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San Antonio Furniture Maker KLN Manufacturing Shutters Doors

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KLN Manufacturing, a longtime San Antonio makerof furniture for military barracks, universities and hospitals, is shuttering its local operations next month, MySanAntonio.com reported yesterday.  The closing of the 275,000-square-foot facility follows the November bankruptcies of two related companies, KLN Steel Products Co. and its Dallas-based parent company AGS Enterprises Inc., which does business as Avteq Inc. Each filed for chapter 11 in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Dallas. At the time, O’Donnell issued a statement that KLN Manufacturing had not filed for bankruptcy and would “continue to manufacture products, service customers, employ great people, and pay vendors.”

D.C. Football-Themed Restaurant Hail & Hog Files for Chapter 11

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Hail & Hog Kitchen and Tap, a northern Virginia-based theme restaurant paying homage to the NFL’s Washington Redskins, filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The eatery is based in Ashburn, Va., a suburb located 30 miles north of Washington that is also home to the professional football team’s training camp. Hail & Hog is one of a number of football-themed restaurants owned by the G.R.E.A.T. Grille Group, also known as G3. None of the other G3 businesses have filed for bankruptcy, according to Hail & Hog’s lawyer. “The root of the bankruptcy relates to the cost of the build-out for the restaurant and sums owed as a result to the general contractor,” said Roy Terry, a Sands Anderson lawyer who is representing Hail & Hog in the case. The restaurant plans to stay open and use the restructuring process afforded by chapter 11, Terry said.

Analysis: American Apparel Bankruptcy Deal Leaves Retail Future in Doubt

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American Apparel, once a high-flying retailer that peaked at more than $600 million in sales, is probably headed toward liquidation after a bankruptcy auction ended with Canadian T-shirt and underwear maker Gildan Activewear Inc. buying intellectual property and other assets for $88 million, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. This transaction doesn’t include American Apparel’s stores, and the fate of its garment workers in Los Angeles remains in doubt. The company had 4,700 employees and 110 stores as of November, when it filed for bankruptcy for the second time in 13 months. Gildan said that it has no obligation to keep any American Apparel employees. The end comes about two years after American Apparel’s board orchestrated the firing of founder and chief executive officer, Dov Charney, for alleged misconduct, which he denies. Charney engaged in a bruising -- and ultimately futile -- public battle to regain control. Saddled with high-interest debt racked up during Charney’s tenure, American Apparel first filed for bankruptcy in October 2015 and was taken over by former bondholders led by Monarch Alternative Capital. But the reorganization did little to slow American Apparel’s decline as sales continued falling. 

Canadian Apparel Maker Gildan Wins Auction to Buy American Apparel

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Canadian apparel maker Gildan Activewear Inc. said that it had won a bankruptcy auction to buy U.S. fashion retailer American Apparel for about $88 million in cash, Reuters reported today. The deal is subject to approval from a bankruptcy court on Thursday, the company said. Under the deal, Gildan will acquire the intellectual property rights related to the American Apparel brand and certain manufacturing equipment. The company, however, will not buy any of the 110 American Apparel retail stores.

Tribune Co. Shareholders' Legal Woes over 2007 Buyout Near End

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A New York federal judge has shot down an effort by creditors of the former Tribune Co. to claw back $8 billion from shareholders who sold stock in the publisher's 2007 buyout, bringing a long-running legal battle sparked by its bankruptcy closer to an end, Reuters reported yesterday. The ruling stems from the tangled litigation following real estate mogul Sam Zell's leveraged buyout of the Chicago Tribune and Los Angeles Times publisher, which creditors blame for its 2008 bankruptcy. In an attempt to recover money raised from the buyout, Tribune creditors have spent years pursuing unusual claims in court, such as trying to hold passive shareholders accountable for the failed deal. In a ruling published yesterday, Judge Richard Sullivan dismissed such claims and absolved individual shareholders from complying with creditors' demands that they hand over the money from the sale of their stock in the buyout. The shareholders included retired employees, whose pension funding was in the form of Tribune stock, and pension plans that also held stock at the time of the buyout and sold their shares. Judge Sullivan said that the deal was approved by independent directors and that creditors lacked sufficient evidence to allege that those directors had tried to defraud them through the buyout of the publisher.