The
increase in negative cash flow from operations was primarily the
result of increased compensation costs for additional employees
beginning during the current period, added legal and professional
fees primarily related to the Company's growth, acquisition and
capital raising plans, inventory purchases and prepaid expenses.
Cash flows from financing activities during the six months ended
June 30, 2022, totaled $1,500,000 and were the result of proceeds
from a loan agreement and $150,000 from the issuance of its common
stock.  Going forward, the Company expects capital expenditures to
increase significantly as operations are expanded pursuant to its
current growth plans.  The Company anticipates the requirement to
raise significant debt or equity capital in order to fund future
operations.

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

https://www.sec.gov/ix?doc=/Archives/edgar/data/1108645/000121465922010023/cip8822010q.htm

                            About Correlate

Correlate Infrastructure Partners Inc. (OTCQB: CIPI), formerly
Triccar Inc., through its two subsidiaries, Correlate and Solar
Site Design, offers a complete suite of proprietary clean energy
assessment and fulfilment solutions for the commercial real estate
industry.  The Company believes scaling distributed clean energy
solutions is critical in mitigating the effects of climate change.


Correlate reported a net loss of $90,249 for the year ended Dec.
31, 2021, compared to a net loss of $184,388 for the year ended
Dec. 31, 2020.

Dallas, Texas-based Turner, Stone & Company, L.L.P., the Company's
auditor since 2006, issued a "going concern" qualification in its
report dated April 14, 2022, citing that the Company has suffered
recurring losses since inception and has no generated positive cash
flows from operations both of which raise substantial doubt about
its ability to continue as a going concern.


DOT COM REALTY: Court OKs Interim Cash Collateral Access
--------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of North
Carolina, Statesville Division, authorized Dot Com Realty, LLC,
doing business as Plato's Closet to use cash collateral on an
interim basis in accordance with the budget, with a 10% variance,
through the date of the final hearing.

The final hearing is set for September 9, 2022 at 11 a.m.

As previously reported by the Troubled Company Reporter, the Debtor
believes the purported secured creditor is Thread Capital, Inc.,
UCC File No. 20200074763B. Pursuant to the filed UCC Financing
Statement, Thread is allegedly secured by interests in certain
property of the Debtor, including, but not limited to, accounts,
accounts receivable, inventory, and cash collateral.

As adequate protection, the Debtor proposed to provide Thread with
a replacement lien in the postpetition assets to the same extent
and priority as existed pre-petition, for all cash collateral
actually expended during the duration of the interim cash
collateral Order. The payments due to Thread are currently in
deferment based upon COVID-19 relief offered by Thread.
Furthermore, Thread is an oversecured creditor who is adequately
protected by the replacement lien on the post-petition assets of
the Debtor.

A copy of the order is available at https://bit.ly/3Kw9grF from
PacerMonitor.com.

                       About Dot Com Realty

Dot Com Realty, LLC, doing business as Plato's Closet, filed a
petition for relief under Subchapter V of Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D.N.C. Case No. 22-30277) on June 20,
2022.  In the petition filed by Jayna Davis, managing member, the
Debtor estimated assets and liabilities between $100,000 and
$500,000.

Judge Laura T. Beyer oversees the case.

The Law Office of Kimberly A. Sheek serves as the Debtor's
counsel.



ENVISION HEALTHCARE: S&P Cuts ICR to 'SD' on Debt Exchange
----------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings lowered its issuer credit rating on Envision
Healthcare Corp. to 'SD' (selective default) from 'CCC'

On Aug. 5, 2022, Envision announced a second major restructuring,
which it views as further discounting of its debt. S&P views this
transaction as a distressed exchange and tantamount to a default
because creditors received less than the principal amount they were
originally promised.

The downgrade reflects Envision's second major restructuring that
S&P views as tantamount to default. Envision closed on three new
debt issues (new money first-out term loan, new second-out term
loan, and new third-out term loan. The final amounts reflect more
discounting of the existing debt, hence the distressed event and
another selective default. Only $149 million remains on Envision's
term loan B and $939 million on its unsecured notes.

Envision is a national provider of physician-led services,
ambulatory services, and post-acute services. The company is one of
the largest providers of outsourced physician services to
hospitals, ambulatory surgery centers, and other health care
facilities, primarily in anesthesiology, radiology, women's and
children's services, and emergency medicine. In 2021, the company
generated about $7.3 billion of revenue (including grants), of
which about 85% was derived from physician services and about 15%
from ambulatory services. It is also one of the largest owners and
operators of ambulatory surgery centers in the U.S. (based on total
number of facilities).



EVOKE PHARMA: Extends Office Lease With SB Corporate Until 2023
---------------------------------------------------------------
Evoke Pharma, Inc. entered into the Fifth Amendment to Lease with
SB Corporate Centre III-IV, LLC, to amend the Office Lease
Agreement dated as of Dec. 19, 2016, relating to office space
located at 420 Stevens Avenue, Suite 370, Solana Beach, California,
which serves as the company's headquarters.  

The amendment extends the term of the lease from Oct. 31, 2022 to
Oct. 31, 2023.  The lease amendment provides that the base monthly
rent for the leased space will be $13,370.50 for the 12-month
period beginning on Nov. 1, 2022 and that the company will be
obligated to pay a specified percentage of certain expenses paid by
the landlord.

                         About Evoke Pharma

Headquartered in Solana Beach, California, Evoke Pharma, Inc. --
http://www.evokepharma.com-- is a specialty pharmaceutical company
focused primarily on the development of drugs to treat GI disorders
and diseases.  The Company is developing Gimoti, a nasal spray
formulation of metoclopramide, for the relief of symptoms
associated with acute and recurrent diabetic gastroparesis in adult
women.

Evoke Pharma reported a net loss of $8.54 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2021, compared to a net loss of $13.15 million for
the year ended Dec. 31, 2020.  As of June 30, 2022, the Company had
$14.40 million in total assets, $7.21 million in total liabilities,
and $7.19 million in total stockholders' equity.

San Diego, California-based BDO USA, LLP, the Company's auditor
since 2014, issued a "going concern" qualification in its report
dated March 8, 2022, citing that the Company has suffered recurring
losses and negative cash flows from operations since inception.
These factors raise substantial doubt about the Company's ability
to continue as a going concern.


FENDER MUSICAL: S&P Alters Outlook to Negative, Affirms 'B' ICR
---------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings revised its outlook on U.S.-based Fender Musical
Instruments Corp. to negative from stable and affirmed its 'B'
issuer credit rating and its 'B' issue-level rating on its $400
million term loan. While S&P's '3' recovery rating on the term loan
remains unchanged, it revised its rounded recovery estimate to 55%
from 65% due to the increase in its asset-based lending (ABL)
commitments.

The negative outlook reflects the possibility that S&P will lower
its rating on Fender over the next 12 months if it sustains
negative FOCF and its leverage approaches 6x or above.

The negative outlook reflects Fender's elevated leverage and
negative FOCF, which led it to seek an amendment to its ABL
commitment to provide it with additional liquidity.

S&P said, "The company's pro forma leverage for the 12-months ended
July 3, 2022, rose to 4.4x from 3.8x as of the end of fiscal year
2021. We forecast Fender's leverage will remain elevated in the
mid- to high-4x range as of the end of 2022 as it continues to
navigate a lower demand environment due to inflation and supply
chain challenges, which have led to its accretion of excess
inventory. Our measure of the company's leverage incorporates the
put option held by its majority owner, Servco Pacific, which we
treat as a debt-like obligation because it represents a potential
future call on its cash. Excluding the put option, we forecast
Fender's leverage will be in the high-3x area in 2022 and 2023. We
also forecast the company will generate negative FOCF of at least
$100 million in 2022 due to elevated working capital usage, given
the high levels of inventory it has incurred due to a key
retailer's cancellation of its orders in the second quarter of 2022
and management's capital investments to improve its productivity.
We forecast Fender will generate FOCF of more than $30 million in
2023 as it moves to shed the excess inventory, likely by
discounting its products, and its working capital normalizes.

"Additionally, the company pursued two amendments to its ABL credit
facility, one in the second quarter of 2022 (which increased its
commitment to $140 million from $100 million) and one in the third
quarter (further increasing it to $183.8 million). These actions
reflect Fender's need for additional liquidity as its borrowing
base increases to support its elevated inventory position and the
cash tied up in working capital. As of July 3, 2022, the company
had $91.6 million of borrowings outstanding under the revolver and
$40.1 million of available capacity. We expect Fender will make
additional draws on the facility in the upcoming months as it
reaches its peak working capital usage during the third quarter
ahead of the key holiday selling season. We anticipate the company
will pay down a portion, but not the full amount, of this balance
by year end. Fender's ability to work through its excess inventory
will determine how much of the ABL borrowings it will repay at the
end of the year, which is uncertain at this time. If the company
cannot reduce its inventory position or make progress toward
repaying its ABL after its seasonal peak, this could further
constrain its liquidity and trigger a downgrade.

"The demand for discretionary products is weak amid ongoing
inflationary pressures. Therefore, we forecast flat revenue in 2022
due to lower demand and sales volumes globally.

"Excluding the full year contribution from PreSonus, we project
Fender's revenue will decline by about 8% in 2022. In the first two
quarters of this year, the company's revenue rose by about 10%,
primarily due to the contributions from PreSonus and strong demand
for its electric guitars and custom shop products. However, given
the declining demand for acoustic guitars, consumer electronics,
and accessories, as well as our expectation for weaker
discretionary spending in the second half of this year, we
anticipate the company will experience a drop in its demand and
revenue in the upcoming quarters.

"We forecast an S&P Global Ratings-adjusted EBITDA margin of about
14% in 2022, which is a 190 basis point (bps) decline from its
margin in 2021, due to elevated freight, component, and wage costs
stemming from inflation and supply chain constraints. We do not
anticipate that Fender will have the ability to offset its elevated
costs by raising its pricing this year because consumer spending
has already begun to decline and we forecast it will remain
pressured through the end of the year. In 2023, we expect the
company's S&P Global Ratings-adjusted EBITDA margin will fall
slightly, by 40 bps, to 13.6% as it increases its marketing
spending to support advancements at Fender Digital and its
integration of PreSonus.

"We believe the company is susceptible to high profit volatility
during economic downturns.

"Our rating on Fender incorporates the risk of a 1x or more
increase in its leverage during an economic downturn due to the
discretionary nature of its products. While the company's products
are sold at multiple price points, its sales tend to be cyclical
and vulnerable to economic downturns because its customers
generally put off their purchases or trade down to lower-priced
offerings during periods of economic stress, which leads to a
negative shift in its product mix. Fender's weaker-than-expected
second-quarter results, including reduced top-line growth and lower
operating margins, illustrate this dynamic.

"The negative outlook on Fender reflects the possibility we will
lower our rating over the next 12 months if it is unable to work
through its inventory such that it sustains negative FOCF, which
would further constrain its liquidity and increase its leverage."

S&P could lower its ratings on Fender if it sustains S&P Global
Ratings-adjusted leverage of more than 6x. This could occur if:

-- The macroeconomic environment worsens or S&P enters a prolonged
recession such that consumer spending on discretionary items, like
guitars, declines significantly for an extended period; or

-- The company is unable to offset the inflationary and supply
chain pressures, further reducing its profitability.

S&P could revise its outlook on Fender to stable if it generates
positive FOCF and sustains S&P Global Ratings-adjusted leverage of
less than 6x. This could occur:

-- The demand for guitars strengthens, despite increasing pressure
on discretionary spending, such that it is able to reduce its
leverage; and

-- The company is able to offset its elevated cost pressures
through price increases, operational efficiencies, and cost-savings
initiatives.



FORUM ENERGY: Board Appoints Katherine Keller as VP, PAO
--------------------------------------------------------
The Board of Directors of Forum Energy Technologies, Inc. appointed
Ms. Katherine T. Keller to serve as the Company's vice president
and principal accounting officer, effective Sept. 2, 2022.  In
connection with her appointment, Ms. Keller will enter into the
Company's standard form of indemnification agreement.

Ms. Keller, age 39, has served as corporate controller since
February 2022.  From January 2012 to January 2016 and March 2018 to
February 2022, Ms. Keller has held positions of increasing
responsibility, including as the Company's Senior Manager –
Corporate Accounting and Reporting.  Prior to joining the Company,
Ms. Keller served as Financial Reporting & Equity Accounting
Manager for Apollo Group from May 2009 to January 2012.  In
addition, Ms. Keller worked in the audit department of Ernst &
Young LLP, an independent accounting firm, from July 2005 to May
2009.  She holds a B.S. in Accounting from Bucknell University and
is a certified public accountant.

Ms. Keller has no familial relationships with any director or
executive officer of the Company.

Ms. Keller succeeds Mr. John McElroy, who resigned as vice
president and chief accounting officer on Aug. 19, 2022, with
effect from Sept. 2, 2022.

                         About Forum Energy

Forum Energy Technologies, Inc. -- www.f-e-t.com -- is a global
oilfield products company, serving the drilling, downhole, subsea,
completions and production sectors of the oil and natural gas
industry.  The Company's products include highly engineered capital
equipment as well as products that are consumed in the drilling,
well construction, production and transportation of oil and natural
gas. Forum is headquartered in Houston, TX with manufacturing and
distribution facilities strategically located around the globe.

Forum Energy reported a net loss of $82.65 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2021, a net loss of $96.89 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2020, a net loss of $567.06 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2019, a net loss of $374.08 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2018, a net loss of $59.40 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2017, and a net loss of $81.95 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2016.  As of June 30, 2022, the Company had $807.49
million in total assets, $499.04 million in total liabilities, and
$308.45 million in total equity.

                             *   *   *

In July 2022, Moody's Investors Service changed Forum Energy
Technologies, Inc.'s outlook to positive from stable.
Concurrently, Moody's affirmed Forum's Corporate Family Rating at
Caa1.  "The change in Forum's rating outlook reflects our
expectation that
Forum will grow EBITDA through 2023, driving improved leverage,"
said Jonathan Teitel, a Moody's analyst.

As reported by the TCR on Aug. 22, 2022, S&P Global Ratings revised
its outlook to positive from stable and affirmed the 'CCC+' issuer
credit rating on Forum Energy Technologies Inc.  "The positive
outlook reflects our view that Forum's credit measures will
continue to improve over the next 12 months, based on more
supportive sector conditions, with funds from operations (FFO) to
debt of about 12% in 2022," S&P said.


FREE SPEECH: Jones Accused of Hiding Assets From Hook Families
--------------------------------------------------------------
Elizabeth Williamson of The New York Times reports that Sandy Hook
victims' families asked a federal bankruptcy court on Thursday,
August 25, 2022, to order the Infowars conspiracy broadcaster Alex
Jones to relinquish control over his company, saying he has
"systematically transferred millions of dollars" to himself and his
relatives while claiming to be broke.

In a filing in the bankruptcy court in Houston, the families of
nine Sandy Hook victims said they sought to have a bankruptcy
trustee who is already monitoring the case take control of Free
Speech Systems, the parent company of Mr. Jones’s
misinformation-peddling media outlet. The families are also seeking
a court-appointed oversight committee to restrict Mr. Jones's
ability to control Infowars’s finances.

Mr. Jones's claimed insolvency is at the heart of his efforts to
avoid paying for the damage done by his Sandy Hook lies. Earlier
this August 2022, a Texas jury ordered him to pay the parents of a
child killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting nearly $50
million in compensatory and punitive damages for spreading the
falsehood that they helped stage the massacre.

"Alex Jones is not financially bankrupt; he is morally bankrupt,
which is becoming more and more clear as we discover his plots to
hide money and evade responsibility," said Kyle Farrar, a lawyer
for the Sandy Hook families. "He used lies to amass a fortune, and
now he is using lies and fictions to shield his money."

"We will be filing a response soon," R.J. Shannon, one of Mr.
Jones's lawyers in the bankruptcy matter, said on Thursday, August
25, 2022. He declined to comment further.

The families said in their filing that Mr. Jones had siphoned
nearly $62 million from his business into financial vehicles
benefiting himself and his family beginning in 2018, when the Sandy
Hook families first filed suit.

At the core of his bankruptcy claim is Mr. Jones's assertion that
Free Speech Systems owes $54 million to PQPR Holdings, a company
owned and operated directly and indirectly by Mr. Jones and his
parents. The debt is fictional, the families' lawyers said in
Thursday's, August 25, 2022, filing, and "a centerpiece of
Jones’s plan to avoid compensating the Sandy Hook families."

Scarlett Lewis, left, and Neil Heslin, two of the Sandy Hook
parents, have endured years of torment and threats after Mr.
Jones’s lies about them on Infowars.Credit...Pool photo by Briana
Sanchez

For years Mr. Jones broadcast lies on his show that the shooting
that killed 20 first graders and six educators in Newtown, Conn.,
was staged by the government as a pretext for gun control and that
the victims' families were “actors” in the plot. Conspiracy
theorists tormented the victims' families online, defaced and stole
memorials to their murdered loved ones, confronted them on the
street and threatened their lives.

In 2018 the families of 10 Sandy Hook victims filed four defamation
lawsuits against Mr. Jones in Texas and Connecticut. Mr. Jones, an
avid supporter of former President Donald J. Trump, is also under
scrutiny for his role in organizing events surrounding the Jan. 6,
2021, Capitol insurrection.

                     Understand the Cases Against Alex Jones

A united front. Alex Jones, a far-right conspiracy theorist, is the
focus of a long-running legal battle waged by families of victims
of a mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown,
Conn., in 2012. Here is what to know:

Pushing misinformation. Mr. Jones used his Infowars media company
to spread lies about Sandy Hook, claiming that the attack in 2012,
in which 20 first graders and six educators were killed, was a
hoax. The families of the victims say Mr. Jones's lies have added
to their devastation and his followers have harassed them,
threatening their safety.

Defamation lawsuits. The families of 10 Sandy Hook victims sued Mr.
Jones in four separate lawsuits. The cases never made it to a jury;
Mr. Jones was found liable by default in all of them because he
refused to turn over documents, including financial records,
ordered by the courts over four years of litigation.

Mr. Jones's line of defense. The Infowars host has claimed that his
right to free speech protected him, even though the outcome of the
cases was due to the fact that he failed to provide the necessary
documents and testify.

Three new trials. A trial in Austin, Texas this July was the first
of three that will determine how much Mr. Jones must pay the
families of the Sandy Hook victims. The other two are scheduled for
September, but are on hold after Mr. Jones put the Infowars parent
company, Free Speech Systems, into Chapter 11 bankruptcy last week,
halting all pending litigation.

Compensatory and punitive damages. On Aug. 4, a jury in the Texas
trial awarded the parents of one of the children killed in the mass
shooting more than $4 million in compensatory damages, which are
based on proven harm, loss or injury. A day later, jurors decided
Mr. Jones must pay the parents $45.2 million in punitive damages,
which aim to punish especially harmful behavior and tend to be
granted at the court’s discretion.

Late last 2021, shortly before Mr. Jones lost all four Sandy Hook
lawsuits by default after refusing to submit business records and
testimony ordered by the court, he began transferring up to $11,000
per day and up to 80 percent of Infowars’s sales revenue to PQPR,
the families’ filing said. Infowars’s explanation for the
payments has shifted over time, with the company’s
representatives most recently saying that the money was payment on
debts to PQPR for merchandise.

The families' sweeping victory in the four suits set the stage for
three trials in which juries would decide how much he must pay the
families in damages. Shortly before the end of the first trial,
which resulted in the award of nearly $50 million in damages to the
Sandy Hook parents, Mr. Jones put Free Speech Systems into Chapter
11 bankruptcy.

The families say the payments are "fraudulent transfers designed to
siphon off the debtor's assets to make it judgment-proof" — in
essence, an effort by Mr. Jones and his family to be the first
party paid in any liquidation of his empire. The families are also
pursuing a fraudulent transfer of assets lawsuit against Mr. Jones
and his companies in Texas.

Contrary to Mr. Jones's company's claims, the new filing said,
"PQPR performs no services, has no employees and has no warehouse,"
adding that “money that Free Speech Systems pays PQPR ends up in
Alex Jones's pockets."

Mr. Jones has continued to parlay his Sandy Hook lies and the Texas
jury award into a boon for his business. Like the former president,
Mr. Jones claims he is being pursued by "deep state" enemies, and
the Sandy Hook lawsuits are part of a sweeping conspiracy to
silence him.

His audience has responded by buying more Infowars diet supplements
and survivalist gear. Infowars's sales have increased about 50
percent since the trial in Austin, Texas, to nearly $1 million per
week, Mr. Jones's representatives told the bankruptcy court,
projecting sales could reach $450,000 a day by the end of August
2022. Mr. Jones's online pleas to his followers have also resulted
in millions of dollars in donations, including $8 million in
cryptocurrency that he pocketed before the trial, the families'
lawyers said.

Mr. Jones is emblematic of a cadre of far-right figures who came to
prominence during the Trump era by broadcasting incendiary false
theories about threats to America from immigrants and left-leaning
"globalists."  A community college dropout, Mr. Jones, 48, got his
start in the late 1990s with conspiracy-themed talk shows on Austin
community access television and a local radio station.  He has ties
to extremist groups in the American West, including some involved
in armed standoffs with the federal government.

In 2012, the year of the Sandy Hook shooting, Mr. Jones and his
father, David Jones, got into the diet supplements business. David
Jones, a dentist with a string of successful practices, joined
Infowars full time the next year.

Working with a Texas lawyer, Eric Taube, Alex Jones and his father
created PQPR as part of a legal network of limited liability
companies, "structured to protect the family from ongoing risk of
forming the business, running the business and adventures and
misadventures that could come in the future," David Jones said in
2014 court testimony.

Today the Infowars online store sells a variety of products
targeted to an audience suspicious of traditional medicine and the
federal government, including diet supplements and quack cures,
dried foods and supplies for home shelters, air and water
filtration systems, body armor and firearms paraphernalia.

Mr. Jones claims he is being pursued by "deep state" enemies, and
the Sandy Hook lawsuits are part of a sweeping conspiracy to
silence him.Credit...Ilana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times

"He didn't ride a wave; he created the wave," Bernard Pettingill
Jr., a forensic economist who examined Mr. Jones's finances, said
in court testimony this month. "He is a very successful guy."  Mr.
Pettingill valued Mr. Jones's company at a minimum of $130 million,
based on a partial analysis of its revenues.

Free Speech Systems's debt to PQPR is "a clawback to pay himself
back,” Mr. Pettingill testified. "He can say he’s broke, he has
no money, but we know that’s not the fact."

During Barack Obama's presidency, Mr. Jones grew his following by
fueling fears of "leftist" government plans to usurp Americans'
freedoms.  Within hours of the Sandy Hook massacre, Mr. Jones was
broadcasting lies to tens of millions of listeners, falsely
claiming that the massacre was a "false flag" operation plotted by
the government.

Mr. Jones has repeatedly refused to provide business and financial
records ordered by the courts. But the records he did supply
indicated that business surged on the days Mr. Jones spoke about
Sandy Hook, telling his audience his political enemies aimed to
shut Infowars down. Mr. Jones said in court testimony this month
that he earned $70 million in revenues in 2012, the year of the
shooting.

                     About Free Speech Systems

Free Speech Systems LLC is a broadcast media production and
distribution company that provides broadcasting aural programs by
radio to the public.  Free Speech Systems is a family-run business
founded by Alex Jones.

FSS is presently engaged in the business of producing and
syndicating Jones' radio and video talk shows and selling products
targeted to Jones' loyal fan base via the Internet.  Today, FSS
produces Alex Jones' syndicated news/talk show (The Alex Jones
Show) from Austin, Texas, which airs via the Genesis Communications
Network on over 100 radio stations across the United States and via
the internet through websites including Infowars.com.

Due to the content of Alex Jones' shows, Jones and FSS have faced
an all-out ban of Infowars from mainstream online spaces.  Shunning
from financial institutions and banning Jones and FSS from major
tech companies began in 2018.

Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones has been sued by victims' family
members over Jones' lies that the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School
shooting was a hoax.

Jones' InfoW LLC and affiliates, IWHealth, LLC and Prison Planet
TV, LLC, filed petitions under Chapter 11, Subchapter V of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Texas Lead Case No. 22-60020) on April
18, 2022.

The Debtors agreed to the dismissal of the Chapter 11 cases in June
2022 after the Sandy Hook victim families dismissed the three
bankrupt companies from their lawsuits.

Free Speech Systems filed a voluntary petition for relief under
Subchapter V of Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Tex.
Case No. 22-60043) on July 29, 2022.  In the petition filed by W.
Marc Schwartz, as chief restructuring officer, the Debtor reported
assets and liabilities between $50 million and $100 million.

Melissa A Haselden has been appointed as Subchapter V trustee.

Raymond William Battaglia, of Law Offices of Ray Battaglia, PLLC,
is the Debtor's counsel.


FREE SPEECH: Jones Atty Pleads Guilty at Hook Data Leak Hearing
---------------------------------------------------------------
Christine DeRosa of Law360 reports that a Connecticut attorney
facing possible disciplinary action after allegedly releasing
confidential information, including medical records, about Sandy
Hook families to unauthorized parties pled the Fifth on the stand
Thursday, August 25, 2022, in Connecticut state court.

