Tag Archives: goodman games

Diamond Chapter 7 Trustee Claims No Undisclosed Agreements with Creditors after Goodman Games raises questions

Double Secret Chapter 7 Arrangements

The Diamond Chapter 11/Chapter 7 process has been one filled with drama and it feels like you never know where it might go next. In late February, tabletop game publisher Goodman Games raised a question if there was an arrangements between the Trustee and secured creditors (most likely JPMorgan Chase Bank).

The Trustee, Morgan W. Fisher, manages the Chapter 7 process going through remaining assets, liquidating, and attempting to get the most value to pay back creditors.

In their filing Goodman Games wrote:

Goodman Games understands that there may be an arrangement between the Trustee and one or more secured creditors concerning the payment of the Trustee’s fees and expenses, whether in the form of a carve-out from collateral, a sharing of recoveries, or another similar agreement.

To the extent such arrangement exists, Goodman Games respectfully submits that it should be fully disclosed so that the Court and all creditors are aware of the nature and terms of the agreement.

Goodman Games has requested this information from the Applicant. As of the filing of this Response, the Application does not describe any such arrangement.

Goodman Games therefore respectfully requests that, to the extent any such agreement or understanding exists concerning the funding or payment of the Trustee’s professionals’ fees, the Trustee and/or Applicant provide appropriate disclosure so that the Court and parties in interest are fully informed in connection with consideration of the Application.

The bankruptcy court took the request seriously enough asking for a memorandum addressing the matter of “undisclosed arrangements with creditors for the payment of the Trustees fees and expenses.”

That memorandum has now been submitted by Fisher and states:

There are no (and were no) undisclosed arrangements with any creditors. This fact was made clear to counsel for Goodman Games prior to her filing of the Response. Attached as Exhibit A is a copy of that colloquy. In no uncertain terms, proposed counsel for the Trustee stated that “The agreement to share recoveries was approved during the chapter 11 case…” and that no agreement or use of cash collateral was “needed for payment of professional fees of our firm.” Ex.

The memorandum goes on to state that what is likely being referred to and questioned is the “Shared DIP Collateral” in the Final DIP Order. The DIP is “debtor in possession” and involves loan agreements and paying things back.

The memorandum further states:

That agreement between the chapter 11 debtors-in-possession and the DIP Lender granted the DIP Lender a first-priority, blanket lien on all assets of the Debtors, including all property of the estate and “expressly including… all … Avoidance Actions, commercial tort claims, other estate causes of action …” [Docket No. 163 at ¶ 13(b)]; provided, however, that the Lenders agreed to “share with the Debtors’ estates 50% of the net proceeds recovered from the Shared DIP Collateral until the DIP Obligations have been paid in full …” Id. “Shared DIP Collateral” is, in turn, defined in the Final DIP Order as just “the Avoidance Actions and commercial tort claims,” Id. at ¶ 11(a), and not other estate causes of action.

This, and only this, is the agreement for shared recoveries Mr. Dillworth was alluding to in his email and why he implored counsel for Goodman Games to “[r]e-read what I stated below with respect to our fees,” i.e., that no agreement or use of cash collateral was “needed for payment of professional fees of our firm.” Ex. A. Simply put, there was no undisclosed arrangement with creditors for the payment of the Trustees fees and expenses. If such an agreement had been reached with the DIP Lender (or any other party in interest) on that front, then it would have been brought to the Court for approval in compliance with the Bankruptcy Code and Bankruptcy Rules.

Where things get intriguing is Goodman Games raised the concern during what seemed like a simple filing for the Trustee to employ Stearns, Weaver, Miller, Weissler, Alhadeff & Sitterson, P.A. as bankruptcy counsel to the Trustee. That decision was delayed by the court while the concern of dealings was addressed. On March 15, Fisher submitted a new motion to defer the ruling to employ that counsel.

Since the filing of the Stearns Weaver Application, circumstances have arisen that have caused Stearns Weaver to seek to withdraw as proposed bankruptcy counsel to the Trustee.

They are being engaged in finding a replacement. It is unknown what the “circumstances” are that caused the withdrawal.

You can read the memorandum and exhibit A, and other filings below:

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Discovery Hashed Out in Court Cases Between Diamond and some Publishers

Diamond Comic Distributors

One of the major outstanding issues with Diamond‘s bankruptcy is the status of consignment inventory. Diamond currently has stock that was provided to it by publishers on a consignment basis. That stock is currently physically held by Sparkle Pop which purchased some of Diamond’s assets, including taking over the warehouse where these are stored, though they don’t have a right to sell it (which they did and there was drama around that). Earlier today, we reported that a group of publishers filed a motion to dismiss their cases and thus take control of their goods. But, there’s still a few more publishers that are outstanding and since that motion hasn’t been decided, things are still in motion.

Today, a report was filed concerning the cases of Goodman Games, BOOM! Entertainment, Fantagraphics, and Avatar Press, laying out the plans for “discovery.”

The various parties and Diamond met on February 26 and March 3-4 to attempt to find a resolution, the nature of the claims and defenses, to arrange disclosures, and propose a discovery plan.

Discovery is a process where documents are handed over to the lawyers for them to go through. This could be contracts, emails, text messages, and more and is a gathering of evidence to be used during the trial. It can be a costly process and involve millions of documents that need to be sorted through. With that, rules and dates are laid out for the case concerning the discover process including on the production protocol.

There are key dates now as per the initial agreement.

