Bankruptcy doesn't "cover" anything. If you mean, can a criminal-court-ordered restitution be discharged so you don't have to pay it, probably not. Lawyers are trained to argue issues for their clients, so you might find a lawyer who can convince the bankruptcy court it should be discharged.
Virtually never. That would be against the "public good" and restitution is at least in part, a punishment.
No you can not file bankruptcy on anything that is court ordered.CAN YOU FILE BANKRUPTCY ON RESTITUTION?
YES, you can include it whether the payments are current or not.
Absolutely not. Bankruptcy payments are repayments for debts that you incurred in the past and did not pay. There is no circumstances where these could be deductible on your income taxes.
the answer that was given before is wrong because you can't LOL
If you are behind in your payments and you declare bankruptcy usually you can remain in your home and continue payments. However the lender will most likely begin foreclosure since you can't afford it and you are at higher risk.
Yes, you can move anywhere you want to, but if you are paying payments (Chapter 13) you are still legally obligated to make the payments.
There's no maximum amount. If you can't make your payments you file bankruptcy.
When you co-sign on a loan or mortgage for someone, you are promising to make the loan payments if they can't. When someone files for bankruptcy, they are claiming that they cannot make their payments. It would stand to reason that if someone you co-signed on a mortgage for files for bankruptcy that you would then be liable for making the payments.
You not only can, you must. All creditors must be listed in any bankruptcy filing.
Restitution is the repayment of items taken or the payments of a loss that the victim incurred. When looking at a contract if one party doesnÕt uphold there end of the contract they will be obligated to pay restitution for goods or services or incomes that have been lost be their failure to comply to the agreement.
No
Yes, they may.