Every Day Can Be Veterans' Day for Bankruptcy Attorney in Indiana

Friday, December 2, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

The Veterans’ Day parade is over, along with the free meals for veterans from area restaurants and the playing of the “Armed Forces Medley” at concerts and business gatherings. The challenges facing veterans when it comes to finding jobs – now, that’s war veterananother story, as every bankruptcy attorney in Indiana well knows.

“As servicemembers return from Iraq and Afghanistan, they face a tough job market,” reports
Marisol Bello of USA Today

I was discussing this very issue the other day with the Anderson, Bloomington, Indianapolis, and Columbus bankruptcy lawyers who work in the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices.  I realized that we’re all encountering veterans who, because of lack of a steady income, have reached the point where they need help filing bankruptcy Chapter 7 in Indiana, or even need payday loan debt help

The Indianapolis Star reported that homelessness takes a heavier toll on vets, who, once they become homeless, are more likely to stay homeless for longer periods than non-veterans.  Veterans are also more likely to suffer from serious health conditions. As a longtime Indianapolis lawyer for bankruptcy who offers Indiana bankruptcy information, I was happy to learn that the Senate has approved a bill that offers tax credits to businesses that hire unemployed veterans and also provides dollars for retraining older unemployed veterans.

Of the three leading causes for individual bankruptcy in Indiana - divorce, medical bills, and joblessness - the latter two hit veterans especially hard.  Often, veterans of the military suffer from medical conditions and even physical or mental disability, presenting an extra challenge when it comes to employment, along with extra medical costs.

In my Bankruptcy in Indiana articles, I’ve highlighted some of the special exceptions provided for service members in the new bankruptcy laws of Indiana, as well as special programs our own Lilly Endowment put in place four years ago to help returning Indiana veterans.

Handling medical costs, finding well-paying employment, finding good housing, and managing debt repayment are issues for all the clients of any lawyer for bankruptcy in Indiana.  But veterans deserve extra assistance making a fresh financial start after serving our country!



Anderson, Indiana Lawyer for Bankruptcy Wonders: Will What Happens in Alabama Stay in Alabama?

Wednesday, November 30, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

To all the good bankruptcy attorneys in Indiana who work in the Zuckerberg bankruptcy lawAlabama offices, Alabama is a long ways from home in terms of practicing Indiana bankruptcy law.

On the other hand, a recent piece of news out of Alabama was of great interest to us, because when, only weeks ago,Alabama County filed for bankruptcy court protection, it marked what Yahoo! News called “the biggest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history”.

Municipal bankruptcy is actually a topic I’ve been mentioning in these Bankruptcy in Indiana articles, despite the fact that, in all the years I’ve been a bankruptcy attorney in Indiana, the new bankruptcy laws of Indiana have made no provision for a city or a town or county to file bankruptcy.

My work, which involves individual bankruptcy in Indiana and small business bankruptcy in Indiana , is different in that, when a city or town files bankruptcy, it may or may not sell assets to pay debts. The point of the municipal bankruptcy is that it allows time for the municipality to continue to provide services to the extent possible while trying to sort out the debts they have and work with a bankruptcy judge to find ways to settle these debts. For example, Chicago bankruptcy attorney James Chatz said the filing allows all sides to have a moment of calm and then try to reach an agreement. In the meantime, Jefferson County can continue to run its operations and pay its bills.

One of my Columbus bankruptcy lawyer colleagues hit the nail on the head when she observed that it will be very interesting to watch as the Alabama County bankruptcy case unfolds.  As the Huffington Post states, “The biggest civic bankruptcy in American history could leave residents of Alabama's most populous county paying astronomical rates for public services performed by a skeleton crew of county workers. Or it could simply mean tightening the belt another few notches, depending how much of Jefferson County's $4.15 billion debt will have to be paid. It's even possible that, just as companies have benefited from bankruptcy, that the county surrounding Birmingham will emerge stronger for it.”

As a longtime debt consolidation lawyer offering Indiana bankruptcy help, largely through
bankruptcy Chapter 7 in Indiana and through Chapter 13 bankruptcy law in Indiana, I’m very interested in what happens in Alabama. If the bankruptcy process proves to be a successful remedy to the problems there, other municipalities may be encouraged to file as well, including, potentially, law changes allowing for municipal bankruptcy in Indiana.

Will what happens in Alabama stay in Alabama?  This Indianapolis lawyer for bankruptcy is interested to see….


Indianapolis Lawyer for Bankruptcy Relates More of the Story on Vallejo

Monday, November 28, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

The city of Vallejo, California has just emerged from a three year bankruptcy process.  As I’ve been telling my Bankruptcy in Indiana readers, when a city or county files bankruptcy, it’s not the same as individual bankruptcy in Indiana.  Yet, it many ways, it’s similar.

Vallejo, CaliforniaIt’s actually one of the differences that I want to discuss today.  I was showing my Columbus bankruptcy lawyer colleagues an article published in the Huffington Post, saying that Vallejo’s Chapter 9 bankruptcy proceedings had “cast a stigma on the city”.  Real estate agents were required to disclose the city’s status to buyers, and investment advisors needed to point out the bankruptcy status to bond investors.  The national media were writing stories about Vallejo as a caution for other cash-strapped cities.  In short, it seemed as if “everybody knew”!

Now in all of the twenty five years I’ve been a debt consolidation lawyer offering Indiana bankruptcy information, the one fear that keeps coming up concerning personal bankruptcy in Indiana is that “everybody will know!”  But unlike the case in municipal bankruptcy, the usual situation is that nobody but you, your lawyer for bankruptcy in Indiana, the bankruptcy judge, and your credit card companies will know.
 
