Quick Answers to Bankruptcy Questions & Understand How Bankruptcy Laws Affect You

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Law advice please?

Thursday, November 20th, 2008
bankruptcy law

I own a small company, and we had a customer in 1998, who ordered a system for $6,000. They never paid us and kept the equipment. In 2000 they filed chapter 13 bankruptcy. We never got paid. 1 month ago the same company placed an order with us for $4000. My question is, is it legal for us to put that $4000 towards their old debt and not ship them what they ordered? Or are we screwed on that old debt because they filed chapter 13? Their lawyer told us if we didn’t produce the equipment or refund their money we could be sued. If that is true, it doesn’t seem to be fair, when they made money on us back then and we received nothing. Any thoughts?

Florida bankruptcy law?

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008
bankruptcy law

Is there a minimum amount of debt owed in order to file a Chapter 7 in Florida?

HELP! SORRY guys I have another question regarding the bank taking my car?

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008
bankruptcy law

Hello,

I cant help to wonder what would happen if i just decided to hide my car or just take it apart and then delcare bankruptcy? given that i still owe 27 thousand on it and also they bank is suppoused to repo it this week….. anyone????? i wouldent do this but just wane know about the laws and what not

I am an attorney in New York City who cannot find a good job. Can anyone help me?

Monday, November 17th, 2008
bankruptcy law

I don’t expect someone to hand me a job on a silver platter but good ideas would be appreciated.

I graduated from a top school but it was out of state and thus non-existent to New York lawyers. I had average grades and awards for public service. My school’s CSO is useless, can only find jobs in St. Louis, and has not heard of New York City.

I’ve been working as a temp lawyer for several years to pay the bills but now I feel I’ve been labeled as a “Temp” and thus untouchable. The work provides no marketable experience.

I’m not looking to be a big firm associate or an ADA. I know that’s not likely. I don’t expect to get 100 grand a year.
I want a job that allows me to pay my student loans and rent. If I have to I’ll try to declare bankruptcy for as much of my other debt as I can. I want to get a job that teaches me something or, in other words, invests in me.

I volunteered for two years during law school in SSD.

I have no connections in New York. Any ideas?

This power enables Congress to regulate working conditions across the nation?

Monday, November 17th, 2008
bankruptcy law

1. to enforce civil rights laws

2. to initiate national defense protection

3. to pass bankruptcy laws

4. to regulate commerce

who knows government best?
who knows the awnser?

Bankruptcy Questions?

Sunday, November 16th, 2008
bankruptcy law

I’m doing a project in my Business Law class, and I’m looking for an answer to these questions:

Under what circumstances would a person file for bankruptcy?

If you knew someone that was in financial distress, what advice would you give them/ what web sites would you direct them to?

What type of advice would you give your friend to help prevent him/her from being oerwhelmed with debt?

Also, I need the links to the web sites. If anyone could offer a hand, it would really be appreicated.

Thanks!!

What are the new bankruptcy laws?

Sunday, November 16th, 2008
bankruptcy law

How has it changed and what are the new requirements to qualify?

can someone check these 5 answers or help if there wrong thanks :)?

Saturday, November 15th, 2008
bankruptcy law

1. The fact that a candidate __ disqualifies him or her from representing utah in the senate
A was born in guatemala
B is 33 years old
C lives in utah, but works in idaho
D has been a citizen for 8 years

correct answer C?

2 An example of an expressed power of congress is the?
A power to tax
B power of franking
C veto power
D appropriation of funds for education

correct answer C?

3 __ is when congress regulates the laws pertaining to when a person or entity is no longer financially solvent
A bankruptcy
B copyright infringement
C patent power
D legal tendering

correct answer A?

4 Committee chairpersons are usually chosen?
A by the presiding officers
B by the majority whips
C on the basis of ability
D on the basis of seniority

correct answer D?

5 When a bill is introduced in the house, it is first?
A given to the rules committee
B read aloud in full
C given a number and a title
D debated by the full house

correct answer C?

What law is violated if a lawyer gives false info in a motion he obtained illegally in a police investigation?

Saturday, November 15th, 2008
bankruptcy law

I was a former NYPD Officer under investigation by Internal Affairs based on a bogus residency complaint. The NYPD had this open investigation going for months and really wanted to get me because I had exposed police corruption within the department. NYPD Internal Investigations are confidential! During this same time I was having money trouble and filed for Bankruptcy. The attorney for one of my creditors filed a motion with the Federal Bankruptcy Court detailing information in the confidential NYPD Investigation which he would have only obtained through the NYPD. The statements made by the attorney in the motion were never proven, the investigation was still open and confidential, and the lawyer accused me of something which was not even related to the Bankruptcy! I know the dept. violated guidelines but what legally did the attorney violate for making false statements in the motion and for divulging confidential police info in an open investigation?

The Government-Created Subprime Mortgage Meltdown?

