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This presentation provides an in-depth analysis of the bankruptcy system, including the history, types of bankruptcy, exemptions, lack of privacy, non-dischargeable debts, and the impact on family and friends. Learn why the CARE program may not be the best option for you.
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Why You Don’t Want to Go into Bankruptcy CARE PROGRAM
This presentation will cover the following topics • How we got to today’s bankruptcy system • Chapter 7 or Chapter 13? • Exemptions • Why there is no privacy in bankruptcy • Non-dischargeable debts • Bankruptcy hits your family and friends
Bankruptcy in history • Before bankruptcy, there was debtor’s prison (read Charles Dickens) • Bankruptcy laws started in early 1840s • Modern bankruptcy law started in 1898, revised since then • Credit card companies successfully lobbied for bankruptcy law changes in 2005 to make bankruptcy tougher for consumers
Two main types of consumer bankruptcy • Chapter 7 and chapter 13 • Things that chapter 7 and chapter 13 have in common: • You have to go through the court process. You have to appear before a judge and report to a bankruptcy trustee • For all practical purposes, you have to hire a lawyer. That costs even more money • You have to go through approved credit counseling before filing. • It’s a black mark on your credit report: 10 years
Key features of Chapter 7 • You turn over all your assets except “exempt assets” to a bankruptcy trustee. • Bankruptcy trustee sells all your assets to pay creditors. • You get a fresh start by “discharging” old debts, but . . .
Key features of Chapter 7 • There are some debts you don’t discharge (more on that in a minute) • “Discharge” means you are legally excused from paying those debts--but credit reporting agencies can still report this information • After 2005 Bankruptcy Code changes, not available for everyone. If your discretionary income is too high, you are not allowed to file chapter 7.
Look at the forms you have to complete to show income calculation
Key features of Chapter 13 • You retain control of your assets. • You must write a “plan” to repay your debts over 3 to 5 years. • The plan must channel all your income other than necessary living expenses to debt repayment. • You get a broader discharge than in chapter 7, but only if you complete your plan.
Exemptions: in Illinois they are limited • Technically, creditors and the trustee cannot collect on exempt assets. • But they can sell assets whose value exceeds the exempt amount and give you just the cash amount of the exemption.
Illinois Exemptions • Home: $15,000 • 1 motor vehicle: $2400 • Life insurance, 401(k), social security, certain other retiree benefits • School books, family pictures, Bible, clothes • Professional books and tools of the trade: $1500 • Catch-all: $4,000 • Not much else
Remember, bankruptcy can happen to anyone! TeresaGiudice TiaCarrere 50 Cent LarryKing MichaelVick AbrahamLincoln ToniBraxton Terri Polo
Why There is No Privacy in Bankruptcy • Bankruptcy debtors have to reveal vast amounts of detailed, intimate, sometimes embarrassing information • You sign under penalty of perjury • It’s all public record
For example, look at some of the personal information Michael Vick had to reveal in his bankruptcy
Trustee makes the debtor answer questions in front of creditors • Trustees can take away jewelry, car keys on the spot • Creditors can make you answer questions about your life for the last several years
You cannot discharge out of some debts • For example: • Student loans (see next slide) • Luxury consumer debts over $500 within 90 days of bankruptcy • Cash advances over $750 within 70 days of bankruptcy • Debts as a result of fraud
Student Loans • Not dischargeable unless “UNDUE HARDSHIP” • Undue hardship is the present and future inability to repay the debt and maintain a minimal standard of living • Only one percent of student loan debt gets discharged based upon a showing of undue hardship
And remember . . . • A private employer is legally entitled to turn you down for a job simply because you filed for bankruptcy!
It can drag in your family and friends • The bankruptcy trustee can sue these people to give the trustee money • Gifts within 2 years of bankruptcy, e.g., to family and friends • Paying off family debts within 1 year of bankruptcy.
Conclusion • Bankruptcy takes away your privacy • Bankruptcy touches your family, friends, and job • Bankruptcy doesn’t protect you from all your creditors • Bankruptcy is expensive – financially and emotionally • Bankruptcy destroys your credit
Presentation of Chicago CARE Program Graphic Design: Bonnie McDuffie