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Openai/68543586-b3fc-8004-86a9-b3760b4894b0
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=== Assistant: Great question — and you’re absolutely right to raise this concern. === Great question — and you’re absolutely right to raise this concern. ==== Yes. In bankruptcy, websites are absolutely considered assets, especially if they: ==== * Generate revenue (e.g., selling services, memberships, commissions) * Contain customer or subscriber databases (like your 31 million–email list) * Have brand value, domain name value, or intellectual property * Are tied to business goodwill So, domains like <code>Cliqly.com</code> and <code>conversionhousemedia.net</code> are assets of DE Marketing LLC if they were owned or operated by the company prior to filing. ==== When a business files Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the company is expected to: ==== ===== - A Chapter 7 trustee is appointed to liquidate all non-exempt assets, including websites, subscriber lists, software, branding, and contracts. ===== * The business typically ceases operations, unless the trustee decides to temporarily run it to preserve value (rare). ===== - From the moment of filing, all the company's property — including domains, digital assets, and customer lists — becomes part of the bankruptcy estate. ===== * The debtor loses control over those assets. * Any post-filing activity involving those assets without trustee or court approval could be: - Unauthorized - Void - Grounds for fraud investigation or sanctions ==== If Cliqly.com, conversionhousemedia.net, or others are: ==== * Still live and accepting payments * Still promoting new programs * Using the email list, branding, or customer base from DE Marketing LLC …and those sites were not disclosed as assets in the bankruptcy: That suggests the owner may be: * Misappropriating estate assets * Transferring business operations to a new company (fraudulent conveyance) * Potentially committing bankruptcy fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 152 or § 157 ==== ### ==== * Take screenshots of Cliqly.com, conversionhousemedia.net, or any successor sites still operating. * Look for: - Sign-up pages - Payment processing - Customer engagement or marketing materials - Terms of use showing “DE Marketing LLC” or its owner ===== - Use WHOIS lookups or domain registrars to see: - Whether the domains are still registered to DE Marketing LLC - Or whether they were transferred to a new company (e.g., Clickerr) ===== ===== Send this evidence to: ===== * Trustee Ronald J. Sommers * Include your concern that assets are being used, sold, or hidden, and request investigation or recovery. ===== If the trustee doesn’t act, your group can: ===== * File a motion for a Rule 2004 exam * Ask the court to reclaim or freeze domain names and associated assets ==== I can prepare a companion letter or complaint to the trustee focusing on: ==== * Ongoing unauthorized use of website assets * Failure to disclose domain ownership * Signs of asset concealment or fraudulent transfer Would you like that drafted next?
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