Thursday, May 21, 2026 12:14:31 PM
That filing is definitely less comforting than a simple voluntary modernization/update.
A registered agent resignation usually means one of these:
the company stopped responding,
the company stopped paying,
the relationship broke down,
or the agent no longer wanted the responsibility.
And the fact pattern here:
notice sent April 13, 2026
resigning agent waited the required statutory period
state steps in temporarily afterward
…does suggest disruption rather than orderly corporate maintenance.
What’s important, though, is understanding what this does and does not mean.
What it does NOT necessarily mean
It does not automatically mean:
the corporation is dissolved,
bankrupt,
abandoned,
or defunct.
Oklahoma law specifically has a fallback mechanism so the company does not instantly lose legal existence. As Walrus noted, the Secretary of State can temporarily become the agent for service if no replacement is designated.
So this is more:
“corporate compliance instability”
than immediate corporate death.
But it IS a bad signal
Especially combined with:
dead website,
resignations,
no current filings,
disappearing public communication,
Korean asset gone.
Because registered agents typically resign when:
they are not getting cooperation.
And that’s usually:
unpaid invoices,
unanswered communications,
inability to reach responsible officers,
or concern over legal exposure.
The timing is interesting
Notice date:
April 13, 2026
That’s exactly when:
Ussery resigned,
McCollar resigned,
board upheaval was occurring.
That timing strongly hints the company was undergoing some kind of internal transition or dislocation.
One subtle but important detail
The notice went to:
600 S Wagner Rd, Ann Arbor
not the Jackson Plaza suite address from the recent 8-K.
That could mean:
old records were still on file,
administrative records weren’t synchronized,
or operations were fragmented.
Again—not catastrophic alone—but consistent with a company operating loosely.
A registered agent resignation usually means one of these:
the company stopped responding,
the company stopped paying,
the relationship broke down,
or the agent no longer wanted the responsibility.
And the fact pattern here:
notice sent April 13, 2026
resigning agent waited the required statutory period
state steps in temporarily afterward
…does suggest disruption rather than orderly corporate maintenance.
What’s important, though, is understanding what this does and does not mean.
What it does NOT necessarily mean
It does not automatically mean:
the corporation is dissolved,
bankrupt,
abandoned,
or defunct.
Oklahoma law specifically has a fallback mechanism so the company does not instantly lose legal existence. As Walrus noted, the Secretary of State can temporarily become the agent for service if no replacement is designated.
So this is more:
“corporate compliance instability”
than immediate corporate death.
But it IS a bad signal
Especially combined with:
dead website,
resignations,
no current filings,
disappearing public communication,
Korean asset gone.
Because registered agents typically resign when:
they are not getting cooperation.
And that’s usually:
unpaid invoices,
unanswered communications,
inability to reach responsible officers,
or concern over legal exposure.
The timing is interesting
Notice date:
April 13, 2026
That’s exactly when:
Ussery resigned,
McCollar resigned,
board upheaval was occurring.
That timing strongly hints the company was undergoing some kind of internal transition or dislocation.
One subtle but important detail
The notice went to:
600 S Wagner Rd, Ann Arbor
not the Jackson Plaza suite address from the recent 8-K.
That could mean:
old records were still on file,
administrative records weren’t synchronized,
or operations were fragmented.
Again—not catastrophic alone—but consistent with a company operating loosely.
Recent CRTG News
- Form 8-K - Current report • Edgar (US Regulatory) • 04/14/2026 09:20:47 PM
