No. This is clearly stated in the bankruptcy rules.
You can't report someone who is committing adultery. If someone is filing for divorce, it may be used as a reason for divorcing and you could inform the person involved in this case.
Only when pulling their credit report.
Neither is good. However, a repossession does less damage and is removed from your credit report within less time than a bankruptcy.
Filing bankruptcy does not remove a charge off report from a credit card on your credit report. It just adds bankruptcy to your credit report.
If it is not your bankruptcy but on your report, yes, you can dispute it.
You can report it to any law enforcement agency.
any information in regards to a bankruptcy should not be on your credit report if older than 10 years. if it is, write your credit bureaus immediately and dispute the information citing the FCRA Federal law that states it maynot remain on your report after 10 years.
mailing address to report bankruptcy to Home Depot
The amount of time a bankruptcy stays on your credit report after discharge differs between Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 Bankruptcy. With Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the Chapter 7 stays on your credit report for 10 years. Chapter 13 bankruptcy, after discharge, it shows for 7 years on your credit report.
You would only need to report the winning ticket if the bankruptcy was not discharged.
A bankruptcy will remain on a credit report for the required ten years, it cannot be removed arbitrarily.
It should be removed from the credit report in 2009. A bankruptcy remains on a credit report for ten years from date of discharge.