
by Jeroslyn JoVonn
October 24, 2025
Weaver addressed the ongoing receivership battle at the ‘Inc. 5000 Conference’ on Oct. 24.
Uncle Nearest founder and CEO Fawn Weaver is denouncing what she calls a βsmear campaignβ in her companyβs ongoing receivership case.
Weaver addressed the ongoing receivership battle during a fireside chat titled βReclaiming Your Company in Turbulent Timesβ at the βInc. 5000 Conferenceβ on Oct. 24, discussing the companyβs reported default on $108 million in loans to Kentucky lender Farm Credit.
βMarthaβs Vineyard was a smear campaign tactic,β Weaver said, as captured by Inc. βTheir hope was that the judge would see it, would accept the smear, and would turn over keys of my company to them.β
Earlier this month, receiver Phillip Young asked a judge to rule on whether additional assets tied to the Uncle Nearest distilleryβincluding the whiskey, a restaurant and entertainment venue in Shelbyville, Tennessee, and a Marthaβs Vineyard property purchased by the Weavers in 2023βshould be included in the receivership.
On Oct. 21, Weaver, who founded the company with her husband, Keith, filed a response opposing the receiverβs request to bring 10 additional businesses under court control. The receiver had sought βclarificationβ on whether to include these entities, citing the apparent intermingling of finances with the distillery placed in receivership in September.
In their filing, the Weavers argued that the entities are separate from the distillery and not responsible for its debts, warning that placing them under the receiverβs control would strip them and others of their financial interests. The motion also claims that Uncle Nearest is not insolvent and has enough assets to cover the defaulted loans without involving other businesses.
βIf you can get the judge to believe that we misappropriated funds to buy a property, a vacation homeβletβs be clear, Iβm from California, what Iβm not going to do is buy a vacation home thatβs not on the water in a town that is not sunny nine months out of the year,β Weaver said at the conference.
Weaverβs latest filing follows an August motion asserting that Farm Creditβs receivership request βignores critical contextβ and that the lender failed to take proper legal steps to secure its claim on the property as collateral in the event of a loan default, a point Weaver reiterated during the conference.
βThey didnβt have security over any of our collateral. And the question becomes, why not? Why did you not ask to perfect seven of our eight pieces of real estate? Marthaβs Vineyard is just one of them,β Weaver said.
Nearest Green Distillery and Uncle Nearest whiskey were placed under a receiverβs control last month. Celebrated as the second-best-selling Tennessee whiskey in the United States after Jack Danielβs, the brand has earned numerous awards and sustained sales growth despite a post-pandemic downturn in alcohol consumption.
But the distillery is among several facing financial challenges as Americans drink less and exports decline amid trade tensions from President Donald Trumpβs tariff war. Despite the receivership, Weaver remains committed to the company she founded, viewing the struggles as part of the risks inherent in entrepreneurship.
βEvery entrepreneur is going to have a moment in time where it looks like all is lost,β Weaver said. βThe only difference between those who have been the most successful entrepreneurs in American history and those who have failed are those who gave up in the in between.β
RELATED CONTENT: Uncle Nearest CEO Fawn Weaver Is βUnshaken And Unmovedβ By Receivership Order


