First Brands

First Brands to close Cleveland corporate office and multiple Ohio facilities amid executives' fraud scandal, impacting 1,200 jobs
First Brands' bankruptcy, linked to alleged fraud by its executives, has prompted the closure of several Ohio facilities, impacting over 1,200 jobs statewide.
Author: Anna Meyer, Dave DeNatale
Published: 11:39 AM EST March 2, 2026
Updated: 11:41 PM EST March 2, 2026
CLEVELAND — Roughly one month after three of the company's top executives were indicted for fraud and money laundering, Cleveland-based First Brands is planning the closure of several of its Ohio facilities, including its downtown corporate office.

According to WARN notices filed First Brands to close Cleveland corporate office and multiple Ohio facilities amid executives' fraud scandal, impacting 1,200 jobs
First Brands' bankruptcy, linked to alleged fraud by its executives, has prompted the closure of several Ohio facilities, impacting over 1,200 jobs statewide.
Author: Anna Meyer, Dave DeNatale
Published: 11:39 AM EST March 2, 2026
Updated: 11:41 PM EST March 2, 2026
CLEVELAND — Roughly one month after three of the company's top executives were indicted for fraud and money laundering, Cleveland-based First Brands is planning the closure of several of its Ohio facilities, including its downtown corporate office.

According to WARN notices filed with the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, more than 1,200 employees statewide will be impacted.


On Feb. 23, First Brands notified the state that it would be conducting a "mass layoff" at its Cleveland corporate office on Public Square on that date. A total of 146 employees were immediately terminated, including 17 account managers and nine zone managers.

Four days later, the company issued WARN letters announcing the closure of the Cleveland corporate office, plus three other facilities statewide, effective on April 30 of this year.

"As you may be aware, the Company is currently experiencing a period of financial distress and is in a chapter 11 bankruptcy process. Nevertheless, the Company has gone to great lengths to maintain its operations. This has included pursuing a sale process as well as attempting to seek additional funding from numerous outside parties. However, under all of these circumstances, the Company has now made the difficult decision to close this Facility," First Brands wrote in its WARN notice.


The closing of the Cleveland corporate office will impact 110 additional employees.

Meanwhile, our TEGNA sister station WTOL in Toledo reports that 302 workers at First Brands' TMD Bowling Green facility will lose their jobs as a result of the closing there, with another 407 workers impacted by the closing of the TMD Tiffin facility.

Additionally, the closing of the FRAM Greenville facility in Darke County will result in 302 jobs being lost.

Federal prosecutors say three Northeast Ohio men — including two brothers from Chagrin Falls and Canton — are facing sweeping fraud and money laundering charges tied to the collapse of a global automotive parts company.

THE INDICTMENT
According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, Patrick James, 61, of Chagrin Falls, and his brother Edward James, 60, of Canton, were arrested in January after a federal indictment was unsealed, charging them with multiple counts of wire fraud, bank fraud, money laundering conspiracy and related offenses.


Prosecutors allege the James brothers orchestrated a years-long fraud at First Brands Group, LLC, a global automotive aftermarket parts supplier founded by Patrick James, ultimately driving the company into bankruptcy in September 2025.

A third Northeast Ohio resident, Peter Andrew Brumbergs, 45, of Chagrin Falls, has already pleaded guilty and is cooperating with the government, federal officials said.

“As alleged in the indictment, Patrick James, together with his brother, Edward James, perpetrated a staggering fraud at First Brands Group,” said U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton. “The James brothers obtained billions for First Brands—and millions for themselves—by presenting their lenders with the impression of a successful, growing international business. The indictment and the guilty plea unsealed today describe a very different reality: a business run through fraud, fake documents, and false financials. Together with our law enforcement partners, we will continue working tirelessly to uncover every aspect of this fraud and vindicate the rights of every victim.”


According to federal prosecutors, the alleged scheme spanned several years and ultimately led to the collapse of First Brands Group, LLC.