Norm Pattis of Pattis & Smith LLC, an attorney for right-wing
conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, took the stand before Judge Barbara
N. Bellis of the Superior Court for the Judicial District of
Waterbury. He invoked his Fifth Amendment right against
self-incrimination to each question asked by state Chief
Disciplinary Counsel Brian B. Staines. Pattis is representing Jones
and his company Free Speech Systems LLC in an upcoming damages
trial.

                     About Free Speech Systems

Free Speech Systems LLC is a broadcast media production and
distribution company that provides broadcasting aural programs by
radio to the public.  Free Speech Systems is a family-run business
founded by Alex Jones.

FSS is presently engaged in the business of producing and
syndicating Jones' radio and video talk shows and selling products
targeted to Jones' loyal fan base via the Internet.  Today, FSS
produces Alex Jones' syndicated news/talk show (The Alex Jones
Show) from Austin, Texas, which airs via the Genesis Communications
Network on over 100 radio stations across the United States and via
the internet through websites including Infowars.com.

Due to the content of Alex Jones' shows, Jones and FSS have faced
an all-out ban of Infowars from mainstream online spaces.  Shunning
from financial institutions and banning Jones and FSS from major
tech companies began in 2018.

Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones has been sued by victims' family
members over Jones' lies that the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School
shooting was a hoax.

Jones' InfoW LLC and affiliates, IWHealth, LLC and Prison Planet
TV, LLC, filed petitions under Chapter 11, Subchapter V of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Texas Lead Case No. 22-60020) on April
18, 2022.

The Debtors agreed to the dismissal of the Chapter 11 cases in June
2022 after the Sandy Hook victim families dismissed the three
bankrupt companies from their lawsuits.

Free Speech Systems filed a voluntary petition for relief under
Subchapter V of Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D. Tex.
Case No. 22-60043) on July 29, 2022.  In the petition filed by W.
Marc Schwartz, as chief restructuring officer, the Debtor reported
assets and liabilities between $50 million and $100 million.

Melissa A Haselden has been appointed as Subchapter V trustee.

Raymond William Battaglia, of Law Offices of Ray Battaglia, PLLC,
is the Debtor's counsel.


FUSION PROMOTIONS: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
----------------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Fusion Promotions & Marketing LLC
        3070 Winward Plaza Suite F #326
        Alpharetta, GA 30005

Business Description: The Debtor is a provider of brand
                      representation talents.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: August 31, 2022

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Northern District of Georgia

Case No.: 22-56872

Judge: Hon. Paul Baisier

Debtor's Counsel: Cameron M. McCord, Esq.
                  JONES & WALDEN, LLC
                  699 Piedmont Avenue NE
                  Atlanta, GA 30308
                  Tel: 404-564-9300
                  Fax: 404-564-9301
                  E-mail: info@joneswalden.com

Estimated Assets: $0 to $50,000

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Matthew Burns as CEO.

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

https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/YRC3C7I/Fusion_Promotions__Marketing__ganbke-22-56872__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA


GIRARDI & KEESE: Treasures, Art Set for Auction to Pay Lender
-------------------------------------------------------------
Brandon Lowrey of Law360 reports that more than 200 valuable items
from Tom Girardi's Southern California mansion are slated to go up
for auction next week, with most of the proceeds going to repay a
litigation lender owed by the disgraced lawyer's bankrupt estate.

Among the items are a Steinway piano, valued at up to $60,000, and
numerous works by famed international artists and authors. Numerous
law books from Girardi's library will be up for bid as well, along
with a first-edition English translation of "The Prince," Niccolo
Machiavelli's infamous treatise exploring the darkest practices of
politics.

                     About Girardi & Keese

Girardi and Keese or Girardi & Keese was a Los Angeles-based law
firm founded in 1965 by lawyers Thomas Girardi and Robert Keese.
It served clients in California in a variety of legal areas. It was
known for representing plaintiffs against major corporations.

An involuntary Chapter 7 petition (Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No.
20-21022) was filed in December 2020 against GIRARDI KEESE by
alleged creditors Jill O'Callahan, Robert M. Keese, John Abassian,
Erika Saldana, Virginia Antonio, and Kimberly Archie.

The petitioners' attorneys:

         Andrew Goodman
         Goodman Law Offices, Apc
         Tel: 818-802-5044
         E-mail: agoodman@andyglaw.com

Elissa D. Miller, a member of the firm SulmeyerKupetz, has been
appointed as Chapter 7 trustee for GIRARDI KEESE. The Chapter 7
trustee can be reached at:

         Elissa D. Miller
         333 South Grand Ave., Suite 3400
         Los Angeles, California 90071-1406
         Telephone: (213) 626-2311
         Facsimile: (213) 629-4520
         E-mail: emiller@sulmeyerlaw.com

An involuntary Chapter 7 petition was also filed against Thomas
Vincent Girardi (Case No. 20-21020) on Dec. 18, 2020. The Chapter 7
trustee can be reached at:

         Jason M. Rund
         Email: trustee@srlawyers.com
         840 Apollo Street, Suite 351
         El Segundo, CA  90245
         Telephone: (310) 640-1200


GREEN ACRES: Files Subchapter V Case
------------------------------------
Green Acres MHP LLC filed for chapter 11 protection in the District
of Nebraska.  The Debtor filed as a small business debtor seeking
relief under Subchapter V of Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code

According to court filing, Gren Acres MHP LLC estimates between 1
and 49 unsecured creditors. The petition states funds will be
available to unsecured creditors.

A meeting of creditors under 11 U.S.C. Section 341(a) is slated for
Sept. 28, 2022, at 10:00 AM BY PHONE.  

Proofs of claim are due by Nov. 3, 2022.

                    About Green Acres MHP LLC

Green Acres MHP LLC filed a petition for relief under Subchapter V
of Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Neb. Case No.
22-80635) on August 25, 2022. In the petition filed by Brett
Burris, as Governor of Member/Manager B2CK LLC, the Debtor reported
assets between $500,000 and $1 million and estimated liabilities
between $500,000 and $1 million.

James A. Overcash has been appointed as Subchapter V trustee.

The Debtor is represented by Patrick Patino of Patino King LLC.


GUARDION HEALTH: Incurs $1.7 Million Net Loss in Second Quarter
---------------------------------------------------------------
Guardion Health Sciences, Inc. filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission its Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q reporting a
net loss of $1.70 million on $3.27 million of total revenue for the
three months ended June 30, 2022, compared to a net loss of $4.54
million on $1.22 million of total revenue for the three months
ended June 30, 2021.

For the six months ended June 30, 2022, the Company reported a net
loss of $4.32 million on $5.66 million of total revenue compared to
a net loss of $7.21 million on $1.46 million of total revenue for
the six months ended June 30, 2021.

Notwithstanding the net loss for the six months ended June 30,
2022, management believes that its current cash and short-term
investments as of June 30, 2022 are sufficient to ensure
continuation of the Company as a going concern for at least one
year from the date of this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q.

Guardion Health said, "The amount and timing of future cash
requirements will depend, in part, on the Company's ability to
ultimately achieve operating profitability.  The Company expects to
continue to incur net losses and negative operating cash flows in
the near-term and will continue to incur significant expenses for
the development, commercialization and distribution of its clinical
nutrition products and the successful development and
commercialization of any new products or product lines.  The
Company may also utilize cash to fund acquisitions or other
strategic initiatives."

As of June 30, 2022, the Company had $29.83 million in total
assets, $1.69 million in total liabilities, and $28.14 million in
total stockholders' equity.

Bret Scholtes, Guardion's president and chief executive officer,
commented:

"We reported our highest quarterly revenue in Guardion's history in
the second quarter of 2022 despite continued supply chain
constraints that prevented us from fully restocking one of our
largest legacy retailers.  These results were encouraging, and I
remain optimistic for the future of Guardion despite the currently
challenging macro environment.  Additionally, I am very pleased
with the quarter-over-quarter growth in revenues we experienced in
the second quarter of 2022 as compared to the first quarter of
2022.  The approximately 37% increase in revenues in the second
quarter of 2022, as compared to the first quarter of 2022, was
attributable to a combination of factors, including additional
Viactiv calcium chew inventory, the recent launch of our new Omega
Boost Gel Bites, and our focused marketing activities.  We are
optimistic that, as the supply constraints begin to improve, we
should see further increases in revenues."

"Our focus on building a strong foundation for our business, and
demonstrating growth and commercial success from that foundation,
is continuing, and we believe that the Company's improved financial
performance in the second quarter and six months of 2022
demonstrates that focus.  Our June 2021 acquisition of the Viactiv
product line is fueling the increase in our revenues in 2022, both
quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year.  We also significantly
reduced the operating loss during the second quarter of 2022."

"We are continuing our focus on achieving three key objectives –
demonstrating commercial success, strengthening our commercial
engine, and strengthening our clinical nutrition strategy - as we
seek to maximize stockholder value by acquiring, developing and
marketing a portfolio of science-based, clinically supported
products designed to support the health needs of consumers,
healthcare professionals and providers and their patients."

"We have continued to actively work toward the fulfillment of these
key objectives through increased availability of our calcium chews,
expanded sales channels through the launch of a direct-to-consumer
eCommerce capability on our website viactiv.com, the introduction
of Omega Boost Gel Bites and the launch on our website, followed by
the launch on Amazon.  We are working to further expand our
distribution of existing products, as well as to introduce
additional products."

"Concurrently, we continue to develop our brand strategy and, as
stated, expand our sales channels, while also focusing on ensuring
that scientific support for our products meets our high standards,
as exemplified by our recent agreement with OmegaQuant Laboratories
to provide high quality professional studies regarding Omega Boost
Gel Bites.  In the meantime, we look to continue to develop and/or
acquire new products that fit into our existing strategy, while
also constantly evaluating our existing business lines to ensure
they continue to meet our overall strategies."

"We believe our cash resources remain sufficient to advance the
Company's strategy to build a vital clinical nutrition company with
recognized brands and consumer trust.  We continue to appreciate
our stockholders' patience as we embark on these important
strategic initiatives and we look forward to reporting our
continuing progress to you," concluded Mr. Scholtes.

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

https://www.sec.gov/ix?doc=/Archives/edgar/data/1642375/000149315222021971/form10-q.htm

                   About Guardion Health Sciences

Headquartered in San Diego, California, Guardion Health Sciences,
Inc. -- http://www.guardionhealth.com-- is a specialty health
sciences company that develops clinically supported nutrition,
medical foods and medical devices, with a focus in the ocular
health marketplace. Located in San Diego, California, the Company
combines targeted nutrition with innovative, evidence-based
diagnostic technology.

Guardion Health reported a net loss of $24.75 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2021, a net loss of $8.57 million for the year ended
Dec. 31, 2020, a net loss of $10.88 million for the year ended Dec.
31, 2019, and a net loss of $7.77 million for the year ended Dec.
31, 2018.  As of March 31, 2022, the Company had $31.62 million in
total assets, $1.83 million in total liabilities, and $29.79
million in total stockholders' equity.


HOLLOWAY CROSSING: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
----------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Holloway Crossing, LLC
        8685 North Shore Drive
        Jonesboro, GA 30236

Business Description: Holloway Crossing is enaged in activities
                      related to real estate.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: August 31, 2022

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Northern District of Georgia

Case No.: 22-56865

Debtor's Counsel: Leon S. Jones, Esq.
                  JONES & WALDEN, LLC
                  699 Piedmont Avenue NE
                  Atlanta, GA 30308
                  Tel: 404-564-9300
                  Fax: 404-564-9301
                  Email: info@joneswalden.com

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

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

The petition was signed by Karen Mullins as manager.

The Debtor stated it has no creditors holding unsecured claims.

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

https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/TEI7LQI/Holloway_Crossing_LLC__ganbke-22-56865__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA


INDIGO PALMS: No Resident Complaints, PCO Report Says
-----------------------------------------------------
Lori Berndt, the appointed Patient Care Ombudsman for Indigo Palms,
LLC, filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District
of Florida a second report regarding the Debtor's health care
facility.

According to the PCO's review of staff schedules and payroll
reports, Indigo Palms consistently exceeded the minimum staffing
requirement during the reporting period.

The PCO's designee personally visited with the administrator, staff
and residents of Indigo Palms on July 21 and July 27, 2022. On July
21, 2022, the PCO's designee was met by Darren Pedigo, Director of
Nursing. The air conditioning was not working in the back part of
the building. It was scheduled for repair on July 25, 2022.

The designee observed that meals were still being served in
residents' rooms rather than in the dining room. She further
observed that although lunch was scheduled for 12:30 p.m., the
meals were still being plated as of 12:45 p.m. The meals were being
served in residents' rooms at 1:00 p.m., notwithstanding the
scheduled lunch time of 12:30 p.m. The designee remained concern
about the lack of communal dining.

The designee interviewed 3 residents and 1 family member, who
expressed satisfaction with the facility. The family member stated
that Indigo Palms provided good care to her loved one.

No complaints by or on behalf of residents at this facility were
filed with the Ombudsman program during the reporting period.

A copy of the Ombudsman Report is available for free at
https://bit.ly/3cwk1xB from PacerMonitor.com.

Counsel for Lori Berndt:

     Lynn C. Hearn, Esq.
     Legal Advocate
     Florida Long Term Care Ombudsman Program
     4040 Esplanade Way
     Tallahassee, FL 32399
     Telephone: (850) 414-2054
     Email: hearnl@elderaffairs.org

                   About Indigo Palms

A Florida limited liability company, Indigo Palms, LLC, leases and
operates an assisted living facility located at 507 Healthcare
Drive, Daytona Beach, FL.

Indigo Palms, LLC, filed a petition under Chapter 11, Subchapter V
of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 22-01080) on
March 25, 2022, listing up to $100,000 in assets and up to $10
million in liabilities. Robert Altman serves as Subchapter V
trustee.

Judge Tiffany Payne Geyer oversees the case.

Kenneth D. Herron, Jr., Esq. at Herron Hill Law Group, PLLC, serves
as the Debtor's legal counsel.            


INNERLINE ENGINEERING: Seeks Cash Collateral Access Thru Nov 15
---------------------------------------------------------------
Innerline Engineering, Inc. asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Central District of California, Riverside Division, for authority
to use cash collateral on a final basis  for the period October 1,
2022 through November 15, 2022.

The creditors with liens on the cash collateral are HOP Capital,
Danny Song, Dig Vac, LLC, APS Environmental Inc., U.S. Small
Business Administration, Herc Rentals, Inc., and the Internal
Revenue Service.

The Debtor believes the Secured Creditors are adequately protected
by the continued and uninterrupted operation of the business.
Notwithstanding, the Debtor will continue to make adequate
protection payments to HOP Capital, Danny Song, SBA, and the IRS.

The Debtor will give the Secured Creditors a replacement lien to
the extent the automatic stay, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. section 362,
as well as the use, sale, lease or grant results in a decrease in
the value of the Secured Creditors' interest in the cash collateral
on a postpetition basis retroactive to the Petition Date. The
Debtor believes the replacement lien is valid, perfected and
enforceable and will not be subject to dispute, avoidance, or
subordination, and this replacement lien need not be subject to
additional recording.

The Debtor will continue to make adequate protection payments as
follows:

- HOP Capital: $3,000;
- Danny Song: $1,000;
- U.S. Small Business Administration $731; and
- Internal Revenue Service: $5,207.

A copy of the motion and the Debtor's budget for the period from
October to November 2022 is available at https://bit.ly/3pXwiy0
from PacerMonitor.com.

The Debtor projects $425,000 in total income and $114,777 in total
operating expenses for October 2022.

                   About Innerline Engineering

Corona, Cal.-based Innerline Engineering, Inc.
-http://www.innerlineengineering.com/-- offers a variety of
services to municipalities, utility owners, industrial facilities
and commercial property owners for the maintenance of their
underground utilities.

Innerline Engineering filed a petition for Chapter 11 protection
(Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 21-14305) on Aug. 9, 2021, listing as
much as $10 million in both assets and liabilities. Thomas J.C.
Yeh, chief financial officer, signed the petition.

Judge Wayne E. Johnson oversees the case.

Resnik Hayes Moradi LLP serves as the Debtor's bankruptcy counsel.



J MORALES: Files Emergency Bid to Use Cash Collateral
-----------------------------------------------------
J Morales Inc. asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of
Nevada for authority to, among other things, use cash collateral
and provide adequate protection.

The Debtor requires the use of cash collateral to allow for the
continued operation, preservation and maintenance of its businesses
pending a final hearing.

As reflected in the financial statements attached to the Debtor's
bankruptcy petition, for the first six months of 2022, the Debtor's
businesses have grossed modest profits. Specifically, from January
through June 2022, its restaurant's gross profits were $48,009, and
the Banquet Hall's gross profits were $5,674. After accounting for
operating expenses, however, both Businesses have showed net losses
for this time period. As a result, from time-to-time, owner Jose
Morales has infused money into J Morales in order to sustain its
operations and because he believes the future prospects of its
Businesses are very good, especially once the Property's repairs
are completed and the balance of the Property can be utilized or
leased out to generate additional income.

The Debtor's property is presently encumbered by an SBA loan in
first position arranged through Seacoast Commerce Bank, which a
lender based in San Diego, California. On March 26, 2019, the
Debtor entered into a Secured Promissory Note with Seacoast's SBA
Division, which the Debtor believes is presently held by Enterprise
Bank & Trust. The SBA Note was in the original principal amount of
$655,500. After an initial three months of interest only payments,
the SBA Note required J Morales to make regular monthly payments of
$5,184 per month in principal and interest until the obligation was
paid in full. The initial interest rate on the SBA Note was 8.25%
per annum, but the interest rate fluctuates every calendar quarter,
and is calculated as the Prime Rate plus 2.75%. The current balance
of the SBA Note is approximately $615,000.

The SBA Loan was secured by a Construction Deed of Trust and a
separate Assignment of Rents recorded against the Property in the
Official Records of the Clark County Recorder on March 29, 2019, as
Instruments# 20190329-2616 and -2617.  The SBA perfected its
security interest in personal property by filing a UCC-1 financing
statement filed with the Nevada Secretary of State on that same
date, however, in the financing statement's collateral description,
it only listed "all building materials," and without any other or
further explanation.

Prior to the Debtor's acquisition of the Property, Stuart Sackley,
as Trustee of the Sackley Family Trust, owned the Property. Sackley
had a tenant in the Property called Ortiz Family LLC, a Nevada
limited liability company, which was managed by Leticia A. Catellon
and Roberto C. Ortiz-Vargas, and which operated a nightclub called
El Sellito Rojo in one of the suites. Neither the Debtor nor Mr.
Morales are insiders or affiliates of Sackley, Ortiz Family, or the
principals of those companies.

On February 5, 2018, Max Vargas, as plaintiff, filed a Complaint
against Ortiz Family and J Morales, among various other "Doe
Bouncers" and "Roe Corporations," in the Eighth Judicial District
Court, Clark County, Nevada, Case No. A-18-768988-C. Mr. Morales
personally as an individual was never included as a defendant in
the State Court Case. Ms. Vargas' complaint alleged that he was
involved in an altercation with bouncers at the nightclub on March
22, 2017 that resulted in his sustaining damages, including bodily
injury, medical specials, and pain and suffering. Critically, this
incident occurred while Sackley owned the Property, and the Ortiz
Family operated the nightclub, and indeed more than five months
before J Morales purchased the Property.

Upon becoming aware of the Complaint, J Morales contacted its
insurance agent, who advised the company not to worry about the
State Court Case because there was no way J Morales could ever be
found liable for the incident involving Mr. Vargas given that it
did not own the Property at the time. Relying on this advice, J
Morales did not answer the Complaint or otherwise appear in the
State Court Case. Additionally, from review of the docket, Ortiz
Family also did not answer or otherwise appear in the State Court
Case as well.  

On April 13, 2018, Mr. Vargas filed a Default against both of the
Defendants in the State Court Case, and then on July 25, 2019,
obtained a Default Judgment against the Defendants in the total
amount of $1,706,215. Again, Mr. Morales was not personally liable
on the Default Judgment; rather, only J Morales, the company, was
liable for it. The Default Judgment included, inter alia,
$1,000,000 in punitive damages, and pre-judgment interest of
$164,422.63. Post-judgment interest also may have accrued on the
Default Judgment in the additional amount of approximately
$282,000, and thus as of the Petition Date, the total amount of the
Default Judgment is approximately $1.988 million.

Regrettably, upon later consultation with the company's legal
counsel, had J Morales actually appeared and defended itself in the
State Court Case, given that the company did not own the Property
or operate the nightclub at the time of the incident involving Mr.
Vargas, there is little real possibility that J Morales would have
been found liable for that matter.

On May 28, 2020, Mr. Vargas recorded his Default Judgment in the
Official Records of the Clark County Recorder as Instrument No.
20200528-2898, which created a judgment lien on J Morales’ real
property located in Clark County, Nevada, which then included the
Property, pursuant to NRS 17.150. Mr. Vargas' judgment lien is
recorded more than 14 months after the SBA's Deed of Trust and
Assignment of Rents, and thus because it is recorded later in time,
it is in junior, subordinate position on the Property relative to
the SBA's senior lien and encumbrance.

Mr. Vargas was apparently unsuccessful in obtaining collection of
his Default Judgment from Ortiz Family, as co-defendant, and the
Debtor is not aware of it having paid anything in satisfaction of
the judgment. Mr. Vargas eventually commenced collection of his
Default Judgment against J Morales, which prompted the company to
act. On October 27, 2020, and thus more than 16 months after the
Nevada State Court entered the Default Judgment, J Morales filed a
Motion to Set Aside Judgment and Stay Execution, which the Court
granted by order entered on November 24, 2020 pursuant to NRCP
60(b).

On December 11, 2020, Mr. Vargas filed an appeal from the Order for
Relief from Judgment to the Nevada Supreme Court, which was pending
as Appeal No. 82218. On June 2, 2022, and thus 16 months after Mr.
Vargas filed his appeal, the Nevada Supreme Court entered an order
reversing the State Court's Order for Relief from Judgment, thus
reinstating the Default Judgment against the Defendants, including
J Morales, and remanding the matter back to the Nevada State
Court.

On July 25, 2022, Mr. Vargas filed an Application for Order Setting
Examination of Judgment Debtor Jose Morales in the State Court
Case, which contains numerous errors.

In addition to the SBA Loan and Mr. Vargas' Default Judgment, the
Debtor also has some other debts associated with the Businesses as
well. After accounting for the SBA's lien on the Property in first
position, the Property does not have sufficient equity to be able
to satisfy Mr. Vargas' $1.9 million+ Default Judgment as well. In
fact, the Debtor has obtained an appraisal of the Property with an
effective date of August 22, 2022, and thus just one week before
the Petition Date, which indicates that the current fair market
value of the Property is only $550,000, and thus less than even the
SBA is owed, thus leaving no value to attach to Mr. Vargas'
judgment lien, and thus rendering his claim entirely unsecured.

Given the Nevada Supreme Court's decision, thus restoring Mr.
Vargas' Default Judgment against the Defendants, including J
Morales, with Mr. Vargas continuing to seek aggressive collection
of his Default Judgment through the JDE Examination and JDE Notice,
among other means.

As illustrated by the Budget, the Debtor is only seeking to use
cash collateral to preserve, maintain and operate its Businesses in
the ordinary course. Each expense included in the Budget is a
necessary and appropriate to the Businesses. The Debtor proposes to
make a monthly adequate protection payment to the SBA in the
amount of $4,835 on or before the 5th calendar day of each and
every month during the pendency of the Chapter 11 Case, which is
approximately the normal monthly payment required under the SBA's
Note.

The Debtor does not propose to make any adequate protection payment
to Mr. Vargas for various reasons.

A copy of the motion is available at https://bit.ly/3ToG3Tx from
PacerMonitor.com.

                       About J Morales Inc.

J Morales Inc. owns and operates two businesses. Since 2006, it has
owned and operated an El Nopal Mexican Grill #2 restaurant, which
operates out of leased space located at 4200 W. Russell Rd., Suite
115, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89118.  Since 2017, it has owned real
property located at 3977 Vegas Valley Drive, Las Vegas, Nevada
89121, which includes an approximately 10,000 square foot building,
and in which it has most recently
operated the Le Caprice Banquet Hall, which host events such as
wedding receptions and quinceaneras.

The Debtor sought protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Nev. Case No. 22-13083) on August 29,
2022. In the petition signed by Jose Morales, owner and director,
the Debtor disclosed up to $1 million in assets and up to $10
million in liabilities.

Judge Natalie M. Cox oversees the case.

Matthew C. Zirzow, Esq., at Larson & Zirzow, LLC oversees the
case.



JA SEEKINS: Gets Cash Collateral Access Thru Sept 8
---------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Washington
authorized JA Seekins Painting Inc. to use cash collateral on an
interim basis for payment of post-petition operating expenses as
follows:

     1. Post-petition payroll expenses to non-insiders Heyden
Alexander at the rate of $25 per hour, Nakota Glossip at the rate
of $25 per hour, and Andrew Emmerich in the amount of $2,500 per
week, including payroll and related taxes;

     2. Post-petition payroll to insider David Seekins in the
amount of $1,500, per week including payroll and related taxes;

     3. Marketing expenses;

     4. Insurance expense;

     5. Travel expense; and

     6. Materials and Supplies expense

The Debtor is not authorized to use cash collateral to pay any
amount as a draw to insider David Seekins.

