Founded in 1991, the Worth Collection established an exclusive shopping experience with its stylist network and appointment-only shopping. However, almost 30 years after its founding, the company faced a “tenuous future,” and was forced into Chapter 7 bankruptcy in February 2020.

Now, three years later, dozens of former stylists have been given the news that they’ll have to return thousands of dollars worth of commissions earned before the company’s collapse. About 200 former stylists were ordered by U.S. bankruptcy trustee Douglas Tabachnik to settle their debts or be served lawsuits, The New York Post reported.

“We are angry and in shock,” former Worth stylist Andrea Greenspan, who was asked by Tabachnik to repay $19,000 worth of commissions, told the outlet. “There are women who are widowed, divorced or single mothers who are supporting their families and have to hire lawyers now.”

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The trustee claims stylists were aware of the company’s financial fate and knew Worth intended to file for bankruptcy. However, the former stylists told The Post that wasn’t the case.

“The bank instructed Worth’s president, who instructed the stylists in numerous emails to continue to sell,” Michele Baena, who is being sued for $52,000, told the outlet. “We were selling through a season so we could receive larger commissions, but we had no knowledge of a bankruptcy.”

The stylists aren’t the only ones who are affected by the company’s collapse. Tabachnik shared with the Post that vendors have also been burned by Worth’s liquidation.

“These people were paid money that perhaps should have gone to a vendor who was also unaware that the company wouldn’t be able to pay their bills,” he said. “The objective of the bankruptcy code is to distribute the unfairness equally.”

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