Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Chapter 11 Explained


When a person or a business needs to file for bankruptcy protection, there are several chapters within the United States Bankruptcy Code under which the initial petition can be filed that will govern the subsequent proceedings.  While many people understand the basics for bankruptcy petitions that are more consumer-oriented and usually filed under Chapter 7 or Chapter 13, many see filings under Chapter 11 of the code as extremely complicated and difficult to understand.

While a bankruptcy filing under Chapter 11 is usually a complicated matter, there are some basics that are not difficult to understand.  However, this is not a filing that one should attempt to take on individually.  You will need professional help in order to make sure that all goes as it should, so contact a bankruptcy lawyer today to schedule an initial consultation if you are having trouble meeting your obligations.

Basic Procedure under Chapter 11

Generally, a Chapter 11 filing is done by businesses, and this sort of filing is known as either a 'reorganization bankruptcy' or a 'rehabilitation bankruptcy.'  The reason for these labels is that a Chapter 11 filing basically gives the petitioner time to put together a plan that helps it get out from under the debts it cannot pay at the time of the filing and to one day 'emerge' from bankruptcy.

Below is a brief look at the procedures involved with a Chapter 11 filing:


Initial filing - When a business files for Chapter 11 protection, the court will order that the creditors cease with collection efforts while the case is pending, much like in a consumer bankruptcy filing.
Disclosure statement - The filing party must also file a disclosure statement that lists all assets and liabilities as well as a plan for reorganization that details how the debts will be paid during the plan's duration.
Creditors' committee - When a filing occurs, the largest creditors are usually grouped into a committee that will vote on the reorganization plan.  If the plan is approved, the parties move forward under it.  If it's not, either the filing party must come up with a new plan, the creditors can come up with their own plan or the filing party can petition the court to 'cram down' their plan if it's reasonable on its face, and the court will rule on it.
Post-plan - When the court ultimately accepts a plan, the debts as constituted prior to the filing are discharged and the petitioner must make the payments proposed in the plan until the time has passed.  If the company does not pay under the plan, it opens up several possibilities for enforcement.




How You Should Proceed

If your Arizona business is struggling, it doesn't necessarily mean that it's time to shut the doors for good. You could emerge from Arizona bankruptcy just like many other companies have done, but you'll need the help of an experienced bankruptcy attorney. Contact Phillips & Associates today to schedule an initial consultation.




Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Things to Consider


If you think there are more people filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy this year than in the past you are correct. This is the type of financial repayment plan where all assets possible are used to repay debts, from checking and savings accounts to proceeds from the sale of inventory or personal possessions. Depending on the state, as a Chapter 7 filer you are allowed to keep a vehicle, your primary residence and a reasonably long list of personal items. The rules are slightly different from state to state, so be sure to check with your court or a local bankruptcy attorney to see how it works in your state.

Most bankruptcy attorneys encourage people to take a good hard look at their finances before considering bankruptcy. Although many of your immediate financial problems will be wiped clean, your credit score will be damaged and this may make it harder to get credit for a period of time. So at what point should you go ahead and file for bankruptcy?

If you are overwhelmed with debt and have failed in negotiating with your creditors, you might be a candidate for bankruptcy. When you do a tally of your assets and liabilities and you find that your liabilities are significantly more than your assets, it is probably time to take action. If your ability to save for your retirement or plan for the future has been put in jeopardy by the mountain of debt facing you, bankruptcy may be the answer.

Going through a bankruptcy proceeding doesn't carry the same stigma it used to and has become almost common these days. If you have more debt than you can handle, it's not necessarily your fault. Letting it ruin your life, however, would be a poor decision. Chapter 7 could be a tool to restart your life without debt. Just remember not to do the same things you did before that got you into this mess in the first place.

Finding a bankruptcy attorney to help you regain control of your finances could be the best decision you've ever made. Debt can become unmanageable for several reasons, most of which are beyond your control. The state of the economy has caught millions of people in the same predicament and there is nothing in it for anyone to insist that having impossible debt hanging over a person's head for the rest of their life is any kind of solution to the problem.

Many bankruptcy lawyers offer free consultation before it is necessary to choose who you want to use. This is a good way to ascertain whether you and the attorney are on the same page. It is also a good time to become clear on the costs involved in retaining a specific legal firm as well as what he or she expects of you as a client.

Interview several attorneys. Consider their background, their reputation, how comfortable you feel with them, and of course consider the price they charge. You may even want to check with the state bar association to find out if an attorney you're considering is in good standing and has no complaints filed against them. Choosing an attorney to advise you and represent you is an important decision that should not be taken without proper consideration.

It is not easy to make the decision to proceed with bankruptcy. But the fact is, bankruptcy can put an end to an uncomfortable chapter of your life and give you a fresh start. Hopefully you will come out of it with a better understanding of the dangers of credit, and a commitment to avoid letting it happen again.




Nick Messe is president of Lead Frog, LLC. In the Milwaukee and Waukesha area the Burr Law Office specializes in bankruptcy and debt relief services. Milwaukee Chapter 7 bankruptcy is an effective way to eliminate many types of debt and have a fresh financial start - http://www.burrlawoffice.com




Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Discharging Income Taxes in Bankruptcy - Can You Do It?


Can you get rid of (bankrupt or discharge) tax debts in bankruptcy? The answer is "yes," depending on the type of taxes and other factors.

Bankruptcy tax dischargeability analysis is very tricky and even experienced bankruptcy lawyers can have difficulty accurately determining whether a client's tax debts qualify. This will be a rather complicated and sophisticated article, but regardless of whether you completely understand it or not, you should always consult with a professional regarding your specific circumstances. Similarly, please understand that these bankruptcy laws are always changing, so what is contained in this article may not be current when you read this; another reason to always seek the advice of a bankruptcy attorney.

How Can Taxes Be Discharged in Bankruptcy?

The most common type of tax that people owe are income taxes due to the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS") and to their State Tax Board (in California, this is the Franchise Tax Board ("FTB").

The issue of how much of a tax can be discharged also depends on which Chapter of bankruptcy one files. This is because in a Chapter 13 case, usually some percentage (between zero and one hundred) is repaid to general unsecured creditors, whereas in a Chapter 7 case, nothing is paid by the debtor (the debtor is the person who owes the money and files the bankruptcy case). Priority claims must be paid 100%, whereas general unsecured claims can be paid anywhere from 0 to 100% depending on the circumstances. Thus, the first thing to determine is whether the particular taxes in question are priority debts, or general unsecured debts. Moreover, if the taxing agency has already obtained a lien against your property, then they are SECURED by the value of whatever their lien attaches to as of the date your bankruptcy case is filed. The secured portion of the debt must be paid 100% plus interest. The unsecured portion may be paid less than 100% if, but only if, it is non-priority (general unsecured), as described above.

Priority Taxes are never dischargeable

A tax debt is priority if it is owed for a tax year for which a return was due to be filed within the 3 years prior to the bankruptcy case being filed. This period usually runs from April 15 of the year following the tax year in question. For example, if you owe taxes for 2003, and you file your bankruptcy case on May 30, 2006, these taxes are priority taxes because they were last due to be filed on April 15, 2004 and that is within 3 years of May 30, 2006. Extensions to file will change that time frame (usually to October 15 of that year).

A tax debt is also priority if it is assessed within 240 days prior to filing the bankruptcy case. This time period may be extended if an offer in compromise has been filed, or a prior bankruptcy case has been filed during that 240 day period.

OK, that's priority. Simple rule: Priority tax debts are not dischargeable and must be paid 100%.

Additional Requirements

The next requirement to discharge the tax (or, in a Chapter 13, to pay less than 100% of it) is that the tax returns must have been either filed on time or filed at least 2 years before the bankruptcy case was filed. And last, there must not have been any willful attempt to evade or defeat the tax or by filing a fraudulent return.

If you meet the above requirements, then you can potentially eliminate a particular year's tax obligation in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, or potentially pay less than 100% of it in a Chapter 11 or 13 case.

There are many other types of taxes (sales taxes, trust fund taxes, excise taxes, etc.). It is too lengthy to analyze everything in this one article, but suffice to say that it is possible to get rid of some tax debt in bankruptcy, so don't just assume that you can't. Always seek the advice of a knowledgeable bankruptcy tax attorney.




Mark J. Markus is a bankruptcy attorney practicing exclusively bankruptcy law in California since 1991. http://www.bklaw.com/




Filing Bankruptcy - Is It Wise?


Filing bankruptcy is a familiar practice in the US. Over 2 million people file for bankruptcy each year. This may sound like a dramatic event that will change your lifestyle for a very long time, but the reality is quite different.

There are a handful of reasons a person files for bankruptcy: for instance unemployment, unanticipated medical bills, large credit card debt etc. After you have filed bankruptcy and the case is closed you virtually have a clean slate. Filing bankruptcy will immediately get your creditors off your back. And, with some cases (like Chapter 7) most debts are able to be discharged.

Note: Some debts like child support, taxes, housing mortgages, car loans and student loans are not discharged in accordance with Chapter 7 bankruptcy law.

Filing bankruptcy is an emotional experience. You will need an attorney whom you trust and with whom you feel comfortable. If you are not familiar with the law, you might forfeit your property and have a hard time filing a subsequent bankruptcy case due to new rules. Although it is feasible to file a case without a lawyer, it is recommended to shop around for legal assistance, especially when your house and automobile are affected.