As adequate protection, creditor WebBank is granted a replacement
lien on the Debtor's collateral as set forth in the Supplemental
Declaration of David Seekins, in the same priority as existed on
the petition date.

The Debtor's interim right to use cash collateral will expire at
11:59 p.m. on September 8, unless further extended by the Court.

The final hearing on the matter is set for September 8 at 9:30
a.m.

A copy of the order is available at https://bit.ly/3dW5vPX from
PacerMonitor.com.

                About JA Seekins Painting, Inc.

JA Seekins Painting, Inc. sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
U.S. Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D. Wash. Case No. 22-11316-CMA) on
August 14, 2022. In the petition signed by David Seekins,
president, the Debtor disclosed up to $50,000 in assets and up to
$500,000 in liabilities.

Judge Christopher M. Alston oversees the case.

Thomas D. Neeleman, Esq., at Neeleman Law Group, P.C. is the
Debtor's counsel.



JACKSON HOSPITAL: S&P Lowers 2015 Long-Term Bond Rating to 'BB'
---------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings lowered its long-term rating on The Medical
Clinic Board of the City of Montgomery, Ala.'s series 2015 bonds
issued for Jackson Hospital & Clinic Inc. to 'BB' from 'BBB-'. The
outlook is negative.

"The downgrade reflects Jackson's unexpected, significant, and
persistent operating losses and diminished unrestricted reserves
through June 30, 2022," said S&P Global Ratings credit analyst John
Magers. S&P said, "These pressures have been driven by high labor
costs and inflationary pressures that we expect will persist into
fiscal 2023. There is very limited headroom under financial
covenants--specifically, the days' cash on hand (DCOH) requirement
of 50 that could result in acceleration if violated. We expect
management will bring in a consultant, given that debt service
coverage is likely to be below 1.1x in fiscal 2022."

S&P said, "We view Jackson's social human capital risk as elevated
in our rating analysis due to the heightened labor costs and
staffing retention challenges that are leading to operational
pressures. A high proportion of Medicare revenue and an aging
population pose additional risk to Jackson's social capital
position. We view social health and safety risk as neutral in our
analysis, although we recognize that the COVID-19 pandemic has
exposed the health care sector to additional risks that have, for
most systems, dampened revenue growth, required increased costs to
care for patients, and created staffing challenges and higher labor
expenses. We think Jackson's governance and environmental risks are
neutral within our credit rating analysis. That said, we note
Jackson's elevated governance transparency and reporting risk,
given its history of delayed audits, which appears to have
persisted over the last fiscal year, despite management's plan to
remedy with more automated reporting and internal control
improvements. Additionally, S&P Global Ratings' ability to
establish timely communication with Jackson's management team and
meet for annual review cycles has been somewhat limited in recent
years.

"The negative outlook reflects our expectation of continued
operational weakness and very thin unrestricted reserves over the
one-year outlook period. We also believe there is very limited
cushion under current financial covenants that could result in
noncompliance if operations do not improve.

"We could lower the rating further if Jackson's unrestricted
reserves continue to be depleted and breach the covenant
requirement, resulting in acceleration of the bonds. The rating
could also be lowered if there is no operational improvement and
progress on having more cushion over bond covenants. There could be
negative rating pressure if there is a debt issue or weakening in
the enterprise profile.

"We do not expect a higher rating over the outlook period, although
we could revise the outlook back to stable if there is significant
operational improvement as well as a significant increase in DCOH
such that this is more of a cushion under financial covenants. This
would be contingent upon stability in the enterprise profile."



JOHN V. GALLY: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
------------------------------------------------
Debtor: The John V. Gally Family Protective Trust Inc.
        208 W. 1st Street
        Winslow, AZ 86047

Type of Debtor: Business Trust

Chapter 11 Petition Date: August 30, 2022

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       District of Arizona

Case No.: 22-05770

Debtor's Counsel: Bradley D. Pack, Esq.
                  ENGELMAN BERGER, P.C.
                  2800 North Central Avenue
                  Suite 1200
                  Phoenix, AZ 85004
                  Tel: 602-271-9090
                  Email: bdp@eblawyers.com

Total Assets as of July 31, 2022: $5,052,969

Total Liabilities as of July 31, 2022: $231,578

The petition was signed by Caryn K. Mangisi as trustee.

The Debtor failed to include in the petition a list of its 20
largest unsecured creditors.

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

https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/FDFHGJI/THE_JOHN_V_GALLY_FAMILY_PROTECTIVE__azbke-22-05770__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA


KEYS MEDICAL STAFFING: Wins Interim Cash Collateral Access
----------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Georgia,
Gainesville Division, authorized Keys Medical Staffing, LLC to use
cash collateral on an interim basis in accordance with the budget.

The Debtor requires the use of cash collateral to fund critical
operations.

The Debtor is permitted to pay its independent contractors that are
temporarily staffed at work sites, the amount that is actually
billed by the independent contractors, regardless of the amount
provided for in the Budget for independent contractor compensation.


All clients of the Debtor, including SavaSeniorCare Administrative
Services, LLC, are authorized to send funds they are holding for
services already provided directly to the Debtor.

Sava, its affiliates, or any other client that sends funds to the
Debtor in accordance with the Interim Order will not be liable to
either the Debtor or its lender to the extent of the amount of
funds that are actually paid to the Debtor, and any payments by an
Account Debtor will be credited against, and in satisfaction of,
invoices that are undisputed by the Account Debtor.

On June 2, 2020, the Debtor entered into a financing agreement with
ARA, Inc. d/b/a Lone Oak Payroll, a factoring company, and executed
a Conditional Letter of Agreement for Factoring and Payroll
Services. The Debtor asserts that the Factoring Agreement is a loan
rather than a true sale of receivables. The Lender asserts that it
is the owner of certain accounts receivable which it purchased from
the Debtor under the Factoring Agreement, and the Lender asserts
further that it holds a security interest in all of the Debtor's
personal property as security for all amounts owed to the Lender by
the Debtor. The Lender contends that, as of June 29, 2022, the
Debtor was indebted to it under the Factoring Agreement in the
total amount of approximately $1,085,833, exclusive of attorney's
fees and other items recoverable under the Factoring Agreement and
applicable law. Debtor disputes the amount owed.

SavaSeniorCare is a pre-petition client of the Debtor that, upon
information and belief, owes funds for work performed.

As adequate protection for any diminution in the value of ARA's
interests in the Pre-Petition Collateral resulting from the use of
cash collateral, the Lender is valid, binding, enforceable and
automatically perfected liens on and security interests in (i) all
personal property of the Debtor that is of a kind or nature
described as Collateral in the Factoring Agreement, whether
existing or arising prior to, on or after the Petition Date, and
(ii) all other personal property of the Debtor, wherever located
and whether created, acquired or arising prior to, on or after the
Petition Date.

The Adequate Protection Liens will at all times be senior to the
rights of the Debtor and any successor trustee or estate
representative of the Debtor's estate, and any security interest or
lien upon the Debtor's assets that is avoided or otherwise
preserved for the benefit of the Debtor's estate under Section 551
or any other provision of the Bankruptcy Code will be subordinate
to the Adequate Protection Liens. The Adequate Protection Liens and
all claims, rights, interests, administrative claims and other
protections granted to or for the benefit of the Lender pursuant to
the Order and the Bankruptcy Code will constitute valid,
enforceable, nonavoidable and duly perfected security interests and
liens.

As additional adequate protection, the Debtor will make a $50,000
payment to the Lender by the close of business on August 30, 2022.
The Adequate Protection Payment will be applied to reduce the
principal amount the Debtor owes to the Lender as of the Petition
Date.

The Debtor will pay the Subchapter V Trustee $5,000 as a deposit
ear-marked for purposes of paying any compensation awarded to the
Subchapter V Trustee in the case. The deposit will be held in trust
by Debtor's counsel until further order of the Court.

The final hearing on the matter is scheduled for September 22, 2022
at 10:30 a.m.

A copy of the order and the Debtor's four-week budget is available
at https://bit.ly/3R5tQBs from PacerMonitor.com.

The budget provides for total expenses, on a weekly basis, as
follows:

    $111,380 for Week 1;
     $19,206 for Week 2;
     $22,166 for Week 3; and
     $21,125 for Week 4

                About Keys Medical Staffing, LLC

Keys Medical Staffing, LLC is a medical staffing company formed by
Dr. Theresa Jones and Dr. Linnie Fletcher in 2016.

The Debtor sought protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D. Ga. Case No. 22-20573-jrs) on June 28,
2022. In the petition filed by Christy Collins-French, chief
operating officer, the Debtor disclosed up to $10 million in assets
and up to $1 million in liabilities.

Judge James R. Sacca oversees the case.

William Rountree, Esq., at Rountree, Leitman, Klein & Geer, LLC,
serves as the Debtor's counsel.


LIVEWELL ASSISTED: Wins Cash Collateral Access Thru Sept 30
-----------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of North
Carolina, Raleigh Division, authorized Livewell Assisted Living,
Inc. to use cash collateral on an interim basis in accordance with
the budget, with a 10% variance, through September 30, 2022.

The Debtor requires the use of cash collateral to continue its
ongoing operations. The budget provides for $386,261 in projected
income through September 30.

The possible lienholders of the Debtor's cash collateral are:

   Creditor                               Balance owed
   --------                               ------------
   U.S. Small Business Administration         $510,017
   Itria Ventures                              $54,483
   Forward Financing                          $114,062
   Vox Funding                                 $80,300
   Delta Bridge Funding                        $33,973
   Wynwood Capital Group                       $44,970
   United Fund USA                             $24,481
   Seabrook Funding                            $52,465
   EBF Holdings                                $66,960
   CFG Merchant Funding                        $95,153
   Green Grass Capital                         $47,680

The secured creditors are granted liens in after-acquired revenue
to the same extent and priority as they had prior to the filing of
the case.

A further hearing on the matter is scheduled for September 22 at 10
a.m.

A copy of the order and the Debtor's budget is available at
https://bit.ly/3PW78dQ from PacerMonitor.com.

The Debtor projects $373,131 in revenue and $357,856 in total
expenses for the month of September.

                   About Livewell Assisted Living

Livewell Assisted Living, Inc., a part of the continuing care
retirement communities industry, filed its voluntary petition for
Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. E.D.N.C. Case No. 22-00264) on Feb.
7, 2022, listing up to $500,000 in assets and up to $10 million in
liabilities. Justin Beckett, president, signed the petition.

Judge David M. Warren oversees the case.

Travis Sasser, Esq., at Sasser Law Firm represents the Debtor as
legal counsel.



LONESOME VALLEY: Seeks Cash Collateral Access
---------------------------------------------
Lonesome Valley Brewing, Inc. asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the District of Arizona for authority to use cash collateral and
grant replacement liens.

The Debtor seeks to use cash collateral on an interim basis in
accordance with the budget, with a 10% variance.  The expenses
provided for in the Budget are basic and necessary expenses
required for the Debtor's continued operations.

As of the Petition Date, the Debtor held approximately $1,000 in
cash-on-hand. The Debtor additionally had an estimated $5,556 in
deposit accounts. Lastly, as of the Petition Date, the Debtor
believes it had approximately $7,000 in pending proceeds from
unprocessed credit card transactions.

The Debtor is aware of the following lenders who have asserted or
may assert a security interest in the Debtor's accounts or
receivables:

     a. Arizona Department of Revenue
     b. Greenbox Capital/Merchant Capital Group, LLC
     c. Holloway Funding Group/ Adam Wines Consulting, LLC
     d. IOU Central Inc.
     e. United States Small Business Administration
     f. DMKA, LLC

The Debtor is also aware that Corporation Service Company and First
Corporate Solutions have filed financing statements on behalf of
unnamed creditors that assert an interest in the Debtor's accounts
or receivables.

As the Budget indicates, the Debtor expects to have positive cash
flow by the end of September 2022.

The Debtor proposes replacement liens to the same extent, validity,
and priority as the Applicable Creditors' pre-petition liens in the
value of any depreciation in the unavoidable portions of such
individual creditor's interest in cash collateral as of the
Petition Date, if any, including depreciation through post-petition
use of cash collateral.

As no creditor appears to have a perfected interested in the
Debtor's Cash or Accounts, replacement liens would likely be
limited to the minimal value of the Debtor's outstanding
Receivables as of the Petition Date.

A copy of the motion and the Debtor's budget is available at
https://bit.ly/3B0qoCM from PacerMonitor.com.

The Debtor projects $88,000 in income and $82,545 in expenses for
September 2022.

                About Lonesome Valley Brewing, Inc.

Lonesome Valley Brewing, Inc. operates two bar and restaurant
locations in northern Arizona: a craft brewery in Prescott Valley
and a pub in Prescott.

The Debtor sought protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Ariz. Case No. 22-05747) on August 29,
2022. In the petition signed by Joanne Cole, chief financial
officer, the Debtor disclosed up to $500,000 in assets and up to
$10 million in liabilities.

Judge Brenda K. Martin oversees the case.

Thomas H. Allen, Esq., at Allen Barnes & Jones, PLC is the Debtor's
counsel.



LOUISVILLE PROCESSING: Has Deal on Cash Collateral Access
---------------------------------------------------------
Louisville Processing & Cold Storage, Inc. asks the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Western District of Kentucky, Louisville Division,
for authority to use cash collateral, pursuant to its agreement
with GOF Finance, LLC.

As adequate protection, the Cash Collateral Creditor will be
granted liens, upon all property of the Debtor of the same type of
collateral and priority as existed as of the Petition Date, subject
only to any valid and enforceable, perfected, and non-avoidable
liens of other secured creditors.

The Replacement Liens granted by will be deemed effective, valid,
and perfected as of the Petition Date without the necessity of the
filing or lodging by or with any entity of any documents or
instruments otherwise required to be filed or lodged under
applicable nonbankruptcy law.

As additional adequate protection, the Debtor will continue to
account for all cash use, and the proposed cash use as set forth in
the Budget is being incurred primarily to preserve property of the
Estate. Debtor will also remit $8,000 per month to GOF Finance, LLC
beginning September 15, 2022 as adequate protection payments.
Payments thereafter are due on or before the 15th day of each month
unless and until this provision is modified by mutual agreement of
the parties, confirmation of the Chapter 11 plan, or dismissal of
the case.

The Debtor will maintain sufficient insurance on the LPCS Property
such that GOF's interest in such property is protected. The Debtor
will cause GOF to be listed as a loss payee on such insurance.
Proof that this insurance is in effect will be provided to GOF upon
request. Failure to provide proof of valid insurance shall
constitute sufficient grounds to grant relief from the automatic
stay in favor of GOF.

A copy of the order is available at https://bit.ly/3RqzC0b from
PacerMonitor.com.

         About Louisville Processing & Cold Storage, Inc.

Louisville Processing & Cold Storage, Inc. is a one-stop USDA
processing and cold storage service offering USDA Processing,
Co-pack and Private Label Processing services, Fully Cooked
Operations (dry, smoke, steam), and long term or short term
refrigerated and frozen storage. Its sole shareholder is David
Phillips.

The Debtor sought protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. W.D. Ky. Case No. 22-31479) on August 3,
2022. In the petition signed by David Phillips, president, the
Debtor disclosed up to $10 million in both assets and liabilities.

Charity S. Bird, Esq., at Kaplan Johnson Abate & Bird LLP is the
Debtor's counsel.



LUMILEDS HOLDING: Seeks $275MM DIP Loan from Deutsche Bank
----------------------------------------------------------
Bright Bidco B.V., an affiliate of Lumileds Holding B.V., asks the
U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York for
authority to, among other things, use cash collateral and obtain
postpetition financing.

Bright Bidco B.V., in its capacity as borrower, and each of the
other Debtors, with the exception of Luminescence Cooperatief U.A.
and Aegletes B.V., as guarantors, seek to obtain postpetition
financing, on a joint and several basis, under a senior secured
superpriority term loan debtor-in-possession facility in an
aggregate principal amount of $275 million, consisting of:

     (i) a first lien senior secured superpriority term loan
facility in the aggregate principal amount of up to $175 million,
which will, upon entry of the Proposed Interim Order, be available
to be drawn in up to two drawings, and

    (ii) a delayed-draw term loan in a principal amount of up to
$100 million,

with the funding of the DIP Loans to be coordinated by Deutsche
Bank Securities Inc., which will available to be drawn in a single
drawing upon entry of the Proposed Final Order; provided, however,
that the Delayed Draw DIP Facility will only be funded if (A) the
Debtors do not obtain authority from the Court to maintain a
Receivables Factoring Facility or (B) Credit Agricole fails to
continue performing under the Receivables Factoring Facility.

Deutsche Bank AG New York Branch serves as administrative agent,
collateral agent, and escrow agent under the DIP Agreement.

The Debtors have been significantly impacted by various recent
geopolitical and macroeconomic events,  including the recent
COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent and interrelated global
decline in vehicle production, semiconductor shortages and other
supply chain issues, and lockdowns in China, as well as Russia's
invasion of Ukraine, and rising inflation and interest rates, raw
material prices, and other costs, which have exacerbated pricing
pressure in certain divisions. As these headwinds persisted, it
became clear that the Debtors' capital structure was unsustainable
and that the Company needed to move with urgency to gather support
from its secured lenders for a restructuring plan that would secure
necessary liquidity to preserve the Company’s businesses in the
short term and reduce its indebtedness to maximize value in the
long term.

As of the Petition Date, the Debtors' capital structure consists of
outstanding funded-debt obligations in the aggregate principal
amount of approximately $1.7 billion.

In late April 2022, the Company launched a process to explore
strategic alternatives. The Company, with the assistance of its
advisors and at the direction of the Restructuring Committee, has
aggressively pursued various initiatives and engaged in extensive
arm's-length negotiations with an ad hoc group of secured lenders.


These negotiations culminated in a comprehensive restructuring, the
terms of which are memorialized in the Restructuring Support
Agreement, which, in addition to providing for the reduction of the
Debtors' funded debt by $1.3 billion, also secures the postpetition
financing.

Prior to the Petition Date, the Debtors entered into the
Restructuring Support Agreement with their key stakeholders,
including holders of approximately 67% of the outstanding
obligations under the Prepetition First Lien Credit Agreement, and
their sponsors AP Bright Holdings (Lux) S.a.r.l.,
Metaaldraadlampenfabriek "Volt" B.V., and Alnitak (MEP) B.V., and
launched solicitation of a prepackaged plan of reorganization. The
Debtors have commenced these chapter 11 cases to effectuate the
transactions contemplated in the Restructuring Support Agreement
and the Plan to restructure their funded debt, while ensuring that
the financial restructuring will have a minimal impact on the
Debtors' operations, their key business partners, and their
customers.

As adequate protection, the Prepetition First Lien Secured Parties
will be granted valid, enforceable, binding, non-avoidable, and
fully perfected first priority priming liens on and senior security
interests in substantially all of the property, assets, and other
interests in property and assets of the Debtor Loan Parties.  As
further adequate protection, the Prepetition First Lien Secured
Parties  will be granted superpriority administrative expense
claims against each of the Debtors' estates to the Funding
Coordinator, the DIP Agent and the DIP Lenders with respect to the
DIP Obligations over any and all administrative expenses of any
kind or nature subject and subordinate only to the payment of the
Carve Out on the terms and conditions set forth herein and in the
DIP Loan Documents.

The Carve Out means certain statutory fees allowed professional
fees of the Debtors, and say official committee of unsecured
creditors appointed in these Chapter 11 Cases pursuant to section
1103 of the Bankruptcy Code.

The DIP Loan Agreement includes certain milestones related to the
Chapter 11 Cases, including:

     (a) Entry of Proposed Interim Order that is acceptable the DIP
Agent and to the DIP Lenders holding at least 50.1% of the
outstanding unused commitments and term loans under the DIP
Facility, within five days following the Petition Date;

     (b) Entry of Proposed Final Order that is acceptable to the
DIP Agent the Requisite DIP Lenders within 30 days following the
Petition Date;

     (c) Entry by the Bankruptcy Court of a combined order
confirming a plan of reorganization that is acceptable to the
Requisite DIP Lenders and approving the disclosure statement with
respect to
the Acceptable Plan within 45 days following the Petition Date; and


     (d) Consummation of the Acceptable Plan within 65 days
following the Petition Date.

A copy of the motion is available at https://bit.ly/3RkeMzI from
PacerMonitor.com.

                   About Lumileds Holding B.V.

Lumileds Holding B.V. is a global manufacturer of innovative
lighting solutions. In the 1960s, the Company expanded its
offerings to also include state-of-the-art LED devices alongside
the automotive lighting technologies that it had continued to
innovate.  Today, the Company continues to develop and manufacture
high-tech lighting products for the automotive, mobile device,
consumer, general lighting, and industrial markets.

Lumileds Holding and several affiliates sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Lead Case
No. 22-11155) on August 29, 2022. In the petition signed by
Johannes Paulus Teuwen, chief financial officer, Lumileds Holding
disclosed up to $100 million in assets and up to $500 million in
liabilities.

Judge Lisa G. Beckerman oversees the case.

The Debtor tapped Latham & Watkins LLP as legal counsel, Paul,
Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP as special financing and
employee compensation counsel, AlixPartners, LLP as financial
advisor, and Evercore Inc. as investment banker, and Epiq Corporate
Restructuring, LLC as claims and noticing agent.

Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP serves as counsel to the DIP Lenders.
The Secured Lender Group retained Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP,
Loyens & Loeff N.V., Roland Berger LP, and PJT Partners LP, as
counsel or financial advisor.


MAGIC DESIGNS: Wins Cash Collateral Access on Final Basis
---------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California,
Los Angeles Division, authorized Magic Designs, Inc. to use cash
collateral on a final basis pursuant to its agreement with the U.S.
government on behalf of the Internal Revenue Service.

The Debtor is directed to timely make payments to the IRS pursuant
to the Stipulation and Order entered by the Court.

As adequate protection, all secured creditors with a perfected
security interest will be granted a replacement lien to the same
extent, validity, and priority, and the same dollar amount as their
secured claims as existed on the Petition Date.

The replacement lien is valid, perfected, and enforceable without
the need of any further recording, provided that, if the bankruptcy
case is closed or dismissed, any applicable nonbankruptcy law will
determine whether any further recording is required.

As previously reported by the Troubled Company Reporter, the Debtor
requires the use of cash collateral to pay its normal and ordinary
operating expenses as they come due in the ordinary course of the
Debtor's business.

The Debtor has a few judgment creditors that assert an interest in
its cash, most of which are disputed. The Debtor submitted that the
secured creditors will not be harmed in any way by the Debtor's use
of cash collateral. Without the proposed use of cash collateral,
the Debtor will not have any liquidity to operate its business and
will be unable to fund its ordinary course expenditures or pay the
expenses necessary to administer the chapter 11 case.

A copy of the order is available at https://bit.ly/3cvA7HC from
PacerMonitor.com.

                     About Magic Designs, Inc.

Magic Designs, Inc. is a clothing manufacturer. The Debtor sought
protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (Bankr.
C.D. Cal. Case No. 22-13987) on July 23, 2022. In the petition
signed by Xanlhyl Zuleika Nuno Aquiono, president, the Debtor
disclosed up to $50,000 in assets and up to $500,000 in
liabilities.

Judge Neil W. Bason oversees the case.

Tamar Terzian, Esq., at Epps and Coulson, LLP is the Debtor's
counsel.



MARKET STREET: Voluntary Chapter 11 Case Summary
------------------------------------------------
Debtor: Market Street Holdings, LLC
        221 Washington Street
        Newark, NJ 07102

Business Description: The Debtor is a Single Asset Real Estate
                      (as defined in 11 U.S.C. Section 101(51B)).

Chapter 11 Petition Date: August 30, 2022

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       District of New Jersey

Case No.: 22-16840

Judge: Hon. John K. Sherwood

Debtor's Counsel: David Stevens, Esq.
                  SCURA WIGFIELD, HEYER, STEVENS & CAMMAROTA LLP
                  1599 Hamburgh Turnpike
                  Wayne, NJ 07470
                  Tel: 201-490-4777
                  Email: dstevens@scura.com

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $500,000 to $1 million

The petition was signed by Daniel M. Risis as member.

The Debtor failed to include in the petition a list of its 20
largest unsecured creditors.

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

https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/VXGFE4Q/Market_Street_Holdings_LLC__njbke-22-16840__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA


MONSTER INVESTMENTS: Gets More Time to File Chapter 11 Plan
-----------------------------------------------------------
Monster Investments, Inc. received court approval to remain in
control of its bankruptcy while it awaits the examiner's
investigation into the real estate transactions handled by Avance
Title Company.

Judge Lori Simpson of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of
Maryland issued an order extending Monster Investments' exclusive
right to file a Chapter 11 plan to the date that is the shorter of
the 60th day following the submission of the examiner's final
report; or 18 months after entry of the order for relief in the
company's Chapter 11 case.

The bankruptcy judge earlier ordered the appointment of an examiner
upon request by the company to investigate the real estate
transactions and identify the claims that must be pursued by the
company.

