Green Ronin Crowdfunding Legal Defense Fund In Fight Against Diamond Distrubutors

Company fighting to get its stock back.
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Green Ronin Publishing has set up a crowdfunding campaign to help cover legal fees fighting to get back their inventory from Diamond Comic Distributors in what it describes as "a dire financial threat to our company, not just today, but well into the future".

Diamond, which filed for Bankruptcy in January, still holds the stock of Green Ronin and over one hundred other companies in its warehouse, and has asked the court for ownership of that inventory so that it can liquidate it and pay its creditors. The distributor, while being mainly comic-book focused, also serves as distributor for some toy and TTRPG companies, including Green Ronin, Paizo, Goodman Games, and Roll For Combat.

The GoFundMe had raised $17K at the time of writing, with over 200 donations.

Paizo Publishing, also affected, has announced that its upcoming releases will not be available at major bookstores or at Amazon because the company has stopped shipping products to Diamond. This includes 12 August releases and 10 September releases, such as Starfinder Player Core, Starfinder GM Core, Pathfinder Battlecry, and more.

The court has scheduled a hearing on July 21 to hear objections from the affected vendors.

My name is Nicole Lindroos, co-owner of Green Ronin Publishing. Diamond Comic Distributors' recent Chapter 11 bankruptcy has impacted over 100 independent publishers, including Green Ronin, putting us in a very precarious position. Diamond is attempting to use a legal technicality to claim ownership of millions of dollars worth of consigned inventory, which amounts to several hundreds of thousands of dollars for Green Ronin Publishing alone. This is stock that we still own and have not been paid for.

This is a dire financial threat to our company, not just today, but well into the future. We must secure legal representation immediately before the deadline to do so passes.

While there is no "good" time for someone to steal hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of your property to sell for the benefit of their biggest creditors, it is especially challenging given that Gen Con is weeks away. Gen Con is not just a convention for us, it's our most important annual event for connecting with TTRPG enthusiasts, our business partners, and our community, and this year is no exception. We're launching new products and have already committed significant funds to cover everything from booth space, travel (flights, rooms), and most critically, the production of new books and merchandise specifically for the show floor.

Diamond’s bankruptcy and this legal action also mean that Green Ronin has lost its book trade distributor. We are looking for a new partner, but that will take some time. Book trade sales of literary licenses, currently The Fifth Season and The Expanse, are a key part of our strategies for those games. This is especially bad timing for The Fifth Season RPG because we recently received final approvals from N.K. Jemisin and the game is ready to go to print.

We simply don't have the cash on hand to do all of this, pay for an attorney, or participate in any collective legal actions with other publishers in our same position.

The banks are stopping at nothing to wring every last dollar out of Diamond - including taking several hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of Green Ronin product to sell in order to pay Diamond’s debts - but they can't do that, and we've got a legal agreement that says as much. Now, we just need to secure a law firm to represent us in the courts.

The funds raised through this campaign will be used directly to cover the escalating legal fees associated with fighting Diamond's claim in bankruptcy court. This includes attorney retainers, court filing fees, and the costs of pursuing every possible avenue to recover our inventory and protect Green Ronin's assets.
 

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No, I see predatory business behavior resulting in companies that try to operate professionally getting screwed. There's no excuse for Diamond's or Chase's behavior here--and especially Diamond's. Waving this all off as "just business" is providing cover for the predators.
You are seeing a conspiracy in a commonplace event.

This is real life, not a B movie. Companies go bust every single day.
 

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You are seeing a conspiracy in a commonplace event.

This is real life, not a B movie. Companies go bust every single day.

No, but you are waving off predatory business behaviors as quotidian and excusing businesses passing off damage on to their partners as they fail. Happens in tabletop, of course, among the worst of the predators. It's always ugly and inexcusable.
 

No, but you are waving off predatory business behaviors as quotidian and excusing businesses passing off damage on to their partners as they fail. Happens in tabletop, of course, among the worst of the predators. It's always ugly and inexcusable.
Its just business. There no such thing as a non-predatory business; that's an oxymoron. You're applying drama to the routine.

A company is going under, and creditors and clients will get hurt. That's what happens in bankruptcies. Nothing new or special about this one, except that it is happening to a sizeable player in a niche industry.
 

Its just business. There no such thing as a non-predatory business; that's an oxymoron. You're applying drama to the routine.

A company is going under, and creditors and clients will get hurt. That's what happens in bankruptcies. Nothing new or special about this one, except that it is happening to a sizeable player in a niche industry.

Again, this is excusing predatory behavior. There are non-predatory businesses, of course, and companies can act ethically--here, Diamond only had to not set up their "partners" to get burned as they went down. If you can't see that, that's on you.
 


I find it entirely cowardly to fob off this situation as “commonplace”, as though the fact that this apparently happens frequently should be a valid excuse.

This whole fiasco is a story of bureaucracy being used to help wealthy creditors triumph over small businesses and their workers. If the court sides with Diamond, it’s a failure of justice.
 

Diamond is bankrupt. They will continue to exist only until the proceedings are completed, and then they are done.
If it’s Chapter 7. Chapter 11 is reorganization to deal with unpayable debt.

Snarf will correct me if I remember it backwards. My point is bankruptcy is not necessarily dissolution.
 

From the department of what it is worth:

This deals with contract law. Contract law is, by it's very nature, an obscure and murky area of law. Extremely intelligent attorneys are paid many hundreds of thousands of dollars a year to deal with these matters, and that requires a great deal of legal training and practice. None of us here (as far as I can tell, though I may be wrong) are contract lawyers.

I say this because it would be wise to simply wait for the court to make its decision, and then decide whether or not DCD is completely in the wrong, despite the appearance of such. We are not privy to their inner deliberations or contract stipulations--we only get to see what is released to the public, and many times, that means not having access to internal memos or other files and documents that would shed light on the situation.

My advice? Wait and see, and in the meantime, don't read too much into the legal arguments unless you really want to dive into a rabbit hole (because that is definitely what commercial contract law is).
 


Again, this is excusing predatory behavior. There are non-predatory businesses, of course, and companies can act ethically--here, Diamond only had to not set up their "partners" to get burned as they went down. If you can't see that, that's on you.
You aren't quoting what you're replying to, and replying in rapid fashion, making it very hard to follow the thread, at least to me..
 

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