The decision to file bankruptcy is a decision that only you can make. To choose wisely, you should research all your options before filing and defaulting. Filing fees typically depend upon the kind of bankruptcy that you have filed for, your specific situation, and your method of filing. In fact, there are a handful of ways to file your petition.

Filing bankruptcy will not hurt your spouse or your spouse's credit unless your spouse is listed jointly on any of your debts. However, if your spouse is listed as a joint debtor, sometimes called a co-debtor or co-signor, on any loan, credit card or other debt, your spouse can become liable for all of the debt as soon as your responsibility for the debt has been discharged in bankruptcy.

Filing bankruptcy should be a last resort if you want to keep a healthy and acceptable credit report. There are other options available, like debt consolidation.

Furthermore, credit counseling agencies can help resolve financial stress and individuals escape bankruptcy. Some people can reach compromises and pay off their debts, either with the aid of a counselor or by themselves.

Be sure to evaluate all your options before settling on anything.




For more Personal Bankruptcy options and information , visit our website.




Thursday, April 19, 2012

Free Bankruptcy? Or, at Least, Cheap & Low Cost!


Just by simple definition alone, a debt-burdened consumer who files for bankruptcy is presumed doing so simply by reason of the fact that he or she has no money. Hence, what better proposition for a person who seeks this than for him or her to be able to file FREE bankruptcy! Is it any wonder, then, that a common question asked by many consumers who contemplate it, is often something having to do with filing a free one?

In deed, from this writer's personal perspective, a completely free bankruptcy, or at least a dirt cheap bankruptcy, should be the rule of the game. Being a basic constitutional right of American citizenship, it should NOT be expensive. Rather, the honest and qualified debtor should be able to file for bankruptcy without charge, or at least at a low-cost, cheap price that the debtor should afford.

The central question for us here, therefore, is: How realistic or practicable within today's legal establishment, is the debtors' common question, Can I file bankruptcy for free?

PROSPECTS UNDER THE NEW LAW FOR NO-FEE BANKRUPTCY

Put very simply, the whole reality of the matter is that under the prevailing bankruptcy law and procedures that came into being since the passage of the new "reformed" law of October 2005 (commonly known as the BAPCPA law), the expectation, on the part of the debtor who seeks to file one today for a totally free bankruptcy, is almost totally unrealistic and unattainable for the average debtor. In deed, what the new law has done to the whole bankruptcy process, is that it has drastically added, not reduced, more and higher costs, especially the lawyers' costs, to filing bankruptcy for the filer. For example, the average bankruptcy lawyer's fees for the simplest Chapter 7 which used to be $750 to $1,000 before the 2005 law, is now in the range of $2,000 to $2,500 since the new law, while the lawyers' fees for Chapter 13 which used to be around $1,500 or less, is now in the range of $3,000 to $4,500. In addition, the court filing fees charged by the bankruptcy court to file the papers, have shut up significantly - by more than 33% of the pre-2005 law costs.

FREE BANKRUPTCY, A POSSIBILITY - BUT ONLY REMOTELY AND FOR VERY SELECT FEW

But is it possible, under any circumstances whatsoever today, for a debtor to file bankruptcy for free? In theory, yes. But, in practice, in the real world that most debtors have to operate in, the answer is absolutely NO! In theory, for the vast majority of over 1,000,000 debtors who file for bankruptcy these days every year, sure, a really proven, low income, cash-strapped debtor seeking to file bankruptcy could file for a court "waiver" to have the court waive the approximately $300 in court filing fees that are required, as well as other required costs for filing bankruptcy (for things such as Credit Counseling classes, debt management, etc.). However, for the average debtor, the hassles involved in being allowed such privileges, as well as the additional stringent conditions required for the debtor to qualify for them, are generally too cumbersome to the point that only just a handful really ever qualify for or use them. Hence, filing for bankruptcy for free, in the sense of not having to pay any of these various court filing and administrative fees, is merely a very remote possibility for only a very tiny few among bankruptcy filers.

And as to the prospect for free bankruptcy with respect to the lawyers' high legal fees for it? True, the lawyers' groups and bar associations have established some forms of pro bono or legal aid programs that are supposed to allow bankruptcy-seekers to file bankruptcy for free. However, in practice, only a mere handful of people qualify for such programs or ever use them. Hence, these days - unless you completely choose to file bankruptcy under some non lawyer option that is being adopted by a growing number of debtors today, by which you file without using an attorney - being able to file for bankruptcy for free without having to pay the attorneys' hefty legal fees, is also simply a remote, if impractical possibility for most filers.

DEBTORS' CURRENT OPTIONS ON COSTS - Free Bankruptcy Vs Low-Cost

A growing option for many American debtors to the closest thing to "free bankruptcy," is low-cost, cheap non lawyer BANKRUPTCY - that is, filing for it through the use of such methods as competent legal manuals and kits, credible and reputable debt relief agents and agencies and Full Service bankruptcy document preparers that specialize in bankruptcy filings. Contrary to the common notion often propagated by lawyers and bar organizations across the country, most bankruptcy cases are, in fact, really what is called no-asset situations, and are of the simple, straightforward garden variety kinds that readily lend such bankruptcies to being filed by the debtors themselves, without a lawyer or the lawyers' high legal fees for bankruptcy.

In short, the answer to the question: Can I file bankruptcy for free? Generally, NO. If you were to go about it the traditional way, which means having to hire an attorney for it, that notion is essentially out of the question. Call it a pipe dream, almost! On the other hand, however, you can use a non traditional alternative method (use of competent instructional manuals and kits, non lawyer bankruptcy specialists who specialize in preparation of bankruptcy papers for debtors at extremely low prices, and the like) to dramatically cut your cost for bankruptcy and reduce it to the point where filing for it will be affordable for you. And for you as a debtor, that will be, in the real world, the closest thing you'll ever get to a free bankruptcy or filing bankruptcy for free today in this super expensive post-2005-law bankruptcy era!

In sum, as to the answer to the question, 'Can I file bankruptcy for free?' That is a practical impossibility for the vast majority of American consumers filing for bankruptcy today. But, can you have cheap bankruptcy or low cost bankruptcy that will dramatically cut the cost down, if not completely eliminate it to zero? Yes. Possibly. You can, if you simply seek out that alternative method, and engage the services of reputable and competent agencies that deliver such services for debtors.

NEED MORE INFORMATION?

To conclude, if you are like most Americans (and chances are that you probably are!), you probably wish desperately to be able to file free bankruptcy, or, if that is not exactly possible, at least, a cheap and low-cost bankruptcy that is affordable? You can get follow-up and further information about this at this website: http://www.afford-bankruptcy.com/proSeBankruptcyTrend.html




Benjamin Anosike, Ph.D., has been dubbed by experts and reviewers of his many books, manuals and body of work, which dwell largely on self-help law issues, as "the man who almost literally wrote the book on the use of self-help law methods" by America's consumers in doing their own routine legal chores - in uncontested divorce, will-making, simple probate, settlement of a dead person's estate, simple no-asset bankruptcy, etc. A pioneer and intellectual and moral leader of the 1970s-based "you do your own law" movement and a lifelong vehement advocate and veteran of historical battles for the right of the American consumers to perform their own tasks in the area of routine legal matters, Anosike was one of the pioneers who fought and survived (along with many others of courage) the lawyers' and organized bar's stiff war of the 1970s and '80s against American consumers and entrepreneurs who merely sought, then, to use, write, distribute or sell law-related self-help books and kits for non-lawyers to do their own law, upon the lawyers' claim then that such was purportedly "unauthorized practice of law" or "practicing law without a license."

Anosike holds graduate degrees in labor economics and management and a Ph.D. in jurisprudence. Once characterized by a review of the American Library Association's Booklist Journal as "probably the most prolific author in the field of legal self-help today," Dr Anosike is the author of over 26 books and manuals (and countless number of articles) on various topics of American law, including 4 volumes on personal and business bankruptcy filing, in a lifetime of dedication. For more on the subject matter discussed in this article, or on how to get a low-cost, affordable bankruptcy filing, or the author's other books and manuals, visit this site: [http://www.Afford-Bankruptcy.Com]




How Bankruptcy Works by State


Numbers of local consumers newly uncomfortable with their accumulated debt loads are beginning to worry over the economic problems affecting Colorado and the nation as a whole. These consumers tend to flock toward bankruptcy attorneys to see whether or not Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy protection would better their situation, and, after the changes to the bankruptcy code following the 2005 legislation, whether or not they would even qualify for Chapter 7 debt elimination bankruptcy in their state of residence. While virtually all the citizens of Coloradan that we have spoken with maintain some knowledge of bankruptcy processes - after all, growing up in the United States of America, even children recognize that bankruptcy is meant to offer a fresh start to debtors who have gotten in over their head with bills they're unable to pay - most ordinary consumers are unaware of the actual specifics regarding bankruptcy declaration and eventual discharge.

While we can't pretend that the totality of knowledge floating about the potential repercussions and intrinsic loopholes of bankruptcy should be able to be glossed over in an article such as this, there is information every Coloradan debtor should be aware of before taking another step. It seems, from our correspondence, that almost no Coloradan not already working in the financial services industry has more than a cursory understanding of how their local statutes will protect their assets in the event that they do decide to go through with bankruptcy declaration. For instance, every state holds personal exemptions that borrowers can choose to invoke rather than taking advantage of the (generally far harsher) federal exemptions, and these may change greatly depending on the borrowers' location around the country. Any consumer seriously interested in bankruptcy should first do their own research on how bankruptcy (and, especially, bankruptcy in Colorado) could help their own financial scenario before paying the ever more expensive costs that comes along from even a consultation with experienced bankruptcy attorney firms. These lawyers charge by the hour, after all, and there is no reason to ask questions that could be easily answered for free should the borrowers have sufficient interest.

