Money that should be used to repay creditors was instead siphoned off to Whitehat Education Technology, a court-approved trustee for the affiliates said in court papers. The trustee, bankruptcy attorney Claudia Springer, sued to get back nearly $700,000 that was moved from entities under her control.
The dispute is a small piece of a much bigger battle between Raveendran’s troubled tech company Byju’s and lenders owed more than $1.2 billion. For more than a year, those lenders have tried to track down $533 million that Byju allegedly hid from them.
A representative for Byju’s did not respond to an email requesting comment.
A Byju’s affiliate that once held the missing $533 million was taken over by lenders and put into Chapter 11 bankruptcy, while three other units were forced into insolvency proceedings and placed under Springer’s control. All of those US-based entities are in bankruptcy court in Wilmington, Delaware, while Byju’s itself faces bankruptcy proceedings in India.
When a company comes under court protection in the US, especially in the early days of a case, cash cannot typically be moved or used to pay bills without a bankruptcy judge’s approval. Lenders have accused Byju’s officials of moving the $533 million in violation of bankruptcy rules.
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Between Sept. 26 and Oct. 7, the US affiliates’ Stripe Inc. account transferred the funds out of the bankrupt companies to a Wells Fargo bank account associated with Whitehat, according to Tuesday’s complaint. Springer alleged individuals residing in India with Byju-related email accounts have been attempting to access the US debtors’ account, according to images of the firms’ Stripe account history that’s included in the complaint.Springer has sought a court order preventing Wells Fargo from transferring any funds out of Whitehat’s account.
Stripe and Wells Fargo didn’t immediately return messages seeking comment.
Byju’s faces a fraudulent-transfer lawsuit in a US bankruptcy court related to those funds. That case involves Byju’s Alpha, a shell company created by Byju’s to tap US capital markets. After Byju’s defaulted, lenders seized control of the shell company, put it under court protection and sued to get the $533 million they claim should go to them.