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Free Sessions (no CLE)

Acquiring the Assets of a Distressed Company: A Buyer’s Guide to Selecting the Best Sale Process

Potential buyers often have significant leverage over distressed sellers of assets and are able to influence or dictate the nature of the sale process. This panel will examine the considerations that a potential buyer of a distressed company should make when it has the opportunity to choose the appropriate process and venue for pursuing such acquisition. We will outline the pros and cons of Article 9 sales (both public and private), receivership sales, § 363 sales and “loan to own” strategies, including with respect to issues related to successor liability, funding considerations, operational concerns, timing, legal risk and deal certainty.
1 hour 31 minutes 24 seconds

After the § 363 Sale: And Now for the Rest of the Story

The panel will discuss and contrast (and will invite the workshop attendees to discuss) the various options for ending chapter 11 cases after the debtor’s assets have been sold, including plans of liquidation, liquidation and litigation trusts, dismissals, structured dismissals and conversion. Issues will include things to consider when planning for the debtor’s wind-down staffing and budget. The panel will also discuss the rest of the story from the perspective of the § 363 purchaser, focusing on recent developments in successor liability.
1 hour 32 minutes 23 seconds

Asset-Protection Trusts in Bankruptcy: Creation, Litigation, and Practical Guides to Both

As more states are adopting asset-protection trust statutes, more issues have been arising in bankruptcy when these trusts take center stage in a fraudulent transfer, substantial-abuse, alter-ego or objection-to-discharge battle. This panel will provide insight into the creation of asset-protection trusts, issues that arise when these trusts are challenged in bankruptcy, and practical tips for both creating asset-protection trusts that can withstand bankruptcy challenges and litigating these trusts in bankruptcy.
1 hour 24 minutes 2 seconds

Consumer Update 2014

There are many changes occurring in consumer bankruptcy law. Find out the latest developments in your neighborhood and around the country.
1 hour 26 minutes 21 seconds

Sayeth the Lawyer, “I Will Do This, But Not That”: The Ethical Implications of Limited Representation

State courts are increasingly relaxing their rules to allow attorneys to provide a-la-carte services to parties in cases appearing before them. However, bankruptcy courts have been reluctant to do so. Is it because the Bankruptcy Code is so complicated? Or is it because what is good for parties in state court is not good for those in bankruptcy court? This panel of experts will examine whether counsel can provide limited representation services to parties in bankruptcy matters and maintain their ethical obligations to the client.
1 hour 2 minutes 31 seconds

What Lurks in Them There Cases?

How can you best advise a client who is unsure whether the stay or the discharge applies? How can you protect a debtor’s benefits offered by the automatic stay and the discharge? Stay violation litigation and discharge analysis are just two of the topics that this expert panel will examine.
1 hour 9 minutes 51 seconds

A Plan to Get Paid: Debtors’ Counsel’s Fees in Chapter 13

Chapter 13 practice is complicated, and the days when a debtor’s 13 plan was quickly confirmed are few and far between. In addition to proposing confirmable chapter 13 plans, debtors’ attorneys (and in some cases chapter 13 trustees) are litigating defective mortgage claims and contentious objections to confirmation. How can debtors’ counsel ensure that they are compensated for these complicated cases that not only sit on the bankruptcy court’s docket, but often end up on appeal? This panel will discuss the challenges and practicalities of compensating chapter 13 debtors’ counsel in this ever-evolving area of bankruptcy law.
1 hour 5 minutes 11 seconds

Does This Look Defective?

More and more litigation is emerging over the sloppy practices that were rampant during the real estate boom. Defective mortgages, flawed trusts and faulty deeds have all produced much litigation, but how can you tell if there is really a defect that you can either make a case out of, or need to protect your client from? In this practical and hands-on program, attendees will examine at least 10 different documents, all based on real cases, that demonstrate the defects that counsel need to not only be aware of, but to actually look for.
1 hour 3 minutes 44 seconds