In an indictment unsealed in Manhattan federal court, prosecutors allege that from at least 2018 through 2025, Patrick and Edward James, built and then bankrupted the company through a series of coordinated fraud schemes. First Brands developed, marketed, and sold replacement automotive parts — including brakes, filters, wipers, and lights — under multiple brand names like FRAM and Autolite, according to court filings.

Patrick James served as the company’s founder and chief executive officer, while Edward James held the role of senior vice president, prosecutors said.

Federal authorities allege the brothers engaged in multiple schemes designed to mislead lenders and financing partners about the company’s true financial condition. According to the indictment, those schemes included submitting fake or inflated invoices tied to accounts receivable and payable, double- and triple-pledging collateral, falsifying corporate financial statements, and concealing significant liabilities from lenders.


the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, more than 1,200 employees statewide will be impacted.


On Feb. 23, First Brands notified the state that it would be conducting a "mass layoff" at its Cleveland corporate office on Public Square on that date. A total of 146 employees were immediately terminated, including 17 account managers and nine zone managers.

Four days later, the company issued WARN letters announcing the closure of the Cleveland corporate office, plus three other facilities statewide, effective on April 30 of this year.

"As you may be aware, the Company is currently experiencing a period of financial distress and is in a chapter 11 bankruptcy process. Nevertheless, the Company has gone to great lengths to maintain its operations. This has included pursuing a sale process as well as attempting to seek additional funding from numerous outside parties. However, under all of these circumstances, the Company has now made the difficult decision to close this Facility," First Brands wrote in its WARN notice.


The closing of the Cleveland corporate office will impact 110 additional employees.

Meanwhile, our TEGNA sister station WTOL in Toledo reports that 302 workers at First Brands' TMD Bowling Green facility will lose their jobs as a result of the closing there, with another 407 workers impacted by the closing of the TMD Tiffin facility.

Additionally, the closing of the FRAM Greenville facility in Darke County will result in 302 jobs being lost.

Federal prosecutors say three Northeast Ohio men — including two brothers from Chagrin Falls and Canton — are facing sweeping fraud and money laundering charges tied to the collapse of a global automotive parts company.

THE INDICTMENT
According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, Patrick James, 61, of Chagrin Falls, and his brother Edward James, 60, of Canton, were arrested in January after a federal indictment was unsealed, charging them with multiple counts of wire fraud, bank fraud, money laundering conspiracy and related offenses.


Prosecutors allege the James brothers orchestrated a years-long fraud at First Brands Group, LLC, a global automotive aftermarket parts supplier founded by Patrick James, ultimately driving the company into bankruptcy in September 2025.

A third Northeast Ohio resident, Peter Andrew Brumbergs, 45, of Chagrin Falls, has already pleaded guilty and is cooperating with the government, federal officials said.

“As alleged in the indictment, Patrick James, together with his brother, Edward James, perpetrated a staggering fraud at First Brands Group,” said U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton. “The James brothers obtained billions for First Brands—and millions for themselves—by presenting their lenders with the impression of a successful, growing international business. The indictment and the guilty plea unsealed today describe a very different reality: a business run through fraud, fake documents, and false financials. Together with our law enforcement partners, we will continue working tirelessly to uncover every aspect of this fraud and vindicate the rights of every victim.”


According to federal prosecutors, the alleged scheme spanned several years and ultimately led to the collapse of First Brands Group, LLC.

In an indictment unsealed in Manhattan federal court, prosecutors allege that from at least 2018 through 2025, Patrick and Edward James, built and then bankrupted the company through a series of coordinated fraud schemes. First Brands developed, marketed, and sold replacement automotive parts — including brakes, filters, wipers, and lights — under multiple brand names like FRAM and Autolite, according to court filings.

Patrick James served as the company’s founder and chief executive officer, while Edward James held the role of senior vice president, prosecutors said.

Federal authorities allege the brothers engaged in multiple schemes designed to mislead lenders and financing partners about the company’s true financial condition. According to the indictment, those schemes included submitting fake or inflated invoices tied to accounts receivable and payable, double- and triple-pledging collateral, falsifying corporate financial statements, and concealing significant liabilities from lenders.
 