Once again, virtually everyone your authors have spoken with in Colorado knows the most basic information about bankruptcy protection - consumers with sufficient debt balances (provided they're the right sort of unsecured loans) will be considered for a Chapter 7 debt elimination program (provided they have not earned too much money in the preceding years) that could liquidate their credit card bills and similar burdens under the full protection of federal and Colorado state law. The bankruptcy process was originally legislated to offer a new hope for borrowers that have bitten off more than they could chew. To a large degree, for debtors sufficiently desperate and who have suffered genuine calamities necessitating governmental assistance, this can still be true, but, sadly, only a minority of people living in Colorado would actually qualify under current conditions. Fortunately, even as the official protections continue to dissipate, a number of new debt relief and debt management companies have come into existence which attempt to help debtors in Colorado and across the United States erase their more problematic high interest loans and learn proper household budgets and correct spending behaviors to preclude a return to similar situations. Since the discrepancies between debt consolidation and debt settlement and Consumer Credit Counseling are significant and each solution may be different for different sorts of Coloradan families, it should certainly be a priority for every borrower to learn all that they can about these debt maneuvers prior to helplessly concluding that bankruptcy would be the only solution available.

To be sure, however difficult it may now be for Colorado borrowers to avail themselves of bankruptcy protection, it is nonetheless a federally sanctioned legal right to at least file a petition declaring your intentions, and the very act of bankruptcy declaration prevents your accounts from debtor harassment or attempts at collection. Once any borrower files for Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy protection in the state of Colorado, the various lenders - and whichever bill collectors the lenders may have been working with - are legally required to end all forms of communication. Unless the lenders can prove that they will lose money by waiting for the trustee chosen by the Colorado courts to render a judgment on the borrowers eligibility for bankruptcy through depreciation of collateral or other means (this rarely happen), the filer should at the least be granted a sudden peace of mind just after declaration. This does not, of course, guarantee the Coloradan borrower shall qualify for bankruptcy nor that the Chapter 7 debt elimination proceedings would be advantageous once all the drawbacks were taken into consideration. Like virtually all elements of consumer finance, no strategies should be entered into blindly or chosen without time for reflection and sufficient amounts of research and self education that would allow all due deliberation. In this article, we would primarily like to go over the reasons each Colorado borrower may invoke when first thinking about bankruptcy, the various processes and statutes borrowers should be aware of before filing (as well as those alterations and exemptions specific to Colorado), and the other debt relief techniques that have become popular in recent years.

When deciding on the necessity of bankruptcy, there are a few different aspects each Coloradan should consider fully before making a final decision - or, again, even spending dollar one on a discussion with the bankruptcy lawyer they would consider using. If the interest rates on any given loan are sufficiently high so that the borrowers cannot satisfy much more than the minimum payments each month, Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 protection should certainly have to be thought of as an option. In the same way - this almost always goes alongside the previous problem, as a matter of fact - borrowers whose collected unsecured debts have amassed to a degree that they would be virtually impossible to repay over the near future may genuinely need look into bankruptcy or any other debt solution available in Colorado. Further, as you should imagine, the regular threatening phone calls and mailings from lenders or collection agents working on their behalf should be a strong warning signal that something has to be done. Remember, as soon as you start working with a debt management firm or file a bankruptcy petition, Colorado state law guarantees that all collector harassment shall immediately cease. In the event that secured lenders have begun the proceedings to enact foreclosure of personal residences or the repossession of automobiles (or, even, the much less common but still effective civil court summons for potential forfeiture of property), you'll have little choice other than to employ an attorney or debt professional to aid you with your financial burdens.

Essentially, Colorado borrowers must sit down with their families and struggle through the question of whether or not they can justifiably expect to pay back their worst bills (those debts either featuring high interest rates or adjustable interest rates bound to escalate plus loans which demand balloon payments or risk default) in a reasonable amount of time. What do your debts look like compared to the family financial situation of one year ago? Have they become progressively worse? Clearly, demonstrable headway that has been made in paying loans down should be seen as a sign that successive attempts at personal debt management may be enough to eliminate the majority of your problems while, in the same way, ever increasing debts are a reason to investigate bankruptcy or seek out professional assistance from your area of Colorado. Do you have any reason to believe that your income will greatly increase over the short term? Have you considered the overall financial free fall otherwise seen by most aspects of the Coloradan economy and the status of the American economy as a whole? If your motivation for believing the resolution of all debts shall come from some preyed upon inheritance or similar windfall, we strenuously counsel suspicion and a clear headed maintenance of resolve. You have no idea how many Colorado citizens we have corresponded with who let their debts fester while vainly waiting on a miracle only to end up declaring bankruptcy after their credit rating had been unnecessarily ruined (even worse than if they had gone bankrupt in the first place) and family morale irreparably harmed.

It's easy enough to recognize your problems when you have bill collectors breathing down your neck and even the minimum payments seem beyond hope of remuneration. Once consumers realize that they can't depend on their own incomes to better their own situation - no matter the attempts at controlling spending and hewing to a budget - it's a simple step toward bankruptcy. However, for those Colorado borrowers who have not yet reached rock bottom, who still think they may be able to climb out of debt burdens on their own, it may be surprisingly difficult for consumers untutored in the complexities of finance to understand just how potentially dire their debt circumstances may be. Any Coloradan resident with unsecured debt obligations in the amount of ten thousand dollars or greater needs to give serious thought to employ some debt solution program, but, still and all, this is still not necessarily the time for bankruptcy. For this reason, your authors advise using one of the debt calculators online to attempt some more accurate estimation of your payment time lines and how much you would end up paying in compound interest over the duration of your various debts. Even then, if you still have trouble with the math (and credit card companies have little reason to simplify this process), you may wish to talk with one of the debt management or debt settlement companies that offer free consultations to see what they would suggest.

Once again, in many situations, these debt relief firms are likely to say that utilizing the bankruptcy protection of federal and Colorado law would be the most beneficial alternative. Successfully undertaken, Chapter 7 bankruptcies could liquidate all applicable revolving debts - credit card accounts primary among them - and your authors understand how very attractive that scenario must seem. Discharged obligations are the cherry on the cake of bankruptcy protection, but there are other benefits above and beyond the potential of dissolution of legal debts much as that aspect garners the headlines. In Colorado, as we have mentioned, merely filing the initial documents for Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy declaration will force all creditors to halt their attempts toward debt collection even if court actions had already been begun to garnish wages or repossess vehicles. Indeed, even those assets recently reclaimed by the collection agency will be (temporarily, depending on the Colorado trustee ruling) returned by the lender following a bankruptcy petition. In the same way, utilities that had been turned off because of faulty payments will be immediately restored, and foreclosure proceedings for residences will be suspended for the time being. For borrowers who believe their mortgage company or other lenders acted in poor faith or had even committed out and out fraud but were unaware of how to alert authorities or afford proper lawyers, this time and avenue toward the courts should alone be worth the bankruptcy proceedings. It's especially difficult to fight multinational corporations when your power has been shut off, and the Colorado justice system will be allowed additional time to study and consider any borrower claims.

At the same point, much as Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection can do grand things for the lucky Colorado consumer, it's certainly not the savior to every borrower. Even if you are accepted into the program, you will find that dollar one of many sorts of debts - for some individuals and families, perhaps even the majority of your debts - will not be affected in any way. Secured debts such as home mortgages and car loans, presuming you wish to maintain the possessions that these debts are attached to, will be essentially left alone although the consumers will be asked to reaffirm these obligations with the original lenders. Student loans, for these purposes, will be considered another sort of secured debt since legislation pushed through congress in the late 1980s ever after disallowed the discharge of all education loans in Colorado and throughout the country. Furthermore, borrowers should not expect any funds that are owed for familial debts like alimony or child support to be done away with, and, for that matter, all debts handed down by the government or courts (from penalties to taxes resulting from criminal misdeeds) of America or Colorado are similarly rendered invulnerable. As another element to consider, should the debts have been co-signed, the other party may be held liable for the entirety of the obligation. Considering the limited debt liquidation available even from successful Chapter 7 bankruptcies, one can't presume the program shall best aid each consumer problem.

More to the point, there is also no guarantee that Chapter 7 protection will even be made available to every Colorado borrower that genuinely seeks an elimination of their burdens. Once a petition is filed for Chapter 7 debt liquidation, the court decides on whether or not the potential for unsecured loan discharge will be deserved. Should the Colorado court trustee decide otherwise, the borrower will be deemed eligible for Chapter 13 bankruptcy debt adjustment program which - while still forcing a temporary stay of collection that may be of sufficient help for truly needy consumers - demands a monthly payment to the trustees which the courts shall then distribute among the assembled lenders. Unlike the Chapter 7 program, even credit card bills will be largely satisfied by the original borrower under Chapter 13 protection, and the courts shall determine a budget (alongside the budgetary guidelines predetermined by the Internal Revenue Service according to their, shall we say, somewhat fantastical expectations about Colorado living expenses) that the household shall have to survive under for the sixty month period of repayment. In this way, aside from the temporary end to bill collector harassment, Chapter 13 will be not much more effective than any personal attempt at debt relief, but the programs legal restrictions could prove far more damaging should the court unfairly decrease your actual expenses or should your household earnings falter during the time of repayment.

