Those are U.S. laws. Many U.S. laws are increasingly being applied to Canadians but we do have our own which are similar to 286 and 152.
Jail time is very rare for any White Collar crimes in Canada, any prosecution of any kind for White Collar crime is rare. This has been noted by some investment firms outside of Canada warning their investors that there is little recource should they be a victim of White Collar Crime.
This is even more so when it comes to defrauding Canadian governments. Even our most high profile cases often exist in the media only with no charges, or charges plea bargined or charges dropped when the media spotlight is off.
Those that have faced such charges as 286 and 152 have had little political power but even those convicted do not receive serious jail time.
When two or more people gather together to plan or commit a crime, that is a conspiracy.
At the same time, yes...together, no.
Yes, whether or not they will all be included in the BK will be the decision of the bankruptcy trustee.
AnswerYes 9/11 was indeed a conspiracy. A conspiracy occurs when two or more people work together to do something bad. The official theory of 9/11 involves a conspiracy by al-Qaeda.
Each country has its own leadership that controls it. There are organizations such as the United Nations that bring multiple countries together to maintain peace. There is no conspiracy that controls the whole world.
Nothing. Conspiracy (to commit ANY crime) requires two or more persons colluding together. Murder can be commited by a single individual.
If her name is on a loan that you file bankruptcy on than she would then be responsible for that loan. Filing a bankruptcy only gets your name off the loan(s), you would both need to file together.
When you file a mutual bankruptcy, you and your partner file a single set of bankruptcy papers with the court. In your bankruptcy appeal, you release all property, debt, income, and expenses you have between both you and your partner.
divorce should not prior to bankruptcy. you agreed to love this person unconditionally through worse times. you should stick together and work this probem out.
I suppose you could, but even if you did manage to get the financing together to open another business, any profits from it would be subject to seizure by the court and the bankruptcy trustee to pay off the bankruptcy judgement. There is no bankruptcy "judgment." If the bankruptcy is over and you have your discharge, you can open a business, and any money you make is yours. Providing the first bankuptcy is discharged.
A conspiracy is a plan to commit an action by more than one person, though it is often used to imply a cover-up intended to hide some such illegal action.
You are in it together, I am afraid.