"Without knowing who to pay in what amounts, or even in which class
the creditors truly fall, it is impossible for [Monster
Investments] to propose a suitable and equitable plan until the
creditors' competing claims are resolved by the examiner," said the
company's attorney, Matthew Abbott, Esq., at Wolff & Orenstein,
LLC.

Monster Investments' Chapter 11 case was precipitated by its
discovery that several real estate settlements conducted by Avance
Title Company had been closed without existing secured creditors
receiving payment of their claims. Since its bankruptcy filing, the
company has discovered more issues related to the transactions that
warrant investigation, according to court filings.

                     About Monster Investments

Monster Investments, Inc. is a Hughesville, Md.-based company
primarily engaged in renting and leasing real estate properties. It
is the fee simple owner of 28 real properties in Maryland and
Florida having an aggregate value of $9.95 million.

Monster Investments filed its voluntary petition for Chapter 11
protection (Bankr. D. Md. Case No. 21-16592) on Oct. 19, 2021,
listing $10,018,848 in assets and $16,529,878 in liabilities.
Donald Bernard, president, signed the petition.

Judge Lori S. Simpson oversees the case.

Wolff & Orenstein, LLC is the Debtor's legal counsel.


MONSTER INVESTMENTS: Seeks Cash Collateral Access
-------------------------------------------------
Monster Investment, Inc., LLC asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
the District of Maryland, Greenbelt Division, for authority to use
cash collateral represented by the rents collected from the
Debtor's Shelton Properties and the Red Berry Property.

The Debtor requires the use of the cash collateral in order to
continue and maintain the operation of its business.

WCP Fund I LLC, as servicer for LH-NPABS Income Owner Trust, Cayman
LLC, 1Sharpe Opportunity Intermediate Trust, and potentially other
entities, is the beneficiary of Deeds of Trust on the properties
owned by the Debtor, including the Shelton Properties, which are a
combination of end and center unit townhomes.

WCP is also the beneficiary of a Deed of Trust on the Debtor's real
property located at 3781 Red Berry Drive, Pt. Republic, MD 20676.
The Red Berry Property is a single family home on 2.5 acres of land
with 2,428 square feet of above ground living space and no finished
basement.

The Debtor's case was precipitated by the Debtor's discovery that
several real estate settlements conducted by Soledad Herrera and
Avance Title Company had been closed without in a manner
inconsistent with directions provided by the lenders and in a
manner that was inconsistent with the documented transactions.

In light of the complex web of fraud committed by Avance Title, and
to avoid any appearance of bias in the resolution of claim validity
and seniority or competing liens, on May 27, 2022, the Debtor took
the highly unusual step of asking the Court to appoint an examiner
in its own case to investigate the real estate transactions handled
by Avance Title and to provide a report that would identify claims
and targets of those claims to allow those claims to be pursued
against appropriate parties, whoever they may be.

Until the Examiner is appointed and completes the Examiner's work,
the Debtor, the various parties in interest, and the Court cannot
be sure which real estate transactions are genuine and which are
void, and the Debtor cannot determine what claims need to be
pursued for the benefit of the estate.

Because the Debtor, through no fault of its own, does not know who
to pay, what amounts to pay, and what creditors are actually
secured or unsecured, it is impossible for the Debtor to propose a
suitable and equitable Plan until the creditors' competing claims
are resolved by the Examiner.

The Debtor believes the business can be operated on a profitable
basis and, in the ordinary course of the operation of said
business, more proceeds will be realized from property sales.

The values of the subject properties are well in excess of the
amounts asserted to be owed to WCP and, as a result, WCP is
adequately protected by the value of the properties themselves. For
this reason, the Debtor proposes that it not be required to make
any adequate protection payments to WCP for at least six months, at
which time the properties will likely have been sold or, if not,
the values of any remaining properties can be reexamined.

A copy of the motion is available at https://bit.ly/3pX212l from
PacerMonitor.com.

         About Monster Investments

Monster Investments, Inc. is a Hughesville, Md.-based company
primarily engaged in renting and leasing real estate properties. It
is the fee simple owner of 28 real properties in Maryland and
Florida having an aggregate value of $9.95 million.

Monster Investments filed its voluntary petition for Chapter 11
protection (Bankr. D. Md. Case No. 21-16592) on Oct. 19, 2021,
listing $10,018,848 in assets and $16,529,878 in liabilities.
Donald Bernard, president, signed the petition.

Judge Lori S. Simpson oversees the case.

Michael G. Wolff, Esq., at Wolff & Orenstein, LLC represents the
Debtor as legal counsel.



MY ISLAND VISA: Seeks More Time to File Reorganization Plan
-----------------------------------------------------------
My Island Visa, Inc. seeks court approval to remain in control of
its bankruptcy while it negotiates to resolve the claim filed by PS
Funding, Inc.

In its motion filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern
District of New York, My Island Visa seeks to extend its exclusive
right to file a Chapter 11 plan of reorganization to April 11,
2023, and solicit votes in favor of the plan to Oct. 8, 2023.

The company will use the extension to reconcile the PS Funding
claim, which, if not resolved, might result in litigation,
according to its attorney, Michael Farina, Esq., at the Law Office
of Ronald D. Weiss, P.C.

The company is also considering a sale of its property in Copiague,
N.Y., so it can pay the claim, the attorney further said.

                       About My Island Visa

My Island Visa Inc., a travel company in Copiague, N.Y., sought
Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 22-70707) on April
11, 2022, listing up to $1 million in assets and up to $500,000 in
liabilities. Michele Swan, president, signed the petition.

The case is assigned to Judge Alan S Trust.

The Law Office of Ronald D. Weiss, P.C. serves as the Debtor's
counsel.


NATIONWIDE FREIGHT: Wins Cash Collateral Access Thru Sept 30
------------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Illinois, Eastern
Division, authorized Nationwide Freight Systems, Inc. to use cash
collateral on an interim basis through September 30, 2022.

In exchange for the Debtor's use of cash collateral, PNC Bank
National Association, Vox Funding, LLC and Forward Financing, LLC
are granted, as adequate protection for their purported secured
interests in the Debtor's property, the following:

     1. The Debtor will permit the Secured Creditors to inspect,
upon reasonable notice and within reasonable hours, the debtor's
books and records. By August 10, 2022, the Debtor must also provide
PNC and any other Secured Creditor that requests it, the following
information:

          a. Current A/R aging report;
          b. Balance sheet for the Debtor; and
          c. An analysis of the proposed budget showing the
             actual amounts that the debtor expended and
             received compared to the amounts on the budget.

     2. The Debtor must maintain and pay premiums for insurance to
cover all of its assets from fire, theft and water damage and upon
request provide proof of insurance to any Secured Creditor who asks
for it.

Without limiting or waiving the Secured Creditors' rights to
request additional adequate protection, the Secured Creditors are
granted valid, perfected, enforceable security interests in and to
the Debtor's post-petition assets, including all proceeds and
products which are now or hereafter become property of the
bankruptcy estate to the extent and priority of their alleged
pre-petition liens, if valid, but only to the extent of any
diminution in the value of those assets.

No later than September 16, the Debtor must pay PNC $10,000, plus
the monthly interest accruing on the PNC Note at the non-default
contract rate of interest, as additional adequate protection to PNC
for the use of its cash collateral during the period covered the
order covers. The payment is without prejudice to any party's right
to dispute how PNC should apply the payment and PNC's right to seek
additional adequate protection. PNC must provide the Debtor with a
calculation the monthly interest by August 1.

A further interim hearing on the motion is scheduled for September
19 at 10 a.m.

A copy of the order and the Debtor's 13-week budget through
December 2, 2022 is available at https://bit.ly/3e9nuTc from
PacerMonitor.com.

The budget provides for total expenses (amounts in thousands), on a
weekly basis, as follows:

     $115.4 for the week ended September 9, 2022;
     $115.4 for the week ended September 16, 2022;
     $115.4 for the week ended September 23, 2022;
     $115.4 for the week ended September 30, 2022;
     $115.8 for the week ended October 7, 2022;
     $116.8 for the week ended October 14, 2022;
     $117.9 for the week ended October 21, 2022;
     $117.9 for the week ended October 28, 2022;
     $119.4 for the week ended November 4, 2022;
     $119.9 for the week ended November 11, 2022;
     $120.1 for the week ended November 18, 2022;
     $120.8 for the week ended November 25, 2022; and
     $122.2 for the week ended December 2, 2022.

              About Nationwide Freight Systems, Inc.

Nationwide Freight Systems, Inc. is an asset-based transportation
and logistics provider located in Elgin, Illinois. It provides
transportation, logistics, and distribution services to the
printing, retail, hospitality and textile industries, and also to
many manufacturing and wholesale companies of various sizes.
The Debtor sought protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D. Ill. Case No. 22-06364) on June 6,
2022. In the petition signed by Robert D. Kuehn, president, the
Debtor disclosed up to $1 million in assets and up to $10 million
in liabilities.

Judge Benjamin A. Goldgar oversees the case.

David K. Welch, Esq., at Burke, Warren, Mackay and Serritella, PC
is the Debtor's counsel.



NEWAGE INC: Case Summary & 30 Largest Unsecured Creditors
---------------------------------------------------------
Four affiliates that concurrently filed voluntary petitions for
relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code:

    Debtor                                       Case No.
    ------                                       --------
    NewAge, Inc. (Lead Case)                     22-10819
    7158 S. FLSmidth Dr.
    Midvale, Utah 84047

    Ariix LLC                                    22-10820
    Morinda Holdings, Inc.                       22-10821
    Morinda, Inc.                                22-10822

Business Description: NewAge, Inc. is a developer, seller, and
                      distributor of health and nutritional
                      products which predominantly sells through a
                      sales network of brand partners.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: August 30, 2022

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       District of Delaware

Judge: Hon. Laurie Selber Silverstein

Debtors' Counsel: Anthony W. Clark, Esq.
                  Dennis A. Meloro, Esq.
                  GREENBERG TRAURIG, LLP
                  1007 North Orange Street, Suite 1200
                  Wilmington, Delaware 19801
                  Tel: (302) 661-7000
                  Fax: (302) 661-7360
                  Email: Anthony.Clark@gtlaw.com
                  Dennis.Meloro@gtlaw.com

                    - and -

                  Annette Jarvis, Esq.
                  Michael F. Thomson, Esq.
                  Peggy Hunt, Esq.
                  Carson Heninger, Esq.
                  222 S. Main Street, Suite 1730
                  Salt Lake City, Utah 84101
                  Tel: (801) 478-6900
                  Fax: (801) 303-7397
                  Email: JarvisA@gtlaw.com
                         HuntP@gtlaw.com
                         ThomsonM@gtlaw.com
                         Carson.Heninger@gtlaw.com


                    - and -

                  Alison Elko Franklin, Esq.
                  3333 Piedmont Road, NE, Suite 2500
                  Atlanta, Georgia 30305
                  Tel: (678) 553-2100
                  Fax: (678) 553-2212
                  Email: Alison.Franklin@gtlaw.com

Debtors'
Financial
Advisor:          SIERRACONSTELLATION PARTNERS LLC

Debtors'
Claims/
Noticing
Agent:            STRETTO

Total Assets: $310,902,000

Total Debts: $149,447,000

The petitions were signed by Lawrence Perkins as chief
restructuring officer.

A full-text copy of the Lead Debtor's petition is available for
free at PacerMonitor.com at:

https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/BVQMGKI/NewAge_Inc__debke-22-10819__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA

Consolidated List of Debtors' 30 Largest Unsecured Creditors:

   Entity                          Nature of Claim    Claim Amount
   ------                          ---------------    ------------
1. TCI Biotech LLC                   Trade Debts        $2,503,155
737 East 1180 South
American Fork, UT 84003
Remi Lee
Tel: 385-202-8828
Email: Remi.Lee@tci-bio.com

2. Zennoa, LLC                       Trade Debts        $1,627,271
PO Box 577
Island Park, ID 83429
Bryant Joseph Wadsworth
Email: bjwadsworth@gmail.com

3. Miller & Chevalier                Professional       $1,429,837
Chartered, Inc.                       Services
900 16th Street NW
Washington, DC 20006-2901
John Davis
Tel: 202-626-5913
Email: jdavis@milchev.com

4. Deloitte & Touche LLP             Professional       $1,317,128
111 South Main St. Suite 1500          Services
Salt Lake City, UT 84111-1919
Ken Scriber
Email: kscriber@deloitte.com

5. Internal Revenue Service              Tax              $488,960
Centralized Insolvency Operation
Post Office Box 7346
Philadelphia, PA 19101-7346

6. SelectHealth                     Health Benefits       $448,944
5381 Green Street
Murry, UT 84123
Jen Simonsen
Tel: 801-442-7724
Email: Jennifer.simonsen@selecthealth.org

7. Ernst & Young U.S. LLP            Professional         $283,957
3712 Solution Center                   Services
Chicago, IL 60677-3007
Laura A. Dyer
Email: Laura.Dyer@ey.com

8. Mavie                              Trade Debts         $270,623
6 Temasek Boulevard
09-05 Sunteck Tower Four, 38986
Singapore
Abboud Barakat
Email: ab@levant.me

9. Barnes & Thornburg LLP            Professional         $209,352
299 S Main Street                     Services
Suite 1825
Salt Lake City, UT 84111
Ken Horton
Tel: 214-258-4102
Email: Kenneth.Horton@btlaw.com

10. 2420 17th Street, LLC               Lease             $208,848
4400 Macarther Blvd
Suite 700
Newport Beach, CA 92660
Casey Boes
Tel: 720-610-1682
Email: Casey.Boes@cbre.com

11. Sidley Austin LLP                Professional         $205,304
787 Seventh Avenue                     Services
New York, NY 10019
Karen Popp
Tel: 202-736-8053
EmaiL: Kpopp@sidley.com

12. Cargo Link International, Inc    Trade Debts          $167,288
881 South 3760 West
Salt Lake City, UT 84104
Nicole Fenton
Tel: 801-975-9336
Email: nfenton@cargolink.com

13. Aries Global Logistics, Inc.     Trade Debts          $166,562
365 Franklin Avenue
Franklin Square, NY 11010
Aaron Peterson
Tel: 516-328-2500
Email: aaron.peterson@ariesgl.com

14. Marriott International Inc, - JW Trade Debts          $134,190
Marriott Orlando Grande Lakes
4040 Central Florida Parkway
Orland, FL 32837
Kathy Lebron-Diaz
Fax: 407-393-4855
Email: Kathy.Lebron-Diaz@Marriott.com

15. Wasatch Products                 Trade Debts          $131,388
Development LLC
427 W. 11950 S.
Draper, UT 84020
Giselle Gomez
Tel: 385-342-1041
Email: Ggomez@wasatchlabs.com

16. SFIC                             Trade Debts          $127,301
4040 Pike Lane
Concord, CA 94520
Jen Ryerson
Tel: 925-689-2414
Email: jen@sficcorp.com;
       info@sficcorp.com

17. Faegre Drinker Biddle &          Trade Debts          $122,646

Reath LLP
1144 15th Street
Suite 3400
Denver, CO 80202
Jeff Sherman
Email: jeff.sherman@faegredrinker.com

18. Stevens Global Logistics, Inc    Trade Debts          $116,545
PO Box 729
Lawndale, CA 80260-072
Alejandro Cruz
Tel: 800-229-7284
Email: alejandroc@stevensglobal.com

19. Lexyl Travel Technologies LLC     Executory           $115,595
205 Datura Street                     Contracts
10th Floor
West Palm Beach, FL 33401
Neil Valentine - Chief Strategy
Officer
Tel: 1-800-898-1347 x 202

20. Vision 68th, LLC                    Lease             $114,855
574 Santa Fe Drive #300
Denver, CO 80204
Connie Vaughn
Tel: 303-219-5888
Email: Cvaughn@wheelhousecommercial.com

21. Embark Consulting, LLC           Professional         $114,592
26 S. Rio Grande Ste 2072              Services
Salt Lake City, UT 84101
Steve Lake
Tel: 801-699-2892
Email: s.lake@embarkwithus.com

22. HubSpot Inc.                      Executory           $113,638
25 First St.                          Contracts
Cambridge, MA 02141
Adam Rubin
Tel: 857-829-5542
Email: arubin@hubspot.com

23. KLDiscovery Ontrack LLC          Professional         $107,445
8201 Greensboro Drive                 Services
Suite 300
McLean, VA 22102
Johnny Haro
Tel: 571-422-1298
Email: johnny.haro@KLDiscovery.com

24. Oracle America, Inc.               Executory          $107,292
500 Oracle Parkway                     Contracts
Redwood Shores, CA 94065
Tel: 888-803-7414
Email: collections_us@oracle.com

25. Sun Life Assurance                Trade Debts         $106,610

Company of Canada (US Branch)
PO Box 7247-7184
Philadelphia, PA 19170-7184
Jessica Kenel
Tel: 781-446-1389
Ext. 4031389
Email: jessica.uliasz.kennel@sunlife.com

26. Dickinson Wright LLP              Professional         $90,961
1850 North Central Avenue              Services
Suite 1400
Phoenix, AZ 85004-4568
Timothy Strong
Tel: 602-285-5000
Email: Tstrong@dickinson-wright.com

27. SoftChoice Corporation            Trade Debts          $70,232
16609 Collections Center Drive
Chicago, IL 60693
James McCormack
Tel: 888-549-7638 X222272
Email: James.McCormack@Softchoice.com

28. Sheppard Mullin Richter &         Professional         $68,342
Hampton LLP                            Services
333 South Hope Street 43rd Floor
Los Angeles, CA 90071-1422
Charbel Lahoud
Tel: 213-617-4182
Email: clahoud@sheppardmullin.com

29. Amazon Web Services, Inc.         Trade Debts          $59,393
410 Terry Avenue North
Seattle, WA 98109
Vasu Acharya
Tel: 1-833-448-2289
Email: aws-receivables-
support@email.amazon.com

30. Bona Law PC                       Professional         $58,414
4275 Executive Square                  Services
Suite 200
La Jolla, CA 92037
Jarod Bona
Tel: 858-964-4589
Email: jarod.bona@bonalawpc.com


NEXTPLAY TECHNOLOGIES: Schedules Annual Meeting for Oct. 19
-----------------------------------------------------------
NextPlay Technologies, Inc. filed its preliminary proxy statement
on Schedule 14A with the Securities and Exchange Commission and
publicly announced that it has scheduled its 2023 annual meeting of
stockholders to be held on Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2022 at 9:00 a.m.
Eastern Time.  The Company is holding the 2023 Annual Meeting as a
virtual-only meeting, which will be conducted via live audio online
webcast.  The Company has established Aug. 22, 2022 as the record
date for determining stockholders entitled to notice of, and to
vote at, the 2023 Annual Meeting.

Because the date of the 2023 Annual Meeting will be more than 30
days from the anniversary of the Company's 2022 annual meeting of
stockholders, the deadline for submission of proposals by
stockholders for inclusion in the Company's proxy materials in
accordance with Rule 14a-8 under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, as amended, will be 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time on Tuesday,
Sept. 6, 2022.  Any such proposal must also meet the requirements
set forth in the rules and regulations of the Exchange Act in order
to be eligible for inclusion in the proxy materials for the 2023
Annual Meeting.

In addition, in accordance with the Company's Bylaws, any
stockholder who intends to nominate a person for election as a
director or submit a proposal for inclusion at the Company's 2023
Annual Meeting must provide notice on or before 5:00 p.m. Eastern
Time on Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2022.  Any Stockholder Notice must comply
with the specific requirements set forth in the Company's Bylaws in
order to be considered at the 2023 Annual Meeting.  Any such
proposal shall be mailed to: NextPlay Technologies, Inc., 1560
Sawgrass Corporate Parkway, Suite 130, Sunrise, Florida 33323,
Attn.: Secretary.

                    About NextPlay Technologies

NextPlay Technologies, Inc. (formerly known as Monaker Group Inc.)
-- nextplaytechnologies.com -- is a technology solutions company
offering games, in-game advertising, crypto-banking, connected TV
and travel booking services to consumers and corporations within a
growing worldwide digital ecosystem. NextPlay's engaging products
and services utilize innovative AdTech, Artificial Intelligence and
Fintech solutions to leverage the strengths and channels of its
existing and acquired technologies.

NextPlay reported a net loss of $40.41 million for the year ended
Feb. 28, 2022, compared to a net loss of $1.63 million for the
period from March 6, 2020 to February 28, 2021. As of May 31, 2022,
the Company had $106.49 million in total assets, $43.34
million in total liabilities, and $63.14 million in total
stockholders' equity.

Sugar Land, Texas-based TPS Thayer, LLC, the Company's auditor
since 2020, issued a "going concern" qualification in its report
dated June 17, 2022, citing that the Company has suffered recurring
losses from operations and has stockholders' deficit that raise
substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern.


NMN HOLDINGS: S&P Lowers ICR to 'B-' on Weaker Cash Flow
--------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings lowered its issuer credit rating on NMN Holdings
III Corp. and its rating on the company's first-lien debt to 'B-'
from 'B'; the recovery rating is unchanged at '3'.

The stable outlook reflects S&P's expectation that the company's
leverage and cash-flow deficits will peak in 2022 then improve and
stabilize in 2023 as its backlog and supply-chain difficulties
begin to subside.

S&P said, "The downgrade reflects our expectation for continued
supply-chain challenges and delays in Numotion's ability to service
its record-high backlog, resulting in cash-flow deficits and
tighter liquidity.In 2021, Numotion's S&P Global Ratings-adjusted
EBITDA margin, leverage, and reported FOCF were significantly
weaker than our previous expectations due to supply chain
challenges, inflation, and labor difficulties. In addition, the
company's underperformance in the first half of 2022 suggests a
higher risk that it will not meet our base-case forecast. While we
expect Numotion's orders intake to increase for the remainder of
2022 as patients continue demanding its services to maintain
mobility, we believe supply-chain issues could still impair the
company's ability to fulfill its backlog. Numotion is dependent on
favorable supply-chain developments: Its ability to convert its
backlog is directly dependent on its suppliers' capability to
deliver the remaining components needed to assemble its wheelchairs
and deliver them to customers, which we view to be largely outside
of Numotion's control. We believe supply-chain problems will likely
continue for the rest of 2022 and at least through the first half
of 2023, raising the likelihood Numotion will continue to struggle
with its backlog for a while."

For the 12 months ended June 30, 2022, the company reported revenue
growth of about 20% compared to the same period last year, with
about 10% growth compared calendar-year 2021. Revenue growth was
primarily due to increased order intake driven by the pent-up
demand for replacement chairs during the height of COVID-19 as well
as additional revenues from acquisitions. However, the company's
S&P Global Ratings-adjusted EBITDA margin for the 12 months ended
June 30, 2022, declined by about 260 basis points (bps) from the
prior year. This stemmed from operating expenses increasing due to
the reversal of various cost-containment actions that were
implemented during the height of the pandemic to serve the pent-up
order volume as well longer product lifecycle time from
supply-chain delays.

S&P said, "We continue to believe industry dynamics are generally
favorable, with growth supported by an aging population and the
nondiscretionary nature of the company's products.Numotion is one
of the largest players in the U.S. complex rehabilitation
technology (CRT) market, with revenues of approximately $705
million for the 12 months ended June 30, 2022. In addition, the
company benefits from generally favorable secular trends, including
an aging population and increasing awareness among the currently
large market of patients who are not using CRT solutions. We view
these products as nondiscretionary for patients with permanent
mobility disabilities, as they are critical for long-term health
and mobility. Also, about 60% of Numotion's total revenues are from
replacement wheelchairs and repair services, which provides some
visibility regarding its revenue and cash-flow. Management has
automated some of its processes in the value chain. This helped it
lower its product lifecycle time to about 75 days from 90 days,
which is lower than the industry average. However, due to current
supply-chain challenges, the product lifecycle has increased back
up to about 90 days. We believe the cycle will reverse back to
about 75 days once the supply-chain issues subside.

"The stable outlook reflects our expectation that the company's
leverage and cash-flow deficits will peak in 2022 then improve and
stabilize in 2023 as the company's backlog and supply-chain
difficulties begin to subside.

"We could lower our rating on Numotion again in the next 12 months
if cash-flow generation weakens such that it is insufficient to
cover fixed charges on a sustained basis, leading us to consider
the capital structure to be unsustainable. This could occur if the
company experiences significant supply-chain disruptions,
greater-than-expected pricing pressures from its wheelchair
suppliers, a reimbursement cut from government payers, or
billing-related complications. We also believe there is potential
for rising refinancing risk, as the company's primary source of
liquidity, a $50 million revolver, matures in November 2023.

"Although unlikely over the next 12 months, we could raise the
ratings if we believe Numotion will achieve and sustain S&P Global
Ratings-adjusted leverage below 7x and adjusted FOCF to debt above
3%."

ESG credit indicators: E-2, S-2, G-3

S&P said, "Governance factors are a moderately negative
consideration in our credit rating analysis. Our assessment of the
company's financial risk profile as highly leveraged reflects
corporate decision-making that prioritizes the interests of the
controlling owners, in line with our view of the majority of rated
entities owned by private-equity sponsors. Our assessment also
reflects the generally finite holding periods and a focus on
maximizing shareholder returns."



