The creditors are out for blood:
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Shortly after 3 a.m. this morning, the Debtors officially closed the auction for the sale of substantially all of the Debtors’ assets with an announcement that ESL Investments, Inc. was the successful bidder. For myriad reasons that will be set forth fully before this Court in the coming days, the Creditors’ Committee opposes the proposed sale
The Creditors’ Committee believes that these causes of action should be litigated in open court but is complying with its obligations under the Amended Stipulated Protective Order to file the Standing Motion and Proposed Complaint under seal because certain materials relied on or cited to in the Sealed Documents were designated by producing parties as “Confidential” or “Highly Confidential.” For the avoidance of doubt, the Creditors’ Committee does not believe that any of the information referred to in the Standing Motion or Proposed Complaint should be withheld from the public.
The recovery from ESL of the value of the properties transferred in the Seritage Transaction, in which Sears transferred some of its most valuable real estate to Seritage, an entity controlled by Lampert and ESL, for less than reasonably equivalent value and at a time when Sears was (or was rendered) insolvent. Lampert and ESL caused Sears to execute the Seritage Transaction with an actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors.
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Nothing can undo Sears’s excruciating,slow motion destruction at the hands of Lampert and ESL. But without any such recourse, Lampert and ESL will have created the perfect blueprint for future bad actors: stack a company’s board of directors with allies and devotees; with their blessing, raid the company’s cash and assets; in the process, dismantle operations and put hundreds of thousands of employees out of a job; and, finally, manipulate chapter 11 proceedings to obtain the company’s remaining assets for a bargain while falsely claiming to “save” a fraction of the jobs already sacrificed.
Throughout these proceedings, Lampert and ESL have painted themselves as saviors, stating that their bid will save the few jobs they have not already eliminated—but for how long? They have failed to set forth a business plan that offers any viable go-forward path.
Sears simply cannot survive as a going concern.
- This is a matter of significant public interest and should be heard entirely in open
court. Pursuant to the Amended Stipulated Protective Order, the Creditors’ Committee has no
choice but to move to file the Sealed Documents under seal, even though it believes that these Confidential and Highly Confidential designations are not appropriate and that the Standing Motion and Proposed Complaint should be made public in their entirety.