There are other forms of bankruptcies, the different Chapter applicable under Colorado law range from those dealing with family farms to actual municipalities, but virtually every borrower shall only have to concern themselves with Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 protections. Really, since the Chapter 13 budgetary guidelines are so strict and the benefits so small, consumers in Colorado should only knowingly enter Chapter 13 when they have a tax obligations that they're otherwise unable to resolve or secured (mortgage, auto loan, investment) loans that are in jeopardy of default but which they believe they should be able to repay given reaffirmed terms. As happens, most every borrower that goes into Chapter 13 protections only does so because the Colorado trustee - following the directives of the 2005 congressional alteration of the US bankruptcy code - finds the individual or couple declaring bankruptcy earns too much money. The recent code changes examine each bankruptcy petition in terms of the filers gross income as compared to the median income of their state of residence. For consumers filing in Colorado, this means that a single borrower must have less than forty two thousand in earnings according to recent census information. A Colorado household with two members would have to earn less than sixty thousand, three members would need less than sixty four thousand, four members would need less than seventy five thousand and so on. Understand, beyond simple tax records of earnings, that the formal stipulation does not allow the Colorado trustee to look at the filers' debts but only their incomes, and borrowers who petition for bankruptcy without properly checking their figures against the median income of Colorado residents could be in for five desperate years.

The legislation of 2005 did more than simply make it more difficult to enter Chapter 7 debt elimination programs, of course. There is so much misinformation swirling around the recent changes that many of the Coloradan citizens we have spoken to are falsely convinced that bankruptcy protection which would liquidate credit card bills no longer even exists. As we have written, presuming borrowers pass the income regulations, Chapter 7 protection could be a salvation for the right filer, but, still and all, further hurdles have been erected. The documentation requested from all debtors upon finishing their petitions - from expense receipts to half a years worth of income evidence - has become far more challenging for ordinary citizens who have little time to go tracking down paperwork. Also, borrowers will be forced to take a credit counseling course before their bankruptcy will first be considered and, again, before their bankruptcy will be discharged. Not only will the interested consumers have to pay the not inconsiderable costs from their own pockets, they may have to travel some ways from their area of Colorado just to find a training course certified by the federal government. For many debtors, especially those who most need the assistance of bankruptcy protection, the time required by these various new obligations and the initial costs involved are more than they could easily bear. Frankly, once the charges for the courses are put together with the governmental fees and the truly significant funds demanded by the attorneys - more than ever, after the paperwork grew exponentially more difficult following code alterations, attorneys experienced in Colorado bankruptcy law are needed to ensure not only that borrowers find the best representation but also that they shield themselves from fraud charges following documents mishandled from laziness or neglect - personal bankruptcy could be out of reach just because consumers needed the protection too much.

There is still more elements to be considered for any Colorado borrower considering bankruptcy. Either form of debt protection thoroughly harms credit ratings and F.I.C.O scores for years afterwards, up to a decade in the worst possible case, and filers should expect interest rates approaching twenty percent for vehicle loans or whatever other credit accounts they could land. Even more troubling, Chapter 7 bankruptcies, even presuming the trustee should agree that the case should go forward (and presuming the debtor could afford to declare bankruptcy in the first place), essentially guarantees that the courts are now in charge of the filers personal possessions. As long as debt elimination bankruptcy has existed in the United States, the assets of those borrowers accepted into what became known as the Chapter 7 bankruptcy were subject to forfeiture by the courts and eventual auction with the funds to be handed over the lenders whose burdens would be defaulted upon. However, previously, the courts only looked at the potential resale value of the household items when deciding what and what was not an asset while, currently, borrowers must now worry about their lives possessions being prized as according to their replacement value which renders most everything up for grabs.

Colorado borrowers declaring Chapter 7 are considerably more fortunate than their fellow citizens in this matter. Under Colorado state exemptions - as opposed to federal ones - residents filing for bankruptcy may vouchsafe household furnishings up to three thousand dollars, tools of trade up to twenty thousand, and two thousand dollars worth of art, music, collectibles, or hobby equipment. Compared to the national exemptions, the Colorado bankruptcy statutes should be seen as exceedingly generous. Furthermore, under the Colorado homestead exemption, residents filing for bankruptcy may keep their homes provided there is not more than sixty thousand dollars of equity as would be proven by recent appraisal (which should not be much of a problem given the current real estate market slowdown), and they're also able to keep their automobiles as long as there is not more than five thousand dollars of equity from blue book pricing (which, for most any vehicle, should not be an issue at all). Furthermore, aside from the homestead, all of these Colorado exemptions would be doubled for married couples filing jointly. Also, though this is true for most of the nation, retirement plans (social security benefits, I.R.A, and most any pension) won't be touched as well as most forms of public assistance including unemployment compensation and veterans benefits no matter how large the eventual funds may be.

Even though debtors filing for bankruptcy protection in Colorado are demonstrably better off than their counterparts throughout America, any consumers who remain curious about the option should keep in mind how quickly - regardless of the exemptions Colorado grants - the values of household possessions could grow depending upon the wrong trustee at the wrong time. Again, depending upon circumstances, Chapter 7 or, even, Chapter 13 bankruptcy declaration could be the right choice for a certain sort of Colorado borrower, but other alternatives should not be ignored. Admittedly, the depressed property values in Colorado, particularly the Denver and Colorado Springs areas, should effectively preclude mortgage debt consolidation for any borrower that wants to keep their family residence. Also, the Consumer Credit Counseling approach has recently come into question after the income profile of most consumer credit counseling companies showed that they accepted as much if not more from the credit card companies they were supposedly fighting against as they did from their debtor clients. When speaking with Coloradan borrowers that managed to liquidate their accumulated burdens without braving the potential household destruction of bankruptcy protection, the industry that comes up time and again as a success story has been debt settlement.

After employing a certified and experienced debt settlement negotiator to use the very threat of Chapter 7 debt elimination against the lenders, these counselors regularly induce representatives of the credit card companies to cut the accounts owed by as much as fifty percent with minimal effects toward the borrowers' credit ratings. Nothing comes for free, of course, and the debt settlement companies shall still insist upon an eventual repayment of the lingering unsecured balances in less than five years. Obviously, the debt settlement firms also have little assistance to offer with those loans attached to neither collateral nor any governmental protections. Nevertheless, considering the minimal upfront costs and the limited damage done to credit reports and F.I.C.O scores from a successful debt settlement negotiation (as well as the long list of satisfied Colorado debt settlement clients we have corresponded with over the past year), your authors would be remiss if we did not urge every potential filer for bankruptcy protection to at least have a chat with a local debt settlement professional. Even if your area of Colorado doesn't have a debt settlement specialist easily obtainable in person, there is any number of relevant professionals available from internet sites throughout the web. So much of financial analysis ends up being conducted remotely, in any event, and, as long as the Coloradan client researches the online firm they wish to talk with, there should not be any more fear to web sites than from unfamiliar store fronts. It's still likely, even probable, that bankruptcy protection will be the best possibility for you and your family, but, as long as debt settlement continues to thrive in Colorado, there is no reason not to explore other solutions.




For more information on this topic or if you are in immediate need of debt relief or debt settlement, please visit TotalDebtRelief.net.




Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Is Chapter 7 Personal Bankruptcy Really the Best Answer to Your Financial Problems?


With all the current problems in the economy, many people are naturally thinking about declaring personal bankruptcy. But is this really the best answer to your financial problems? Well, there isn't a single answer for everyone. So much depends on your own particular set of circumstances, which is why it is very important that you sit down and speak with professionals like financial advisors and bankruptcy attorneys.

There are a number of things you need to consider before making a final decision regarding how to tackle your personal debt. For one thing, you need to look at the total amount of debt that you owe and how long it would take you to pay it off using your current salary and expenses. One rule of thumb is to ask yourself whether you could pay this off within a few years while maintaining a reasonable budget. Here I use the term reasonable to imply that you will need to make some sacrifices, but I don't mean that you need to live in squalor in order to pay off your debts.

If you can't see yourself taking care of your debts within the next few years, you need to at least consider personal bankruptcy with the help of a good lawyer. It is possible that a bankruptcy lawyer would try to convince you to file Chapter 7 just so he or she can make a commission on your case. However, your lawyer should explain to you why bankruptcy is the best option and should be willing to answer all your questions to help you gain the peace of mind you desperately need.

Of course, there are many myths floating around concerning Chapter 7 bankruptcy, and many people don't even think they would qualify under the new law. In many cases this is not a true. There are some increased requirements such as mandatory personal counseling and a means test which will look at your income and expenses much more closely in order to determine whether you can afford to pay part of your financial obligations. However, most people who would have previously qualified still have a good chance if they follow the advice of a good bankruptcy attorney.




If you would like more information about personal bankruptcy as well as general information on finding debt relief, please visit http://freebankruptcyevaluation.org




Lawyer Jokes Aside, Tax Attorneys Can Save You Money


Do you owe back taxes and do not know what your next step should be? Are you intimidated by the legal system and for that reason resisting asking for assistance? Back taxes are serious issues that should be dealt with. By facing your problem as quickly and efficiently as problem, you may reduce the large amount of stress that can be caused from owing back taxes. Whether you are an individual, family or business you can truly benefit from hiring a tax attorney to aid you in your back tax issues. They are hired professionals that can assist in creating a game plan for you to follow and could even save you money by talking to the IRS and reducing any penalties you might owe.

