5. Ignoring Creditor Collection Attempts after Filing and Discharge.
There
are a number of mistakes that debtors and their bankruptcy attorneys
make that often cause problems after discharge or after their chapter
13 is confirmed. These mistakes often make it difficult to enforce the
discharge or the automatic stay and can cause the debtor to suffer a
serious financial loss.
It’s human nature to avoid
embarrassment and conflict, if at all possible. So, it is not
understandable that Debtors would ignore calls and letters from
creditors after filing bankruptcy. They know the debt is no longer
collectible, so they throw away the collection and letters and ignore
the calls that keep on coming after filing and even, sometimes, after a
discharge is received. This, however, is a mistake.
Some
creditors intentionally ignore a bankruptcy notice hoping that the
debtor can still be coerced to pay. Whether it is to buy peace, ease
feelings of guilt, or believing it will help improve their credit,
debtors will often pay discharged debt even though they have no
obligation to do so. The problem with ignoring these illegal contacts
after bankruptcy is that the creditors will just continue to harass the
debtor with calls, letters, by illegally pulling their credit reports,
and they may even report the debt as active and collectible to the
credit bureaus.
These acts may prevent a debtor’s
credit score from properly rebounding after filing bankruptcy and
threaten the fresh start they were expecting. What all debtors should do
is keep every letter or email received from creditors, document each
phone call carefully and report these contacts to their attorneys.
There
are various laws that protect bankruptcy filers from these types of
illegal contacts, but they can only be successfully prosecuted if there
is evidence to show the court and jury. The actual letters, telephone
records and documentation of damages are all needed to prevail in
bankruptcy court, in state courts, or the federal district courts. But
nothing will happen unless an attorney who handles these type claims is
retained and he has the proof necessary to prevail.
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