I'd advise against it. ESOP's are not for mom & pops usually so I'm surprised there was no trustee who oversaw the sale; no board in place or the new owners that feel this may be an overreach by the old owners. Who hired the valuation firm? If there was a discretionary trustee for the sale, that's the likely trustee who should be hired as the directed trustee. The sale is already suspicious if no trustee oversaw the sale, then to let the old owner act as trustee, you're asking for a lawsuit! Just negotiate a fee with a bona fide ESOP trustee, one who knows the ESOP community and the ESOP rules and can advise the board. The former seller (only if they have an installment note) should be on the board, chairman is okay, but that's it. You need formality formality and formality now or the DOL will be calling on you. In fact, the DOL will know when you don't have an outside trustee and will be calling. Be prepared for a real ESOP Trustee to walk away from taking you on if this was a suspicious sale. Then go to your banker and see if they'll do it. Good Luck!