And as far as bankruptcy being a “stigma”, take it from me, Mark Zuckerbeerg, someone who has brought Indiana bankruptcy help to literally tens of thousands of individuals – the new bankruptcy laws of Indiana are based on a system created by your U.S. congress specifically to help stop foreclosure and to help good, honest, hard-working people make a fresh financial start.

It’s all the tension and the worry and the collection efforts that are the stigma; bankruptcy is the beginning of the beginning.  A municipality’s’ Chapter 9 bankruptcy may be the stuff of news, but, in the case of bankruptcy Chapter 7 in Indiana or Chapter 13 bankruptcy law in Indiana, it’s not news-making when you’re one of many thousands making a new financial start!


Indianapolis Lawyer for Bankruptcy Reports the Rest of the Story on Vallejo

Wednesday, November 23, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

When a city or county files bankruptcy, it’s not the same as when a restaurant owner files small business bankruptcy in Indiana, or when an individual in our state files Vallejopersonal bankruptcy in Indiana.  No, it’s not the same, but, in many ways, it’s similar.

In all of the twenty five years I’ve been a debt consolidation lawyer offering Indiana bankruptcy help, there’s never been a provision for a city or town to file Chapter 9 bankruptcy in our state. There are two reasons I began, back in 2008, to write about municipal bankruptcy in these Bankruptcy in Indiana articles.  One of those reasons is that I wish municipal bankruptcy were allowed here and I would like to be involved in that type of work if ever that does come to pass.

A more important reason, though, is the similarities.  There are just enough similarities so that readers and clients seeking Indiana bankruptcy information can better understand the whole bankruptcy process and the principles behind it, just from following the news story.

Take the recent news about Vallejo, California, which has just emerged from the bankruptcy that I first mentioned three years ago.  Is everything just hunky-dory with Vallejo?  Of course not.  Bankruptcy – in Indiana, in California, or anywhere – is no miracle cure.  But are things better for the city?  Definitely.  “Declaring bankruptcy gave the city protection from creditors and allowed it to renegotiate its employee contracts,” explains the San Francisco Chronicle.

As one of the Columbus bankruptcy lawyers who works in the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices puts it – municipal bankruptcy forced Vallejo to create a more realistic budget.  Five fire stations needed to be closed and funding had to be reduced for some senior centers and library branches.  Some public works projects needed to be postponed.  Is that pleasant to do? Of course not, but, just as in individual bankruptcy in Indiana, Vallejo’s bankruptcy bought time for it to work out a budget that is more sustainable.

At the Mark Zuckerberg law practice, I’ve developed a saying: “To fix your credit, start with a bankruptcy.” Nothing ever gets better by ignoring the problems.  Bankruptcy in Indiana, just as it’s proving to be in California, marks a beginning – a fresh start, and a fresh budget.

Counting Heads and Dollars for Filing Personal Bankruptcy in Indiana

Monday, November 21, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

Leaves are falling, temperatures are dropping, and, as all good bankruptcy attorneys in Indiana know, numbers are changing. As a longtime debt consolidation lawyer offering bankruptcy services in Indiana, by now I’m used to these twice-yearly shifts.

heads with numbersThere are actually a number of ways in which the new numbers (in effect for cases filed under Indiana bankruptcy law on or after November 1 of this year) affect the planning I do with clients.

First, let’s talk about the means test, which is a sort of measuring stick the courts use to determine who’s eligible to file under the new bankruptcy laws in Indiana, and for what type of bankruptcy each debtor qualifies. As one of my Columbus bankruptcy lawyer colleagues always points out, the numbers are not the same in every state.

In Indiana, a one-person household can have income up to $39,987, with anything above that amount meaning that person can be disqualified from seeking relief under bankruptcy Chapter 7 in Indiana. A two-person household, by comparison, is allowed to have up to $49,669 in income, while a four-person household may have up to $67,296 and still file a Chapter 7. For every extra person in the household above four, $7,500 is added to the allowable income number.

The counting continues beyond income dollars, however, and gets far more detailed, using different numbers depending on which Indiana county the debtors live in. Depending upon family size, there is a dollar figure for how much money may be kept each month by the debtor for the mortgage or rent payment, for non-mortgage expenses, and for car-related expenses.

The four Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices are located in Indianapolis, Columbus, Bloomington, and Anderson, serving 60 different counties, so knowing the precise numbers becomes very important to us as we offer Indiana bankruptcy help.

So, for example, in Marion County the monthly allowance for mortgage or rent (for a one-person household) is $777, while in Shelby County it’s $743. The monthly non-mortgage allowance in Brown County is $417, as compared to $384 in Marion County. The financial standards are broken down into even finer categories for food, housekeeping supplies, apparel and services, personal care products and services, and miscellaneous. Health care expenses have allowances that are different for those under or over age 65.

Whether my clients need payday loan debt help, student loan debt help, help to stop foreclosure on their home, or are considering filing small business bankruptcy in Indiana – I need to be counting heads and dollars. And, whether my clients are filing bankruptcy Chapter 7 in Indiana or filing under Chapter 13 bankruptcy law – I need to be counting income and expenses. In the end, it all boils down to numbers and people!




When It Comes to Figuring Out Fees, You May Need Indiana Bankruptcy Help

Wednesday, November 16, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

Just two weeks ago, on Nov. 1, new numbers went into effect for bankruptcy in Indiana. The changes will affect clients of the four Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices, all of which arepercentage fees in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court Southern District of Indiana.