Tax attorneys usually should be hired when an individual, family or business owes back taxes to the state or federal government and is not able to sufficiently pay them in a timely manner and IRS and the State Revenue are after the back tax payer. Another reason to how a tax attorney would be to simply keep ahead of the game and keep on top of your tax situation. They are able to organize and track your tax paperwork so that it is always in an orderly fashion. Businesses are complicated organization and keeping track of this is not an easy thing to do, tax attorneys are trained professionals that are able to do this for you, reducing the high level of stress that could result if attempted on your own. Remember, however, that tax attorneys are available to help anyone. There is no job to small or large. They are able to assist individuals, families or businesses. Even after paying the tax attorney the fee assessed, you save money in the long run.

Why are tax attorneys so special? They are professional individuals that are skilled and educated specifically in the area of tax relations. Taxes are what they do! There are several reasons that individuals do not file their taxes. These could be for financial or personal reasons. They could not be filed unintentionally or knowingly not filed. Either way, a tax attorney can be of assistance. Also many individuals do not know the seriousness of the tax system and take filing their taxes lightly. They do not know the implications that can result from not filing. The IRS has hired individuals who strictly just review back tax years. They are searching everyday for individuals or businesses who are not filing. They will catch up with you!

Tax attorneys can help you with your communication to the IRS. A lot of individuals try to do this themselves but it will not likely result in anything helpful. You have to have a keen knowledge of the issues at hand so that the issue can be negotiated and solved. Tax attorneys are trained professionals who speak with the IRS on a regular basis. They know how to communicate effectively with them to minimize your tax problem. To avoid any complications it is best advised to go to a tax attorney that comes recommended. Do not big money for a low quality tax attorney.

Bankruptcy is another issue. Tax attorneys are there to help individuals when the ultimate decision is the file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. Bankruptcy laws are extremely strict, stricter than ever before. It would definitely be in your best interest for a tax attorney to help you deal with these issues.

For a business, it is very vital that all of your financial plans and paperwork stay in an orderly, organized manner. If you are ever audited it will be in your best interest to be able to produce records and returns from up to six years previous of the year being audited. If you are simply interested in investigated your tax return options if you own a business, consult a tax attorney. A tax attorney can be hired to tutor you and your business on the proper way to record your financial data and how exactly your business should file. Also, tax attorneys might be able to shed some light on various deductions that you might be missing, aiding you in getting the largest refund possible.

It is essential that your business maintains their tax records and files each year in a timely and correct fashion. There might be massive penalties assessed if there is any earned income or profit withheld from being reported. You are responsible for this even if it was a mistake. The great thing is that a tax attorney can be hired to help you fix your mistake in a timely manner, most likely before any penalties are assessed.

Many people assume that if you are a self-employed individual or own a home based business you don't have to pay business taxes each year. But usually the sole owner is usually considered both an employer and employee. These rules and regulations can often be mind boggling, consult a tax attorney if you have further questions. Also, different types of organization and businesses have different tax rules and regulations and a tax attorney can help you with the game plan. This will end up saving your organization or business in the long run.

If you are just starting a business, especially if the business if located in your own home, a tax attorney most defiantly should be consulted. There are multiple deductions you will be most likely qualify for. Tax rules, regulations and deductions you are eligible change each year. It would be of your best interest to hire a tax attorney simply based on this reason. They are knowledgeable and know the most up to date information.




Lydia Sweet is a contributing tax preparation expert for http://www.taxadvisr.com and has been working in the tax preparation field for 13 years. taxadvisr.com is a resource site for those preparing their federal and state income tax returns. Free E-File software, discussions, articles, reviews, forms and more can be found at http://www.taxadvisr.com




Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Personal Bankruptcy - Minimum Amount of Debt Needed to File For Bankruptcy


If you're in debt and over your head then maybe you've thought about filing for bankruptcy as an option. Lots of people come to my office with the same question - "how much debt is enough to file?" The answer is stunningly simple.

If you can't pay your bills and won't be able to do so without a radical change in your financial situation, then you need to do something. Fast. Bankruptcy may be an option, but it's certainly not the only one.

There's no minimum amount that you need to owe in order to file for Chapter 7 or Chapter 13, but there is a rule of reason that applies. If you don't owe significantly more than the legal fees to file a case then it doesn't make sense to file at all.

For example, let's say you've got $3,500 in credit card debt and nothing else. You're unemployed and can't make the payments. Sounds like a slam dunk for a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, right?

Maybe not. Consider this: a lawyer may charge you a decent portion of that amount. Let's say you find an experienced, reliable attorney who's going to do the work for $2,000. Why hire him or her when you could easily use that money to knock out over 50% of the total debt load?

In this illustration, it's a bad idea to file for bankruptcy. You could take the $2,000 and put it towards your debt load, bringing it down to a total of $1,500 - something that might be more easily managed.

Of course, this assumes you're going to hire a lawyer for your case. Though it may be tempting to think that you should go the "do it yourself" route when dealing with a small amount of debt, consider the fact that bankruptcy is a highly specialized field of law. Most lawyers work for years on learning the basics, and the law is a complex and ever-changing beast. Even with a small amount of debt, your case could be more complex than you realize.

And if you mess it up... well, that just spells a lot more in the way of trouble.




Want more information about filing for bankruptcy? I'd like to invite you to visit http://www.NewYorkBankruptcyHelp.com to download my free report and learn more.

Jay S. Fleischman is a New York bankruptcy lawyer and New York State co-chairman for the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys. He is also the co-founder and past President of the Bankruptcy Law Network, where he writes on consumer bankruptcy and related issues.




Seek Advice From a Lawyer to Obtain an Understanding of Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Rules

Along with the economic climate in the situation it's in, lots of people eventually find that barely making it day to day is starting to become more difficult. The majority of people in America lived salary to salary currently, as well as a large amount of families had both parents working to pay bills. Along with joblessness rates jumping and also reduces in time and compensation, the typical household is actually getting a lesser amount of when compared in years past - without decrease in their own general financial debt. As a result, an increasing number of folks are seeking in the direction of personal bankruptcy as their particular hope for relief.
Sad to say Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 bankruptcy rules are extremely complicated to understand. Presently there are certain rights, disclosures, addendums as well as procedures within the laws and regulations that are around bankruptcies. Just like with salary taxes, they are created in complicated legal terms difficult for the typical person to understand. Almost everything one needs to understand to be able to file can be found on the web, but without pursuing the actual directions and specs as prepared an individual can perhaps incur penalties or maybe imprisonment because of this. That's where working with a lawyer who specializes in this field isn't just essential, but recommended.
While each of those chapters 7 and 13 apply to unique consumers in contrast to companies or corporations, Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 bankruptcy rules are different- one more reason why working with a lawful consultation is essential. Although an individual's first opinion of the variations in between the 2 guide them to think that one is preferable to another, the actual laws and regulations themselves do not fine detail each situation- which means that there's lots of interpretation included. Without a very good knowledge of exactly how each kind of personal bankruptcy will affect their financial responsibilities, one may select incorrectly- exactly where a lawyer might have assisted them make a decision that could have been in their benefit.
For instance, looking at the Chapter 13 bankruptcy rules, one particular might find that they should document with the court a plan to pay back their own credit card companies almost all or even a part of the cash that's owed using upcoming income. This could falsely guide them to think that they have to deal with every creditor within the plan- as well as accept much more pay back than required under the protection of the law. Right after talking to an attorney, the individual would have discovered that they can easily get rid of any kind of unguaranteed debts that they don't prefer to maintain, like credit cards. They might even make a deal on specific guaranteed debts, such as auto loans, to pay back what the automobile is currently valued instead of what's remaining on the loan.
Although a few may decide to not pay an attorney because they can document alone, obtaining a free of charge legal consultation at the very minimum amount is smart. Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 bankruptcy rules tend to be complicated and there's considerable time as well as effort required to be able to complete all of the needed documents for the court. In a consultation, a legal professional will make good sense out from the Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 bankruptcy rules and also assisted in the finishing of the necessary documents. Over and above arming them with this knowing, an attorney can easily recommend a person on what to state or not to state, as well as which form of personal bankruptcy enables them to maintain a larger amount of what they worked really hard to get.



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Monday, February 20, 2012

Taking it to Bankruptcy Court

The number of cases that people are filing in bankruptcy court is at an all-time high. With the average amount of consumer debt in the typical American household growing everyday, there is no end in sight.
People see bankruptcy as a new start for those who lost control of their finances due to one reason or another, but they often have no idea about the process that goes into filing bankruptcy or the long-term repercussions of doing so.
This is where bankruptcy attorneys are helpful. Without the help of bankruptcy lawyers, the entire process could be confusing and intimidating for the average person, so hiring help is highly recommended.
The rules and laws of any given bankruptcy court are governed by federal regulations rather than state regulations. While each state has its own laws regarding the process of filing and undergoing bankruptcy procedures, every state must follow the overall guidelines set forth by the federal government.
Once a person has hired a bankruptcy attorney and filed a petition with the courts to have all debts discharged through a bankruptcy, all creditors listed on the petition must cease any efforts to collect debts. The reason for this is that the bankruptcy court officials then handle the matter. If the proceedings are finalized and the debtors are granted bankruptcy, either their assets are liquidated to pay off creditors or they enter into a repayment plan, depending on which chapter of bankruptcy they are categorized in.
The best thing for a person to do when deciding to file bankruptcy is to seek out a bankruptcy attorney. There are many different laws and regulations involved in the filing process. Bankruptcy lawyers are familiar with specifics of the process and help ensure that the court treats the case fairly.
An attorney will also explain your options to you so you can decide which type of bankruptcy you want to file. In addition, they will typically accompany you to the bankruptcy court on your trial date and advise you throughout the entire process. Many bankruptcy attorneys will also put you on payment plans for their services for people who have no money saved for such an event.
Unfortunately, people often abuse the bankruptcy system by being financially irresponsible. More stories are being reported everyday about people who have filed for bankruptcy two and three times because they have learned nothing from their past mistakes.
Because of this abuse, the idea of bankruptcy has acquired a societal stigma that discourages those who truly need the fresh financial beginning that legitimate bankruptcies can provide. One of the advantages of bankruptcy lawyers is that they will accompany you throughout the process and add a sense of legitimacy to your claim.
Bankruptcy court can be an ordeal that takes a tremendous toll on a person, both emotionally and psychologically. Declaring that you have no money and no other options can negatively affect not only the way people view you, it can also have an impact on your own self-image.
People who are deep in debt often put off filing in bankruptcy court until they are certain that there is no other way out of their financial hole because of their pride or because they have simply exhausted all of their other possibilities.



