I agree, this situation is indeed unique. I can't think of another company that has or had a BOD that benefits from bankruptcy as D'Enron's does.
They have done a really terrible job, keeping the burn rate crazy high because they couldn't admit to their past mistakes. They are almost completely divested. Even if they quit, as long as there is some cash, they will have to do deposition after deposition about why they behaved the way they have. Best strategy for them is to get rid of it all.
I really can't think of a comparable case. Most companies don't let criminals sit on their board and there are normally shareholders on the board.
If (the right) half of the board resigned, the stock would probably jump 50-100%. Whether you believe anything else in this post, you know that's true.