This page provides information for creditors, employees and affected parties in relation to the Libelle Group Liquidation.
Background information
Libelle Group was placed into Liquidation on March 11, 2025 by the shareholders of the company.
Robert Campbell and David Webb of Deloitte New Zealand have been appointed as Liquidators.
Libelle Group is a food service provider, offering a range of services including government funded lunches, residential catering, tuckshop solutions and school catering services for the past 20 years. Its contracts span the education sector.
Libelle Group is contracted by Compass Group New Zealand Limited (Compass) to deliver approximately 125,000 meals daily as part of the Government’s…
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The death of a man with disability in NDIS-supported housing last month has sparked a police investigation and renewed calls for mandatory provider registration.
The ABC can reveal a 42-year-old man died suddenly at a housing facility in the suburb of Acacia Ridge in Brisbane on March 14.
The facility was run by a company called Core and Capacity, which was not formally registered with the NDIS, and so was not subject to the same oversight or regulation as providers that have registered.
Public documents from the corporate regulator, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), show the company was forced into liquidation by the Australian Tax Office (ATO).
An application for the winding up of the company was lodged late…
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News Photo by Reagan Voetberg
Cole Veeren explains the idea behind buying pallets and talks about the pallets on display.
ALPENA — At the beginning of this year, Cole Veeren started a business venture with his family that many may wonder at — pallet liquidation.
Veeren buys truckloads of pallets. The pallets are typically made up of overstocked or returned items from retail chains like Amazon, Target, and Dollar General. Each pallet is about five to six feet tall and around three feet long and wide, although sizes can vary depending on where the pallet comes from.
Veeren organizes the pallets in his warehouse and resells them to customers.
Veeren’s business is called Mitten Liquidation. He runs it with the help of his mom, Alex…
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Underscoring the massive scale of America’s medical debt problem, a nonprofit has struck a deal to pay off old medical bills for an estimated 20 million people.
New York-based Undue Medical Debt, which buys patient debt, is paying off $30 billion worth of unpaid bills in a single transaction with Pendrick Capital Partners, a Virginia-based debt trading company. The average patient debt being retired is $1,100, according to Undue Medical Debt, with some reaching the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
The deal will prevent the debt being sold and protect millions of people nationwide from being targeted by…
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Rite Aid Mulls Filing for Bankruptcy If It Misses Debt Targets Bloomberg
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Ansal Properties Reports Q3 Financials Amidst Insolvency Proceedings TipRanks
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Ansal Properties Releases Q3 Financial Results Amid Insolvency Proceedings TipRanks
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More Ohio Millennials seeking debt relief Cleveland 19 News
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How Abengoa Group impacted the Spanish economy EY
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CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) -Organizations that help people dig out of debt say nearly half of the clients they’re helping now are millennials, who have double the budget deficits they used to face, and are using credit cards to make up the difference.
People like Gene Florian knew he needed to seek help.
He said he lived for the moment, spending freely and care free using multiple credit cards.
“The minimum payments will come and I’m like, ‘Oh I can afford these, you know, tacking on another few hundred here a few hundred here,‘” he said.
Florian saw those minimum payments started to climb twenty and thirty percent.
“I had a good job so I was able to keep on getting credit cards for a while there so it was going good,” he said.
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Corporate Insolvency and Governance Act 2021- One year on Ashurst
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Limavady business Taggart Homes will continue to trade during the process
Current director Nicolas Taggart (left) and father Michael, who was a former director
A building company once owned by two of Ireland’s richest men has commenced insolvency proceedings after racking up debts of more than £3.4m.
Taggart Homes, in Limavady, Co Londonderry, continues to trade while the restructuring process take place.

















