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Re: Cassandra post# 141901

Thursday, 07/30/2015 3:51:49 PM

Thursday, July 30, 2015 3:51:49 PM

Post# of 148335
Hi Cassandra,

It seems to me that the company, by publicly declaring the address as its Company Headquarters, has legally assumed responsibility for the lease. A company can't merely change its name and be absolved from all obligations created under the former name.

Supposedly, Kerry worked out of that office performing duties for the company. That published statement and the company's public claim of the address as their Corporate Headquarters is more than enough to prove that they are liable for any and ALL owed amounts.

Do you know the expiration date of the lease? Legally, the company owes the landlord the past due amounts PLUS the remainder of payments due under the lease agreement. So DudS r US could be on the hook for rent on the office as long as it is unoccupied until the original lease expires.

Normally in a merger, if the surviving company occupies the same offices after the merger, they have assumed the Assets and Liabilities connected with the offices, i.e. the lease.


Good DD IS NOT just reciting the PRs and company handouts and looking for the good. Those things are never hard to find.

Good DD IS finding out what the company and CEO do NOT want you to know.