Bingo, SEC filings is where you'd find your change of control. On that note, can you post the SEC filing for the newly appointed directors of Bioamber? We'd be grateful...or a Q filing, we'd all love to see Bioamber's financial health? Or a....etc.... Who's running Bioamber now, who's steering the ship? Must be a SEC filing for that no ? An asset sale is an asset sale, whether it's in a liquidation scenario or not, it's still an asset sale. The company was stripped of it's assets in Chapter 15 bankruptcy. The equity was not acquired, the shares were not acquired, the board of directors / all management were dismissed. You did not get a proxy, nor did you vote for new directors to be appointed to the board for a change of control to occur. There was no plan of arrangement filed with the court before the termination of proceedings & there was no change of control, the former company named "Bioamber is out of business & Delaware 4612067 no longer owns the trade name "Bioamber" - clearly documented on court papers. There was no change of control, shares would have been acquired. This 'was' a publicly listed company, you as a shareholder would have voted on it & there would have been multiple SEC filings for the event.