The filing fee for bankruptcy Chapter 7 in Indiana went from $299 to $306, while the fee applying to Chapter 13 bankruptcy law in Indiana went from $274 to $281. These filing fees are paid directly to the bankruptcy court, usually at the time the debtor files a case.

I’ve been a debt consolidation lawyer for a very long time now, just about 25 years, in fact.  Yet I realize that many of my Bankruptcy in Indiana readers may not understand that these filing fees I’m talking about are separate from and in addition to attorneys’ fees.  Indiana lawyers for bankruptcy charge fees for representing clients, preparing their paperwork and guiding them through the process of filing personal bankruptcy in Indiana.

Basically, the cost for having a bankruptcy attorney in Indiana help you is going to depend on how complicated the case is. In fact, that’s one of the reasons every one of my colleagues, including the Columbus bankruptcy lawyers and the attorneys in Indianapolis, Anderson, and Bloomington, all offer free consultations to new clients.  That way, there’s the opportunity to discuss all the details of your case and evaluate it before quoting any fee. 

Are you going to need student loan debt help?  Help to stop foreclosure? Payday loan debt help? Is small business bankruptcy in Indiana going to be involved?  Are there properties or other assets that are going to need appraisals?  Is a spouse and/or a business partner involved? Is it going to be more appropriate to file under Chapter 13 bankruptcy law or to file bankruptcy Chapter 7 in Indiana?

The basic level of attorneys’ fees, just like the filing fees, is set by the courts.  There are differences among Indianapolis bankruptcy lawyers, for example, in how they are willing to receive their fees – up front or as part of, say, a repayment plan under Chapter 13 bankruptcy law in Indiana.

Adjustments for rising costs of living are not unusual in the bankruptcy world”, as one San Jose attorney points out. However, for many debtors, the benefits of the Indiana bankruptcy safety net most certainly outweigh those costs!

North Kitsap or Indianapolis, Lawyer for Bankruptcy Finds Lessons are the Same

Friday, November 11, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

The fear that if you file personal bankruptcy in Indiana, “everyone will know” is basedWashington State on a common bankruptcy myth. When it comes to politicians, now, that may not be a myth after all!

When Chris Tibbs filed bankruptcy Chapter 7 in the state of Washington six years ago, only the closest friends with whom he chose to share the information (and Tibbs’ attorney for bankruptcy, of course) knew anything about it. No one was really interested. It’s only now, because Tibbs is a political candidate for the office of Kitsap County commissioner, that the story of his earlier bankruptcy is making headlines.

At the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices, questions about publicity arise all the time, but in actual fact, it’s very rare for anyone’s individual bankruptcy in Indiana to be of interest to anyone beyond that person’s creditors. That means that if you don’t want everyone to know you’ve filed, you need do nothing more than keep the information to yourself!  To a great degree, the same holds true for small business bankruptcy in Indiana. 

In fact, the Chris Tibbs bankruptcy in Washington State was related to a small business, a coffee stand business, for which Tibbs purchased supplies with personal credit cards. Because Tibbs borrowed money in his own name, and since he did not establish a corporation, he had no protection of his personal assets against creditors’ claims.

That brings me to a second myth that I’ve frequently encountered over the 25 years I’ve been a debt consolidation lawyer offering Indiana bankruptcy help – the myth of the “corporate veil”. One of my Columbus bankruptcy lawyer colleague says she sees this a lot - clients who believe they can file small business bankruptcy in Indiana without also filing personal bankruptcy in Indiana. If, unlike Tibbs, they had a corporation, they ask, why can’t they keep their personal finances out of the corporate bankruptcy? They don't need help to stop foreclosure, they don't need student loan debt help, and certainly not payday loan debt help, they say.  So what does their business have to do with their personal affairs?

Here's why their business has a lot to do with their personal affairs:

  • They guaranteed business loans or lines of credit with their personal assets.
  • They put personal money into their business, including money taken out as home equity loans.
  • They withdrew money from their business for personal use.
  • They signed contracts and agreements for the business in their own name.

Some clients give away their own privacy.  And some business owner clients pierce their own corporate veil!


Shh... Indianapolis Bankruptcy Attorney Talks About Privacy

Wednesday, November 9, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

As any good bankruptcy attorney in Indiana can tell you, one of the biggest fears surrounding filing personal bankruptcy in Indiana is this:   EVERYONE WILL KNOW!  In other words, it’s the fear of having our privacy compromised that unfortunately deters private propertymany people from making use of the safety net provided through individual and small business bankruptcy in Indiana.

The reality about bankruptcy is, (as tends to be the case with most myths), very different. Unless you happen to be a very prominent person, the chances are very high that the only people who will know you’ve filed individual bankruptcy in Indiana will be the ones you tell!
At the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices, we know that, whether you need help to stop foreclosure, payday loan debt help or perhaps even student loan debt help, you don't need to allow the myth of "people knowing" stop you from getting the help you need.

Awhile back in these Bankruptcy in Indiana articles, I told the true story of a woman whose car was towed, ending up with a credit collection company requesting a credit report on her. Since there was no credit transaction going on at the time, only Maria herself had the right to request a credit report, and she was able to sue both the collection agency and the credit bureau for violating her privacy rights.  Point being, all the privacy laws that were the basis for Maria’s lawsuits will continue to protect you through the process of filing (either bankruptcy Chapter 7 in Indiana or under the Chapter 13 bankruptcy laws in Indiana), as well as afterwards.

What made me particularly think about privacy issues relating to bankruptcy is a story that one of the Columbus bankruptcy lawyers showed me, written by a guy named Ced Kurtz who calls himself TechMan.  The title of the article is “Bankruptcy can compromise your privacy.”  

