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From the Omaha World Herald,
7 Sep 98
Creditors are
Trying to Collect a Campground Company's Debts
From Customers
Unaware of its Bankruptcy
By ROBYNN
TYSVER
WORLD-HERALD BUREAU
Lincoln, NE - Thousand
Adventures Inc. is dead.
The former Nebraska campground company that sported Lear jets and courted
politicians now exists only in bankruptcy court after years of battling
creditors and consumer-fraud lawsuits.
But the company that ended up with Thousand Adventures' property is accused
of trying to collect money from campers who had signed contracts with
the defunct company.
Doug Napier, the Fort Madison, Iowa, attorney who filed a class-action
lawsuit on behalf of Thousand Adventures' 70,000 members, says the collection
effort being reported across the nation is an attempt to take advantage
of senior citizens and would-be-retirees who dreamed of cruising from
campground to campground in their RVs.
He said these campers are under no obligation to continue with the new
company, Travel America Inc., unless they want too. " (But) It's
never made clear to them that it's a new offer," he said.
Nebraska opted against a consumer fraud lawsuit after a Blair, NE campground
company's bankruptcy caused grief for some campers.
Meantime, campers who bought memberships to 58 campgrounds now are left
with 20 campgrounds - more if they want to pay added fees - and no assurances
that those will continue to exist.
Napier and the lawyer for the Thousand Adventures bankruptcy trustee in
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Dan Childers, believe it's only a matter of time before
all the former Thousand Adventure campgrounds revert back to the bankruptcy
court and are sold to pay creditors.
An attorney for Travel America, Michael Mallaney of Des Moines, IA, denied
that Travel America obtained the campgrounds in violation of bankruptcy
laws.
He said the transfers were made by Thousand Adventures subsidiaries in
individual states to Travel America in exchange for assuming any debt
on the properties.
He said the idea behind the property transfers was to keep the campgrounds
open for the campers. One judge in Ohio has approved the transfer, he
said.
Mallaney also said Travel America was not collecting on Thousand Adventure
contracts but, as campground operator, was collecting membership fees.
"As I understand it," he said, "if former members of any
of these subsidiaries want to use the Travel America camp system, those
systems are available in exchange for what is called a membership fee."
A number of companies bought Thousand Adventure campgrounds for as little
as $1 or the cost of property taxes owed after the Blair, NE, company
was forced into bankruptcy last year, Childers said.
Gretchen Pettit is one of the unhappy campers who was unaware of the bankruptcy
case.
We were led to believe that Thousand Adventures just changed its name,"
she said.
Bankruptcy Fiasco Comes at Expense of Campers
The Lincoln woman said she fielded a telephone call this spring from a
salesman named Bill Jones of Weeping Water, Neb. The 64-year-old said
that Jones demanded that she and her husband, Ivan, continue to make their
$70 monthly payments.
Pettit is worried that Thornhaven, her favorite campground in Weeping
Water, won't be open for long.
"He was very rude. He threatened me," Pettit said. "He
said, 'We know where you live. Don't be late with your payments."
Thousand Adventures wasn't always Pettit's nightmare. The company had
a hopeful beginning in 1982 when David Vopnford of Blair decided to capitalize
on the RV craze by selling memberships to a group of campgrounds in 21
states.
For about $6,000, campers would have access to 58 campgrounds.
Childers said it appeared that Vopnford started the company in good faith
but was consumed by debt. His mistake, Childers believes, was a penchant
for luxury.
"The money spent on yachts and Lear jets, that was very imprudent
to say the least," Childers said.
Vopnford's high style included two Lear jets and a $600,000 yacht, which
is now the focus of a search by a lawyer hired by the bankruptcy trustee.
A Republican, Vopnford also was known to contribute heavily to GOP candidates.
Vopnford now is believed to be managing a Mississippi campground. He did
not have a listed phone number in Picayune, the town where he was believed
to be living last.
The good times began to come apart when Vopnford failed to secure a loan
to keep the business going, said John O'Hanlon, his former Blair attorney.
For several years in the mid-1990s, consumer-fraud divisions in 21 states
battled with Thousand Adventures, forcing the closure of campgrounds,
forbidding the company from selling additional memberships and winning
monetary settlements, said Ben Bellus, Assistant Attorney General in Iowa.
In 1997, the company was forced into bankruptcy. The campgrounds were
then moved into Travel America, of which the exact ownership remains unknown,
Childers said.
Because of the property transfers, Thousand Adventures was then able to
claim only $1,600 in assets and $70 million in debt in bankruptcy court.
Childers believes the transfers were orchestrated by Vopnford's creditors.
"It would appear Mr. Vopnford didn't get anything personal out of
these transfers," Childers said.
The idea behind the property shuffle was to keep the campgrounds open
as long as possible and out of the hands of the bankruptcy court in order
to allow creditors to collect from campers, said Napier, the attorney
for the class action suit.
He said Travel America knows it's only a matter of time before the campfires
are extinguished permanently at the 20 remaining TAI campgrounds. "I
still believe that's their plan," Napier said.
"They haven't been putting money back into the campgrounds."
Mallaney, Travel America's lawyer, said: "I think that's Mr. Napier's
allegation and I think Travel America would deny that." Ray Novelli,
president of Travel America in Irvine,.CA, could not be reached for comment.
Childers said there is testimony to support Napier's claim. He said two
men - including David Vopnford - have testified that the purpose of Travel
America was to make sure the creditors could continue to collect from
campers.
The Bankruptcy Trustee would like to inform campers about the bankruptcy
proceedings but can't because it doesn't have a membership list, Childers
said.
Travel America has refused the trustee's request for a list of members,
prompting the trustee to go to court to try to force the company to release
the list, he said.
Meantime, creditors - whom Travel America also has refused to identify
- continue to collect from campers, he said.
One creditor has hired Resort Marketing Inc. of Weeping Water to collect
on the contracts. The company is owned by David Vopnford's son and daughter-in-law,
Ken and Lynn Vopnford.
Lynn Vopnford said she and her husband are not involved with Travel America
and are working only as contractors. She said she did not remember the
creditor's name.
The creditor believes that although Thousand Adventures is bankrupt, the
customers still have a membership with Travel America, Lynn Vopnford said.
"They're owed that money," she said. "These members still
have a contract."
But several states, including Iowa, New York, and Kansas, have been aggressive
in pursuing consumer complaints and have ordered that such collections
stop.
In Iowa, for example, neither Travel America nor the creditors can collect
unless customers willingly and knowingly agree to transfer their membership
to Travel America as a result of a settlement with the state's consumer
fraud division, said Bellus, the Assistant Attorney General in Iowa.
Bellus said this fall he learned about a letter sent from "T.A.I.
Collections" of Weeping Water to an Iowa camper. The letter informed
a couple that unless they paid on their Travel America contract, their
Thousand Adventure account would become "due and payable."
Many people respond to such tactics because they fear that if they don't
pay Travel America, their credit will be ruined, Bellus said.
Bellus said he quickly wrote a letter to Travel America and to Resort
Marketing, ordering them to stop collection efforts.
"We are very well aware of Travel America and we are watching them
he said.
Lynn Vopnford said she did not know of any such letter sent by the
Weeping Water office. She also did not know that the company was
not allowed to collect in Iowa and said she had not seen Bellus'
letter.
Vopnford said the whole misadventure with the campground has been difficult
for her family.
"We're trying to start over again," she said. "We lost
a lot just like other people lost a lot. The hardest thing is everybody
associates our last name with Thousand Adventures. You say your last
name sometimes to people and they cringe. It's very, very tough."
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