Yes... but you have several things to consider.
1) 13 instead of 7. Creditors may claim Fraud and 13 is the only way to discharge Fraud
2) Criminal Charges!
3) "Bad Faith" - Be wary of this term.
Yes.
Only temporarilarly at best....court fines and such are not provided BK protection.
If the car is gone, the car is gone. The car would only be covered in BK if you still had it. If you file Chapter 13 bankruptcy within 10 days of your car being repossessed, or in some states before it has been sold or auctioned, your creditor must return the vehicle to you.
Chrysler bought the Dodge Bros company in 1928. Chrysler was near bankruptcy in 1979 when it received a government loan. It did file for bankruptcy in 2009 before being purchased by Fiat.
Most creditors take a very dim view of bankruptcy, and you will likely lose your card(s). Remember, bankruptcy should be a last resort, not to be gone into lightly. It's best to consult with a lawyer first, if not to actually engage one to help you.
call the police and tell them he didnt pay you after u worked
that depends, if it has not gone to collections, they may give typically 20% reduction IF you pay right away. if it has gone to collections, you can negotiate with the collection agency for a settlement.
Yes, or at least it already has gone bankrupt. As of late summer, 2010, Blockbuster Video filed for bankruptcy. The success of subscription-based rental services such as Netflix, as well as the greater presence of file-sharing websites with the bandwidth to stream movies, have contributed to Blockbuster's bankruptcy.
At its discretion, the medical biller will report to one or more credit reporting agencies that the debt has gone to collections. The collections agency will report it, as well - also at their discretion. You can negotiate for payment with the collections agency.
If you are keeping your house and you have a first and a second, your second will not go away. If you are letting your house go, then the first and second will go. If your house is more than or equal to your first mortgage and you file a chapter 13, then your second will be "gone" in the end.
Collections can't "take" money at all. However, if they obtain a judgement against you, they can get the sheriff's department to do it for them, and the first notice you get will probably come from the bank telling you your checks are bouncing. (They do send out a letter telling you what happened, but by the time it arrives, the money will have been gone from your account for several days.)
If you delete a file from removable media, the file is gone permanently