Now, Kurtz wasn’t contradicting any of the things I’ve just finished saying about an individual’s privacy rights in the process of filing bankruptcy in Indiana – or elsewhere.  He was talking about the Borders book stores’ corporate bankruptcy. Kurtz explained that Borders’ assets were put up for auction to pay off creditors, with one of those assets being its customer lists, including credit card information.  He was concerned that, in transferring the Borders assets to a buyer, customers’ information might be compromised.  The Federal Trade Commission apparently agreed, dictating that customers need to sign individual consent forms before their information could be transferred.  Meanwhile, Kurtz urges you and me to pay attention – and opt out of any transfer of our information.

So, while each of us needs to be careful to protect our own privacy, the laws, including the new bankruptcy laws of Indiana, are out to do exactly that for us!

Bankruptcy Lawyer in Columbus, Indiana Talks About Condo Fees

Monday, October 31, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

Bankruptcy judges have the power to “discharge” debts, but, as I’ve often cautionedcondos readers of these Bankruptcy in Indiana articles, there are some debts that, under the new bankruptcy laws of Indiana, cannot be forgiven.

The most well-known examples of bankruptcy “cant’s” include:

  •  Child support and alimony payments
  •  Most student loans
  •  Certain taxes
  •  First mortgage arrears
  •  Criminal or other legal penalties and fines

There’s one kind of debt related to filing personal bankruptcy in Indiana that isn’t so well-known, and it involves condo or homeowners’ association fees in bankruptcy Chapter 7 .  As a longtime debt consolidation lawyer offering bankruptcy services in Indiana, I’ve found that few clients realize that their monthly fee is one obligation that can’t be forgiven through filing Chapter 7 personal bankruptcy in Indiana.

The subject of delinquent homeowners’ fees is actually a subject that comes up quite often in the work we do in the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices to help stop foreclosure.

As Susan Jenkins points out in BroadNeck Patch, the homeowners’ association has the law on its side and can sue a homeowner (even one who’s vacated the property) for unpaid monthly fees. While this unpleasant legal fact is not commonly known by homeowners, all the good bankruptcy attorneys in Indiana who are my colleagues are very aware of the law and take condo and homeowner fees into account when filling out the list of expenses and debts as part of the process of filing bankruptcy.

In many locations, including the Indianapolis, Anderson, Columbus, and Bloomington, Indiana areas where I practice law, joining the homeowners’ association is mandatory when purchasing a home or condo.   In the event the fees are not paid, the association could sue, and then legal fees would add to the money owed on back payments.

As a certified consumer bankruptcy specialist, I understand that it all comes back to the importance of dealing with debt early on, rather than putting off facing financial problems.  Condo fees, it turns out, are one of the few but important “can’ts” in the bankruptcy “can”!


Lawyers for Bankruptcy in Indiana Can Help Stop Foreclosure

Friday, October 28, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

Even the best bankruptcy lawyer in Indiana gets frustrated working to help stophome locked foreclosure.  Oh, as a longtime debt consolidation lawyer, I understand the problems.  Every day at one of the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices, we’re sure to hear one or more versions of the old story:

  • You have an ARM mortgage about to reset at a rate you can’t possibly afford.
  • You were told your mortgage can’t be modified because you have lender-paid private mortgage insurance.
  • Your lender lost your paperwork and you have to start from scratch.

So, can an experienced lawyer for bankruptcy in Indiana help stop foreclosure? Yes. Oh yes!

In earlier Bankruptcy in Indiana articles, I used stories about celebrities who went through foreclosure to illustrate some important points about the process.  It’s very rare in my own work as an Indianapolis bankruptcy attorney for me to deal with celebrities, but I can use national news stories about foreclosure to provide Indiana bankruptcy information and explanations of how the process works. 

Back in 2010, for example, I was writing about actor Nicholas Cage, who went through three foreclosures because he owned back taxes and penalties.

As my colleague the bankruptcy lawyer in Columbus  always reminds her clients, foreclosure and bankruptcy are two separate legal processes, but both play a role in debt situations. A recent news story brings out this point very well.  Foreclosure papers were filed against “Rush Hour” star Chris Tucker, after the IRS imposed a lien on the home in Florida to collect back taxes.

Bankruptcy cannot discharge taxes or mortgage arrears.  These are two realities that even multimillionaires like Cage and Tucker must face.  In our practice of Indiana bankruptcy law, we must get our clients to face the fact that the IRS can put a lien on their property, including the money in their bank account, and can also garnish their wages.

If all that is true, then why do I say “Yes,. Oh, Yes!” when referring to my practice as an Indiana bankruptcy attorney? Because we can help.  We analyze your situation, have skilled appraisals run on your property, and become your legal negotiators with the mortgage company, the bankruptcy court, and even the IRS.  The result is a plan. Your circumstances may be far from ideal, but plan beats no-plan any day!

Attorney for Bankruptcy in Indiana in Tune with Amnesty Program

Thursday, October 27, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

What does child support have to do with bankruptcy in Indiana? A lot.  Just half a month ago, a special six-week Indiana amnesty program called “Stop Delaying – Start Paying” was concluded.  Every one of the Anderson, Bloomington, Indianapolis, and Columbus child supportbankruptcy lawyers in the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices was at least indirectly involved with that child support amnesty program.