NYMD GREEN LAKE: Files for Chapter 11 to Stop Foreclosure
---------------------------------------------------------
NYMD Green Lake LLC has returned to Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

The Debtor owns and operates a 146-acre retreat in Catskill, New
York, for the benefit of over 40 New York churches comprising the
New York Pentecostal community.

The new chapter 11 filing was precipitated by a pending foreclosure
proceeding.  The Debtor intends to use the Chapter 11 process to
consummate an offer to purchase the property.

According to court filings, NYMD Green Lake LLC estimates between 1
and 49 creditors.  The petition states funds will be available to
unsecured creditors.

A meeting of creditors under 11 U.S.C. Section 341(a) is slated for
Oct. 3, 2022, at 1:30 PM at Teleconference - Brooklyn.

                     About NYMD Green Lake

NYMD Green Lake LLC owns and operates a 146-acre retreat in
Catskill, New York, for the benefit of churches comprising the New
York Pentecostal community.

NYMD Green Lake LLC previously sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy (Bankr.
E.D.N.Y. Case No. 19-bk-43460) on June 5, 2019.

NYMD Green Lake LLC sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 22-42032) on August 26,
2022.  In the petition filed by Lincoln Graham, as president, the
Debtor reported assets and liabilities between $1 million and $10
million each.

The Debtor is represented by Gary C Fischoff of Berger, Fischoff,
Shumer, Wexler & Goodman, LLP.


ODYSSEY LOGISTICS: Moody's Hikes CFR to B2, Outlook Stable
----------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service upgraded the ratings of Odyssey Logistics
& Technology Corporation, including the corporate family rating to
B2 from B3 and probability of default rating to B2-PD from B3-PD.
The ratings on the company's first lien senior secured debt was
upgraded to B1 from B2 and second lien senior secured debt to Caa1
from Caa2. The outlook is stable.

The rating upgrades reflect Moody's view that Odyssey's credit
metrics will continue to improve through the remainder of 2022 and
position the company to adequately withstand the cyclicality in its
freight end markets. In particular, Moody's expects Odyssey to
maintain debt/EBITDA around 4.5x and generate solid free cash flow
over the next twelve months.

Upgrades:

Issuer: Odyssey Logistics & Technology Corporation

Corporate Family Rating, Upgraded to B2 from B3

Probability of Default Rating, Upgraded to B2-PD from B3-PD

Senior Secured 1st Lien Term Loan, Upgraded to B1 (LGD3) from B2
(LGD3)

Senior Secured 1st Lien Revolving Credit Facility, Upgraded to B1
(LGD3) from B2 (LGD3)

Senior Secured 2nd Lien Term Loan, Upgraded to Caa1 (LGD5) from
Caa2 (LGD5)

Outlook Actions:

Issuer: Odyssey Logistics & Technology Corporation

Outlook, Remains Stable

RATINGS RATIONALE

Odyssey's B2 CFR reflects its position as a specialized provider of
freight forwarding, intermodal and trucking services to the
chemicals, industrial and food & beverage end markets. Higher
volumes and freight rates over the last twelve months have
supported Odyssey's significant revenue and earnings growth. As a
result, Odyssey's debt/EBITDA has improved materially from over 7x
at the beginning of 2021 to 4.3x at June 2022.

Moody's expects Odyssey's revenue growth to slow considerably to
about 3% in 2023 as overall freight market conditions normalize
compared to the past two years. About half of Odyssey's revenue is
tied to industrial production, particularly chemicals and metals.
Moody's expects demand in these end markets to remain solid through
2022, but notes these markets are more susceptible to lower volumes
and earnings pressures during economic downturns. In the event
volumes are lower than anticipated over the next twelve months,
Moody's believes that operating efficiencies and cost saving
actions the company is taking during 2022 will maintain its EBITDA
margin above 11%.

In terms of corporate governance, Moody's views event risk to be
high, specifically the potential for Odyssey to increase leverage
to pursue acquisitions or make distributions to shareholders. In
addition, the majority of Odyssey's debt matures in about two
years, and while not a concern at this time, refinancing risk will
become more prevalent in the back half of 2023.

The stable outlook reflects Moody's expectations for Odyssey to
maintain debt/EBITDA around 4.5x and generate solid free cash flow
over the next twelve months as freight activity normalizes.

Moody's expects Odyssey to maintain adequate liquidity through 2023
supported by a cash position of around $30 million and full
availability under its $60 million revolving credit facility
(modestly sized for the revenue base) that expires July 2024.
Moody's expects Odyssey to generate at least 5% free cash flow to
debt in 2022 and 2023, which is meaningfully higher than historical
levels.

FACTORS THAT COULD LEAD TO AN UPGRADE OR DOWNGRADE OF THE RATINGS

The ratings could be upgraded if Odyssey sustains its strong
operating performance, including an operating margin above 5%,
through cyclical periods in its end markets. In addition, Odyssey
would need to demonstrate conservative financial policies to
sustain debt/EBITDA below 4.5x. Further, maintaining good liquidity
would also be required for an upgrade.

The ratings could be downgraded if operating performance
deteriorates, perhaps due to a loss of customers, lower volumes or
weak execution. Ratings could also be downgraded if Odyssey
maintains debt/EBITDA above 5.5x. Further, the ratings could be
downgraded if Odyssey's free cash flow approaches breakeven or
availability on its revolving credit facility is materially
reduced.

The principal methodology used in these ratings was Surface
Transportation and Logistics published in December 2021.

Odyssey Logistics & Technology Corporation is a global multimodal
logistics provider, offering its customers end-to-end technology
enabled supply chain solutions. The company operates across four
operating divisions, including Intermodal, Freight Forwarding,
Transport & Warehouse, and Managed Services.  Revenue for the
latest twelve months ended June 30, 2022 was approximately $1.4
billion.


OPEN TEXT: Moody's Puts 'Ba1' CFR on Review for Downgrade
---------------------------------------------------------
Moody's Investors Service placed Open Text Corp.'s credit ratings,
including its Ba1 Corporate Family Rating and the Baa2 and Ba2
ratings for its senior secured credit facilities and senior
unsecured notes, respectively, on review for downgrade following
Open Text's announcement that it plans to acquire Micro Focus
International plc in an all-cash transaction for an enterprise
value of approximately $6.0 billion. The SGL-1 speculative grade
liquidity rating is unchanged.

On Review for Downgrade:

Issuer: Open Text Corp.

Corporate Family Rating, Placed on Review for
Downgrade, currently Ba1

Probability of Default Rating, Placed on Review
for Downgrade, currently Ba1-PD

Senior Secured Bank Credit Facility, Placed on
Review for Downgrade, currently Baa2 (LGD2)

Senior Unsecured Regular Bond/Debenture, Placed
on Review for Downgrade, currently Ba2 (LGD4)

Issuer: Open Text Holdings Inc.

Senior Unsecured Regular Bond/Debenture, Placed
on Review for Downgrade, currently Ba2 (LGD4)

Outlook Actions:

Issuer: Open Text Corp.

Outlook, Changed To Rating Under Review From Stable

Issuer: Open Text Holdings Inc.

Outlook, Changed To Rating Under Review From Stable

RATINGS RATIONALE / FACTORS THAT COULD LEAD TO AN UPGRADE OR
DOWNGRADE OF THE RATINGS

Moody's placed the credit ratings on review to reflect Open Text's
elevated execution risk and its weaker financial profile as a
result of the substantial increase in debt to be incurred in
connection with the pending acquisition of Micro Focus. Open Text's
high financial risk tolerance is a key driver of the rating action.
While acquisitions are integral to Open Text's growth strategy,
Moody's had expected that Open Text would pursue a balanced
financing strategy for its larger acquisitions. This was supported
by the company's use of its common stock in financing the
acquisitions of EMC's Content Division assets and GXS, two of its
then-largest acquisitions. The company's intention to substantially
increase debt reflects a shift relative to Moody's expectations for
a balanced acquisition financing strategy. This, along with the
operational risks in integrating a large and declining business
will result in an elevated risk profile in the 12 to 24 months
following the acquisition. If Moody's determines that the
acquisition is highly likely to close based on the proposed terms
and assuming no change in Moody's expectation for financial
performance, a downgrade of the CFR to Ba2 is likely.

The acquisition of Micro Focus will be Open Text's largest
acquisition to date. Open Text intends to finance the acquisition
with $4.6 billion in new debt, $600 million of borrowings under its
existing revolving credit facility, and $1.3 billion of cash on
hand. As a result, Open Text's outstanding debt will increase from
$4.2 billion to about $9.3 billion after the acquisition. The
acquisition is expected to close in the first quarter of 2023. The
company expects to increase Micro Focus' adjusted EBTIDA margins to
its target model range of 37% to 39% within six quarters and reduce
net leverage (as reported by the company) to 3x within eight
quarters of closing the acquisition.

Moody's estimates that pro forma for the acquisition, Open Text's
total debt to EBTIDA (Moody's adjusted) will increase to mid 4x,
from 3.6x at fiscal year ended June 2022, before the $400 million
of total cost savings are included in EBITDA. Cash and marketable
securities, relative to total adjust debt, will decline from 37% to
10%. Based on Moody's assumption that Open Text will build-up its
cash balances to $1.7 billion – its average year-end levels over
the past three years – Open Text's Moody's adjusted total debt to
EBITDA will remain above mid 3x at least through fiscal year ending
June 2024.

The execution risk will be elevated in combining two large
companies while implementing $400 million of cost reductions. The
total cost reduction amounts include Micro Focus' $300 million of
previously announced cost savings as a stand-alone company. Both
companies generate a large share of their revenues from declining
and mature products and the challenges are compounded by the highly
competitive software segments they operate in that are increasingly
adopting cloud software solutions. Organic growth at both companies
has significantly lagged the growth of the enterprise software
industry. While Moody's expect stand-alone Open Text's organic
growth of about 2% over the next 12 to 24 months driven by growth
in its cloud portfolio, Micro Focus' revenues declined by 7% on a
constant currency and continuing operations basis in its fiscal
first half ended April 2022, and Moody's expects revenue declines
to persist over the next 2 to 3 years. Micro Focus' revenues and
profitability have underperformed Moody's expectations since the
company acquired HP Enterprises' software businesses in 2017.

Open Text's credit profile will benefit from its substantial scale
and prospective free cash flow levels after the acquisition. The
company has a good track record of integrating numerous
acquisitions, and improving profitability and deleveraging after
larger acquisitions. It has good product and geographic revenue
diversity, and approximately 75% of the revenue for the combined
companies will come from recurring software maintenance and
subscription services. Even before considering the targeted cost
savings, Open Text will have strong profitability. The high revenue
to free cash flow conversion rates in the software business further
supports Open Text's credit profile and provides capacity to reduce
debt. However, Open Text's low organic growth prospects and
reliance on debt-financed acquisitions to drive cash flow growth,
limits potential upside to credit metrics, despite its strong free
cash flow.

Open Text's existing SGL-1 speculative grade liquidity rating
reflects its very good liquidity, though the anticipated use of
cash and revolver drawings to finance the acquisition will pressure
liquidity which could result in a lower SGL rating upon closing of
the transaction. Open Text had $1.7 billion of cash balances and
access to an undrawn $750 million revolving credit facility.
Excluding the effect of the acquisition, Moody's expects $750
million in free cash flow (after dividends) in FY '23.

The Baa2 ratings for Open Text's senior secured credit facilities
benefits from a meaningful share of senior unsecured debt in the
existing capital structure. The ratings for senior secured credit
facilities and the Ba2 rating for the senior unsecured notes will
be subject to downward rating pressure from a downgrade of the CFR
as well as any increase in the proportion of the first-lien debt in
the final capital structure.

Moody's ratings review will focus on: (i) the mix of debt in the
final capital structure; (ii) Moody's assessment of Open Text's
financial strategy, including specific plans to reduce debt and
restore cash position after the acquisition, and, (iii) its
acquisitions strategy, while financial leverage will be elevated.

Open Text is a leading provider of Information Management software
and services.

The principal methodology used in these ratings was Software
published in June 2022.


ORGANICELL REGENERATIVE: Closes $5.5 Million Funding Round
----------------------------------------------------------
Organicell Regenerative Medicine, Inc. has closed its previously
announced $4.0 million capital raise at $0.02 and corporate
restructuring transaction.  Organicell also closed on an additional
$1.5 million of funding at $0.04 per share from two additional
investors, totaling $5.5 million in funding.

This capital infusion will allow Organicell to build out its
technology platforms for more efficient operations, allow the
company to advance its clinical trials, and vertically integrate
new businesses that are essential to production.  Organicell's
investors and board of directors strategically represent key
pillars of the Company's new business plan.

Investors Greyt Ventures, LLC and Skycrest Holdings, LLC have asked
Bob Smoley, the spouse of the principal of Greyt Ventures, to act
as an advisor to Organicell through its growth stage.  Mr. Smoley
founded MDLive, a telehealth platform, which sold to Cigna for a
reported $2 billion in April of 2021.  Organicell views Mr.
Smoley's vast network and experience in the tech and healthcare
space to be helpful in creating the new foundation for Organicell.


Given Mr. Smoley's involvement in advising the Company, the Company
and Mr. Smoley chose to disclose that Mr. Smoley pled guilty to
felony charges over a decade ago and served a brief prison camp
sentence.

Mr. Smoley is a philanthropic member of his community, a devoted
husband and father, and considered a visionary in the healthcare
and technology industries.

Organicell's CEO made the following statement:

"It is easy to pass judgment and slap a label on someone...I have
been at fault for that myself.

Over the past couple of months, I have gotten to know Bob Smoley on
a personal level.  I have seen his work ethic, his family dynamic,
and how highly regarded he is amongst his peers.

In the human experience people make mistakes.  Sometimes things
happen to people for reasons beyond their control.  That said, I
believe a person should not be defined by their mistakes or
misfortunes but by how they overcome them.

Bob has extraordinary vision, an incredible network of
uber-successful friends, and the business acumen to compete at the
highest level.  Bob's introductions ultimately helped Organicell
out of financial hardship.  It gave this business a second
chance...let's make this a story of second chances.

One cannot change their past, they can only work to create a new
future.  To me, experience trumps knowledge and we're lucky to have
an advisor that has sold a healthcare company for ten-figures.
Bob's advice and guidance will be a great asset to our Company.

Organicell has begun a new chapter.  I am excited to share other
developments as they become relevant."

                         About Organicell

Headquartered in Miami, FL, Organicell Regenerative Medicine, Inc.
-- www.organicell.com -- is a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical
company principally focusing on the development of innovative
biological therapeutics for the treatment of degenerative diseases
and to provide other related services. Its proprietary products are
derived from perinatal sources and manufactured to retain the
naturally occurring microRNAs, without the addition or combination
of any other substance or diluent.  Its RAAM Products and related
services are principally used in the health care industry
administered through doctors and clinics.

Organicell Regenerative reported a net loss of $12.76 million for
the year ended Oct. 31, 2021, compared to a net loss of $12.58
million for the year ended Oct. 31, 2020. As of April 30, 2022, the
Company had $2.21 million in total assets, $6.41 million in
total liabilities, and a total stockholders' deficit of $4.19
million.

Fort Lauderdale, FL-based Marcum LLP, the Company's auditor since
2015, issued a "going concern" qualification in its report dated
Feb. 14, 2022, citing that the Company has a significant working
capital deficiency, has incurred significant losses and needs to
raise additional funds to meet its obligations and sustain its
operations.  These conditions raise substantial doubt about the
Company's ability to continue as a going concern.


OXBOW CARBON: S&P Alters Outlook to Positive, Affirm 'B+' ICR
-------------------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings revised the outlook on Oxbow Carbon LLC to
positive from stable and affirmed its 'B+' issuer credit rating on
the company. The 'BB-' issue-level and '2' recovery ratings on the
company's secured debt are unchanged.

The positive outlook indicates the potential for an upgrade within
the next 12 months if Oxbow maintains adjusted leverage below 3x.

Oxbow's earnings continue to expand significantly, spurred by
strong pricing and demand in all segments despite a drop in
marketing volumes. S&P expects Oxbow's EBITDA will increase by
20%-30% in 2022 because of significant price increases in all of
the company's segments. As of June 30, 2022, Oxbow's price
realization per metric ton (/mt) increased by about 50%-77%
compared with fiscal 2021 across the marketing, distribution, and
CPC businesses due to favorable commodity prices (coal and
aluminum) and strong demand in its end markets. Volumes in all but
the marketing segment have generally recovered to pre-pandemic
levels after severe declines in fiscal 2020. Although S&P
anticipates a gradual recovery in marketing volumes as Oxbow works
to increase its supply sources, our assumption of about 70%
increase in prices more than offsets the drop in volumes in 2022.
The distribution and terminal segments will continue to benefit
from robust demand for commodities such as thermal coal and pet
coke, along with energy security issues since the beginning of the
Russian-Ukraine conflict.

High energy prices create a difficult operating environment for
aluminum smelters, a key market for Oxbow's CPC business. CPC is a
key ingredient in the production of aluminum, which is an
energy-intensive business. Power prices can account for up to a
third of aluminum production costs. The high cost of power in
Europe has led to production curtailments or plant closures,
especially for smelters that sit at the high end of the cost curve.
So far, Oxbow's CPC business remains robust as none of its
customers has curtailed or ceased operations. The decrease in
aluminum production would provide some support for aluminum prices,
which have fallen almost 40% since reaching close to $4,000/mt in
March 2022 following recession fears and a strong U.S. dollar. As a
result, S&P expects CPC volumes will remain relatively flat in 2022
compared with 2021, after recording 14% growth last year as Oxbow
recovered from the negative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

S&P said, "The positive outlook indicates our expectation that
Oxbow will continue to generate robust earnings, given the strong
pricing and demand in most segments. We believe the company could
hold adjusted leverage below 3x and maintain sufficient liquidity
to finance its high working capital requirements, amortizations,
and shareholder distributions. Oxbow could produce strong
discretionary cash flows that it could apply toward debt
reduction.

"We could raise our rating on Oxbow in the next 12 months if it
sustains the current earnings generating capacity and/or reduces
gross debt such that we believe adjusted leverage will remain below
3x.

"We could revise our outlook to stable if Oxbow's earnings declined
sharply. This could be caused by lower demand for CPC due to
aluminum production curtailments, prolonged operational disruptions
in the company's distribution segment, or lower pricing in the
marketing business." In such scenarios S&P would expect:

-- Adjusted leverage to approach 4x;
-- Revenue to decline by 15%; and
-- Gross margins of close to 19%.

ESG credit indicators: E-4, S-3, G-2

Environmental factors are a negative consideration in S&P's credit
rating analysis of Oxbow. The company sources its raw material
(petcoke) from oil and gas refineries, which are negatively
affected by climate transition risks. Oxbow's calcined coke product
is a key input in aluminum and steel production, which are major
sources of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Oxbow's operations
involve high energy intensity and some GHG emissions, which some of
the company's strategic partnerships help to mitigate by converting
GHG into electricity.

Social factors are a moderately negative consideration, given
Oxbow's required compliance with above-average health and safety
regulations associated with the company's operations.



PACKABLE HOLDINGS: Seeks Cash Collateral Access
-----------------------------------------------
Packable Holdings, LLC f/k/a Entourage Commerce, LLC, and its
debtor-affiliates ask the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of
Delaware for authority to, among other things, use cash collateral
and provide adequate protection.

The Debtors commenced the Chapter 11 Cases to effectuate a sale of
the Debtors' assets pursuant to a Court-approved liquidation
process.

The Debtors require the use of cash collateral to fund their
liquidation process and complete an efficient and value-maximizing
wind-down.

Debtors Holdings and Pharmapacks, LLC are borrowers under the
Credit Agreement, dated as of July 24, 2020, by and among Holdings
and Pharmapacks, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. as agent and lender, and
the additional lenders from time to time party thereto in an
aggregate principal amount not to exceed $60 million, with
availability based on the value of certain of the Debtors' accounts
receivable and inventory, less certain offsets, reserves, and
availability blocks. The ABL Facility matures on January 15, 2023.

All obligations under the ABL Facility are guaranteed on a senior
secured first-lien basis by each of Packable's wholly owned
domestic subsidiaries. Pursuant to a Pledge and Security agreement
dated as of July 24, 2020, the ABL Facility is secured by first
priority security interests in and liens on the "Collateral", which
is comprised of substantially all of the Debtors' assets, including
intellectual property. In addition, the ABL Lenders have cash
dominion over Packable's operating accounts and, in specified
circumstances, over its investment account.

On April 14, 2022, contemporaneously with the closing of the Term
Loan Facility, the ABL Lenders and Packable entered into a
forbearance agreement to address certain defaults by Packable and
an agreed-upon forbearance by the ABL Lenders. The ABL Forbearance
Agreement required Packable to maintain minimum liquidity of at
least $10 million at all times, and to deposit cash into a
restricted cash account to cure any deficiency in the borrowing
base in the event the borrowing base fell below $47 million.

The ABL Forbearance Agreement further provided (among other
termination events) that it would terminate if Packable failed to
raise at least $65 million in net tranche B Term Loan Facility
proceeds by July 15, 2022.

The discretionary net tranche B Term Loan Facility proceeds did not
materialize.

In light of this additional default, on July 21, 2022,
contemporaneously with the closing of the Bridge Facility The
Amended Forbearance Agreement retroactively extended the term of
the forbearance through August 1, 2022, and provided (among other
termination events) that it would terminate automatically if
Packable failed to consummate an anticipated permanent refinancing
transaction with a third party and repay the ABL Facility by August
1, 2022, or if that third party failed to obtain internal credit
approval to consummate such a transaction by 9:00 a.m. (Eastern) on
July 29, 2022. The Amended Forbearance Agreement also required
Packable to solicit bids for the purchase of all of Packable's
assets by July 25, 2022, and to request that such bids be provided
by July 29, 2022.

As of July 29, 2022, the potential third party purchaser had not
obtained internal credit approval to consummate the potential
transaction, nor had any bid for the purchase of Packable's assets
been received. On that same day, the ABL Agent issued a notice
that, in light of the occurrence of the Credit Approval Termination
Event, the Amended Forbearance Agreement had terminated.
Thereafter, the ABL Lenders exercised their cash dominion rights
with respect to Packable's operating accounts and swept the cash
held in those accounts, leaving Packable with a cash balance of
approximately $1.7 million.

Following the defaults and termination of the ABL Lenders' agreed
forbearance, and notwithstanding the exercise of their cash
dominion rights, the ABL Lenders continued to advance funds on a
discretionary week-to-week basis for several more weeks as
Packable's advisors attempted to pursue an alternative going
concern transaction. The funding provided by the ABL Lenders during
this period was used to support certain limited disbursements of
Packable, including payroll-related expenses, in accordance with an
agreed-upon budget and subject to certain termination events.

As of the Petition Date, the aggregate principal amount, plus
accrued interest, owing by the Debtors to the ABL Lenders under the
ABL Credit Agreement is approximately $53.7 million.

On April 14, 2022, Holdings entered into the Term Loan Credit
Agreement, which governs a multi-tranche term loan facility with
Alter Domus (US) LLC, pursuant to which certain Term Loan Lenders
to the Debtors in aggregate principal amount of $86,608,294
comprised of $77,700,000 in new money advances and $8,908,294 of
rolled outstanding accounts payable, all of which remains
outstanding. The Term Loan Credit Agreement contemplated three
potential additional tranches of term loans in an aggregate amount
of up to $215 million, with any second tranche to be funded on or
around July 15, 2022 in the amount of at least $65 million.
However, the potential Tranche B Term Loan and any subsequent
tranches were uncommitted and at the Term Loan Lenders' discretion.


The Tranche A Term Loan matures on October 14, 2029. Borrowings
under the Term Loan Facility earn interest at a non-default rate of
15% per annum, payable solely in kind.

All obligations under the Term Loan Facility are guaranteed on a
subordinated secured second-lien basis by each of Holdings'
wholly-owned domestic subsidiaries. The Term Loan Facility is
secured by second priority liens on substantially all assets of
Holdings and its wholly-owned domestic subsidiaries, including
intellectual property.

In June 2022, Packable learned that the uncommitted potential
Tranche B Term Loan was not going to be funded.

On July 21, 2022, certain Term Loan Lenders provided a short-term
loan pursuant to the Term Loan Credit Agreement to the Debtors in
an aggregate principal amount of $8,715,000, all of which remains
outstanding. The purpose of the Bridge Loan was to provide Packable
with incremental liquidity while it attempted to finalize a
permanent refinancing facility proposed to be provided by a third
party.

On August 9, 2022, the Term Loan Agent issued a notice of default
and reservation of rights with respect to the Term Loan Facility.

As of the Petition Date, there is approximately $95.4 million in
aggregate principal amount outstanding under the Term Loan
Facility.

As of the Petition Date, the Debtors are holding cash totaling
approximately $1.92 million.

The ABL Secured Parties and the Debtors have negotiated at
arm's-length and in good faith regarding the Debtors' use of cash
collateral to fund the continued liquidation of the Debtors'
business during the period from the Petition Date through the
earlier of (a) September 27, 2022 (i.e., 30 days after the Petition
Date) if the Final Order has not been entered by the Court prior to
such date; and (b) the Termination Date.

