100%
That's what I was referencing with the 'vulture capitalism' comment. It's not even that rare of a practice to buy a company, saddle it with a ton of debt to free up a different company from their debt, and then take the indebted company you don't care about and file bankruptcy on it. It's as brilliant as it is disgusting when it comes to ways to just free a company completely of their debt. Or even just to quickly make some millions, since part of the debt you can saddle on a company is executive bonuses. Buy Toys R Us, give yourself a sixteen million dollar bonus, which is all of TRU's operating capital, then let TRU file for bankruptcy when it can't pay any of its debts because all of its money is now gone into your pocket. Vile stuff. And neither the US nor Canada have really done -ANYTHING- to curb this practice.
That, of course, does not seem to be what happened to DST. There doesn't seem to be any indication DST was carrying anyone else's debt or paying out massive bonuses to suddenly-employed executives.