Although certain types of debts are not dischargeable like most taxes or debts related to child support, chances are the debt will be dischargeable. If you have grounds to fight the discharge such as fraud, you may need to file an action called an adversary proceeding to prove the grounds for objection to the discharge. This is complicated and you should see a bankruptcy specialist.
No. Penalties are not able to be discharged - although you must list them.
In a chapter 7 it is a total liquidation BK, that has been found valid and has been approved. Therefore the debtor(s) are discharged from the debt(s) that were included in the BK. A discharged BK is not the same as a closed BK. If it is a chapter 13, it indicates that the debtor(s) have fulfilled their obligation of repaying the amount to creditors that was ordered in the BK. After the trustee's audit a chapter 13 is considered closed
Fines in Illinois can not be claimed in bankruptcy if they are derived from criminal acts, parking tickets and traffic offenses. Additionally, court ordered fines and restitution will not be discharged under Chapter 7.
He ordered the 167 members of black troops dishonorably discharged.
Filing a bankruptcy stops ALL Garnishments, foreclosures, etc. (Even the IRS)
shipped, directed, dispatched, discharged, gone, ordered, issued, mailed, posted, transported
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.
He was laid off and got a reduction.
(The Gospel according to) St. Matthew 2:16.
Garnishments must cease.
I could be wrong on this - BUT - I do not believe that a Chapter 7 filing negates a court ordered judgement.
17,460 dollars