The Interim Order provides adequate protection to the Prepetition
Secured Parties in the form of, among other things, adequate
protection liens and superpriority claims to protect the
Prepetition Secured Parties against any diminution in value
occurring from and after the Petition Date and arising from, among
other things, the Debtors' use, lease, consumption or disposition
of the Prepetition Collateral as of the Petition Date, including
cash collateral.

A copy of the motion is available at https://bit.ly/3pSNoNp from
PacerMonitor.com.

                 About Packable Holdings LLC

Packable Holdings LLC -- https://www.packable.com/ -- is a leading
multi-marketplace e-commerce enablement platform.

Packable Holdings LLC and 5 affiliates sought protection under
Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Del. Case No.
22-10797) on August 29, 2022. In the petition filed by Maria
Harris, as chief legal officer, the Debtor reported assets and
liabilities between $100 million and $500 million each.

COOLEY LLP and POTTER ANDERSON & CORROON LLP serve as the Debtors'
attorneys.  ALVAREZ AND MARSAL NORTH AMERICA, LLC, is the financial
advisor.  EPIQ CORPORATE RESTRUCTURING, LLC, is the claims agent.
HILCO MERCHANT RESOURCES, LLC, is the liquidation agent.



PANBELA THERAPEUTICS: Gets Noncompliance Notice From Nasdaq
-----------------------------------------------------------
Panbela Therapeutics, Inc. received a letter from The Nasdaq Stock
Market LLC, notifying the Company that it was not in compliance
with the minimum stockholders' equity requirement for continued
listing on the Nasdaq Capital Market.  

Nasdaq Listing Rule 5550(b)(1) requires companies listed on the
Nasdaq Capital Market to maintain stockholders' equity of at least
$2,500,000.  The Company reported a stockholders' deficit of
$4,838,000 on the balance sheet for the quarter ended June 30, 2022
and as of Aug. 19, 2022, the Company did not meet the alternative
standards based on market value of listed securities or net income
from continuing operations.

This notice of noncompliance has no immediate impact on the
continued listing or trading of the Company's common stock on the
Nasdaq Capital Market, which will continue to be listed and traded
on Nasdaq, subject to the Company's compliance with the other
continued listing requirements.  

The Company has until Oct. 3, 2022 to submit to Nasdaq a plan to
regain compliance.  If a plan is accepted, Nasdaq may grant an
extension of up to 180 calendar days from the date of Nasdaq's
letter to evidence compliance.  In the event a plan is not
accepted, the Company would have an opportunity to appeal that
decision before an independent hearing panel.  The hearing request
would stay any suspension or delisting action pending the
conclusion of the hearing process and the expiration of any
additional extension period granted by the panel following the
hearing.  

The Company intends to take all reasonable measures available to
regain compliance under the Nasdaq Listing Rules and remain listed
on the Nasdaq.  However, there can be no assurance that Nasdaq will
grant the Company's request for an extension or that the Company
will ultimately regain compliance with all applicable requirements
for continued listing.

                            About Panbela

Headquartered in Waconia, Minnesota, Panbela Therapeutics, Inc. --
www.Panbela.com -- is a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company
developing disruptive therapeutics for the treatment of patients
with cancer. Its product candidate, SBP-101, is a proprietary
polyamine analogue designed to induce polyamine metabolic
inhibition, a metabolic pathway of critical importance in multiple
tumor types.

Panbela reported a net loss of $10.13 million for the year ended
Dec. 31, 2021, a net loss of $4.77 million for the year ended
Dec. 31, 2020, and a net loss of $6.20 million for the year ended
Dec. 31, 2019.  As of June 30, 2022, the Company had $6.56 million
in total assets, $11.40 million in total liabilities, and a total
stockholders' deficit of $4.84 million.

Tampa, Florida-based Cherry Bekaert, the Company's auditor since
2014, issued a "going concern" qualification in its report date
March 24, 2022, citing that the Company has recurring losses and
negative cash flows from operations that raise substantial doubt
about its ability to continue as a going concern.


PHIO PHARMACEUTICALS: Gets 180-Day Extension From Nasdaq
--------------------------------------------------------
Phio Pharmaceuticals Corp. received a second letter from the
Listings Qualifications Department of The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC
on Aug. 25, 2022, advising that the Company had been granted an
additional 180 calendar days, or to Feb. 20, 2023, to regain
compliance with the Minimum Bid Price Rule, in accordance with
Nasdaq Listing Rule 5810(c)(3)(A).  If, at any time before that
date the bid price of the Company's common stock closes at $1.00
per share or more for a minimum of 10 consecutive business days,
Nasdaq will notify the Company that it has achieved compliance with
the Minimum Bid Price Rule.

As previously reported, on Feb. 25, 2022, Phio Pharmaceuticals
received written notice from Nasdaq stating that the Company was
not in compliance with Nasdaq Listing Rule 5550(a)(2) because the
Company's common stock failed to maintain a minimum closing bid
price of $1.00 for 30 consecutive business days.  The Notification
Letter stated that the Company had 180 days, or until Aug. 24,
2022, to demonstrate its compliance with the Minimum Bid Price
Rule.

The Company intends to continue to actively monitor the closing bid
price of its common stock and will evaluate available options to
regain compliance with the Minimum Bid Price Rule.  If the Company
does not regain compliance within the additional compliance period,
Nasdaq will provide notice that the Company's common stock will be
subject to delisting.  The Company would then be entitled to appeal
that determination to a Nasdaq hearings panel.  There can be no
assurance that the Company will regain compliance with the Minimum
Bid Price Rule during the 180-day additional compliance period or
maintain compliance with the other Nasdaq listing requirements.

                     About Phio Pharmaceuticals

Marlborough, Massachusetts-based Phio Pharmaceuticals Corp. --
http://www.phiopharma.com-- is a biotechnology company developing
the next generation of immuno-oncology therapeutics based on its
self-delivering RNAi therapeutic platform.  The Company's efforts
are focused on silencing tumor-induced suppression of the immune
system through its proprietary INTASYL platform with utility in
immune cells and/or the tumor micro-environment.  The Company's
goal is to develop powerful INTASYL therapeutic compounds that can
weaponize immune effector cells to overcome tumor immune escape,
thereby providing patients a powerful new treatment option that
goes beyond current treatment modalities.

Phio reported a net loss of $13.29 million for the 12 months ended
Dec. 31, 2021, compared to a net loss of $8.79 million for the 12
months ended Dec. 31, 2020, and a net loss of $8.91 million for the
12 months ended Dec. 31, 2019.  As of March 31, 2022, the Company
had $22.16 million in total assets, $2.71 million in total
liabilities, and $19.45 million in total stockholders' equity.


QUANTUM CORP: All Four Proposals Passed at Annual Meeting
---------------------------------------------------------
At the Annual Meeting of the shareholders of Quantum Corporation,
the Company's shareholders:

   (1) elected James J. Lerner, Marc E. Rothman, Rebecca J. Jacoby,
Yue Zhou White, and Christopher D. Neumeyer as directors;

   (2) approved an amendment to the Amended and Restated
Certificate of Incorporation to increase the number of authorized
shares        of the Company's common stock from 125,000,000 to
225,000,000;

   (3) approved, on an advisory basis, the compensation of the
Company's named executive officers; and

   (4) ratified the appointment of Armanino LLP as the Company's
independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year
ending March 31, 2023.

                        About Quantum Corp.

Based in San Jose, California, Quantum Corp. (NYSE:QTM) --
http://www.quantum.com-- provides technology and services that
stores and manages video and video-like data delivering streaming
for video and rich media applications, along with low cost, high
density massive-scale data protection and archive systems. The
Company helps customers capture, create and share digital data and
preserve and protect it for decades.

Quantum reported a net loss of $32.28 million for the year ended
March 31, 2022, a net loss of $35.46 million for the year ended
March 31, 2021, and a net loss of $5.21 million for the year ended
March 31, 2020.  As of March 31, 2022, the Company had $201.63
million in total assets, $328.32 million in total liabilities, and
a total stockholders' deficit of $126.68 million.


RTW CONSTRUCTION: Cash Collateral Access, DIP Loan OK'd
-------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Jersey authorized
RTW Construction, Inc. on an interim basis, to use cash collateral
and obtain post-petition financing from Change Capital Holdings I,
LLC.

As previously reported by the Troubled Company Reporter, the DIP
Loan is a revolver that will allow the Debtor to obtain funds,
repay, and obtain more funds up to the maximum principal amount of
$1,000,000 with a maximum outstanding amount during the initial
13-week period of not more than $250,000.

The Debtor acknowledges that separate and apart from its
negotiations with the DIP Lender, the Debtor has assured First
Indemnity of America Insurance Company that proceeds of each of the
Debtor's contracts for which FIA issued a surety bond will be
deposited into a segregated bank account and used first for
paying:

     (a) beneficiaries of the New Jersey Trust Fund Act (NJ Rev.
Stat section 2A:44-148) associated with that particular Bonded
Contract who are unpaid at the time of the Debtor's receipt of the
funds; or

     (b) FIA directly to the extent that FIA pays such claims
(e.g., claims to subcontractors and material suppliers for that
particular Bonded Contract).

The Budget and any subsequent Budget(s) will not deviate or
infringe upon this assurance. Proceeds of each of Debtor's
contracts in excess of subsection (a) and (b) herein constitute
cash collateral and may be used in accordance with the Order.

The security interest and lien granted post-petition by the Debtor
to the DIP Lender pursuant to the DIP Loan Documents is approved
and granted on a first priority basis on all assets of the Debtor,
subject to (i) valid and properly perfected pre-petition liens and
(ii) the Trust Fund Act.

As adequate protection for the Debtor's continued use of the DIP
Lender's cash collateral, to the extent of any diminution in the
value of its collateral, the DIP Lender continues to be granted a
replacement lien in all of the Debtor's presently owned or
hereafter acquired property and assets.

The DIP Lender is also granted, to the extent of any diminution in
the value of its collateral, an allowed super priority
administrative claim as provided in section 507(b) of the
Bankruptcy Code against the Debtor's estate which will have
priority in payment over any other indebtedness and/or obligations
now in existence or incurred hereafter by the Debtor and over all
administrative expenses or charges against property arising in the
Debtor's Chapter 11 case or any superseding Chapter 7 case.

The Debtor's authorization to use cash collateral and obtain DIP
Financing pursuant to the Order, will be in effect for the period
commencing with the date of the commencement of the case through
and including the earlier of the entry of a Final Order or
September 13, 2022. The Debtor and the DIP Lender may amend or
provide for new Budgets and extend the Expiration Date, without the
need for further Court approval provided that any amended Budget
and notice of any extension of the Expiration Date is filed with
the Court.

A hearing to consider the DIP Financing and entry of a Final Order
is scheduled for September 13, 2022, at 10 a.m.

A copy of the order and the Debtor's weekly budget through the week
of September 2, 2022 is available at https://bit.ly/3CC2AGl from
PacerMonitor.com.

The budget provides for total expenses, on a weekly basis, as
follows:

     $59,051 for the week ended September 2, 2022;
     $19,551 for the week ended September 9, 2022;
     $14,051 for the week ended September 16, 2022;
     $20,944 for the week ended September 23, 2022; and
     $70,551 for the week ended September 30, 2022.

                   About RTW Construction, Inc.

RTW Construction, Inc. sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
U.S. Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. N.J. Case No. 21-18595) on November
4, 2021. In the petition signed by Randy Worrell, chief executive
officer, the Debtor disclosed $1,376,365 in assets and $3,032,627
in liabilities.

Judge Christine M. Gravelle oversees the case.

Vincent Roldan, Esq., at Mandelbaum and Salsburg PC is the Debtor's
counsel.

Change Capital Holdings I, LLC, the DIP lender, is represented by
Henry G. Swergold, Esq. at Platzer, Swergold, Goldberg, Katz &
Jaslow, LLP



S.D.S. DINING: Case Summary & Six Unsecured Creditors
-----------------------------------------------------
Debtor: S.D.S. Dining Corp.
           d/b/a Sapphire, Cuisines of India
        2014 Broadway
        New York, NY 10023

Business Description: The Debtor operates a restaurant at 2014
                      Broadway, New York, dba Sapphire, Cuisine
                      of India.

Chapter 11 Petition Date: August 30, 2022

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Southern District of New York

Case No.: 22-11173

Debtor's Counsel: A. Mitchell Greene, Esq.
                  LEECH TISHMAN ROBINSON BROG, PLLC
                  875 Third Avenue
                  New York, NY 10022
                  Tel: (212) 603-6300

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

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Darshan R. Shah as vice president.

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

https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/U4VHDXY/SDS_Dining_Corp__nysbke-22-11173__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA


SAS AB: Warns That Much More Needed in Restoring Financial Health
-----------------------------------------------------------------
SAS AB, which is working its way through a Chapter 11 restructuring
in the US, cautioned that much more remains to be done to convince
stakeholders to invest in the ailing Scandinavian carrier.

The airline also needs to overcome the impact of a pilot strike and
travel disruptions that hobbled its key summer season, just as the
price of jet fuel has soared and inflation accelerates.

During the third quarter, SAS continued to see increased demand as
travel restrictions were eased, but noted that the 15-day pilot
strike in July and major operational disruptions affecting the
whole airline industry and its Chapter 11 filing on July 5 affected
results during the quarter.

The Company said that for the third quarter period of May to July
2022, it recorded revenue of SEK 8.580 billion (from SEK 3.982
billion in the same period in 2021) and a net loss of SEK 1.848
billion (from SEK 1.336 billion in the same period in 2021).
Compared with the previous quarter passengers flying with SAS
increased 30% and the flown load factor reached approximately 78%,
up 11 percentage points.

On July 5, SAS voluntarily filed for chapter 11, a legal process
for financial restructuring in the U.S. The chapter 11 process aims
to accelerate the implementation of our transformation plan SAS
FORWARD, and ultimately to enable us to become a financially
strong, profitable and competitive company for years to come.

After the close of the quarter, SAS secured a debtor-in-possession
(DIP) financing commitment for USD 700 million from Apollo Global
Management. This substantial financing commitment is an important
milestone in its transformation and it gives us a strong financial
position to support its operations throughout the chapter 11
process.  The DIP financing is subject to court approval in the
U.S., and SAS anticipates receiving approval for the DIP financing
by mid-September 2022

SAS continues to strengthen its North America network and has
established direct summer routes to Toronto from Copenhagen and
Stockholm.  During the coming winter season, SAS will continue to
operate all its pre-pandemic U.S. routes for its travelers.

SAS notes that the ongoing geopolitical situation in Eastern Europe
and the accompanying uncertainties as well as the lingering effects
of the COVID-19 pandemic makes it impossible to provide any
guidance on the financial performance for the coming fiscal year.

"Over the past two years, the COVID-19 pandemic has significantly
affected the whole aviation industry, including SAS.  And in some
parts of the world, residual effects such as travel restrictions
still remain in place. Substantially rising demand for travel is
having a significant impact and the industry is struggling to
recover quickly enough to meet this positive trend.  Accordingly,
total travel volumes remain lower than before the start of the
pandemic in March 2020.  The current geopolitical
situation and turbulence in Eastern Europe is also affecting the
airline industry and, inter alia, is impacting the recovery of
traffic to and from Asia. Due to the current market conditions in
the aviation industry, estimation remains uncertain, which poses
difficulty for forecasts and scenario analyses related to future
demand, primarily in the short term," SAS said in its third quarter
report.

                   About Scandinavian Airlines

SAS SAB, Scandinavia's leading airline, with main hubs in
Copenhagen, Oslo and Stockholm, is flying to destinations in
Europe, USA and Asia.  Spurred by a Scandinavian heritage and
sustainable values, SAS aims to be the global leader in sustainable
aviation.  The airline will reduce total carbon emissions by 25
percent by 2025, by using more sustainable aviation fuel and its
modern fleet with fuel-efficient aircraft.  In addition to flight
operations, SAS offers ground handling services, technical
maintenance and air cargo services. SAS is a founder member of the
Star Alliance, and together with its partner airlines offers a wide
network worldwide. On the Web: https://www.sasgroup.net/

SAS AB and its affiliates, including Scandinavian Airlines Systems
Denmark-Norway-Sweden and Scandinavian Airlines of North America
Inc., sought protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Case No. 22-10925) on July 5, 2022.  The
Debtor SAS AB estimated assets between $10 billion and $50 billion
and liabilities between $1 billion and $10 billion.

Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP is serving as global legal counsel and
Mannheimer Swartling Advokatbyra AB is serving as Swedish legal
counsel to SAS.  Seabury Securities LLC and Skandinaviska Enskilda
Banken AB are serving as investment bankers, Seabury is also
serving as restructuring advisor.  FTI Consulting is serving as
financial advisor.  Kroll Restructuring Advisors is the claims
agent.


SC SJ HOLDINGS: Chapter 11 Attorney Fee Opposition Reduced
----------------------------------------------------------
Vince Sullivan of Law360 reports that the former owner of a
California hotel, SC SJ Holdings, had its arguments against a fee
application from its bankruptcy counsel trimmed Thursday, August
25, 2022, when a Delaware judge said the company is precluded from
asserting a malpractice defense by the terms of its Chapter 11
plan.

During a virtual hearing, U. S. Bankruptcy Judge John T. Dorsey
said he would prohibit debtor SC SJ Holdings from arguing that
advice from its counsel at Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP to
file for bankruptcy was flawed, and that any evidence advancing
that argument would be excluded from a hearing on the firm's fee
application.

                 About SC SJ Holdings and FMT SJ

San Ramon, California-based Eagle Canyon Management's SC SJ
Holdings LLC owns The Fairmont San Jose, an 805-room luxury hotel
located at 170 South Market St., San Jose, Calif.  The hotel is
near many of the largest Fortune 1000 corporations and is a popular
location for conferences and conventions, particularly in the
technology industry.

On March 5, 2021, SC SJ Holdings' affiliate, FMT SJ LLC, filed a
voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code (Bankr. D. Del. Case No. 21-10521).  On March 10, 2021, SC SJ
Holdings sought Chapter 11 protection (Bankr. D. Del. Case No.
21-10549). The cases are jointly administered under Case No.
21-10549.

At the time of the filing, SC SJ Holdings disclosed assets of
between $100 million and $500 million and liabilities of the same
range.  FMT SJ estimated assets of between $500,000 and $1 million
and liabilities of between $100 million and $500 million.

Judge John T. Dorsey is assigned to the case.

The Debtors tapped Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman, LLP, as their
bankruptcy counsel, Cole Schotz P.C. as local counsel, and Verity
LLC as financial advisor.  Stretto is the claims agent and
administrative advisor.


SELECT MEDICAL: S&P Affirms 'B+' ICR, Outlook Stable
----------------------------------------------------
S&P Global Ratings affirmed its 'B+' issuer credit rating on Select
Medical Corp. S&P also affirmed its 'BB-' rating on its senior
secured credit facilities and 'B-' rating on its senior unsecured
notes.

S&P said, "The stable outlook reflects our expectations that Select
Medical's S&P Global Ratings-adjusted EBITDA margin will stabilize
in the next few quarters, then improve to about 17%, resulting in
adjusted debt-to-EBITDA leverage back near historic levels of
4x-5.5x by the end of 2023.

"We believe the company's rising leverage is primarily due to very
elevated labor market pressures that have already begun to subside.
Unprecedented demand for nursing from the U.S. hospital system to
alleviate staff shortages significantly increased labor costs for
agency (travel) nurses, enticing many of Select's full-time
employee nurses to temporarily seek employment with them. This
subsequently altered the company's nursing mix unfavorably toward
higher cost agency nurses. In the last few months, agency costs
have declined significantly, as hiring efforts to recruit full-time
staff have been successful. We expect labor costs as a percentage
of revenue to decline over the next three to four quarters, but
remain above historic levels."

Recovering patient volumes and fiscal 2023 reimbursement rate
increases support the prospects for deleveraging. Nearly every
performance metric related to patient volumes and revenues across
the company's four operating segments improved for the second
quarter relative to 2021 and 2019 pre-pandemic levels. Critical
illness recovery hospitals continue to show some weakness in
admissions and occupancy rate, but have been relatively resilient
despite catering to a high-risk patient population amid ongoing
pandemic concerns. Concentra's modest decline in revenues
year-over-year for the second quarter is tied to lost Covid-related
testing revenues.

Share repurchases, dividend payments, and capital spending pose
risks to our base-case scenario. The company increased borrowing on
its revolver by $190 million year-to-date to partly fund $178
million of share repurchases, $33 million of dividends, and $93
million of capital expenditures. However, as Select Medical has
repaid $77 million of government advance payments and has under $7
million remaining, S&P expects it will increasingly be able to fund
its investments with cash, absent a major setback in any of its
business lines.

The company's leadership position in four distinct segments, large
operating scale, favorable payor mix, and geographic
diversification within the U.S. help reduce its exposure to any
single risk.Despite operating from a position of strength, the
business remains vulnerable to rate cuts, particularly in its
Outpatient Rehabilitation segment, and competition as it competes
in a fragmented industry with limited barriers to entry.

S&P said, "The stable outlook reflects our expectation that EBITDA
margins will stabilize and then improve in the next few quarters,
resulting in adjusted debt-to-EBITDA leverage near historic levels
of 4x-5.5x by the end of 2023.

"We could downgrade the company if we expect EBITDA margins to
remain depressed beyond 2023 due to a shortfall in its efforts to
reduce labor costs, weaker-than-expected patient volume, or
additional reimbursement cuts. Under such a scenario, we would
expect EBITDA margin contraction of about 250 basis points from our
base-case scenario, leading to leverage sustained above 5.5x beyond
12 months.

"Although unlikely over the next year, we could raise the rating if
we believe Select Medical is committed to reducing debt leverage
below 4x on a sustained basis. Such a scenario would require EBITDA
margin expansion of about 200 basis points above our base-case
forecast."

ESG credit indicators: E-2, S-2, G-2



SENIOR CARE LIVING VII: Exclusivity Period Extended to Nov. 1
-------------------------------------------------------------
Senior Care Living VII, LLC received court approval to remain in
control of its bankruptcy while it pursues a sale of its assets.

The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Florida
extended Senior Care Living's exclusivity period to Nov. 1,
allowing the company to pursue an asset sale before it proposes a
bankruptcy plan without the threat of a rival plan from creditors.

Senior Care Living and its key creditor, UMB Bank, N.A., have
recently reached an agreement in principle concerning the sale of
the properties and anticipate filing revised bid procedures shortly
along with a motion to sell.

                  About Senior Care Living VII

Senior Care Living VII, LLC sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
(Bankr. M.D. Fla. Lead Case No. 22-00103) on Jan. 10, 2022, listing
up to $50 million in both assets and liabilities.

Judge Caryl E. Delano oversees the case.

The Debtor tapped Michael C. Markham, Esq., at Johnson Pope Bokor
Ruppel & Burns, LLP as legal counsel; SC&H Group, Inc. as financial
advisor; and Brimmer Burek & Keelan, LLP, as accountant.


SENIOR CARE LIVING: Cash Collateral Access Continued to November
----------------------------------------------------------------
Senior Care Living VII, LLLC will have continued access to cash
collateral through the hearing on November 21, 2022.  The U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Florida, Tampa
Division, held a hearing on Senior Care's request alongside
objections from creditor UMB Bank, N.A.

In a Seventh Interim Order dated August 26, the Court authorized
Senior Care to use cash collateral on an interim basis in
accordance with the budget, with a 10% variance, until the earlier
of August 29, or the occurrence of a Termination Event, but only on
the terms of the Interim Order.

The Debtor's cash collateral access will be limited solely to the
amounts, times, and categories of expenses listed in the Budget.

Validus Senior Living will remain as manager of the Debtor's
assisted living facility.

As adequate protection of the Trustee's interests in its
collateral, UMB will have a valid, perfected, and enforceable
replacement lien and security interest in all assets of the Debtor
existing on or after the Petition Date of the same type as set
forth in the Bond Documents.

The Debtor will provide, or will cause Validus to provide, UMB with
(a) a weekly census of residents residing at the ALF and (b) a
weekly summary of all receipts and disbursements as compared to the
Budget. The Weekly Reporting will be provided to UMB by 5 p.m. E.T.
on the second business day of each week with respect to the week
ending the prior Friday.

The Debtor will maintain insurance coverage for its property in
accordance with the obligations under the loan and security
documents with UMB. The Debtor will provide proof of insurance upon
written request.

A Termination Event will be deemed to have occurred three days
after written notice sent by UMB to the Debtor, its counsel, and
the United States Trustee of the occurrence of any of the following
pursuant to the Order:

     a. The Debtor fails to comply with the Budget (subject to the
Permitted Variance) and terms governing the Budget;

     b. The Debtor terminates Validus as manager of the ALF and/or
fails to satisfy its postpetition payment obligations to Validus;
or

     c. The Debtor fails to comply with, keep, observe, or perform
any of its agreements or undertakings under the Interim Order.

                   About Senior Care Living VII

Senior Care Living VII, LLC sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
(Bankr. M.D. Fla. Lead Case No. 22-00103) on Jan. 10, 2022, listing
up to $50 million in both assets and liabilities.

Judge Caryl E. Delano oversees the case.