More than 300 employees at a Bowling Green manufacturer may face loss of their jobs by the possible closure of the plant at 515 E. Gypsy Lane Road.

First Brands Group has filed WARN notices indicating the planned permanent closure of its Toledo Molding & Die facility in Tiffin, affecting 407 employees, and the closure of its Bowling Green facility, affecting 302 employees.

The Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act protects workers, their families, and communities by requiring most employers with 100 or more employees to provide notification in advance of closure and mass layoff.

The more than 700 workers at the two plants could lose their jobs by April 30 as First Brands Group moves toward permanent closure of its Tiffin and Bowling Green facilities. It comes amid bankruptcy proceedings and federal fraud charges against former company executives.

The Bowling Green plant blow molds HVAC ducts and fluid reservoirs for Ford, GM, Chrysler, Nissan, Volkswagen, Honda, and various Tier 2 auto suppliers.

First Brands Group is pursuing sales of several business units with significant plastics processing operations — including Toledo Molding & Die — even as it has filed WARN notices that could lead to the closure of two Ohio molding plants if buyers do not emerge.
 
The WARN letter states, “First Brands Group, LLC (the “Company”) regrets to inform you that it will be permanently closing the entirety of the FRAM Greenville facility located at 851 Jackson St. Greenville, OH 45331 (the “Facility”). This letter constitutes notice to you, pursuant to the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act of 1988 and Ohio Revised Code § 4113.31.”

The letter refers to the Chapter 11 bankruptcy process and states, “the Company has gone to great lengths to maintain its operations. This has included pursuing a sale process as well as attempting to seek additional funding from numerous outside parties. However, under all of these circumstances, the Company has now made the difficult decision to close this Facility. The Company expects that 302 total employees will be affected by this closure. The Company expects that the closure will commence on April 30, 2026, and that 302 employees will be terminated effective on that date.”

Whitaker stated, “We’ve been quite aware of the Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing by First Brands Group this past fall, and that subject has since been on our administrative agenda of discussion almost weekly. It’s most unfortunate that we now receive this WARN notice, informing us of the intent to permanently close the FRAM Greenville facility.”
 
The WARN letter states, “First Brands Group, LLC (the “Company”) regrets to inform you that it will be permanently closing the entirety of the FRAM Greenville facility located at 851 Jackson St. Greenville, OH 45331 (the “Facility”). This letter constitutes notice to you, pursuant to the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act of 1988 and Ohio Revised Code § 4113.31.”

The letter refers to the Chapter 11 bankruptcy process and states, “the Company has gone to great lengths to maintain its operations. This has included pursuing a sale process as well as attempting to seek additional funding from numerous outside parties. However, under all of these circumstances, the Company has now made the difficult decision to close this Facility. The Company expects that 302 total employees will be affected by this closure. The Company expects that the closure will commence on April 30, 2026, and that 302 employees will be terminated effective on that date.”

Whitaker stated, “We’ve been quite aware of the Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing by First Brands Group this past fall, and that subject has since been on our administrative agenda of discussion almost weekly. It’s most unfortunate that we now receive this WARN notice, informing us of the intent to permanently close the FRAM Greenville facility.”
Thanks for posting these. You are staying on top of this.

Can you imagine if 5-6 of us here could run the show. In my nutty imagination I envision a 180° difference!
 
Thanks for posting these. You are staying on top of this.

Can you imagine if 5-6 of us here could run the show. In my nutty imagination I envision a 180° difference!
Whether you like the various products that First Brands manufactured one hates to see US workers loosing their jobs because of greed/fraud at the top.

Normally capitalism would dictate the company went bankrupt because they made a crappy product or something no one wanted. But that's not the case here
 
Workers out of a job due to the closing of the First Brands plant in Bowling Green are already being sought by other manufacturers.

