yes
Retirement funds are exempt, but if you take them out of a qualified retirement plan and put them into a regular account, they are no longer exempt. Get some good advice from an experienced bankruptcy lawyer before you do anything.
You can't "exempt" anything.
yes
No. Never. It is exempt and protected.
As they are issued by the government, yes, the are exempt from Chapter 7.
No, it is an asset and must be disclosed.
While registered pension plans [RPPs] are exempt from seizure in bankruptcy situations, most Registered Retirement Savings Plans [RRSPs] are not.
Student loans are exempt from bankruptcy as are IRS debts
In most cases you will not lose your home during your bankruptcy case as long as your equity in the property is fully exempt. Even if your property is not fully exempt, you will be able to keep it, if you pay its non-exempt value to creditors in chapter 13.
If the vehicle was not included as non-exempt property in the BK petition it is considered exempt from sale and seizure.
according to the lawyer I spoke to today, social security is exempt from garnishments. according to the Arizona attorney I spoke to today, social security income is exempt from judgments but retirement income is not.
Generally, these are exempt assets and they remain yours, preumably to take with you.