Michael C. Markham, Esq., at Johnson Pope Bokor Ruppel & Burns, LLP
is the Debtor's legal counsel while SC&H Group, Inc. serves as the
Debtor's financial advisor.



SEVEN ARTS: Appoints Thom Hazaert as Director
---------------------------------------------
Thom Hazaert was appointed to Seven Arts Entertainment Inc.'s Board
of Directors.  Mr. Hazaert will serve as the director of A&R for
the Company's subsidiary, Seven Arts Music, as well as chief
revenue director for the Company and its subsidiary, Muse Media.

Prior to joining the Company, Mr. Hazaert has, over the past 30
years, been a music journalist, record producer, label executive,
Radio Personality, artist manager and talent agent.  His work
includes marketing and management for many iconic Rock acts
including Limp Bizkit, Staind, Def Leppard, Korn, Nine Inch Nails,
Marilyn Manson, Papa Roach, and more.  He has also been involved in
marketing on major studio films and soundtracks including Saw 3,
Stigmata, and Rock Star.

Mr. Hazaert's work was also influential in the early advent of
viral marketing as an independent consultant for record labels
including Warner Bros. Records, Flip Records, Interscope Records,
Hollywood Records, and Jive Records.

More recently, Mr. Hazaert formed THC (Thom Hazaert Company) Films.
Through THC Films, Mr. Hazaert began producing special features
with Red Shirt Pictures for Shout!Factory.  Hazaert was involved in
production, with Red Shirt Pictures and Iron Alley Films, on
special features for Wes Craven's The People Under The Stairs, Army
of Darkness, Tales From the Crypt Demon Knight and Bordello of
Blood.

In 2019, prior to departing as manager to long time business
partner and Grammy winning former Megadeth bassist, David Ellefson,
Mr. Hazaert was involved in the early development of the film
Dwellers along with Ellefson and Director, Drew Fortier.  Dwellers
has gone on to win 11 awards in the horror film genre.

The Company believes Mr. Hazaert's experience and expertise will be
instrumental in networking with major studios and streaming
networks in execution of the Company's business plan.

                         About Seven Arts

Los Angeles-based Seven Arts Entertainment, Inc. (OTC QB: SAPX) was
founded in 2002 as an independent motion picture production
and distribution company engaged in the development, acquisition,
financing, production and licensing of theatrical motion pictures
for exhibition in domestic (i.e., the United States and Canada) and
foreign theatrical markets, and for subsequent worldwide release in
other forms of media, including home video and pay and free
television.

The Hall Group, CPAs, in Dallas, Texas, expressed substantial doubt
about the Company's ability to continue as a going concern
following the financial results for the year ended June 30, 2013,
citing the Company's recurring losses from operations and net
capital deficiency. The Company reported a net loss of $22.4
million for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2013, compared with a
net loss of $11.15 million in 2012.  As of Dec. 31, 2013, Seven
Arts had $16.9 million in total assets, $24.3 million in total
liabilities and a $7.42 million total shareholders' deficit.


SKAUTO BODY REPAIR: Wins Final Cash Collateral Access
-----------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Georgia,
Atlanta Division, authorized SKAuto Body Repair, Inc. to use cash
collateral on a final basis in accordance with the budget, with a
10% variance.

The Debtor needs to use cash collateral to continue operations of
the business.

Shannon K. Abernathy incorporated the Debtor in the State of
Georgia on August 14, 2007, as S.K. Abernathy, Inc.  On June 11,
2015, the name was changed to SKAuto Body Repair, Inc. Abernathy is
the Debtor's sole shareholder, C.E.O., and C.F.O.

In addition to its leased premises at 2490 S. Main Street, Suite C,
Kennesaw, GA, 30144, at one point the Debtor also operated shops in
Arizona, North Carolina, and Tennessee.  Those out of state
locations, however, proved to be unprofitable. The Debtor closed
those locations during the past few years and now operates solely
out of its Kennesaw, Georgia location. In the meantime, however,
the Debtor fell behind with a variety of accounts payable, which
necessitated seeking bankruptcy relief. Although it may fluctuate,
the Debtor currently employs 9 W-2 employees, which includes the
officers and Abernathy's son Dylan Abernathy.

AKZO Nobel Coatings, Inc. asserts a claim against the Debtor and
Shannon Abernathy personally in the amount of $244,450 as evidenced
by pre-Petition supply and security agreements, a judgment dated
September 14, 2021, and a Writ of Fieri Facias filed January 20,
2022 in the Cobb County, Georgia public records.

Kabbage, Inc. asserts a claim against the Debtor, and perhaps
against Shannon Abernathy personally, in the amount of $13,450,
evidenced by pre-Petition business loan agreements.

Keystone Automotive Industries, Inc. asserts a claim against the
Debtor and Shannon Abernathy personally in the amount of $725,342
as evidenced by pre-Petition supply and security agreements.
Included in the $725,342 claim amount is the $244,450 claim of AKZO
Nobel as Keystone, AKZO Nobel, and Debtor were all parties to one
of the pre-petition supply agreements.

As adequate protection, the parties with an interest in the cash
collateral are granted a replacement lien on all property of the
kind and in the same priority as the respective liens of
Respondents attached as of the Petition Date.

These events constitute an "Event of Default": (i) the conversion
or dismissal of the case; or (ii) the appointment of a trustee or
an examiner with expanded powers in the case; and (iii) the
Debtor's failure to comply with the Interim Order.

A copy of the motion and the Debtor's budget for the period from
July 2022 to May 2024 is available at https://bit.ly/3wCakVb from
PacerMonitor.com.

The Debtor projects $186,920 in total income and $50,472 in total
expenses for September 2022.

                   About SKAuto Body Repair

SKAuto Body Repair Inc. is a premier auto body and repair
specialist located in Kennesaw, Georgia.

SKAuto Body Repair Inc. filed a petition for relief under
Subchapter V of Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D.
Ga. Case No. 22-55573) on July 22, 2022.  In the petition filed by
Shannon Abernathy, as CEO and CFO, the Debtor estimated assets
between $100,000 and $500,000 and liabilities between $1 million
and $10 million.

Judge Jeffery W. Cavender oversees the case.

John T. Whaley has been appointed as Subchapter V trustee.

Paul Reece Marr, Esq., at Paul Reece Marr, P.C., is the Debtor's
counsel.



SKILLZ INC: Doris Fritz-Bianchi Quits as Head of People
-------------------------------------------------------
Effective Sept. 9, 2022, Doris Fritz-Bianchi will depart from her
position as Head of People of Skillz Inc.  

On Aug. 24, 2022, in connection with Ms. Fritz-Bianchi's departure,
the Company and Ms. Fritz-Bianchi entered into a transition and
separation agreement. Pursuant to the terms of the Separation
Agreement, Ms. Fritz-Bianchi will receive (i) a severance payment
equal to an aggregate of $157,500, representing six months of base
salary, (ii) COBRA healthcare coverage for a maximum period of nine
months and (iii) accelerated vesting of 40,406 Restricted Stock
Units.  The Separation Agreement also contains customary
cooperation and non-disparagement provisions.

           Departure of Jerry Bruckheimer from the Board

On Aug. 19, 2022, Jerry Bruckheimer notified the Company of his
decision to resign from the Board, effective immediately.  Mr.
Bruckheimer's resignation did not result from any disagreement with
the Company on any matter relating to the Company's operations,
policies or practices.

In connection with Mr. Bruckheimer's departure, the Consulting
Agreement dated May 11, 2022 by and between Mr. Bruckheimer and the
Company will terminate on Sept. 19, 2022.  Pursuant to the terms of
the Consulting Agreement, all remaining unvested portions of Mr.
Bruckheimer's incentive awards under the Consulting Agreement will
be forfeited.

              Appointment of Seth Schorr to the Board

On Aug. 25, 2022, a majority in voting power of the shares of
capital stock of the Company appointed Seth Schorr to the Board.
Mr. Schorr, age 45, has served as the chief executive officer of
Fifth Street Gaming since 2011.  He also serves as the chairman of
Downtown Grand Hotel & Casino.  Since beginning his career in
gaming and hospitality in 1991, Mr. Schorr served in various
capacities at Wynn Resorts and Mirage Resorts.  In 2017 Mr. Schorr
launched Commercial Streaming Solutions which developed a patented
media platform BettorView, that brings sports betting content to
casinos, bars, and stadiums throughout the country.  In 2021,
Schorr founded JefeBet, a multimedia and entertainment brand
focused towards engaging the Latino audience in the United States.
Schorr is also a founder of the Nevada Esports Alliance and
continues to be a leader in the convergence of esports and sports
gambling.  In 2021, Schorr was appointed to the Nevada Gaming
Control Board's Esports Technical Advisory Committee. Mr. Schorr
also co-founded Fifth Street Gaming which owns and operates five
casinos and controls a food and beverage operation that owns and
manages more than 60 restaurants in the Las Vegas area and southern
California.  Mr. Schorr is a graduate of the University of
Pennsylvania.

Mr. Schorr will also join the Board's Compensation Committee.
There is no arrangement or understanding between Mr. Schorr and any
other persons pursuant to which Mr. Schorr was appointed as a
director. Furthermore, there are no family relationships between
Mr. Schorr and any other director or executive officer of the
Company and there are no transactions between Mr. Schorr and the
Company that would be required to be reported under Item 404(a) of
Regulation S-K.

                    Headcount Restructuring Plan

In August 2022, the Company implemented a plan to further reduce
headcount.  This plan is unrelated to the reorganization previously
announced by the Company in July 2022.  In connection with this
restructuring, the Company expects to incur severance and related
costs of approximately $3 million (including stock-based
compensation), substantially all of which is expected to be
incurred in the third quarter of 2022.  The annualized payroll cost
savings from this restructuring is expected to be at least $10
million.

                  Composition of Board Committees

Effective Aug. 25, 2022, the Board reconstituted the membership of
the Compensation Committee to include Messrs. Seth Schorr, Henry
Hoffman and Kent Wakeford, with Mr. Wakeford serving as Chair.

                         About Skillz Inc.

Skillz Inc. -- www.skillz.com -- is a mobile games platform that
connects players in fair, fun, and meaningful competition.  The
Skillz platform helps developers build multi-million dollar
franchises by enabling social competition in their games.
Leveraging its patented technology, Skillz hosts billions of casual
esports tournaments for millions of mobile players worldwide, and
distributes millions in prizes each month.

Skillz reported a net loss of $181.38 million in 2021, a net loss
of $145.51 million in 2020, and a net loss of $23.60 million in
2019. As of March 31, 2022, the Company had $932.54 million in
total assets, $380.90 million in total liabilities, and $551.64
million in total stockholders' equity.

                             *   *   *

As reported by the TCR on March 31, 2022, S&P Global Ratings
lowered its issuer credit rating on San Francisco-based mobile
gaming platform operator Skillz Inc. to 'CCC+' from 'B-'.  Also in
March 2022, Moody's Investors Service downgraded the
Corporate Family Rating of Skillz Inc. to Caa1 from B3 following
the company's recent guidance for greater cash flow losses over the
next year, reflecting higher governance risk.


SOMM INC: Court OKs Deal with SBA on Cash Collateral Access
-----------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of California,
Santa Rosa Division, entered an order approving the stipulation
between Somm, Inc. and the U.S. Small Business Administration
authorizing the Debtor to use cash collateral.

As previously reported by the Troubled Company Reporter, the Debtor
requires the use of cash collateral to continue operating in the
ordinary course of business postpetition, and preserve the going
concern value of its assets and business for the benefit of
creditors and interested parties.

The SBA consented to the Debtor's use of cash collateral on terms
and conditions that include:

     a. As adequate protection, the SBA will receive a replacement
lien to the extent that the automatic stay, pursuant to 11 U.S.C.
section 362, as well as the use, sale, lease or grant results in a
decrease in the value of the SBA's interest in the Personal
Property Collateral on a post-petition basis. The lien will have
and enjoy the same priority relative to the post-petition liens of
other secured creditors as the pre-petition liens the SBA had and
enjoyed relative liens of other secured creditors as to property
owned by the Debtor on the date of the petition.

     b. The lien will be in addition to the one the SBA has in the
Debtor's assets as of the petition date, which lien extends to and
encumbers the proceeds and products of the Debtor's property in
existence at the time the bankruptcy petition was filed.

     c. The Debtor is not required to make payments to the SBA as a
condition to use the cash collateral. However, the Debtor must
commence making payment to the SBA on December 14, 2022, as
required by the SBA loan documents.

      d. As further protection for the SBA's secured claim, the
Debtor will file a plan within 90 days of its bankruptcy filing
date, and will have the plan confirmed within 180 days of the date
of the petition. These dates may only be extended by Court order
after notice and hearing or by agreement of the parties of the
stipulation.

     e. A failure by the Debtor to perform any of the obligations
set forth in the stipulation will, at the SBA's election,
constitute a default. If the SBA elects to declare such default, it
must do so by sending written notice thereof to the Debtor and its
counsel. The notice may be delivered in any reasonable manner,
including facsimile transmission and email.

The SBA's consent to the Debtor's use of cash collateral will
terminate and cease upon the earliest to occur of:

     i. The Debtor's failure to cure a default of any obligation
under the Stipulation within five days written notice thereof;

    ii. Cessation of business operations, or dismissal or
conversion of Debtor's chapter 11 case;

   iii. Entry of an Order granting to any party a lien upon any
collateral, other than a purchase money security interest, unless
SBA has provided its prior consent in writing.

A copy of the order is available at https://bit.ly/3e1bN0T from
PacerMonitor.com.

                        About Somm Inc.

Somm Inc. -- https://sommselect.com -- doing business as Somm
Select, offers exceptional wine from around the world, delivered to
your door.

Somm, Inc., filed a petition for relief under Subchapter V of
Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. N.D. Cal. Case No.
22-10267) on July 14, 2022. The petition was signed by Morris C.
Aaron, the Debtor's CRO.  The Debtor's balance sheet as of June 30,
2022, reflects total assets of $1,907,983 and total liabilities of
$2,520,780.

Mark M. Sharf has been appointed as Subchapter V trustee.

The Law Offices of Michael C. Fallon is the Debtor's counsel.



TUNICA HOSPITALITY: Starts Subchapter V Case
--------------------------------------------
Tunica Hospitality & Entertainment LLC filed for chapter 11
protection without stating a reason.  The Debtor filed as a small
business debtor seeking relief under Subchapter V of Chapter 11 of
the Bankruptcy Code.

According to court filing, Tunica Hospitality estimates between 1
and 49 creditors.  The bare-bones petition states funds will be
available to unsecured creditors.

             About Tunica Hospitality & Entertainment

Tunica Hospitality & Entertainment LLC filed a petition for relief
under Subchapter V of Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr.
S.D. Miss. Case No. 22-01693) on August 25, 2022. In the petition
filed by Don Hewitt, as managing member, the Debtor reported assets
and liabilities between $1 million and $10 million.

Craig M. Geno has been appointed as Subchapter V trustee.

The Debtor is represented by William (Bo) Roland of The Cochran
Firm-Jackson, LLC.


VBI VACCINES: Terminates Sales Agreements With Jefferies
--------------------------------------------------------
As previously disclosed, on July 31, 2020, VBI Vaccines Inc.
entered into an Open Market Sale AgreementSM with Jefferies LLC, as
sales agent and/or principal, to sell, at its option, common
shares, no par value per share, having aggregate gross sales
proceeds of up to $125 million, from time to time, through an "at
the market" equity offering program under which Jefferies acted as
sales agent and/or principal.

Additionally, as previously disclosed, on Sept. 3, 2021, the
Company entered into an Open Market Sale Agreement with Jefferies
as sales agent and/or principal, to sell, at its option, Common
Shares, having aggregate gross sales proceeds of up to $125
million, from time to time, through an "at the market" equity
offering program under which Jefferies acted as sales agent and/or
principal.

On Aug. 26, 2022, the Company delivered written notices to
Jefferies to terminate each of the July 2020 Sales Agreement and
the September 2021 Sales Agreement, each effective as of Aug. 26,
2022, pursuant to Section 7(b)(i) thereof in each of the July 2020
Sales Agreement and the September 2021 Sales Agreement.  The
Company is not subject to any termination penalties related to the
termination of the July 2020 Sales Agreement or the September 2021
Sales Agreement.  Prior to termination, $27,022,182 of the
Company's Common Shares remained available for sale pursuant to the
First ATM Program, and $125,000,000 of the Company's Common Shares
remained available for sale pursuant to the Second ATM Program.
Neither the First ATM Program nor the Second ATM Program were
utilized in 2022.

                        About VBI Vaccines

VBI Vaccines Inc. -- www.vbivaccines.com -- is a biopharmaceutical
company driven by immunology in the pursuit of powerful prevention
and treatment of disease. Through its innovative approach to
virus-like particles ("VLPs"), including a proprietary enveloped
VLP ("eVLP") platform technology, VBI develops vaccine candidates
that mimic the natural presentation of viruses, designed to elicit
the innate power of the human immune system. VBI is committed to
targeting and overcoming significant infectious diseases, including
hepatitis B, coronaviruses, and cytomegalovirus (CMV), as well as
aggressive cancers including glioblastoma (GBM). VBI is
headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with research operations
in Ottawa, Canada, and a research and manufacturing site in
Rehovot, Israel.

VBI Vaccines reported a net loss of $69.75 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2021, compared to a net loss of $46.23 million for
the year ended Dec. 31, 2020.  As of June 30, 2022, the Company had
$172.16 million in total assets, $40.53 million in total current
liabilities, $26.07 million in total non-current liabilities, and
$105.56 million in total stockholders' equity.

Iselin, New Jersey-based EisnerAmper LLP, the Company's auditor
since 2016, issued a "going concern" qualification in its report
dated March 7, 2022, citing that the Company has an accumulated
deficit as of Dec. 31, 2021 and cash outflows from operating
activities for the year-ended Dec. 31, 2021 and, as such, will
require significant additional funds to conduct clinical and
non-clinical trials, achieve regulatory approvals, and subject to
such approvals, commercially launch its products.  These factors
raise substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going
concern.


VENUE CHURCH: Files Ch. 11 After Alleged Pastor's Sexual Misconduct
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Einselen, writing for The Roys Report, details the filing of
bankruptcy of Venue Church after pastor's alleged sexual misconduct
and with millions of debt.

A Tennessee megachurch has filed for bankruptcy and disclosed
millions in debts, following scandal concerning Pastor Tavner
Smith’s alleged sexual misconduct, federal court filings show.

Venue Church in Chattanooga filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy Tuesday
in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee. Its
bankruptcy petition shows the church has more than $3 million in
mortgage, auto loan, and credit card debt.

The church has less than $5 million in assets, even counting its
$4.5 million church building, according to the filing.

Tom Bible, the attorney representing Venue Church in the
bankruptcy, didn’t immediately respond when The Roys Report (TRR)
asked why the church had decided to file for bankruptcy.

But the filing shows a massive drop in revenue over the last two
years. And the bankruptcy filing puts a temporary stop to
foreclosure proceedings on the Venue Church building, reported
earlier by TRR.

An amended listing of secured debts shows Venue Church still owes
$2.77 million on its building.  That's about $5,000 less than the
initial mortgage, the foreclosure notice shows.

Bible reportedly told the Chattanooga Free Press that the church
intends to pay off its debts in full, even if that means selling
the building.

That's a different message than Smith communicated less than three
weeks ago. He had pledged that the church would stay put, TRR
previously reported.

The filing also identifies, for the first time, the former church
governing board members who had reportedly quit in 2021.

Venue Church was reportedly a former member of the Association of
Related Churches (ARC), one of North America's biggest
church-planting organizations. As TRR has previously reported, ARC
is known for restoring and re-platforming morally fallen pastors.
Current and past ARC member churches, including Venue Church, have
faced multiple scandals involving money or sex.

ARC Association of Related ChurchARC's style of church governance
generally puts other megachurch pastors, which it calls
“overseers,” in charge of holding a lead pastor accountable.

Ron Carpenter of Redemption Church in San Jose, California, was
chairman of the Venue Church board. Steven Furtick of Elevation
Church in Charlotte, North Carolina, and Benny Perez of ChurchLV in
Las Vegas, Nevada, were the other two board members.

ChurchLV is an ARC member church and Perez serves on ARC's Lead
Team. Furtick’s Elevation Church is not an ARC member but
reportedly follows the ARC governance model.

Carpenter has links to ARC, but no formal association.

Carpenter founded Redemption Church in Greenville, South Carolina.
In 2018, John Gray—who as recently as April 2022 served on ARC's
Lead Team—took over Redemption Church and renamed it Relentless
Church. Now Gray, who’s repeatedly been accused of sexual
misconduct, is embroiled in a legal dispute with Carpenter over the
property.

Another former Venue board member is Ron Phillips, lead pastor of
Abba's House in the Chattanooga area. The filing lists him as a
board member from September 2021 through January 2022. The
Chattanooga Free Press has reported Phillips resigned in early
February.

A few months after Phillips resigned, Venue Church sold an LED
display wall to Abba's House on June 20 for $40,000, according to
the bankruptcy filing. That same day, the filing shows, Venue
Church paid Tavner Smith a total of $15,000 - $10,000 for a loan
repayment and $5,000 as a pass-through from Abba's House.

While the transactions took place on the same day, there’s no
explicit link between them. Venue Church's bankruptcy attorney
didn’t immediately respond when TRR asked for clarification.

                     What goes up must come down?

Smith launched Venue Church 10 years ago. In just three years it
had swelled to 2,000 attendees across six Sunday worship services,
becoming the seventh fastest growing church in the country.

Venue Church bought its current building in late 2019. In 2020
during the COVID-19 pandemic, the church received more than $3.1
million in revenue, including a $141,691 loan that was forgiven
through the federal Paycheck Protection Program.

But in late 2021, Smith was accused of kissing a woman who wasn’t
his wife. Eight church staffers quit over the allegations, TRR
previously reported. Then Smith went on a short sabbatical early
this year before returning to preaching a month later.

Attendance has reportedly fallen steeply since the scandal broke.
Revenue shrank to just over $2 million last year, the bankruptcy
filing shows. And Venue has brought in less than $600,000 this year
as of August 23.

Debts include auto loans, credit cards, vendor bills and back
taxes

Venue Church now has less than $500 in the bank, according to its
bankruptcy filing. Its other non-real estate assets include more
than $180,000 in furniture, office and cleaning equipment, musical
instruments, and audio/visual and lighting gear. The church also
owns a Ford F-150 and a Chevrolet Suburban, both with about 110,000
miles on them.

Besides its mortgage, the church’s debts include about $53,000
owed on the two vehicles, plus another $12,000 of debt it carried
over from a vehicle it used to own but was underwater on, the
filing shows.

Venue also owes nearly $8,000 to the city of Chattanooga and more
than $2,200 to Hamilton County, according to the filing. Government
records show that is for back taxes and stormwater fees.

Credit card debt amounts to nearly $90,000, the bankruptcy filing
shows. Debts to various business vendors and Tavner Smith’s
ex-wife make up the rest of the church’s indebtedness.

Smith’s ex-wife Danielle Smith, who had also worked for Venue
Church, sued the church in July alleging breach of contract,
Hamilton County Circuit Court documents show.

She claims in a court filing that Venue Church owes her monthly
payments under an exit agreement, but missed the last three months
of payments. She also claims the church was supposed to transfer
her vehicle’s title to her name only and failed to do so.

How much Venue Church owes Danielle Smith isn’t stated either in
the church’s bankruptcy filing or in Danielle Smith’s court
complaint. Tavner Smith denied the breach of contract claims in a
pro se response on the church’s behalf.

                      About Venue Church Inc.   

Venue Church Inc. is a megachurch in Tennessee.

Venue Church Inc. sought protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. E.D. Tenn. Case No. 22-11829) on August 23,
2022. In its petition, it listed estimated assets less than $5
million and more than $3 million in mortgage, auto loan, and credit
card debt.

The case is overseen by Honorable Bankruptcy Judge Shelley D.
Rucker.

The Debtor is represented by The Law Firm Tom Bible Law.


VERTEX ENERGY: Eliminates Four Classes of Preferred Shares
----------------------------------------------------------
Vertex Energy, Inc. previously designated (a) 5,000,000 shares of
preferred stock as Series A Convertible Preferred Stock; (b)
10,000,000 shares of preferred stock as Series B Preferred Stock;
(c) 17,000,000 shares of preferred stock as Series B1 Preferred
Stock; and (d) 44,000 shares of preferred stock as Series C
Convertible Preferred Stock.

The Company filed Certificates of Withdrawal relating to each
series of Preferred Stock with the Secretary of State of Nevada and
terminated the designation of its Series A Preferred Stock (on Aug.
24, 2022); Series B Preferred Stock (on Aug. 24, 2022); Series B1
Preferred Stock (on Aug. 23, 2022) and Series C Preferred Stock (on
Aug. 23, 2022).  At the time of the filing of the Certificates of
Withdrawal, no shares of any of the previously designated series of
Preferred Stock were outstanding.  The Certificates of Withdrawal
were effective upon filing, and eliminated from the Company's
Articles of Incorporation all matters set forth in the
previously-filed Certificates of Designation with respect to the
previously designated series of Preferred Stock.

