Contact your attorney. Depending on the situation, he/she may add it to the bankruptcy (it may be easier to discharge it than fight it), object to the claim, or file an "adversary proceeding" (a lawsuit within the bankruptcy case) to bring it before a judge.
The False Claims Act is an act that protects consumers from falsely claimed purchases, and other things. The False Claims Act was established in the year of 1863.
A method of advertising or selling that uses false claims is called false advertising.
false
The false claims act states that you should not file a false claim on anything. It also states that if you do so you can be fined or even jailed depending on the severity.
that is "life time " guaranty .....Its absurd and false claim,,,
Defamation
ALL of these are false: A amount of debt is less than the income earned B after bankruptcy you can't get credit for 10 years C everything you own goes into bankruptcy
The Antarctic Treaty documents claims, recognizes none, and prohibits additional claims.
No. No lender/collector can garnish your wages without a court order. You would have been summoned to appear in court with your defense prior to a court order being issued for a garnishment. In other words, you would know if a legitimate collector was suing you for real. Payday loans are illegal in Maryland. No payday lender would succeed in suing you in Maryland for anything. Payday lenders routinely break the law by making false threats. They will threaten garnishment, arrest, suspension of your drivers license, etc. They can do none of those things to you. It is simply a tactic to scare you into paying them. Unfortunately, many scammers have popped up who are pretending to be "agents" or "officers" collecting on payday loans. They attempt to scare you into paying them immediately, then they can successfully steal your money right from your account. Never give your personal information or account information to anyone you do not know is legitimate. You can report payday lenders/collectors to the Maryland Commissioner of Financial Regulation for investigation.
Yes, if you fail to disclose all your assets, including any claims you may have for damages or equitable interests that are not yet "ripe," or if you answer any questions falsely or knowingly provide false information. No, if you mean can anyone fire you or discriminate against you because you filed bankruptcy. In states that allow employers to fire at-will employees for no reason, you can be fired. But if you are fired for filing bankruptcy, you may have a defense. Your credit score will be affected, but if you have to file bankruptcy, it probably is not very good any way.
If he makes claims that he is a prophet, he is a false prophet. Does he claim such a thing?
Contrary claims