Minnesota family acquires Polaroid majority in $70M deal. MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Minnesota's Pohlad family has acquired majority ownership of Polaroid in a $70 million deal.
  Minnetonka-based  Polaroid is best known for making instant cameras but the name can be  found on a variety of electronic goods, including tablets, cameras and  flat-screen TVs. The company filed for bankruptcy protection in 2008 and  most of its assets were sold to private investors the following year  but the bankruptcy estate still had a partial ownership stake in the  company.
  Last week, a federal bankruptcy judge approved selling that ownership stake to the Pohlads and an undisclosed partner, the Star Tribune  reported. The Pohlad-owned Marquette Cos. also acquired ownership from  previous investors in Polaroid to gain control of about 65% of the  company.
  The transaction was completed Monday, the newspaper reported.
  "We  are doing this for three reasons," Jann Ozzello Wilcox, the chief  investment officer for Marquette Cos., said in a statement to the Star Tribune.  "First, we continue to seek good, strategic growth opportunities;  second, we see Polaroid as an iconic brand with a licensing model that's  working, and third, it's a local company with a solid management team."
  Polaroid CEO Scott Hardy said in a statement the deal will bring stable family capital to the Polaroid brand over the long term.
   
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  "This  sale will be the next step in the ongoing resurgence of our iconic  American brand and we are very excited about what it means for Polaroid  in 2015 and beyond," Hardy said.
  Polaroid was founded in 1937 in  Cambridge, Mass., by inventor Edwin Land. The company shook up the  photography world in 1948 with the first instant camera.
  The Pohlads are one of the wealthiest families in Minnesota and have owned the Minnesota Twins baseball team since 1984.
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