(a) Discovery Requests. The Parties shall serve all initial document requests, interrogatories, and requests for admissions on or before May 11, 2026.
(b) Agree on ESI Search Terms. The Parties will make reasonable efforts to agree on ESI Search Terms on or before May 25, 2026.
(c) Substantial Document Production Completion Date. The Parties expect to have document production substantially completed by July 6, 2026.
(d) Fact Discovery Cut Off. The Parties have agreed that, except for Rule 26(a)(1) disclosures, all fact discovery in this case shall be initiated so that it will be completed on or before August 31, 2026. The Parties have agreed that they may take fact depositions at any time prior to the expiration of the fact discovery deadline.
(e) Privilege Logs. Privilege logs shall be produced in accordance with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure so as to be completed within five (5) business days of the related document production. Privileged communications occurring after April 29, 2025, need not be included on a privilege log.
(f) Expert Initial Disclosures. The identify of expert witness and subject matter of expected testimony, per Rule 26(a)(2)(A) and 26(a)(2)(C)(i), shall be disclosed on September 8, 2026. Any rebuttal experts, and subject matter of expected testimony, shall be disclosed on September 18, 2026.
(g) Expert Reports and Expert Discovery Cut Off. Expert reports and all other information required by Rule 26(a)(2)(B), along with any documents or information considered by the expert, shall be exchanged on October 8, 2026. Rebuttal expert reports and all other information required by Rule 26(a)(2)(B), along with any documents or information considered by the expert, shall be exchanged on October 29, 2026. All expert discovery shall be completed by November 20, 2026.

With that final date, that would mean the earliest a trial would happen would be late November but with Thanksgiving, early December is more likely and this agreement estimates it’d last 3 to 4 days.

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Diamond’s Chapter 7 Gets Testy with Questions of Secret Payment Arrangements

Diamond’s Chapter 7 Trustee Morgan W. Fisher‘s application to employ Stearns, Weaver, Miller, Weissler, Alhadeff, & Sitterson, P.A. as bankruptcy counsel (don’t they already have some?) should have been rather simple. But, things feel like they’re getting testy in a response to that proposed order by Goodman Games.

Goodman Games is a tabletop game publisher best known for Dungeon Crawl Classics and was founded in 2001.

In their filing on February 26, Goodman Games states it has no problem with the Trustee retaining “qualified bankruptcy counsel per se” but it’s what comes next that’s intriguing:

Goodman Games understands that there may be an arrangement between the Trustee and one or more secured creditors concerning the payment of the Trustee’s fees and expenses, whether in the form of a carve-out from collateral, a sharing of recoveries, or another similar agreement.

To the extent such arrangement exists, Goodman Games respectfully submits that it should be fully disclosed so that the Court and all creditors are aware of the nature and terms of the agreement.

Goodman Games has requested this information from the Applicant. As of the filing of this Response, the Application does not describe any such arrangement.

Goodman Games therefore respectfully requests that, to the extent any such agreement or understanding exists concerning the funding or payment of the Trustee’s professionals’ fees, the Trustee and/or Applicant provide appropriate disclosure so that the Court and parties in interest are fully informed in connection with consideration of the Application.

Woah… that’s a pretty big response. It teases that there’s some backroom discussions and dealings going on with a process that’s supposed to be very transparent.

The bankruptcy court is taking it seriously. They’ve requested a memorandum addressing the matter of “undisclosed arrangements with creditors for the payment of the Trustees fees and expenses.”

No action will be taken on the Application (and the related pending motions for admission pro hac vice) unless and until the Trustee files a supplemental memorandum addressing the matter of undisclosed arrangements with creditors for the payment of the Trustees fees and expenses referred to in the Response filed by Goodman Games [Docket No. 1172]. If such a memorandum is not filed by March 15, 2026, the Application may be denied without further notice or order of court.

In a process that has been full of drama, a new chapter is being written. AS Kurt Vonnegut would say, “so it goes.”

Check out the two court documents below:

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Upgrade your campaigns with Bob’s Dungeon Crawl Classics RPG Megabundle

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CRWN Studios Expands Into Distribution

CRWN Studios

CRWN Studios, a logistics and publishing services company based in Portland, Oregon, is expanding its operations to include distribution. After more than a decade supporting independent publishers, artists, and creators with manufacturing, crowdfunding fulfillment, and e-commerce infrastructure, CRWN is now bringing that same capability to publishers seeking wider retail reach.

This expansion positions CRWN as a full-service partner for publishers and independent creators who want to enter both the U.S. and U.K. trade markets while retaining control of their audience, catalog, and financial terms.

As part of this move, CRWN Studios has hired Terry Helman (formerly of Diamond Book Distributors), who joins as Director of Sales. Helman will oversee sales strategy and publisher relations, drawing on decades of experience with graphic novels, comics, and tabletop/RPG categories.

Several former Diamond Book Distributors clients including Living the LineGoodman GamesPegamoose Press, and Lionwing Publishing have already signed on with CRWN for distribution, alongside publishers who previously partnered with CRWN for direct fulfillment, such as Dragons & BeastiesArchmage StudiosRoll for Combat, and independent creators Marie EngerSimon RoyDon AustinTavis Maiden, and many more to soon be announced.

CRWN Studios has already begun servicing retail and wholesale accounts across the U.S. and U.K., with support for all major book retailers and a new direct-order portal for comic shops, bookstores, hobby retailers, and specialty stores. Warehousing, catalog management, fulfillment, and trade logistics are all operated from CRWN’s Portland facility.

As part of onboarding, new distribution clients are integrated into Firebrand Technologies for title management and ONIX data feeds, with review copies available via Edelweiss, and print and digital catalogs launching in 2026.