First, Euro Pacific Bank was never insolvent. It was placed into receivership despite its being solvent. So the fiduciary duty of directors never shifted to creditors. Second, at the time of the asset sale to Qenta, the bank was under the control of OCIF and the Receiver, not me. All I did was arrange for the sale of the bank's assets to Qetna, which the Receiver and OCIF approved and which strengthened the ability of the bank to repay 100% of its liabilities, including 100% of deposits. No money from that sale went to me personally. The customers were not sold to Qenta. I simply︀ agreed to give customers the option of having their accounts transferred to Qenta if that︁ was their preference. All customers where given the choice have having their funds returned or︂ having them transferred to Qenta. If Qenta miss-managed those funds after they were successfully transferred,︃ Qenta is liable, not me. So if Qenta does not return Opt-in customers deposits, Opt-in︄ customers would easily win a lawsuit against Qenta. If Qenta can't pay, Opt in customers︅ would become creditors in a bankruptcy proceeding. I have no idea what Qenta's other liabilities︆ are, but they do have substantial assets that can be sold to repay creditors.