Mike Selvon is the owner of various niche portals. Our bankruptcy portal is a great resource for more information on taking debt matters to bankruptcy court. While you are there don't forget to claim your free gift.



Understanding Bankruptcy Laws

The purpose of the bankruptcy law is to give honest people a way to get out of debt and start over again. The law does not help those who think they can simply avoid a debt they want to eliminate for whatever reason. This is an important distinction to understand. Filing bankruptcy is a serious decision with long reaching consequences on your credit, but for millions of people it is also a law that offers hope for a fresh start financially.
The bankruptcy law was revised in October 2005 largely in response to claims by creditors that it was too easy for people to claim bankruptcy just to avoid paying their bills. But if you are in serious financial trouble and cannot honestly pay your debts then the new bankruptcy law's more stringent filing requirements will not delay your bankruptcy.
The bankruptcy law has many different sections that address both individual and business bankruptcies. The law's intent is to distribute certain assets after statutory exemptions are excluded and then use the proceeds to pay off as much creditor debt as possible. The court determines which creditor gets what amount. All bankruptcies must go through federal district court, though each state has laws concerning the payments to creditors. This is just another example of why you need a bankruptcy attorney.
The bankruptcy law established "chapters" which merely indicates the kind of bankruptcy being filed. Chapter 7 is the one used most frequently by individuals. A court appointed trustee oversees the identification and selling of non-exempt assets and the use of the proceeds to pay debts. In reality, because assets such as a house and car may be exempted, there is often no asset liquidation required. Chapter 11 is used by large corporations that are reorganizing and need to restructure debt in order to survive. There is also a chapter 12 used by farmers and chapter 13 used by individuals asking for a court established and monitored repayment plan.
For individuals filing chapter 7 there are many different aspects to the law which can impact the final result. The law will not allow you to cancel some debts such as child support. The really good news is that you will not lose your home if your debt meets the rules for determining exempt equity. The same is true for your car. You are also allowed to retain cash accounts as long as the sum total does not exceed $10,000. The courts have recently ruled that retirement accounts like IRA's are also exempt.
It's easy to see that the new bankruptcy law has many complex provisions, but the goal of these statutes is to give you an honest chance to start over without a heavy debt burden. Your bankruptcy attorney will assist you throughout the entire process.



If you want to see more article about bankruptcy .please go to [http://mortgagedoubleplus.com/bankruptcy]



Thursday, February 16, 2012

What Makes It So Important to Hire a Bankruptcy Attorney Rather Than Filing on Your Own?

Bankruptcy defines a legal status in which a person or a business declares himself or itself as unable to pay back all his debts. In that case the law permits that person or business to file for bankruptcy in order to restore his future financial condition while also getting protection and relief from any harassing creditors. The types of bankruptcies vary and the type of case under question determines which type of bankruptcy will apply to it. Only a well experienced bankruptcy attorney will help you figure out which type of bankruptcy applies in your case. A bankruptcy attorney will tell you whether you need to file for Chapter 7, 11, 12, or 13 after analyzing your particular case. A bankruptcy attorney will guide you through all the legalities involved in the process of filing for bankruptcy thus saving you the time and energy required in studying them all and understanding them.
Filing for bankruptcy is legally permissible by any person, which means that hiring a bankruptcy attorney for the process is not a legal requirement rather just an option or personal preference. The only reason why most people prefer hiring a bankruptcy attorney rather than doing the work themselves if because it shorts the amount of time required a lot as an experienced person can deal with the process a lot quicker than one who has not done it before. The rules and regulations involved in filing for bankruptcy are quite lengthy and complex and difficult for an ordinary person to wrap his or her head around it. A bankruptcy attorney will help you by explaining all the pertaining laws and regulations to you.
When a person is forced to file for bankruptcy he or she will naturally be going through a lot of pressure. The biggest factor leading to stress and pressure is the constant harassment from creditors. But when you hire a bankruptcy attorney that person becomes your representative. Therefore all creditors know have to call your bankruptcy attorney for any complains instead of you. This means that you can easily get away with all those phone calls and personal visits from your creditors once you hire a bankruptcy attorney to represent you. This is the biggest peace that one enjoys after hiring a bankruptcy attorney.
Another great benefit involved in hiring a lawyer is that the attorney then becomes responsible for dealing with all the paperwork involved. In the process of filing for bankruptcy there a hundreds and thousands of papers and documents involved. For an ordinary person it is very difficult to be able to fill them all out without making any errors. Since a lawyer is dealing with these documents on a daily basis he or she will know them like the back of their hand. The chances of making any errors in these papers will become close to zero when you hire a lawyer. With no errors your case will roll out very smoothly and you will be done with it before you even know it. whereas if you do not hire a lawyer you will most likely make plenty of errors at this stage that can seriously cause a lot of problems like even the loss of your personal property and valuables. So why take this huge risk when a bankruptcy attorney is readily available?
These days the fees of a bankruptcy lawyer has decreased a lot making them more affordable by the general public. Carefully analyze the different attorneys available in your area and then hire the most efficient and affordable lawyer and have your case solved in no time at all.




The Bankruptcy lawyer will definitely help those people if they have filed for bankruptcy so that, the common people do not get over burdened with the debt which will be impossible for them to pay back.
Click here for Bankruptcy Attorney



What is a Bankruptcy Trustee?

When you file for bankruptcy, your case and your debts can come under the control of the court in the person of the bankruptcy trustee, whose job it is to ensure that bankruptcy laws are obeyed and that your unsecured debts are paid off as much as possible. However, the trustee's legal powers go beyond these simple administrative duties, as this person assumes legal control of your property and your debts as of the date you file for bankruptcy. To take an action without the consent of the trustee is to risk having your case dismissed.
Who is the Bankruptcy Trustee?
Shortly after you file your bankruptcy papers, you will receive a notice informing you of the name, business address, and business telephone number of your trustee. This person is appointed by the Office of the United States Trustee, a branch of the Department of Justice. A trustee may be a local bankruptcy attorney, or a non-lawyer who is knowledgeable about chapter 7 and chapter 13 bankruptcy and the rules and procedures followed by the court.
Once your trustee has been appointed, he or she may contact you with a list of documents to be submitted to this person, which may include bank statements, property appraisals, canceled checks, or perhaps other such documents, and the date by which these documents should be sent.
The U.S. Trustee
In addition to the trustee appointed to handle your case, another person called the U.S. Trustee will be involved, though most people who file for bankruptcy will never have to deal with the U.S. Trustee. Most of the time the U.S. Trustee will only take action if your chapter 7 bankruptcy papers and/or testimony at the creditor's meeting indicate that:
- you earn a monthly income greater than the state median
- your actual income is enough to support a chapter 13 repayment plan
- you are suspected of having engaged in some sort of illegal action which warrants investigation, or
- your case is the one in 250 cases randomly selected for audit
Should the U.S. Trustee take action in your case, all parties to the case will be notified of the proposed action.
Chapter 7 Bankruptcy
When you file for chapter 7 bankruptcy, your trustee will have a vested interest in your property, and how much you claim as exempt. The reason for this is that the trustee receives a commission on property that is sold in order to pay off unsecured debts. The trustee's commissions may be 25% of the first $5000, 10% of everything from $5000 up to $50,000, and 5% of any additional money up to one million dollars (though most of you won' t have to deal with that much value in your bankruptcy case).
If all of your property is exempt under the applicable state laws, than your case will be considered a "no-asset" case; in such a case your creditors will be told not to file claims since you don't have any property to sell off to pay them. In such a case, your trustee will not be too interested unless your papers indicate that you may be hiding assets. In the case that you do have nonexempt assets to be sold off, your trustee will manage the selling of these assets.
Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
If you file for chapter 13 bankruptcy, your trustee's role will be to oversee your payments under the repayment plan. In the event that you miss a payment, your trustee will help you get back on track, even give you a temporary reprieve if you need it. The trustee will also participate in any hearings on the value of your property. However, in most chapter 13 bankruptcies, you maintain complete control of your money and any property you acquire after your bankruptcy filing, so long as you are able to keep up your payment schedule. Your trustee can also amend your payment plan in the event that your income or property increases during the course of your case.



Leslie Donohue has supported charity car donation efforts across the United States. She believes everyone should consider car donations for charities before they go through the hassle of trying to sell a car on their own.



Sunday, February 12, 2012

What Is the Difference Between Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 Bankruptcy?