Under the new bankruptcy laws of Indiana, obligations of child support are not changed at all by bankruptcy.  As a debt consolidation lawyer offering Indiana bankruptcy help, this means several different important things to my clients:

  • Back child support debts cannot be discharged through bankruptcy.
  • If my client is a single mom, she can be assured her ex-husband will not be able to use bankruptcy to avoid paying the support obligations.
  • If my Zuckerberg bankruptcy law office client is the non-custodial father, it means he must get current with his child support payments in order to have his application to file under Chapter 13 bankruptcy law in Indiana approved.
  • The bankruptcy automatic stay, which halts most collection efforts, will NOT apply when it comes to child support.
  • When we’re assisting clients with the bankruptcy paperwork, we deal with the “means test”, which determines how much income debtors are allowed to keep for their own support. If my client has child support payments to make, he or she may be excused from paying other creditors.

The Marion County Prosecutor’s office’s amnesty program was designed to help those who’ve fallen behind in their payments to catch up and get back on track.  That goal is very much in tune with my goals as an attorney for individual bankruptcy in Indiana – help people make a fresh financial start!

 


Elder Bankruptcy in Indiana - Sign of the Times or Here to Stay?

Tuesday, October 25, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

“In today’s economic climate, it comes as no surprise that millions of Americans are facingsafety net unprecedented financial challenges.  One group, however, has been hit especially hard: seniors,” Elizabeth Brennon points out in News Junky Journal, adding that many retired Americans are seeking relief in bankruptcy court.

All the good bankruptcy attorneys who work in the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices have been reading the statistics about the number of older Americans filing bankruptcy.  Truth is, we don’t need to read about these numbers – we’re seeing them every day in our offices, and the Anderson, Bloomington, Indianapolis and Columbus bankruptcy lawyers are all experiencing those statistics first hand.

One AARP statistic, though, startled even us: The rate of bankruptcy filings for Americans between the ages of 74 and 84 jumped 433% from 1991 to 2007! 

Coming up on 25 years as a debt consolidation lawyer offering bankruptcy help in Indiana, I
Agree with Debb Thorne of creditslips.com that medical expenses play a large role in the financial problems of seniors. Sometimes parents go into debt to help adult children who’ve been hit with major hospital bills. 

Of course, rising costs of food and gasoline play a part in the problem as well. But to tell the truth, what upsets me most is seeing older Hoosiers fall victim to scams and predatory credit card offers.  It’s not uncommon for my colleagues and I to see senior citizens coming to us for help to stop foreclosure, and, more startling, for payday loan debt help. One eldercare lawyer in New York quotes data from the Elder Law Journal showing that those over 65 account for 7% of all bankruptcy filings in the country!

What I have personally found in talking with older clients considering filing personal bankruptcy in Indiana is that they have believed in a
bankruptcy myth.  That myth is simply that filing bankruptcy is a sign you don’t handle finances responsibly. The fact is, most people file for bankruptcy because of circumstances beyond their control.

There is no upper age limit for bankruptcy.  For the past twenty five years, I’ve been able to offer that reassurance: the bankruptcy safety net is there whenever in life it’s needed!

Racing Out the Other End of Bankruptcy in Indiana

Wednesday, October 19, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

horse racingLooking back, I realize that my article in Bankruptcy in Indiana earlier this week was focused on the negative, or at least preparing for a negative event such as a job loss. As a debt consolidation lawyer who’s practiced Indiana bankruptcy law for decades, I wanted to emphasize the crucial role income from jobs plays in successfully emerging after filing either personal bankruptcy in Indiana or even in emerging after small business bankruptcy in Indiana.

Today’s article, by contrast is about two happy endings to corporate bankruptcy, one in Indiana, the other in Pennsylvania.

Less than one month ago, a company called Capmark Financial (a real estate finance company headquartered in Pennsylvania), was able to emerge from bankruptcy.  Notes, bonds, and approximately 100 million shares of the company’s stock were distributed to creditors to whom the company owed money, and a plan was agreed upon to make payments of both principal and interest on the notes and bonds.

Exactly as happens with personal bankruptcy in Indiana, the bankruptcy process “bought time” for Capmark to get its financial affairs organized, to work out a plan that would treat all the parties equitably, including the shareholders, the creditors, the employees, and the executives.  In precisely the way all my colleagues in the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices see every day in our work, bankruptcy serves as a “cooling off” period, so that a plan can be worked out without pressure from creditors.

The second story is one the Anderson bankruptcy lawyers and I have been following for the past year and a half. In March, 2010, the Chapter 11 bankruptcy of Hoosier Park in Anderson was the featured story in Bankruptcy in Indiana. At that time, the company (parent company Centaur, LLC) and its lenders agreed to work together to keep the business going, allowing the company to pay its debts over time.

By way of reminder to readers, Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the corporate world is parallel to filing personal bankruptcy in Indiana under Chapter 13 bankruptcy law, in that both involve a debt repayment plan over time.

Now, I am happy to report, the Anderson ”racino” has successfully emerged from bankruptcy. The gambling house and racing permits have been transferred to the newly emerged company.  Centaur has sold off its holdings in Colorado and Pennsylvania under the agreement, and now owns only Indiana-based properties (the Anderson park, plus offsite betting places in Indianapolis, Fort Wayne, and Merrillville).  Whatever your views about horse tracks or gambling, it’s a positive sign whenever a company can continue to operate and generate income to employees and help the local economy. And anything that helps the local economy means jobs with income, and that makes Mark Zuckerberg very happy. 

Every lawyer for bankruptcy in Indiana knows: with Indiana being home to more than 500,000 small businesses, every company that emerges from bankruptcy will have a positive “ripple effect” on other people and other businesses. As on of the Columbus bankruptcy lawyers who is my colleague there pointed out, there will be that many fewer people needing payday loan debt help, that many fewer needing help to stop foreclosure on their homes.  All good bankruptcy attorneys in Indiana like being able to report some positive “ripples”! 

