AKRON, Ohio -- For the second time in a year, Summit County will try to auction off Akron's abandoned, rotting and dilapidated Rolling Acres Mall.

The 850,000-square-foot cavern, complete with shattered glass, snow-covered escalators and what appear to be bullet holes, is up for sale in Tuesday's Summit County Sheriff's Sale for just over $1 million, plus $1.4 million in unpaid taxes.

It remains to be seen whether or not the owner of the mall, a one-act corporation called Premier Ventures, will file for bankruptcy for a second time to thwart the sale and hang onto the asset.

Premier, under California investor John Kia, did just that last October when it filed for bankruptcy in California. This February the California bankruptcy court threw out the filing because Kia couldn't prove his company did business in the state.

Premier Ventures is registered in Delaware and could claim standing in an Ohio bankruptcy court. Court filings indicate that the mall, which still has an outstanding mortgage from Beverly Hill ponzi schemer Ezri Namvar's now-defunct investment company, was Premier Ventures only asset.

County Assistant Prosecutor Regina Van Vorous, said the company still has time to file a bankruptcy overnight. The company could also file before a second sale, June 30, if the mall goes unsold Tuesday.

If the mall is not sold after the June 30 sale, the county has said it will turn the mall over to the city of Akron.

The mall has been vacant since 2008, when FirstEnergy turned off electricity following a series of unpaid power bills. Premier Venutures bought the mall off another Southern California Investment house, Invest Commercial, for over $3 million in 2010 and has never paid a tax bill.