Wade Gottschalk, executive director of Wood County Economic Development Commission, reported Thursday that local companies are seeking out the 302 employees affected by the plant’s closure due to bankruptcy proceedings

At the end of February, First Brands, which makes automotive parts, notified Wood County and city administrators that it was issuing a Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act notice announcing the closure of its Bowling Green facility, located at 515 E. Gypsy Lane Road, commencing April 30.

The top executives for First Brands Group, LLC have been charged with multibillion-dollar fraud. According to a press release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Southern District of New York, an unsealed indictment alleges Patrick James, founder and former CEO of First Brands Group, LLC, and his brother, Edward James, a former senior executive at First Brands, “perpetrated a yearslong fraud at First Brands, eventually bankrupting the global automotive company in September 2025. At the time of its bankruptcy, First Brands – a company that reported approximately $5 billion in net annual sales worldwide – declared just $12 million in cash in its corporate bank accounts and over $9 billion in liabilities. As a consequence of the defendants’ fraudulent schemes, First Brands’ lenders and creditors now face billions in losses.”

Gottschalk told Wood County commissioners at their meeting Thursday that his office has received multiple phone calls they directed to the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services to get those employes to other companies.

“Hopefully anyone who gets displaced, they will be able to find full-time work fairly quickly. …” he said. “Good labor is always at a premium and the workers (at First Brands) have a great track record for doing manufacturing work. …”

Gottschalk also mentioned the “big win” in North Baltimore with the addition of La Linea Verde, an Italy-based agribusiness that purchased a facility on Insley Road.

“They’re a great company to work with and we’re really happy to be their first U.S. location,” Gottschalk said, adding that the company has plants in Europe and Italy.

La Linea Verde, which will produce fresh, ready-to-eat soups, is expected to invest $15 million and create 70 new jobs at its new production facility in North Baltimore.

The business will be good for the economy and ag development, Gottschalk said. The goal is to start operations later this year.

That’s a good win for Wood County agribusiness and farmers because the object is to contract locally for fresh, no frozen, produce, he said, and added the company is working with the NOCK to help learn U.S. business requirements.

He said after the meeting La Linea Verde will likely contact with farmers for produce similar to the Hartung Brothers cucumber facility in Bowling Green.

He said when the Northwest Ohio Cooperative Kitchen announced last year that it would close due to cuts in federal funding, the foundation for the Wood County Economic Development Commission donated money so the businesses using the kitchen didn’t have to cease operations or find another location. He said his office will work with the NOCK and Bowling Green State University to find a permanent source of funding to keep the commercial kitchen open.

“We want to make sure it remains in Wood County,” Gottschalk said after the meeting.

It is not in our bailiwick to work with incubators and food start-ups but if they have one success, that will make a for decades of support, he said.

As an aside, former NOCK user and Degraff, Ohio-based Nate’s Nectar, which makes honey-based products, appeared on QVC Saturday and sold out of their creamed honey bundle.

Gottschalk also announced a grain transportation facility was planned in Henry Township near the CSX intermodal terminal on Ohio 18. The facility “is not a huge investment but a big win for farmers” who can transport grain — mostly soybeans — to rail cars.

“It’s not going to be a huge investment or produce a lot of jobs, but for agribusiness, for Wood County agriculture and for farmers, it’s a big win,” he said.

When asked to provide the name of the company, Gottschalk declined.

He said among the other general stuff being handled by his office was assistance to Perrysburg with zoning update and working on other manufacturing projects.

“We are seeing continued interest in Wood County for manufacturing purposes,” he said, and added his office has received a lot of leads they are responding to.
 
First Brands acquired iconic brands such as Autolite, Raybestos, and Fram before the company’s plunge into Chapter 11 bankruptcy revealed a complex web of deception that had eluded auditors for years.

“Shadow lending,” which Investopedia defines as a specific, overlapping invoice factoring arrangement, allowed executives to mask the company’s weakness while reaffirming its financial health.

The complexity of First Brands’ layered capital
A capital structure in the First Brands debacle was built for a more aggressive yield, Neuberger Berman notes, as the company used a layered approach to financing rather than facilities at traditional banks.
 
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