Help Stop Foreclosure: On the Minds of Senators Along with Lawyer for Bankruptcy in Indiana

Wednesday, October 12, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

Back in May of this year, I was telling Bankruptcy in Indiana readers about yet another newstack of foreclosures program that had been created, that particular one in Marion County, to help stop foreclosures in our state. Actually, ever since the housing crisis began, I have been focusing my efforts as an Indiana bankruptcy attorney and debt consolidation lawyer on mortgage modification.

Exactly how can I, along with all the Anderson, Bloomington, Indianapolis, and Columbus bankruptcy lawyers who work in the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices help stop foreclosure?

  • We write letters and handle phone calls to negotiate mortgage modifications with lenders.
  • We help individuals save their homes through filing personal bankruptcy in Indiana using Chapter 13 bankruptcy law.
  • We provide bankruptcy information in Indiana, including ways to use bankruptcy to stop foreclosure.                                                                                                                     
 
“In Chapter 7 bankruptcy,” notes Texas bankruptcy lawyer Reed Allmand, “debtors can surrender their home and have any mortgage balance discharged…..If they are employed, Chapter 13 allows debtors who have a job to pay off their debt over the course of three to five years and keep their home out of foreclosure.”    The problem, notes Allmand, is that the mortgage servicers quickly move to file foreclosure, not giving middle class and working class homeowners a chance to save their home.

Okay, so here we are, six months after I reported on the Marion County foreclosure prevention effort, still tracking (as part of providing up-to-date Indiana bankruptcy information) each and every legislative development that could help homeowners.  All the while, people have either not filed or not qualified to file under Chapteer 13 bankruptcy law in Indiana have been losing their homes. Sometimes this relates to small business bankruptcy in Indiana, because business owners pour all available funds into saving their businesses, only to suffer in their personal finances.

Three U.S. Senators have sponsored legislation to “strengthen and clarify the U.S. Trustee’s power to protect homeowners in the bankruptcy system from fraud.  The Fighting Fraud in Bankruptcy Act of 2011 was introduced in the Senate and has now been referred to committee.

One of the Columbus bankruptcy lawyers in my office there summarizes the goals of this bill as follows:
  • Gives the bankruptcy trustee power to take action when creditors are abusing the bankruptcy process.  (These powers are both investigative – conducting audits and investigations, and punitive – imposing sanctions for misconduct by creditors.)
  • Mandates that mortgage servicers certify (under penalty of perjury) that they are complying with the special rules for deployed and active duty military homeowners.

After 25 years as a lawyer for bankruptcy in Indiana, someone who actually helped write part of the new bankruptcy laws of Indiana, I, Mark Zuckerberg, wholeheartedly agree with reporter Elizabeth Brennon in News Junky Journal:

Banks should not attempt to profit from these hard times with improper mortgage fees and other types of fraud!


 


Bloomington Bankruptcy Attorneys Explain: Tell-All is What Makes Bankruptcy in Indiana Tick

Tuesday, October 11, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

News headlines that have anything to do with bankruptcy are always a topic of discussionSolyndra among the good bankruptcy attorneys in Indiana who work in the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices. And when the story has to do with truth-telling, the discussions can get rather heated, because all of us know that full disclosure of facts is the one thing that keeps the bankruptcy system working and fair to all the parties concerned.

In the past couple of weeks there were two particular news items that “jumped out” at us both having to do with truth in bankruptcy.  Then, just the other day I read a summary of an outline of a lecture given to bankruptcy trustees at a lawyers’ association meeting in North Carolina.  The article said that what bankruptcy Chapter 7 trustees are looking for in bankruptcy schedules (the paperwork I help clients complete when filing personal bankruptcy in Indiana) could be summed up in two words:

  1. Disclosure
  2. Accuracy

Basically, what that lecturer was saying is that, in bankruptcy, it’s important to tell the truth about what you own and what you owe, what money you transferred to other people and what money they may have transferred to you.  In short, tell the truth and tell it all. That's true whether it's bankruptcy Chapter 7 in Indiana, Chapter 13 bankruptcy law in Indiana, or even small business bankruptcy in Indiana wer'e talking about.

If Bankruptcy in Indiana readers will keep those concepts in mind, it will be easy for you to understand why my Bloomington, Anderson, Indianapolis, and Columbus bankruptcy lawyer colleagues spent so much time talking about the following two pieces of news:


Story #1:    Solyndra CEO touted progress to lawmakers just before bankruptcy.
“Less than two months before his solar panel company filed for bankruptcy, Solyndra CEO Brian Harrison told lawmakers on Capitol Hill that…his company had shipped record-breaking numbers of solar panels to buyers and was posed to double its revenue in 2011,” reports CaliforniaWatch.org
 

As a longtime debt consolidation lawyer offering bankruptcy services in Indiana, I know something is very wrong here.  One thing I’ve learned from providing Indiana bankruptcy help to tens of thousands of people is that the entire bankruptcy system rests on information, truthful information. If the court finds out that a bankruptcy filer has not fully disclosed all the financial transactions in the months leading up to the bankruptcy, it can not only deny the bankruptcy petition, but penalize the debtor for fraud! That’s precisely why such a large part of my work consists of helping clients collect, and then properly report, their information.


Story #2:   Teresa Giudice’s Hubby Joe Withdraws Bankruptcy Filing.

Real Housewives of New Jersey hubby Joe Guidice has withdrawn his bankruptcy filing.
The New York Post is cynical, believing he decided to withdraw because he took the Fifth when questioned about assets his creditors claim he’s been hiding. “Concealing assets during a bankruptcy proceeding is a felony, since the result would be defrauding the creditors,” the Post reporter correctly explains in “Going un-broke”.

