Yes, an apartment complex can refuse to rent an apartment to you if you have bad credit. A bankruptcy alone will not stop you from being approved or disapproved from an apartment, they will consider your overall credit score and credit history.
It normally depends on how many units are in the complex. If the "complex" is actually a duplex, triplex, or quadplex, then no: it's not an apartment complex and generally the landlord is not responsible for pest control. If there are more than four units then it's an apartment complex, and is subject to more rules: the landlord is normally responsible for the pest control, inter alia. Code Enforcement can help you enforce the laws your by which your landlord must abide.
It's up to your potential landlord. Some might refuse to rent to you, others might figure that you're probably a better risk now than you were before you filed.
No. A landlord has no right to refuse to rent you an apartment because of your race religion sexual preference have children or on social assistance.
Yes. There does not need to be the issue of bankruptcy for a lending institution to refuse the applicant. What they may not do is discriminate for reasons of gender, race, ethnicity and so forth.
Yes. It's not always the landlord that owns the apartment block, but a company and he has to go by the rules. The company has a right to a degree to decide who to rent too and refuse cosigners.
Bankruptcy is normally voluntary, however if your creditors feel it is required for them to get paid and you refuse, they can force it - an involuntary bankruptcy.
No they can not. That would be discrimination.
No
As long as another apartment is being offered to you, you must move. If you do not have a singed lease, they can always make you move.
Unfortunately all apartment complexes check for credit but some of them will work with you. They may charge you one or two months rent as a security deposit to ensure that you wont break your lease or refuse payment. I would try to rent from a private person if you don't want your credit ran by an apartment complex.
Not legally. It's a resource that can be used to pay your creditors. If you hide or refuse to acknowledge it, you're cheating the creditors and in violation of bankruptcy law.
You can try, but you won't come out ahead.