Trustee Issues Order Compelling His Attendance
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Dallas, TX β January 9, 2026 β I suppose if I were likely to spend the rest of my life in prison, one of the last things I would want to do with whatβs left of my free time is sit through an uncomfortable court hearing before the thousands whose debts Iβd defaulted on. And that appears to be exactly the case with Tricolor CEO Daniel Chu
As if the Tricolor bankruptcy isnβt messy enough, CEO Daniel Chu has failed to appear at the required 341 bankruptcy meeting of creditors. This does not appear to have been a simple missed appointment as the trustee has filed a motion βcompellingβ him to appear.
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Failure to Attend
On December 9th, Counsel to the Chapter 7 Trustee, Anne Elizabeth Burns, filed a motion to the attendance of Daniel Chu or, if he refuses to cooperate, Jerry Kollar at the Section 341 meeting of creditors (the β341 Meetingβ or βMeetingβ), which has been rescheduled from November 18, 2025 to January 13, 2025 due to the failure of any representative from the Debtors to attend.
Read the Motion Here!
In the motion it was stated:
As the Court is well aware, a Section 341 meeting of creditors is an integral part of a chapter 7 bankruptcy proceeding. It allows a lawfully appointed trustee and creditors to question the debtor in order to gather key information regarding the financials of the debtor.
A meaningful section 341 meeting may therefore be critical to permitting a trustee to maximize estate funds for the benefit of creditors.
Here, the Clerk of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northen District of Texas properly provided notice of, and the Trustee held, the 341 Meeting on November 18, 2025.
In advance of that meeting, the Trustee specifically requested that counsel to the Debtors remind Daniel Chu β who was the Chief Executive Officer (βCEOβ) and founder of the Debtors, and who personally signed each of the Debtorβs bankruptcy petitions β of his need to attend the Meeting.
The Trustee did so because of Mr. Chuβs deep involvement in all aspects of the Debtorsβ business since founding those companies nearly two decades ago, including serving as both the public face and voice of the Debtors throughout that time period.
Nonetheless, Mr. Chu failed to attend the 341 Meeting and did not communicate with the Trustee regarding his absence. And now Mr. Chu has indicated through counsel that he will not voluntarily attend the rescheduled Meeting. Mr. Chuβs refusal to participate in the 341 Meeting threatens to obstruct the resolution of these bankruptcy matters, requiring the Courtβs intervention to compel his attendance and participation.
In addition, should Mr. Chu refuse to cooperate with the Court order, the Trustee further requests that the Court order Jerry Kollar, the Debtorsβ former Chief Financial Officer (βCFOβ), to appear as the Debtorsβ representative at the rescheduled 341 Meeting.
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The Charges
The U.S. Attorney Generalβs Office of New York, the FBI and the FDICβs Office of the Inspector General have concluded their initial investigations and have found evidence enough of fraud perpetrated by Tricolorβs CEO and many members of its executive staff to file charges.
Read the Unsealed Indictment Here!
The primary charges laid against the four named are:
- Statutory Allegations
- Conspiracy to Commit Bank Fraud and Wire Fraud on a Financial Institution
- Bank Fraud
- Wire Fraud Affecting a Financial Institution
The individual charges against each are:


Guilty pleas from JEROME KOLLAR, Tricolorβs former CFO, and AMERYN SEIBOLD, a former finance executive at Tricolor, in connection with their participation in the conspiracy. KOLLAR and SEIBOLD pled guilty to fraud charges before U.S. District Judge Lewis J. Liman on December 16, 2025. Both are cooperating with the Government.
βAs alleged in the indictment, CEO Daniel Chu was the leader of an elaborate scheme to defraud creditors of Tricolor,β said U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton. βAt his direction, Tricolor repeatedly lied to banks and other credit providers, including by falsifying auto-loan data and βdouble pledgingβ collateral. Fraud became an integral component of Tricolorβs business strategy. The resulting billion-dollar collapse harmed banks, investors, employees and customers. It also undermines confidence in our financial system. New Yorkers and all Americans want continuing criminal enterprises shut down and their leaders brought to justice whether they are on our streets or in our markets.β
βThese four executives allegedly conspired to defraud lenders based on bogus collateral,β said FBI Assistant Director in Charge Christopher G. Raia. βThe defendantsβ alleged manipulation not only ripped off multiple banks but also violated the integrity of our credit markets. The FBI will never tolerate any company that makes fraud part of its business.β
βAs alleged, the defendants in this case participated in a years-long fraudulent scheme that deceived the lenders of Tricolor,β said FDIC-OIG Special Agent in Charge Patricia Tarasca. βThe FDIC-OIG stands firm in its commitment to working with our law enforcement partners to investigate all allegations of fraud that target financial institutions, as we seek to preserve the integrity of our Nationβs financial system.β
According to the allegations contained in the Indictment unsealed today in Manhattan federal court:[1]
From in or about 2018 through in or about 2025, CHU, GOODGAME, KOLLAR, and SEIBOLD conspired to defraud the lenders and asset-backed securities investors of Tricolor Holdings, LLC and its affiliates (βTricolorβ), a subprime auto retailer and financing company. CHU, Tricolorβs founder and chief executive officer; GOODGAME, Tricolorβs chief operating officer; and others operated Tricolor through systematic fraud. At CHUβs direction, multiple Tricolor executives repeatedly double-pledged collateral to multiple lenders and manipulated the characteristics of collateral to make ineligible, near-worthless assets appear to meet lender requirements. By in or about August 2025, Tricolor had pledged approximately $2.2 billion of collateral to lenders and investors, but Tricolor had only approximately $1.4 billion of real collateral. The differenceβconsisting of approximately $800 million in bogus collateralβresulted from the series of schemes and the conspiracy in which CHU, GOODGAME, KOLLAR, SEIBOLD, and others participated. Over time, this series of fraudulent schemes had a profound effect on Tricolor, which obtained hundreds of millions of dollars in cash advances; on CHU, who used a portion of the funds to enrich himself; and on Tricolorβs lenders, who extended billions in loans based on fabricated data and false statements.
In or about the summer of 2025, lenders confronted CHU and others at Tricolor about problems with Tricolorβs collateral. In a series of secretly recorded phone calls, CHU and his conspirators concocted plans to conceal or explain away the fraud. For example, on or about August 17, 2025, CHU proposed blaming certain loan data discrepancies on fictitious deferment policies. CHU acknowledged, however, that βwhere we would have an issue is if, if they sent an auditor and they said, pull this up on your screen, right, that would be a problem.β KOLLAR agreed, stating, βYes. That would be bad.β These efforts to conceal failed.
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Realted:
Arrests and Federal Fraud Charges Filed Against Tricolor Executives
Hundreds of Repo Agencies Listed in Tricolor Bankruptcy
Tricolor CEO Fails to Attend Required Bankruptcy Hearing – Tricolor CEO Fails to Attend Required Bankruptcy Hearing – Tricolor CEO Fails to Attend Required Bankruptcy Hearing
Tricolor CEO Fails to Attend Required Bankruptcy Hearing – Repossession β Repossession Agency – Repossessor – Credit Union Collections β Credit Union Collectors – Lending – Bankruptcy






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