"Can you please explain to me, what is the difference between a chapter 7 and chapter 13 bankruptcy?"
Well folks, I am often asked this question and, while I am more than happy to answer it, it requires that we go back to Bankruptcy 101.
Let's start with chapter 7 Bankruptcy.....
A person must first make sure that they qualify before filing. A person will qualify for Chapter 7 relief if either: (1) their income does not exceed the median income level for the state in which they reside; or (2) if their income is over the state median, the "means test" is satisfied. In addition to the income requirement, before a person can file for bankruptcy, they must receive credit counseling from an agency approved by the United States Trustee's office.
If you are ready to find out if you qualify for Chapter 7 relief, the first step is preparing the petition. Preparing a bankruptcy petition can be overwhelming and confusing and that is why we suggest that you let an experienced bankruptcy attorney assist you with this process. There are a number of detailed rules and procedures that must be followed to ensure that your petition is filed correctly with the court and that you allowed exemptions are maximized.
Once a petition is properly filed, the court will appoint a trustee who will be assigned to your case to collect all "non-exempt property," of which he or she will take these assets and distribute proceeds to appropriate creditors. This does not mean that a trustee will take all of your assets. In fact, a person filing pursuant to chapter 7 may even qualify to reaffirm specific debts which would then be exempt from capture and repayment by the trustee. For instance, by signing a reaffirmation agreement a debtor can continue to pay for a car loan or a mortgage on their home.
Under Chapter 7, the debtor does not make a payment to the trustee for his or her services and a filing debtor receives a discharge on all dischargeable debts.
So, then what is a chapter 13 bankruptcy........
Chapter 13 bankruptcy is sometimes referred to a reorganization bankruptcy and is very different from Chapter 7 bankruptcy. In a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, most debts are discharged and a person is given a "clean slate" to start over. However, those persons that do not qualify for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, or those that want to retain valuable assets, may nonetheless seek financial relief through a Chapter 13 bankruptcy filing. In a Chapter 13 bankruptcy, a person does not hand over any property, but must instead use their income to pay some or all of what is owed to creditors generally over a three to five year repayment plan.
The length of a person's repayment obligation will be dependent on how much they earn in relation to how much they owe. If a person's average monthly income over the preceding six month period prior to the date a Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition is filed is more than the median income for their state, they will be mandated to prepare and propose a five-year repayment plan. If however, a person's income is lower than the median, they may propose a repayment plan over three years.
No matter how much you earn, your plan will end if you repay all of your debts in full, even if you have not yet reached the three- or five-year mark.
Chapter 13 bankruptcy isn't for everyone. Because Chapter 13 requires you to use your income to repay some or all of your debt, you'll have to prove to the court that you can afford to meet your payment obligations. If your income is irregular or too low, the court might not allow you to file for Chapter 13.
If your total debt burden is too high, you are also ineligible. Your secured debts cannot exceed $1,010,650 and your unsecured debts cannot be more than $336,900. A "secured debt" is one that gives a creditor the right to take a specific item of property (such as your house or car) if you don't pay the debt. An "unsecured debt" (such as a credit card) doesn't give the creditor this right.
Like Chapter 7, before a person can file for Chapter 13 bankruptcy, they must receive credit counseling from an agency approved by the United States Trustee's office.
The most important and unfortunately most complicated aspect of a Chapter 13 filing is the repayment plan. This is a detailed list that will describe precisely how a person will repay each of their debts. There is no official form for the plan and therefore it is strongly recommended that you seek the advice of an experienced bankruptcy attorney when preparing your repayment plan documents.
A Chapter 13 plan is required to pay certain debts in full. These debts are called "priority debts," since they are considered adequately important to move to the head of the bankruptcy repayment line. Priority debts include child support, alimony, wages you owe to employees and certain tax obligations.
In addition, your plan must include your regular payments on secured debts, such as a mortgage or an auto loan, as well as repayment of any arrearages (past due amount(s)) on the debts.
A repayment plan must also illustrate that any disposable income a person has left after making required payments will go towards repaying any unsecured debts, such as credit cards. It should be noted that a person will not be required to repay these debts in full or at all in some cases.
If for some reason a person cannot finish a Chapter 13 repayment plan, if circumstances are warranted, the bankruptcy trustee has the power to modify the plan, or a court may discharge the remaining debts in full if "hardship" can be demonstrated. If the bankruptcy court won't let you modify your plan or give you a hardship discharge, you might be able to change to a Chapter 7 bankruptcy or seek permission from the court to dismiss your Chapter 13 bankruptcy, of which case a person would still owe any remaining debts, plus interest(s) creditors discharged while the Chapter 13 case was pending.



My name is Christopher H. Ariano and I am a Phoenix bankruptcy attorney and managing partner of Ariano & Reppucci, PLLC. We are a boutique law firm located in Phoenix, Arizona that focuses on the preparation and filing of consumer bankruptcy petitions. If you are in need of an experienced and dependable Phoenix bankruptcy lawyer, don't hesitate to contact me today.
The information contained on this web site may provide general legal information but is not intended to give legal advice or counsel on any specific legal matter. It does not create an attorney-client relationship and should not be relied upon in lieu of legal counsel. The links provided in this web site are for the information and enjoyment of on-line readers and do not constitute an endorsement of products or services represented there. The hiring of a lawyer is an important decision and you should consider the information contained on this Website as well as other factors in making your own decision.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Which Is Better, Chapter 7 Or Chapter 11?

The selection to file personal bankruptcy under chapter 11 or chapter 7 is best to be decided after you have considered the advantages and drawbacks associated to the scenarios from the borrower. Current income and costs incurred should also be considered.
Chapter 7, is much more suitable for consumers prepared liquidate their non-exempt property in turn for removing troublesome debt. The non-business consumer will be forced to take a means test to make certain the case is suited for Chapter 7 if they have a frequent monthly income, specifically if their particular monthly cash flow is above $11,000 annually. At $300 the filing costs for chapter 7 are relatively affordable. For those that find it hard to shell out that sum it is likely to be able to get the initial fees distributed over a period of four months. Chapter 11, involves primary filing charges of over $1000, although the judge will permit these to can be ameliorated over a longer time period. Due to the complexity of chapter 11, attorneys' service fees tend to be greater than for chapter 7 because of the issues involved and also the considerable time that should be committed to the case. Though Chapter 7 is accessible to organizations it's more suitable for folks.
Individuals may be more suited to the Chapter 7 Bankruptcy rules if they are ready to liquidate their property in order to get rid of debt. A stay is going to be instantly carried out which provides the borrower relief from the demands of creditors, once the papers are filed. Simply because Chapter 7 then assigns a trustee to handle the details, minimal involvement will be needed with the bankruptcy court. The remaining procedure progresses in a reasonable fashion after all declarations are revealed plus a complete disclosure from the borrower's assets is made accessible for the judge. As soon as that is completed all the debt is going to be discharged, enabling the individual or married couple to begin his or her financial lives over.
Chapter 11 allows for the retention of a organization and the decreasing or reorganization of debt, for small business, partnerships, or sole proprietors burdened with unmanageable consumer debt. All the while that the bankruptcy is in process, the borrower in control of their company and is operating the company throughout the time of reorganizing, is furnished the power to keep the business active performing specific things like borrowing money relevant to the business under specific court appropriate conditions. Debtors should consider this choice cautiously, nonetheless, because of the fees involved, the complexity of the method and the length of proceedings.
The debtor is going to be expected to create a pay back approach immediately after providing complete disclosure of all fiscal belongings info connected to the small business. Loan companies may also be permitted to file reimbursement strategies, under particular scenarios. The borrower in possession, with unique right to file a approach for within 120 days from the initial filing date, may retain charge of their business enterprise.
In Chapter 11 bankruptcy, considerable obligation on the borrower, as borrower in possession, to interact with the bankruptcy court, the lenders' committee and others who may possibly turn out to be included, simply because the US trustee isn't normally appointed to take care of the specifics and generally just assumes a monitoring role. It's wise to engage a legal professional, and other authorities that will become part of the courtroom proceedings, as a consequence of this complexity of all the people that will be included in a Chapter 11 bankruptcy case. A firm or partnership will be required to be represented by a lawyer simply because the trustee has the capacity to demand settlement on approximately a regular quarterly basis.
Chapter 11 bankruptcy offers simpler alternatives for smaller businesses and reduces the time period in contrast to what is required for larger operations. The approach is still complex and there's the likelihood, should do cause be proven, it could be converted to chapter 7. Sole proprietors and smaller firms that wish to steer clear of liquidation may also consider chapter 13 bankruptcy as a less complicated and less costly alternative to chapter 11.



If your looking for more information on how to file bankruptcy in San Antonio, Tom A. Higgin recommends San Antonio Bankruptcy, and San Antonio Bankruptcy Attorney.

Why Do You Need Bankruptcy Attorneys?

If you also find yourself in such a case of mounting debts and torturing creditors then perhaps you should take the first appointment you get with a bankruptcy attorney. For bankruptcy lawyers it is their business and they know about everything that goes around in it so they will be able to sketch out a viable alternative for you which you might not even think can be worked out. So give in an expert and let them help you.
Along with repaying your debts and the bankruptcy attorney can also guide you to sell off your property in order to repay the creditors. And if selling off your property is not exactly your idea of getting rid of all your debts the bankruptcy lawyers can also assist you in making an arrangement with your creditors approved by the court to repay them in a pre-determined frame of time. Again, if you hire a bankruptcy attorney they are updated with every last bit of information regarding the United States Bankruptcy code. Bankruptcy is not an easily gliding procedure it can really confuse nonprofessional so a bankruptcy lawyer really can make things easy and facilitate them for you. The most common procedures in bankruptcy proceedings are Chapter 7 wherein you follow the debt liquidation or reorganization. The other one is arranging for repaying the indebted money under the Chapter 9, 11, 12, or 13 bankruptcies.
If you are thinking of filing for bankruptcy, a bankruptcy attorney is recommended. The rules of bankruptcy have changed and new norms have been introduced which a nonprofessional cannot be expected to know about. Again, the new rules have made it only difficult to file for bankruptcies all the more reason you will need bankruptcy lawyers to make your experience more pleasant after everything that you are already going through. They will be able to suggest you ways to get rid of your debt mountains, deal with your property and assets in a way that will benefit you and give you more time at hand. Bankruptcy Attorneys also work with the creditors and give them the assurance that their funds will also get recovered back. So a bankruptcy attorney is obviously a person you are going to thank once you see the benefits of hiring them.