                        About Vertex Energy

Houston-based Vertex Energy, Inc. is an energy transition company
focused on the production and distribution of conventional and
alternative fuels.  Vertex owns a refinery in Mobile (AL) with an
operable refining capacity of 75,000 barrels per day and more than
3.2 million barrels of product storage, positioning it as a leading
supplier of fuels in the region.  Vertex is also a processor of
used motor oil, with operations located in Houston and Port Arthur
(TX), Marrero (LA), and Columbus (OH).  Vertex also owns a
facility, Myrtle Grove, located on a 41-acre industrial complex
along the Gulf Coast in Belle Chasse, LA, with existing
hydroprocessing and plant infrastructure assets, that include nine
million gallons of storage.

Vertex Energy reported a net loss of $7.66 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2021, a net loss of $11.40 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2020, and a net loss of $5.49 million for the year
ended Dec. 31, 2019.  As of Dec. 31, 2021, the Company had $266.06
million in total assets, $192.55 million in total liabilities,
$43.45 million in total temporary equity, and $30.07 million in
total equity.


WALL 009 LLC: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
-----------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: WALL 009, LLC
        3926 Vista Woods Drive
        Carrollton, TX 75007

Chapter 11 Petition Date: August 31, 2022

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Eastern District of Texas

Case No.: 22-41113

Debtor's Counsel: Eric A. Liepins, Esq.
                  ERIC A. LIEPINS
                  12770 Coit Road
                  Suite 850
                  Dallas, TX 75251
                  Tel: 972-991-5591
                  Fax: 972-991-5788
                  Email: eric@ealpc.com

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Tim Barton as president and managing
member.

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

https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/MK2HIIY/WALL009_LLC__txebke-22-41113__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA


WALL010 LLC: Case Summary & 19 Unsecured Creditors
--------------------------------------------------
Debtor: WALL010, LLC
        3926 Vista Woods
        Carrollton, TX 75007

Chapter 11 Petition Date: August 31, 2022

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Eastern District of Texas

Case No.: 22-41125

Debtor's Counsel: Eric A. Liepins, Esq.
                  ERIC A. LIEPINS
                  12770 Coit Road
                  Suite 850
                  Dallas, TX 75251
                  Tel: 972-991-5591
                  Fax: 972-991-5788
                  Email: eric@ealpc.com

Estimated Assets: $1 million to $10 million

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Tim Barton as president of managing
member.

A full-text copy of the petition containing, among other items, a
list of the Debtor's 19 unsecured creditors is available for free
at PacerMonitor.com at:

https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/ES6KILA/WALL010LLC__txebke-22-41125__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA


WALL011 LLC: Case Summary & 20 Largest Unsecured Creditors
----------------------------------------------------------
Debtor: WALL011, LLC
        3926 Vista Woods Drive
        Carrollton, TX 75007

Chapter 11 Petition Date: August 31, 2022

Court: United States Bankruptcy Court
       Eastern District of Texas

Case No.: 22-41114

Debtor's Counsel: Eric A. Liepins, Esq.
                  ERIC A. LIEPINS
                  12770 Coit Road
                  Suite 850
                  Dallas, TX 75251
                  Tel: 972-991-5591
                  Fax: 972-991-5788
                  Email: eric@ealpc.com

Estimated Assets: $0 to $50,000

Estimated Liabilities: $1 million to $10 million

The petition was signed by Tim Barton as president and managing
member.

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

https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/NHUDKOY/WALL011_LLC__txebke-22-41114__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA


WINDSOR FALLS: Lender Seeks to Prohibit Cash Collateral Access
--------------------------------------------------------------
Truist Bank asks the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District
of Florida, Jacksonville Division, to prohibit Windsor Falls
Condominium Association, Inc. from using cash collateral.

As of the Petition Date, Windsor Falls was indebted to Truist in
the principal amount of $538,982 pursuant to a Promissory Note
dated August 17, 2016, executed and delivered by Windsor Falls to
Truist, as modified and extended by the Change in Terms Agreements
dated September 29, 2017, September 17, 2018, October 7, 2019,
September 30, 2020, and September 1, 2021. The Loan matures on
September 1, 2022.

The collateral securing payment of the Loan consists entirely of
"deposit accounts" and "investment property."

A security interest in deposit accounts may be perfected only by
control under Sec. 679.3141, Fla.

A secured party has control of a deposit account if the secured
party is the bank with which the deposit account is maintained.
Truist's security interest in the Deposit Accounts is therefore
duly perfected.

The proceeds of the Deposit Accounts and the Securities Account
constitutes "cash collateral", and therefore, may not be used
absent providing Truist with adequate protection.

In this situation, adequate protection should at least include:

     a. Notwithstanding the provisions of 11 U.S.C. Sec. 552(a), a
lien on the postpetition cash collateral, which lien will be of the
same extent, validity and priority that Truist held prepetition.

     b. An order limiting the use of cash collateral to the Deposit
Accounts, and prohibiting the use of the Securities Account.

     c. Use of the cash collateral solely for ordinary course
operating expenses, business as may be approved by the Court.

Truist requests that the Court enter an Order authorizing its use
of cash collateral in a manner consistent with the foregoing, and
for such other and further relief as the Court deems just and
proper.

A copy of the motion is available at https://bit.ly/3RjK0XG from
PacerMonitor.com.

          About Windsor Falls Condominium Association

Windsor Falls Condominium Association Inc. is the homeowner's
association for Windsor Falls Condominiums in Jacksonville,
Florida.  It serves the needs of 384 homeowners.

Windsor Falls filed a petition for relief under Subchapter V of
Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on (Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No.
22-01491) on July 27, 2022.  In the petition filed by Ray Walz, as
president, the Debtor estimated assets between $1 million and $10
million and liabilities between $1 million and $10 million.

Robert Altman has been appointed as Subchapter V trustee.

Robert D Wilcox, of Wilcox Law Firm, is the Debtor's counsel.


ZOSANO PHARMA CORP: Closes $1 Million Sale In Bankruptcy Court
--------------------------------------------------------------
Ron Leuty of San Francisco Business Times reports that nearly 30
months ago, Zosano Pharma Corp. won a date for an FDA decision on
its microneedle-packed patch to soothe migraines.  At the end of
August 2022, the company closed its sale out of bankruptcy court
for $1 million.

The sale of the Fremont company to Emergex USA Corp. in U.S.
Bankruptcy Court in Delaware caps a 16-year journey that saw Zosano
burn through close to $400 million, a half-dozen CEOs and multiple
attempts to produce a wearable patch that would deliver on the
promise of pumping drugs through about 2,000 titanium
microneedles.

The company never won regulatory approval of a product.

Officials with Emergex, a Doylestown, Pennsylania-based subsidiary
of the United Kingdom's Emergex Vaccines Holdings Ltd., were not
available to talk about their plans for Zosano's former assets.

In addition to the sale price, Emergex could pay up to $250,000 to
cover the dismantling and removal of Zosano assets.

Emergex agreed last year to use Zosano's patch system in an
early-stage clinical trial of its experimental Covid-19 vaccine.
Indeed, a number of companies test drove Zosano's technology: Drug
giant Eli Lilly and Co. (NYSE: LLY) at one point wanted the patch
to deliver a daily osteoporosis treatment and Novo Nordisk A/S
(NYSE: NVO) wanted to push a treatment for diabetes-induced severe
hypoglycemia through the drug-tipped, one
one-hundredth-of-an-inch-long needles.

Those collaborations failed to net a product.

Ultimately, Zosano focused on delivering the generic migraine drug
zolmitriptan via the patch. That drug already is available as a
pill, as an injectable and as a nasal spray, marketed as Zomig. But
those methods have nagging side effects, Zosano President and CEO
Steve Lo, who joined the company in October 2019, said when the
company asked the FDA to approve its drug-patch.

Zosano's program used a proprietary formulation of the drug for
people who have five or more migraines a month, showing through
clinical trials that its product could provide migraine pain relief
within 30 minutes.

Zosano submitted the drug-device to the Food and Drug
Administration in late 2019, and by early March 2020 the agency had
given Zosano officials a target approval decision date in October
2020.

But when that time rolled around, the FDA rejected the drug-device,
citing inconsistent exposure levels of the drug in five of 774
patients who received different lots of the drug in clinical
trials. The agency also noted inadequate "pharmacokinetic bridging"
between drug lots that made interpretation of some safety data
unclear.

Zosano resubmitted its application for approval this January, but
the FDA in February rejected the patch a second time, saying the
new filing failed to address "deficiencies" the FDA previously
identified.

With expenses mounting and the company in dire need of more funding
to sustain the migraine program, Zosano raised $14.1 million by
selling 50 million shares of stock. But the fundraise fell short of
what the company needed — in part because general investors have
pulled out of biopharma after riding a Covid-19 wave — and Zosano
cut nearly a third of its 45 employees. It also looked at other
alternatives, including selling its assets and restructuring.

                       About Zosano Pharma

Zosano Pharma -- https://www.zosanopharma.com/ -- is an emerging
CNS company focusing on providing rapid symptom relief to patients,
using known therapeutics with well-established safety and
efficacy.

Zosano Pharma Corporation sought protection under Chapter 11 of the
U.S. Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D. Del. Case No. 22-10506) on June 2,
2022. In the petition filed by Steven Lo, as president and chief
executive officer, the Debtor reports estimated assets and
liabilities between $10 million and $50 million each.

Dennis A. Meloro, of Greenberg Traurig, LLP, is the Debtor's
counsel.


[*] Bankruptcy Filings in Colorado Decreased 16% in July 2022
-------------------------------------------------------------
Christopher Wood of Loveland Reporter Herald Business reports that
Colorado bankruptcy filings dropped 16% in July 2022 compared with
the same period in 2021, but filings increased slightly in Larimer
and Boulder counties.

Broomfield and Weld counties showed declines from July 2021.

That's according to a BizWest analysis of U.S. Bankruptcy Court
data. Numbers cited include all new filings, including open, closed
and dismissed cases. Colorado recorded 453 bankruptcy filings in
July, compared with 540 in July 2021.

Year to date, the state has recorded 2,842 bankruptcy filings,
compared with 4,007 in the first seven months of 2021, down 29%.

Among counties in Northern Colorado and the Boulder Valley:

  * Larimer County filings totaled 30 in July, compared with 23 a
year ago. Filings in the first seven months of the year totaled
159, compared with 199 in the first seven months of 2021, a drop of
20%. Larimer County recorded 11 bankruptcy filings in June 2022.

  * Weld County bankruptcy filings totaled 35 in July, down from 37
recorded a year ago. Year-to-date filings totaled 219, compared
with 290 a year ago, down 24.5%. Weld County recorded 36 bankruptcy
filings in June 2022.

  * Boulder County recorded 18 bankruptcy filings in July, compared
with 16 in July 2021. The county recorded 98 filings year to date,
down from 145 in the first seven months of 2021, down 32.4%.
Boulder County recorded 12 bankruptcy filings in June 2022.

  * Broomfield recorded five bankruptcy filings in July, down from
12 in July 2021. Year-to-date filings totaled 37, compared with 50
a year ago, down 26%. Broomfield recorded six bankruptcy filings in
June 2022.


[^] Recent Small-Dollar & Individual Chapter 11 Filings
-------------------------------------------------------
In re Victor Williams
   Bankr. E.D. Ark. Case No. 22-12306
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 23, 2022
         represented by: Randy M. Rice, Esq.

In re Basmadjian & Jackson Investment, Advisory, Equitable
      Partnership, LLC
   Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 22-13160
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 23, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/Q5XBTDI/Basmadjian__Jackson_Investment__cacbke-22-13160__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Julie Basmadjian, Esq.
                         SELF-REPRESENTED
                         E-mail: kimjulie792@gmail.com

In re The Snowbird II Condominiums Association, Inc.
   Bankr. D. Colo. Case No. 22-13181
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 23, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/KSZAQOA/The_Snowbird_II_Condominiums_Association__cobke-22-13181__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Kevin S. Neiman, Esq.
                         LAW OFFICES OF KEVIN S. NEIMAN, PC
                         E-mail: kevin@ksnpc.com

In re Joseph Ronald Slavik
   Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 22-00884
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 23, 2022
         represented by: Steven Berman, Esq.

In re D Mart Nanuet LLC
   Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Case No. 22-22639
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 23, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/NUDWENY/D_Mart_Nanuet_LLC__nysbke-22-22639__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Mitchell J. Canter, Esq.
                         LAW OFFICES OF MITCHELL J. CANTER
                         E-mail: mcanter@canterlaw.biz

In re EFI Equipment & Parts, Inc.
   Bankr. M.D. Pa. Case No. 22-01564
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 23, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/SM25D4Q/EFI_Equipment__Parts_INC__pambke-22-01564__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: David W. Tidd, Esq.
                         DAVID W. TIDD
                         E-mail: bankruptcy@davidtiddlaw.com

In re Dana Rentz Hernandez
   Bankr. E.D. Cal. Case No. 22-22118
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 24, 2022
         represented by: Noel Knight, Esq.

In re Reglita Caminade Tan
   Bankr. N.D. Cal. Case No. 22-30441
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 24, 2022
         represented by: Matthew Metzger, Esq.

In re Ashley Campbell, Inc.
   Bankr. D. Colo. Case No. 22-13187
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 24, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/VLBQVYQ/Ashley_Campbell_Inc__cobke-22-13187__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Guy Humphries, Esq.
                         GUY HUMPHRIES, ATTORNEY AT LAW
                         E-mail: guyhumphries@msn.com

In re Samantha S. Lindsay, M.D., P.A.
   Bankr. M.D. Fla. Case No. 22-03437
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 24, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/JQ5X6YA/Samantha_S_Lindsay_MD_PA__flmbke-22-03437__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Buddy D. Ford, Esquire, Esq.
                         BUDDY D. FORD, P.A.
                         E-mail: All@tampaesq.com

In re Toson Food & Beverages North Plainfield, LLC
   Bankr. D.N.J. Case No. 22-16670
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 24, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/7S2YQNY/Toson_Food__Beverages_North_Plainfield__njbke-22-16670__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Harry J. Giacometti, Esq.
                         FLASTER/GREENBERG, P.C.
                         E-mail:  
                         harry.giacometti@flastergreenberg.com

In re Randolph E Springer and Jennifer D Springer
   Bankr. W.D. Mo. Case No. 22-30217
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 24, 2022
         represented by: Ted Tinsman, Esq.

In re Springer Storages LLC
   Bankr. W.D. Mo. Case No. 22-30218
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 24, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/R2OBIDI/Springer_Storages_LLC__mowbke-22-30218__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Ted L. Tinsman, Esq.
                         DEBT DOCTORS OF MISSOURI, LLC
                         E-mail: ted@debtdoctorslaw.com

In re Khaled Salah Mostafa
   Bankr. D.N.J. Case No. 22-16686
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 24, 2022
         represented by: Anthony Sodono, III, Esq.
                         MCMANIMON, SCOTLAND & BAUMANN, LLC
                         E-mail: asodono@msbnj.com

In re Tyrone Hill
   Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 22-72199
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 24, 2022
         represented by: Scott Schneider, Esq.

In re Janice Ford Grimes
   Bankr. N.D. Tex. Case No. 22-41932
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 24, 2022
         represented by: Robert DeMarco, Esq.

In re Dragon Mountain Ranch Phase I Meadows Property
      Owners Association
   Bankr. D. Ariz. Case No. 22-05669
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 25, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/RXSRKGQ/DRAGOON_MOUNTAIN_RANCH_PHASE_I__azbke-22-05669__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Jody A. Corrales, Esq.
                         DECONCINI MCDONALD YETWIN & LACY, P.C.
                         E-mail: jcorrales@dmyl.com

In re Green Acres MHP, LLC
   Bankr. D. Neb. Case No. 22-80635
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 25, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/74OAOEI/Green_Acres_MHP_LLC__nebke-22-80635__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Patrick Patino, Esq.
                         PATINO KING LLC
                         E-mail: patrick@patinoking.com

In re George D Group, LLC
   Bankr. D. Nev. Case No. 22-13044
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 25, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/TL6G2MQ/GEORGE_D_GROUP_LLC__nvbke-22-13044__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: David Riggi, Esq.
                         RIGGI LAW
                         E-mail: riggilaw@gmail.com

In re Black Jack Paving and Masonry, LLC
   Bankr. D.N.J. Case No. 22-16725
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 25, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/ZMCWCSQ/Black_Jack_Paving_and_Masonry__njbke-22-16725__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Valerie Palma DeLuisi, Esq.
                         LAW OFFICES OF NICHOLAS J. PALMA, ESQ.
                         P.C.
                         E-mail: vpd@palmalawfirm.com

In re Highgrove Landscape Construction, LLC
   Bankr. D.N.J. Case No. 22-16723
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 25, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/TXXVOJY/Highgrove_Landscape_Construction__njbke-22-16723__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Valerie Palma DeLuisi, Esq.
                         LAW OFFICES OF NICHOLAS J. PALMA, ESQ.,
                         P.C.
                         E-mail: vpd@palmalawfirm.com

In re Anthony Lee Allen
   Bankr. D.N.J. Case No. 22-16703
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 25, 2022

In re Almaz Transportation, Inc.
   Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 22-42027
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 25, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/BFJKSRA/Almaz_Transportation_Inc__nyebke-22-42027__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Alla Kachan, Esq.
                         LAW OFFICES OF ALLA KACHAN, P.C.
                         E-mail: alla@kachanlaw.com

In re Argdowntown, LLC
   Bankr. N.D. Tex. Case No. 22-31529
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 25, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/CT2UHEA/ARGDOWNTOWN_LLC__txnbke-22-31529__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: John Henry, Esq.
                         JOHN HENRY AND ASSOCIATES PLLC
                         E-mail: jhenrylaw@gmail.com

In re Cash Environmental Holdings, LLC
   Bankr. N.D. Ga. Case No. 22-41008
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 26, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/H7BC6GA/Cash_Environmental_Holdings_LLC__ganbke-22-41008__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMAhttps://www.pacermonitor.com/view/H7BC6GA/Cash_Environmental_Holdings_LLC__ganbke-22-41008__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Cameron M. McCord, Esq.
                         JONES & WALDEN, LLC
                         E-mail: info@joneswalden.com

In re Cash Environmental Resources, LLC
   Bankr. N.D. Ga. Case No. 22-41006
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 26, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/JFWKZTY/Cash_Environmental_Resources_LLC__ganbke-22-41006__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Cameron M. McCord, Esq.
                         JONES & WALDEN, LLC
                         E-mail: info@joneswalden.com

In re Cash Development, LLC
   Bankr. N.D. Ga. Case No. 22-41007
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 26, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/4NV5EZY/Cash_Development_LLC__ganbke-22-41007__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Cameron M. McCord, Esq.
                         JONES & WALDEN, LLC
                         E-mail: info@joneswalden.com

In re Coastal Landfill Disposal of Florida, LLC
   Bankr. N.D. Ga. Case No. 22-41009
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 26, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/H2GN2YA/Coastal_Landfill_Disposal_of_Florida__ganbke-22-41009__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Cameron M. McCord, Esq.
                         JONES & WALDEN, LLC
                         E-mail: info@joneswalden.com

In re Green Energy Transport LLC
   Bankr. N.D. Ga. Case No. 22-41010
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 26, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/2RFU5SA/Green_Energy_Transport_LLC__ganbke-22-41010__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Cameron M. McCord, Esq.
                         JONES & WALDEN, LLC
                         E-mail: info@joneswalden.com

In re Beth Ann Smith
   Bankr. S.D. Ga. Case No. 22-10618
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 26, 2022
         represented by: Matthew Cathey, Esq.

In re Luis Florencio Legrand Peralta
   Bankr. D.P.R. Case No. 22-02499
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 26, 2022
         represented by: Jesus Batista Sanchez, Esq.

In re David Ray Kucera and Valerie McLennan Kucera
   Bankr. S.D. Tex. Case No. 22-60050
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 26, 2022
         represented by: Walter Cicack, Esq.

In re QAZ, LLC
   Bankr. E.D. Wisc. Case No. 22-23802
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 27, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/J6XA7SY/QAZ_LLC__wiebke-22-23802__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Jonathan V. Goodman, Esq.
                         LAW OFFICES OF JONATHAN V. GOODMAN
                         E-mail: jonathanvgoodman@gmail.com

In re 127 Depot LLC
   Bankr. E.D.N.Y. Case No. 22-72230
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 28, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/HAY5NQQ/127_Depot_LLC__nyebke-22-72230__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         Filed Pro Se

In re Provident Care, Inc.
   Bankr. E.D. Cal. Case No. 22-90296
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 29, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/NGCFI2Q/Provident_Care_Inc__caebke-22-90296__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: David C. Johnston, Esq.
                         E-mail: david@johnstonbusinesslaw.com

In re Christy A. Thomas
   Bankr. N.D. Ill. Case No. 22-09817
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 29, 2022
         represented by: Kevin J. Benjamin, Esq.

In re Rebecca M. Moses
   Bankr. E.D. Mich. Case No. 22-46762
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 29, 2022
         represented by: Ryan Heilman, Esq.

In re Jesus Rogelio Ramos Puente
   Bankr. D.P.R. Case No. 22-02527
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 29, 2022
         represented by: Gloria E. Justiniano Irizarry, Esq.

In re KS World Inc.
   Bankr. C.D. Cal. Case No. 22-14751
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 30, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/GZZORNQ/KS_World_Inc__cacbke-22-14751__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Leslie Cohen, Esq.
                         LESLIE COHEN LAW PC
                         E-mail: leslie@lesliecohenlaw.com

In re Orlando Bojorrquez
   Bankr. N.D. Cal. Case No. 22-30451
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 30, 2022

In re Ronald Gary Wilson
   Bankr. N.D. Fla. Case No. 22-40266
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 30, 2022
         represented by: Byron Wright, Esq.

In re A1 Pipe Cleaning Company, Inc.
   Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No. 22-16706
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 30, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/3AOGDDQ/A1_Pipe_Cleaning_Company_Inc__flsbke-22-16706__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Rachamin "Rocky" Cohen, Esq.
                         COHEN LEGAL SERVICES, PA
                         E-mail: rocky@lawcls.com

In re KC Partners, LLC
   Bankr. S.D. Fla. Case No. 22-16696
      Chapter 11 Petition filed August 30, 2022
         See
https://www.pacermonitor.com/view/6SPEUTQ/KC_Partners_LLC__flsbke-22-16696__0001.0.pdf?mcid=tGE4TAMA
         represented by: Armando R. Alfonso, Esq.
                         ARA LAW
                         E-mail: armandoalfonsoesq@gmail.com


                            *********

Monday's edition of the TCR delivers a list of indicative prices
for bond issues that reportedly trade well below par.  Prices are
obtained by TCR editors from a variety of outside sources during
the prior week we think are reliable.  Those sources may not,
however, be complete or accurate.  The Monday Bond Pricing table
is compiled on the Friday prior to publication.  Prices reported
are not intended to reflect actual trades.  Prices for actual
trades are probably different.  Our objective is to share
information, not make markets in publicly traded securities.
Nothing in the TCR constitutes an offer or solicitation to buy or
sell any security of any kind.  It is likely that some entity
affiliated with a TCR editor holds some position in the issuers
public debt and equity securities about which we report.

Each Tuesday edition of the TCR contains a list of companies with
insolvent balance sheets whose shares trade higher than $3 per
share in public markets.  At first glance, this list may look like
the definitive compilation of stocks that are ideal to sell short.
Don't be fooled.  Assets, for example, reported at historical cost
net of depreciation may understate the true value of a firm's
assets.  A company may establish reserves on its balance sheet for
liabilities that may never materialize.  The prices at which
equity securities trade in public market are determined by more
than a balance sheet solvency test.

On Thursdays, the TCR delivers a list of recently filed
Chapter 11 cases involving less than $1,000,000 in assets and
liabilities delivered to nation's bankruptcy courts.  The list
includes links to freely downloadable images of these small-dollar
petitions in Acrobat PDF format.

Each Friday's edition of the TCR includes a review about a book of
interest to troubled company professionals.  All titles are
available at your local bookstore or through Amazon.com.  Go to
http://www.bankrupt.com/books/to order any title today.

Monthly Operating Reports are summarized in every Saturday edition
of the TCR.

The Sunday TCR delivers securitization rating news from the week
then-ending.

TCR subscribers have free access to our on-line news archive.
Point your Web browser to http://TCRresources.bankrupt.com/and use
the e-mail address to which your TCR is delivered to login.

                            *********

S U B S C R I P T I O N   I N F O R M A T I O N

Troubled Company Reporter is a daily newsletter co-published
by Bankruptcy Creditors Service, Inc., Fairless Hills,
Pennsylvania, USA, and Beard Group, Inc., Philadelphia, Pa., USA.
Randy Antoni, Jhonas Dampog, Marites Claro, Joy Agravante,
Rousel Elaine Tumanda, Joel Anthony G. Lopez, Psyche A. Castillon,
Ivy B. Magdadaro, Carlo Fernandez, Christopher G. Patalinghug, and
Peter A. Chapman, Editors.

Copyright 2022.  All rights reserved.  ISSN: 1520-9474.

This material is copyrighted and any commercial use, resale or
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re-mailing and photocopying) is strictly prohibited without prior
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are $25 each.  For subscription information, contact Peter A.
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