M
Mark Seaton
Junior Audioholic
and got this as a reply:
I'm curious just how their assets were obtained.
This is from the process of legally dissolving the company. Those pictures appear to be from the Longmont warehouse. If you look at the "about us" section of Dickensheet's website, you can see they regularly work with the bankruptcy courts, which I expect this comes from. As was mentioned in this post elsewhere, many (myself included) with any credit on AV123's books received a letter from Dickensheet & Associates announcing the liquidation of AV123/Perpetual Technology's remaining assets. A very short form to annotate a claim was included explaining that proceeds would pay out in a specific order, starting with administration costs of the auction, followed by back rent, tax, etc. owed, and then on to holders of consumer deposit claims, followed by holders of general unsecured claims.It's probably whatever MLS and his relatives either couldn't fit in their vehicles, was bolted down, was too heavy to lift, or was in such bad shape no one in their right mind would possibly buy it.