Yeah, usually it does. WWASP had a particular board of directors and advisors and staff and a particular set of assets. This new entity, WWASPS, might have a different set of responsible parties and it might be difficult to show the assets still belonging to the new set of individuals responsible for this new corporation.
I don't have the details, but this is the usual scenareo. In one case that I know of, the new organization, SAFE, actually sued the state to prevent investigation by anyone familiar with the old corporate entity, Straight, Orlando. And they won.
Penalties against possession of a drug should not be more damaging to an individual than the use of the drug itself
--Jimmy Carter