A few googles and here is what it appears regarding the P12 debt. Conferences are structured as non-profits and incorporated as such. Technically, that says its members can not be held liable for that debt. That explains the ease of departures. If it files for bankruptcy, the court would first seize its assets. In this scenario, I would think the name and affiliation with the CFP would be it's primary value because the P12 Network doesn't, imo, have much asset value. As those are intrinsic, the courts would do everything to 'restructure' the debt. If the P12 does NOT retain its CFP value, that'd be a debt very difficult to latch on to by other conferences or teams. What may be very challenging for the exiting members are the immense profits seen elsewhere by conferences. It may establish precedence for the other side of that coin (ie debt) and allow the courts to penalize the 'members'. The most logical sequence of events would be bankruptcy, dissolution of the conference, and guessing the courts find members liable. SO, as a previous poster said "law suits": be it interstate, Universities, even people (is Larry Scott, GK, etc.). That's a cluster f%^k.