Last July, when Nina Wesman took her unwanted jewelry to Be Iced Jewelers, an Edina store that buys and sells used fine jewelry, she was pleased to find the dozen pieces were worth $5,700 in store credit, issued as a gift card. She could have taken a lower cash payout, but Wesman wanted to find a pair of gold and diamond stud earrings, ones "that you could actually see," she said.
Months later, Wesman, of Minneapolis, discovered a different sort of value related to gift cards — the value of spending them before a business goes belly up.
In early December, with $1,600 in credit remaining, she went to the store to do some Christmas shopping, only to find a note on the door saying the business had closed.
This month, Be Iced's CEO and president, David R. Pomije, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy for his Shakopee company Top Hat Inc., doing business as Top Hat 430 Inc., Be Iced Jewelers, Gold Stop, Bidx and Be Iced Diamond Exchange.
Wesman now has to get in line behind a string of other creditors with higher priority legal claims to Top Hat's assets.
No stranger to bankruptcy
Be Iced is not the first failed venture for Plymouth entrepreneur Pomije, who could not be reached for comment. A call to his lawyer, Steven B. Nosek, was not returned.
A Commodore computer mail-order resale business that Pomije ran in the 1980s ended in bankruptcy. A travel club for golf lovers dissolved.
He had success in the early 1990s when he opened Funcoland, a chain of video-game swapping stores. Pomije sold the business to Barnes & Noble for $160 million. It was renamed GameStop.