I’ll second that. 
There’s no getting around it – for the new bankruptcy laws of Indiana to work, it takes truth! 

 

 


 


Early and Even, Not Angry, Does It When Filing Bankruptcy in Indiana

Monday, October 3, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

As a longtime debt consolidation lawyer, I can tell you that the advice offered to debtors by ChristiaNet.com  is spot on: “When it comes to negotiating with creditors, debtors should bear one thing in mind: you can catch more flies with honey than vinegar!”

angry manCreditors are more likely to work with debtors who are cooperative and demonstrate an acceptable level of respect, ChristiaNet.com  adds. In my work offering bankruptcy services in Indiana, in addition to helping clients keep their own anger in check, I’ve found that creditors are often willing to respond to letters from an Indiana bankruptcy lawyer than from a debtor.

Creditors, especially small business owners whose customers have failed to pay for goods and services may have their own anger issues, as I and all the good bankruptcy attorneys who work in the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices have found.

Dave Ramsey of the well-known radio advice show thinks properly-directed anger could be a good thing, because “You have to get mad at debt to get out of debt.” No one could disagree with the principles of deferring unneeded spending to reduce debt that Ramsey preaches.  Still, what we Indianapolis bankruptcy lawyers often encounter are situations where very financially responsible people have been hit hard with many bad things happening to them over time, including job loss and illness, to the point where they just cannot financially withstand the pressures by themselves.

The least productive response for debtors, I want to emphasize to clients and to Bankruptcy in Indiana readers, is getting mad and trying to “get even”.  “Getting even” with Uncle Sam by ignoring tax notices – big mistake!  Ignoring late payment letters from creditors – disaster! Even when (perhaps especially when) you feel debt collectors have violated your rights, it’s crucial for you to remain calm and to seek professional advice at the very first signs of financial downslide 

The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act requires that debt collectors treat you fairly and respectfully as well, and there are certain practices debt collectors must avoid under the law. Even though a consumer may file a lawsuit against a debt collector for violating this Act, getting angry is not a help.  For one thing, “Consumer Fraud Reporting” explains, if you get angry, you’ll forget (or forget to ask) important information.

Small business bankruptcy in Indiana and personal bankruptcy in Indiana are both designed to help you get even, not with your creditors, but with your finances!

Indianapolis Lawyer for Bankruptcy Reports on Job Situation in Indiana

Tuesday, September 6, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

If ever I forget how important it is for me, as a debt consolidation lawyer offeringjob question bankruptcy services in Indiana, to stay up on the state of the job market, I’m reminded the moment I step foot into the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices to meet with a client.  The very first thing on the mind of any debtor who lost a job, I know without even asking, is how to stop bill collectors.

In many instances, I and all the other good bankruptcy attorneys in Indiana find, the clients’ problems are related to a job loss.  That’s why I periodically use these Bankruptcy in Indiana article to bring readers up to date on companies in Indiana that are hiring or firing workers.

From Inside Indiana Business, I know that, two and a half weeks ago, more than 600 people turned out for the job fair in South Bend.  And no wonder, remarked one of my Columbus bankruptcy lawyer colleagues. According to News and Tribune.com, Indiana lost 10,200 jobs in June and July of this year, and we had the greatest amount of cuts over the past year of any state in the nation.

From our end, we see the results in the form of more clients needing payday loan debt help and help to stop foreclosure on their homes, all stemming back to lack of steady income from jobs.

Having practiced Indiana bankruptcy law for close to 25 years, I’m very proud of the fact that we’re working hard in our state to rebuild jobs.  The Indiana Plan, for example, is designed to create opportunities for minorities in the construction industry.

Meanwhile, my Bloomington bankruptcy lawyer colleagues were happy to learn that tech firm Next Wave Systems is expanding there, creating up to 60 new jobs, while the attorneys in the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices in Columbus celebrated the news that Stant Corporation in Connersville is adding 59 new jobs.

As an Indianapolis bankruptcy attorney, of course, I was really excited to learn of two coming expansions: Old Dominion Freight Lines, with 183 new jobs to be created, and Angie’s List, with 500 new jobs coming.

No, I remind myself and all the good bankruptcy attorneys in Indiana with whom I work – the bad times are far from over.  But knowing of all these planned job expansions goes a long way towards cheering me up.  I can never forget how important good jobs are to anyone emerging from personal bankruptcy in Indiana!



Student Loan Debt Stories From Near and Far Traced by Anderson Bankruptcy Lawyer

Friday, September 2, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

Even though I’m always reading, everything from professional law journals to the daily newspaper, any material that might have to do with debt consolidation or (especially in student cashrecent days) about student loan debt help,
I was really struck by two similar stories from two very different parts of the world.

The first story happened very close to the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices in Anderson, Indiana.  IndyStar.com featured the tale of a young man who recently graduated from Ball State University, who is, before even beginning his career, $30,000 in debt.  I’m hardly surprised, I must say.  Student loan debt has played an increasingly large role in my conversations with clients. 

After almost 25 years as a debt consolidation lawyer offering bankruptcy services in Indiana, I’m finding an increasing number of clients who not only need student loan debt help, but are in a situation where student loan debt is the main factor driving them to consider filing personal bankruptcy in Indiana.

The second story, called to my attention by one of my Columbus bankruptcy lawyer colleagues, quite literally comes from the other end of the earth – Korea. The Korea Joongong Daily reports that 24-year old Lee Ji-ho has already filed for personal bankruptcy, “crushed by the loans he took out to pay his college tuition.”