Usloanz.com is the Web site where you will find a trusted Bankruptcy Attorney who will help you make decisions regarding Chapter 7 Bankruptcy and Chapter 13 Bankruptcy that are right for you.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

"Reformed" Personal Bankruptcy Law of 2005, Now Broken, Should Urgently Be Truly Reformed This Time

Time, once again, to reform the new 2005 reformed bankruptcy laws, and to reform the new reformed Chapter 7 bankruptcy? Or even the Chapter 13? On October 17 2005, amidst the highly charged atmospherics of high drama, robust promises and expectation, the new bankruptcy law, the Bankruptcy Abuse and Consumer Protection Act or BAPCPA, which had been enacted by Congress largely at the prodding of the Credit and financial industries, among other special interests, was promptly put into effect. Generally called the "reform" bankruptcy law, the law had been touted as something of a bankruptcy cure-all that was going to fix a "broken" bankruptcy system in America, most especially, reverse or drastically reduce the high volume of bankruptcy filings and the increased use of bankruptcy by American consumers in resolving their debt problem. The overarching, dominant argument and premise expressed by the banking and financial industry advocates and supporters of the reform law, and by its sponsors in the Congress, was that the growth in bankruptcy was due to "fraudulent bankruptcy filings" by consumers and the "excessive generosity" of the old bankruptcy system which, it was said, encouraged "abuse" and allowed a great many number of debtors to repudiate debts that they could quite well pay, at least in part.
A Congressional Research Service (CRS) report on the matter summarizing the "Legislative Goals of [the] Consumer Reform," summed it up this way:
"The high volume of consumer bankruptcy filings during the 1990's fuels the argument that the current law is too lenient, i.e., 'debtor-friendly' bankruptcy. Proponents of consumer bankruptcy reform cite many reasons in its support. The legislation is intended, among other things, to make filing more difficult and thereby thwart "bankruptcies of convenience"; to revive the social "stigma" of a bankruptcy filing; to prevent bankruptcy from being utilized as a financial planning tool; to determine who can pay their indebtedness and to ensure that they do; to lower consumer credit interest rates; and, to maximize the distribution to both secured and unsecured creditors. To effect these goals, the proposals implement a "means test" to determine consumer debtors' eligibility to file under chapter 7."
That was in October 2005 that the new law came into effect. Fast forward to today in March 2009, however, only less than 4 years after the passage of the new rules of the 2005 BAPCPA law that toughened the system for bankruptcy filing and made it far more costly (it more than doubled the legal fees charged by attorneys for bankruptcy filing) for debtors to file for bankruptcy. And we find that American debtors, once again, are fast returning to the same rate of bankruptcy filing as the pre-2005 levels. And the informed expert projections are that we'll land right back pretty soon at the same old "square one" in bankruptcy filing - back to the old "bad" high pre-2005 bankruptcy filing levels which the 2005 "reform" law just enactment by Congress was meant to cure and reverse. For the month of February 2009, for example, there were over 103,000 bankruptcy filings nationally. Spread over the 19 business days of February 2009, the filing rate is 5,433 filings per day - which represents a 22.0% jump over the January 2009 filing rate, and a year-over-year increase of 29.9% as compared to February 2008. In deed, by some expert predictions, the nation will register a rate of 1.4 million bankruptcy filings for the current 2009 calendar year.
Clearly, the "reformed" BAPCPA law has woefully failed in its avowed fundamental mission and purpose - discouraging American debtors from using the bankruptcy system in settling their debt problems by making the process tougher and more expensive and hassle-filled, and reversing the escalating or high volume trend in bankruptcy filings.
WHY THE 2005 LAW FAILED
The fundamental reason why the 2005 law has come crashing down so soon, can be traced directly to one basic reason: the whole BAPCPA scheme had been based on a premise that is badly flawed, in deed false, and totally unsupported by facts or evidence or research, but based largely on mere raw emotions and ideological thinking. Essentially, Congress, while conspicuously discounting the independent research-based evidence of scholars such as Harvard's Elizabeth Warren and others (see, for example, Sullivan, Teresa A., Elizabeth Warren, and Jay Lawrence Westbrook. As We Forgive Our Debtors. New York, Oxford University Press, 1989), ultimately bought the more emotional argument of the banking and financial industries that rampant "fraud and abuse" was to blame for the high volume of consumer filing, and that to stem that tide the law needed to be made more stringent so as to curb "bankruptcy of convenience" by debtors.
That fundamental premise happens to have been totally false and grossly in error, however. At the heart of it, the notion that most American debtors file bankruptcy because though they really have the means to pay up their debts, they just do not wish to pay and merely want to cheat to get out of their debt obligation, is directly contradicted by so many studies and emperical evidence on the subject. But, even more closely today, it is directly contradicted by current events. Americans have, again, turned around and resumed flocking to the Bankruptcy courts in record numbers precisely today at a time of clearly serious national economic downturn, joblessness, financial distress and depression, for a great deal of them. Why? Because they wish to or love to cheat? Clearly, NOT that! Clearly, the 2005 reform law failed woefully to take into account the central role that the overall health and soundness of the "fundamentals," or, even more accurately, the lack of it, involved in the nation's as well as an individual debtor's economic and financial condition - his employment, overall financial obligations, etc - could often play in whether or not the debtor ultimately pays back his or her debt.
"After October, 2007 [marking the two years anniversary after the new 2005 law], there was very little 'inventory)'' of consumers ready to file for bankruptcy relief," explains Etaoin Shrdlu, one analyst on the subject, writing in Credit Slips, an online bankruptcy forum. "The Code [the bankruptcy law] changed, but the economic factors leading to bankruptcy have not. If anything, they're getting worse. [That's why] I think that within the next couple of years we'll be back at the same filing levels we had in 2003 and 2004."
Elizabeth Warren, the Harvard Law School professor and author of several books on bankruptcy, probably sums up the point best, this way:
"The credit industry did its best to drive up the cost of filing [for bankruptcy] but when families are in enough trouble they will fight their way through the paper ticket and higher attorneys' fees to get help," adding that "The word is now leaking out [once again] that the bankruptcy courts are open for business."
In sum, today, as we now see, the 2005 bankruptcy law is clearly badly flawed, if broken, right from the beginning. Congress, it's now obvious, needs urgently to completely redo this law to truly reform the egregious flaws of the 2005 "reformed" law - this time correctly, we hope.
Among many other important considerations that the new, truly "reformed" law must include, perhaps the most critical of them all is this: AFFORDABILITY OF BANKRUPTCY; finding low-cost bankruptcy. Whereas the 2005 law sought to arbitrarily restrict or exclude qualified bankruptcy candidates from filing for bankruptcy largely based on false premises by making it more difficult and expensive for them to file, such new law should provide effective mechanism that enables virtually EVERY honest American debtor, once clearly economically unable to meet the debt obligations but overburdened with debt and otherwise qualified, to have low-cost bankruptcy filings. Even finding non-lawyer pro se alternative to lawyer. American debtors should never be forced to have to forfeit their sacred constitutional right to bankruptcy as Americans, to seek the relief of bankruptcy from their debt burden and get the rehabilitative fresh start that bankruptcy offers for a life after debt - AFFORDABLY.



Benjamin Anosike, Ph.D., has been dubbed by experts and reviewers of his many books, manuals and body of work, which deal largely on self-help law issues, as "the man who almost literally wrote the book on the use of self-help law methods" by America's consumers in doing their own routine legal chores - in uncontested divorce, will-making, simple probate, settlement of a dead person's estate, simple no-asset bankruptcy, incorporation, etc. A pioneer and intellectual and moral leader of the 1970s-based "you do your own law" movement and a lifelong vehement advocate and veteran of historical battles for the right of the American consumers to perform their own tasks in the area of routine legal matters, Anosike was one of the pioneers who fought and survived (along with many others of courage) the lawyers' and organized bar's stiff war of the 1970s and '80s against American consumers and entrepreneurs who merely sought, then, to use, write, distribute or sell law-related self-help books and kits for non-lawyers to do their own law, upon the lawyers' claim then of such matters being purportedly "unauthorized practice of law" or "practicing law without a license" Anosike holds graduate degrees in labor economics and management and a Ph.D. in jurisprudence. Characterized by a review of the American Library Association's Booklist Journal as "probably the most prolific author in the field of legal self-help today," Dr Anosike is the author of over 26 books and manuals (and countless number of articles) on various topics of American law, including 4 volumes on personal and business bankruptcy filing, in a lifetime of dedication. For more on the subject matter discussed in this article, or on how to get a low-cost, affordable bankruptcy filing, or the author's other books and manuals, visit this site: www.Afford-Bankruptcy.Com [http://www.afford-bankruptcy.com/]