Renewable Energy SD, an Excelsior seller of wind energy equipment that was sued for fraud by the Minnesota attorney general's office, has filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
In its Friday filing for liquidation in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Renewable Energy listed $15.9 million in debts and $6.2 million in assets.
The attorney general's lawsuit, filed in Hennepin County District Court in January, alleges that the company and its sole owner, Shawn Dooling, 46, of Shorewood, sold farmers in Minnesota and elsewhere faulty wind turbines using federal stimulus money aimed at helping the country during the recession.
The company either failed to deliver many of the turbines or, in some cases, erected turbines that failed to perform properly or at all, the suit says. About 15 civil lawsuits have been filed against Renewable Energy SD by its customers or suppliers.
Renewable Energy SD was forced to stop selling wind generators in Minnesota after the attorney general's office obtained an injunction against the sales, said spokesman Ben Wogsland of the attorney general's office. The suit is pending until a judge determines whether the company should pay restitution or fines, and whether the company will have any funds with which to pay them, Wogsland said.
A spokesman for Renewable Energy said the state's lawsuit forced the Chapter 7 filing.
"The bankruptcy filing was unavoidable because the company was out of business and had no way to fund its defense in multiple court cases," Renewable Energy attorney Michael McGrath, of Ravich Meyer in Minneapolis, said in an interview Monday.
Most of the assets listed in the Renewable Energy bankruptcy filing appear to be speculative. About $6 million of the reported $6.2 million in assets are in the form of anticipated proceeds from a $6 million breach-of-contract and fraud lawsuit that Renewable Energy filed against wind turbine manufacturer Polaris America LLC of New Jersey and its CEO, Christopher Filos.