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Charles Moore provides crisis management and turnaround consulting services to under-performing companies in the gaming & hospitality, governmental, financial services, technology, automotive, manufacturing, distribution, consumer products, construction and real estate industries. Working for debtor, creditor and customer constituents, Mr. Moore has negotiated and executed debt restructuring and reorganization transactions in both out-of-court and Chapter filing settings, and provides assistance in planning and executing the sale and liquidations of businesses. Mr. Moore also has extensive experience with defined benefit pension plans and other post-retirement employee benefits. He is accomplished in both financial and operational aspects of corporate revitalization.
Before joining Conway MacKenzie in 2001, Mr. Moore was the Chief Financial Officer of a privately owned automotive supplier. Previously, he was a Manager in the middle market consulting practice of Deloitte & Touche.
Mr. Moore is a Certified Turnaround Professional and a Certified Public Accountant and holds memberships in the Turnaround Management Association, American Bankruptcy Institute, American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and Michigan Association of Certified Public Accountants. Mr. Moore is also past President and a former member of the Board of Directors for the Detroit Chapter of the Turnaround Management Association. He received his Master of Business Administration and his Bachelor of Arts from Michigan State University and frequently conducts presentations and gives interviews on matters involving insolvency and reorganization. In 2008, he was honored by Crain’s Detroit Business through selection to the class of “40 Under 40” and in 2006, he was named one of twelve ‘People to Watch – Business Professionals Making Their Mark’ by Turnarounds & Workouts magazine. Most recently, Mr. Moore served on the Legislative Commission on Government Efficiency, a nine person task force charged with identifying ways to improve the State of Michigan’s finances. |