NEWS, ESSAYS & CRITIQUES
The Great Mirage Heist: How Axar Capital Stole the Brooklyn Nightlife Scene and Sold it out to Kabir Mulchandani
Axar Capital, a private equity firm, has been previously accused of wrongdoing by MCA funders and a committee overseeing the Avant Gardner venue in Brooklyn. Yet, despite these allegations, Axar has managed to secure deals and is now on a fast track to exit all legal liabilities. The torch is now being passed to PACHA, owned by Five Holdings, with Kabir Mulchandani - a person once accused of real estate fraud and who spent 140 days in jail who’s been making quite a comeback and will have a decisive voice the future of the Brooklyn nightlife scene.
Electric Zoo Refunds: What Ticket Holders Need to Know About the Bankruptcy Process
In the wake of Electric Zoo's recent bankruptcy announcement, eligible ticket holders are now seeking clarity on the refund process. Although a similar plan was proposed in June 2024, the focus has shifted to the timing and availability of funds for these refunds. As Electric Zoo navigates this challenging situation, the community anxiously awaits updates on how much money will remain after previous claims have been processed. With fans eager for answers, the festival's commitment to transparency will be crucial in maintaining trust and engagement.
Brooklyn Mirage Bankruptcy: What Weekly Updates Knew – and Who Was Briefed on Them
In early 2025, as the Mirage moved through its final construction phase, a set of recurring internal updates began to circulate among management and governance stakeholders, according to individuals familiar with the reporting process and materials reviewed by Unmixed. These updates documented installation milestones alongside revised budget assumptions and advance ticket projections for reopening-week performances – placing forward sales into the same reporting stream as procurement timelines, engineering inputs, and cost adjustments as late-stage assumptions hardened into fixed spend.
Brooklyn Mirage New Build Filing Submitted Feb 3, 2026 Under Same Architect and Ownership
If prior Mirage related issues were attributed to problems with initial drawings or plan sets, what specifically were those deficiencies and how were they identified? And if the February 3 2026 New Work filing has been submitted under the same ownership entity and Architect of Record, what ultimately prompted continuity in the design team and what if anything has changed in the plans now moving forward?
Brooklyn Mirage Bankruptcy Plan Fast-Tracked in 17-Minute Hearing
In just 17-minutes, Judge Walrath approved AGDP's late-night plan (Dkt. 583)–admitting she'd not reviewed it. Faris (Young Conaway/Axar) hyped CEO Gary Richards endlessly; Verita's older rep stumbled on foggy technical point. No objections. Confirmation done.
Key Roles: Richards (CEO), Yazhari (plan admin), Nahas ($15K/mo trustee ahead of unsecureds). CVR now $90M trigger + $3.5M guaranteed.
Pacha eyes June relaunch post-demo–but NYC DOB permits? Unrealistic timeline. Creditors wait. Transparency alarm sounded harsh.
Deeper Dive: Where the Dog is Buried in the Brooklyn Mirage Case
By the time most New Yorkers heard the word “bankruptcy,” the real work on Brooklyn Mirage was already done. The dog had been buried years earlier–under term sheets, political favors, and construction shortcuts that never cleared daylight.
Brooklyn Mirage Bankruptcy: When the Trustee Gets Paid First
"The Liquidating Trustee's fixed fee doesn't just tick up—it jumps from a token $3,000 a month to a $15,000 monthly retainer, on top of hourly billing and contingent upside tied to new recoveries. According to the confirmed plan filed at Docket 575, Joshua Nahas of Dundon Advisers LLC becomes the single most powerful actor in Brooklyn Mirage's estate afterlife—paid first, indemnified heavily, and armed with broad discretion over which claims to pursue or drop."
From Avant Gardner's bankruptcy documents, the math looks brutal: every month the case drags on, $15K comes off the top before vendors, contractors, or artists see a dime. Unmixd has reached out to Gary Richards, CEO and public face of Brooklyn Mirage, for comment on what this means for unsecured creditors still waiting. No response by press time.
Brooklyn Mirage Bankruptcy: $90K 'Services Provided' to Firm in Carone Corruption Probe
Oaktree Solutions Ltd., tied to ex-Adams chief of staff, filed $90K claim in Brooklyn Mirage bankruptcy.
Court docs show Frank Carone & Billy Bildstein signatures. Pacha takeover advances despite federal probe ties.
Key revelations:
Billy Bildstein owned 100% of Avant Gardner at collapse
Axar Capital now owns site; FIVE Holdings (Pacha) to operate if court approves.
$90K owed to Oaktree for mysterious "services provided"
Frank Carone signatures appear on claim docs
NYT (Jan 30): Brooklyn grand jury probes Carone's business dealings
Pacha New York: What the Press Release Won’t Say Out Loud
Pacha’s return is backed by a Dubai luxury group with a 460 million dollar credit line, hundreds of millions in hotel revenue, and global expansion plans—not a mom‑and‑pop club rescue for Brooklyn’s once largest independent venue, while bankruptcy language and unpaid claims trail behind.
Brooklyn Mirage’s Chapter 11: What’s in the Committee’s 14-Point Objection
On January 27, 2026, the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors filed a statement withdrawing its support for the plan. The document was surgical and quite frankly, very ‘techno’ in spirit. Point by point, the committee laid out how Axar had:…
Sold in the Headlines, Not in Court: Brooklyn Mirage’s Pacha Deal Blows Up in Bankruptcy
On New Year’s Day, outlets announced Brooklyn Mirage had been sold to the group behind Pacha. Three weeks later, the creditors’ committee told a Delaware judge the deal they were promised had been quietly gutted by Axar — and that without that very press leak, no one in the courtroom would have known.
What’s Next, Brooklyn Mirage?
In an industrial stretch of East Williamsburg, Avant Gardner emerged in 2017 under the vision of Jürgen “Billy” Bildstein. What began as a fleeting pop-up concept found permanence with the opening of the Brooklyn Mirage - a sprawling outdoor venue whose ambitious production and scale set it apart from the outset. Over the next two years, additional halls rose beside it: The Great Hall, cavernous and versatile, and Kings Hall, intimate and subterranean. Together, the complex offered a new blueprint for year-round nightlife. But the by early 2025 the venue saw its first needles in coffin and by August 4, Avant Gardner, LLC (“Avant Gardner”), the operator of Brooklyn Mirage, together with its affiliated entities filed for bankruptcy.