Other original stores included Braun's Fashions, Maurices, The Athlete's Foot, Radioshack, and Regis Salon.
[8] In 2014, Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin filed fraud charges against Cabot Investment Properties, accusing them of operating a ponzi scheme.
[6] Local investors, many of whom were retired or elderly, had each paid $213,000 for a three percent ownership stake in the mall, which was then lost due to embezzlement.
[9][10] After Cabot Investment Properties defaulted, the court placed the mall in receivership, with Jones Lang LaSalle being appointed as the receiving owner.
[14] Planned tenants included a Fresh Thyme Farmers Market grocery store and a new branch of the Brown County Library.