Friday, November 14th, 2008
bankruptcy law
The Government-Created Subprime Mortgage Meltdown
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo

DIGG THIS

The thousands of mortgage defaults and foreclosures in the “subprime” housing market (i.e., mortgage holders with poor credit ratings) is the direct result of thirty years of government policy that has forced banks to make bad loans to un-creditworthy borrowers. The policy in question is the 1977 Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), which compels banks to make loans to low-income borrowers and in what the supporters of the Act call “communities of color” that they might not otherwise make based on purely economic criteria.

The original lobbyists for the CRA were the hardcore leftists who supported the Carter administration and were often rewarded for their support with government grants and programs like the CRA that they benefited from. These included various “neighborhood organizations,” as they like to call themselves, such as “ACORN” (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now). These organizations claim that over $1 trillion in CRA loans have been made, although no one seems to know the magnitude with much certainty. A U.S. Senate Banking Committee staffer told me about ten years ago that at least $100 billion in such loans had been made in the first twenty years of the Act.

So-called “community groups” like ACORN benefit themselves from the CRA through a process that sounds like legalized extortion. The CRA is enforced by four federal government bureaucracies: the Fed, the Comptroller of the Currency, the Office of Thrift Supervision, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. The law is set up so that any bank merger, branch expansion, or new branch creation can be postponed or prohibited by any of these four bureaucracies if a CRA “protest” is issued by a “community group.” This can cost banks great sums of money, and the “community groups” understand this perfectly well. It is their leverage. They use this leverage to get the banks to give them millions of dollars as well as promising to make a certain amount of bad loans in their communities.

A man named Bruce Marks became quite notorious during the last decade for pressuring banks to earmark literally billions of dollars to his organization, the “Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America.” He once boasted to the New York Times that he had “won” loan commitments totaling $3.8 billion from Bank of America, First Union Corporation, and the Fleet Financial Group. And that is just one “community group” operating in one city – Boston.

Banks have been placed in a Catch 22 situation by the CRA: If they comply, they know they will have to suffer from more loan defaults. If they don’t comply, they face financial penalties and, worse yet, their business plans for mergers, branch expansions, etc. can be blocked by CRA protesters, which can cost a large corporation like Bank of America billions of dollars. Like most businesses, they have largely buckled under and have surrendered to their bureaucratic masters.

Consequently, banks in every community in America have been forced to hold a portfolio of bad loans, euphemistically referred to as “subprime” loans. In order to compensate themselves for the added risk of extending these loans, many lenders have increased the lending fees associated with mortgage loans. This is simply an indirect way of doing what banks always do – and what they must do to remain solvent: charging effectively higher rates of interest on riskier loans.

But this is discriminatory!, complained the “community organizations.” Thus, if one browses the ACORN web site, one can read of their boasts of having “predatory lending laws” passed in numerous states which outlaw such fees, prohibiting banks from protecting themselves from the added risk involved in making forced loans to “subprime” borrowers.

These are price control laws, and price controls always cause shortages. Normally, banks would respond to such laws by extending fewer riskier loans. But in this case the banks are forced to continue making the marginal loans by their bureaucratic masters at the Fed and the other three federal bureaucracies mentioned above. So-called predatory lending laws therefore force the banks to “eat” the losses. This is undoubtedly a contributing factor to the bankruptcy of dozens of mortgage lenders over the past year.

Then of course there is the issue of the Fed’s monetary policy having created the housing bubble, characterized by a spectacular escalation of real estate values in every American city over the past decade or so. This created a further problem for the financial institutions that are victimized by the CRA. They are forced to make a certain amount of bad loans, but because of the Fed-created explosion in housing prices, many thousands of subprime borrowers no longer qualified, by a long stretch, for conventional mortgages based on their incomes.

The only way these borrowers could qualify for their mortgage loans (even ignoring their bad credit ratings) was to take out adjustable rate mortgages, some of which had astonishingly low first-year rates in the 3 percent range, and sometimes lower. This is what has largely fueled the subprime mortgage meltdown – the inability of thousands of subprime borrowers to afford their mortgages now that their rates have adjusted upward. Thus, the combination of the Fed’s enforcement of the CRA (with the help of political pressure groups like ACORN) and its post 9/11 monetary policy in general are the reasons for the bursting real estate bubble and the “subprime” mortgage meltdown.

Don’t expect to read about this in the “mainstream media,” however, which generally views groups like ACORN as heroic champions of the poor, laws like the CRA as anti-discrimination laws, and places all of the blame for the subprime mortgage meltdown on greedy capitalists, especially mortgage brokers. Encouraged by such reporting, the odious Senator Charles Schumer of New York has promised federal legislation that will reign in these miscreants, while the Bush administration is proposing an indirect bank bailout by having the Federal Housing Administration cover many of the bad “subprime” loans. This will create what economists call a “moral hazard” by encouraging even more bad loans to be extended in the future. Every banker in America will be glad to extend loans (at high rates of interest) to the most uncreditworthy borrowers if he thinks there is no possibility of default with the FHA effectively guaranteeing the loan.

September 6, 2007

Thomas J. DiLorenzo [send him mail] professor of economics at Loyola College in Maryland and the author of The Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an Unnecessary War, (Three Rivers Press/Random House). His latest book is Lincoln Unmasked: What You’re Not Supposed To Know about Dishonest Abe (Crown Forum/Random House).