If you still haven't claimed your £12 a day travel expenses from that internship in 2011, or a latte your then-boss swore she'd pay you back for, now might be time to chase your former employees up on their debts.

Following the Weinstein Co's announcement that it had filed for bankruptcy on Monday, a 394-page document has now emerged including the names of thousands of people who are owed money by the film company. And we have a feeling you might recognise a few of the names.

David Bowie, Michael Bay, Daniel Radcliffe and the former First Daughter Malia Obama are but a handful of people featured on the list (which you can check out here).

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Last February, Malia interned for Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein in New York, rumoured to be in marketing or development, months before she attended Harvard.

Deadline reports that one of Weinstein's accusers, the model-turned-actress Zoe Brock, is also listed.

In addition to celebrities, the company also owes money to Netflix, Amazon Studios, CBS, NBC, and ABC, as well as charities like the American Fund for AIDS Research, Autism Speaks, and the American Cancer Society. Bizarrely, it's also in debt to the New York Fire Department and the Los Angeles Police Department.

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The Weinstein Co., founded in 2005 by Harvey and his brother Bob, filed for bankruptcy months after allegations of sexual assault and harassment against the disgraced film producer emerged last October.

In doing so, the company said in its initial announcement, it will also release victims of and witnesses to Weinstein's alleged crimes from any nondisclosure agreements they might have signed regarding Weinstein.

'Effective immediately, those "agreements" end,' the company said in a statement, ironically adding 'no one should be afraid to speak out or coerced to stay quiet'.

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Following news of the bankruptcy, New York Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman announced it was 'a watershed moment for efforts to address the corrosive effects of sexual misconduct in the workplace'.

'The Weinstein Company's agreement to release victims of and witnesses to sexual misconduct from non-disclosure agreements – which my office has sought throughout this investigation and litigation – will finally enable voices that have for too long been muzzled to be heard.'

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Katie O'Malley
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Katie O'Malley is the Site Director on ELLE UK. On a daily basis you’ll find Katie managing all digital workflow, editing site, video and newsletter content, liaising with commercial and sales teams on new partnerships and deals (eg Nike, Tiffany & Co., Cartier etc), implementing new digital strategies and compiling in-depth data traffic, SEO and ecomm reports. In addition to appearing on the radio and on TV, as well as interviewing everyone from Oprah Winfrey to Rishi Sunak PM, Katie enjoys writing about lifestyle, culture, wellness, fitness, fashion, and more.