Like many of my clients who file individual bankruptcy in Indiana (or even small business bankruptcy in Indiana), Ji-ho was negatively affected by a combination of factors, not just one.  His father passed away and Lee Ji-ho needed money for funeral expenses and for his mother’s growing medical bills.  During the period of time from when Lee was first admitted to college, he served his compulsory military services and then worked part-time to cover expenses.  Ironically, the government refused to give him a low-interest loan, saying he had “too much income.” Lee was forced to turn to high-interest lenders for help.

(All Indianapolis bankruptcy lawyers have seen similar things happen, when debtors, in desperation, turn to payday lenders.)

Can bankruptcy in Indiana provide relief from student loan debt?  Yes, but with “caveats”… Under the new (2005) Indiana bankruptcy laws, the most likely source of relief will happen when other debt is discharged through bankruptcy, freeing up money to pay on the student loan!

H.R. 2028, the Private Student Loan Bankruptcy Fairness Act of 2011, is in committee stage as I write this.  The stated purpose of the proposed bill, according to the National Consumer Law Center is this:

Restore the Bankruptcy Fresh Start for Student Loan Borrowers!


To which I, along with all the good bankruptcy attorneys in Indiana, have just one word to say”

AMEN!

 

Bloomington Bankruptcy Lawyer Follows New Proposals for Student Loan Debt Help

Monday, August 29, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

With so many students entering or going back to college this week and last, all of the Indianacollege costs bankruptcy lawyers who work in the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices have student loan debt problems on their minds.

One of the Columbus bankruptcy lawyers pointed out that things used to be easier. Then they got worse, and now, in 2011, there’s a glimmer of hope things might get better again.

As an Indianapolis attorney for bankruptcy, I’ve found that a question I’m asked more and more frequently is whether bankruptcy in Indiana can help with student loan debt.  Indianapolis, of course, has become a big college town, with IUPUI, the University of Indianapolis, Butler, Ivy Tech, Indiana Wesleyan, and Harrison College, and others coming on board all the time.

My answer, which I explain on a video on the Zuckerberg Law website is simply “Well…yes – and no.” Since I’ve been in practice for close to 25 years, serving as debt consolidation lawyer offering bankruptcy services in Indiana, I began well before the big changes were made to bankruptcy law in 2005.

You see, going all the way back to 1978, only government and guaranteed student loans were not eligible for discharge in bankruptcy; only private student loans could be forgiven along with other unsecured debt.

The way matters stand today, though, is that in order for a bankruptcy judge to allow your student loans to be discharged when you file personal bankruptcy in Indiana, you need to prove three things to that judge:

  •  You’re living at or near the poverty level.
  • You’ve made a “good faith” effort to repay your loans.
  • (This one’s the most difficult to prove) It’s unlikely you’ll ever be in position to repay those loans.

As you may imagine, my function in all of this is to help you get all the financial information in order, ready to present to the bankruptcy court so that you have the best chance at getting some student loan debt help. However, as you can already tell, under the new bankruptcy laws of Indiana (the ones based on that 2005 change in U.S. bankruptcy law), that’s not very easy to accomplish.

Meanwhile, the costs of college continue to rise, meaning more and more student debt continues to accumulate. Just the other day I read an article in the Indianapolis Star reporting that tuition at Indiana’s seven public colleges has jumped more than 300% over the time I’ve been a lawyer for bankruptcy in Indiana!

Later this week, I’ll bring Bankruptcy in Indiana readers up to date on Congress’ newest proposal for bankruptcy relief for student loan borrowers…stay tuned.

Myth About Losing Job Because of Bankruptcy in Indiana One of Top 10

Sunday, August 28, 2011 by Mark Zuckerberg

One of thetop ten myths about bankruptcy in Indiana is this: You will be fired if you file bankruptcy in Indiana and never hired again.” In my 2010 book on debunking myths, I cutfocused on one fact: It’s illegal to terminate someone based solely on a bankruptcy.
 
“Sez who?” The federal bankruptcy code is very explicit: “No private employer may terminate the employment of or discriminate with respect to employment against, an individual who is or has been a debtor under this title.”

All the good bankruptcy attorneys in Indiana who work in the Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices have been asked the question over and over again:  Will filing personal bankruptcy in Indiana cause me to lose my job?  And, in the twenty-four years I’ve practiced as a debt consolidation lawyer and lawyer for bankruptcy in Indianapolis, clients have expressed this fear to me again and again.

One point I need to emphasize when providing bankruptcy information in Indiana is that ours is an “employment at will” state. What that means is that employers do not have to have a reason for letting employees go.  On the other hand, as one of the Columbus bankruptcy lawyers who is my associate keeps reminding clients, no employer is allowed to unfairly discriminate against particular employees by reason of their age, gender, race, or – their bankruptcy!

Remember, I say to clients wrestling with a decision of whether to file individual bankruptcy in Indiana: your employer will not be notified automatically that you have filed bankruptcy.  If you keep your personal life details to yourself in your workplace, in all likelihood, your employer will not know.  On the other hand, should you choose not to file, your employer may find out when your wages or garnished. 

The law that specifically applies to private employers is Section 525(b), preventing discrimination against employees because of bankruptcy.  In the real world, it can be difficult to prove that a firing or layoff happened because of a bankruptcy.

It’s a difficult situation.  Making a successful comeback after bankruptcy takes income from a job.  People struggling financially need to keep their jobs.  Employers need good work performance and experience, and would often rather hang on to good employers than start over with new ones. The best secret of job protection may consist simply of doing the best job!

Bankruptcy is meant to help solve problems, not create them.