I have a few questions regarding Adversary Proceedings pursuant to 523. I saw a few threads on this a while ago and read them.
My situation: I have a large amount of unsecured and priority debt. Five months before filing Chapter 7, I took out some balance transfers and cash advances for casino gambling. The amounts involved in these balance transfers may seem large to this forum and to lawyers, but it is a small percentage of the total debt I am seeking to discharge. I used to have high income, but due to several compounding factors, I have had no income and passed the means test (I'm currently a No Asset, without Presumption of Abuse, as I head into my 341 meeting soon).
One law firm has written two separate letters, representing two separate credit cards. Both letters cite that as I have made no payments during the five months, and that as the credit limit was pretty much used up, they seek a stipulation amount or a one time cash payment. It looks like a form letter citing FDCPA disclaimer stuff at the end, and seems to be a threat to try to get me to settle.
The letter also suggests I may want to offer more explanation/ evidence behind my situation (which is bad to do, I know).
I have a retained solid lawyer, but seek additional thoughts. OK, my questions, as I saw in another thread, some people had similar threatening form letters.
1. Did anyone give these letters seeking settlement to their designated trustee at the 341 meeting? Apparently, there was a thread which suggested trustees did not appreciate lawyers seeking settlements for specific creditors during the BK process
2. Does anyone know whether one law firm can represent multiple creditors as this law firm is (it is even the same lawyer). In my case, it is two separate credit card companies
3. Did anyone receive these letters and what happened to you? Did they just send that letter and then stop? My letter read pretty much the same as the one posted in the other old thread.
4. Whether to volunteer "my evidence" upfront or wait? I am very comfortable with defending the use of cash. It is not squirreled away under the mattress, but rather went immediately to a wire transfer to a casino. I have learned my lesson about the irrationality of gambling, but it was an emotional, sobering road. So, my question is: does anyone have thoughts of proactively offering this explanation to the trustee at the initial 341 meeting or waiting for the round about question and data gathering? I strongly do not believe it was fraudulent, etc (stupid yes); I have paid numerous, numerous markers and balance transfers over the past 10 years (sad but true, so I can prove that this is a repeat history).
4. Do you agree or no? My reaction to these letters are that they are complete garbage and just seeking to scare me into a settlement, which I have no interest in. The burden of proof lies with them and I can prove where the money went. I had every intention of paying it back then, before my financial situation deterioriated further over the summer. And, I did not make minimum payments as my lawyer told me to not to, once I retained him.
5. Has anyone actually defended against an older than a 70/90 day cash advance/balance transfer AP process? Can you tell us how it went? I have 0% interest in settling, and would rather incur massive legal expense that I am confident that this law firm would need to reimburse my lawyer for.
My overall strategy is to (a) not offer them anything they can try to spin against me, (b) ignore them, (c) see if they show up at the 341 to see if they are really going to be a pain, and (d) as a last resort, have my lawyer call them and verbally tell them it was for gambling.
Can I ask for any advice if anyone else has received these letters threatening Adversarial Proceedings (I received these between filing and the 341 meeting)? I am a bit nervous that one law firm can represent multiple creditors, and they may be more willing to waste time which tends to deter most APs.
Thank you kindly.
My situation: I have a large amount of unsecured and priority debt. Five months before filing Chapter 7, I took out some balance transfers and cash advances for casino gambling. The amounts involved in these balance transfers may seem large to this forum and to lawyers, but it is a small percentage of the total debt I am seeking to discharge. I used to have high income, but due to several compounding factors, I have had no income and passed the means test (I'm currently a No Asset, without Presumption of Abuse, as I head into my 341 meeting soon).
One law firm has written two separate letters, representing two separate credit cards. Both letters cite that as I have made no payments during the five months, and that as the credit limit was pretty much used up, they seek a stipulation amount or a one time cash payment. It looks like a form letter citing FDCPA disclaimer stuff at the end, and seems to be a threat to try to get me to settle.
The letter also suggests I may want to offer more explanation/ evidence behind my situation (which is bad to do, I know).
I have a retained solid lawyer, but seek additional thoughts. OK, my questions, as I saw in another thread, some people had similar threatening form letters.
1. Did anyone give these letters seeking settlement to their designated trustee at the 341 meeting? Apparently, there was a thread which suggested trustees did not appreciate lawyers seeking settlements for specific creditors during the BK process
2. Does anyone know whether one law firm can represent multiple creditors as this law firm is (it is even the same lawyer). In my case, it is two separate credit card companies
3. Did anyone receive these letters and what happened to you? Did they just send that letter and then stop? My letter read pretty much the same as the one posted in the other old thread.
4. Whether to volunteer "my evidence" upfront or wait? I am very comfortable with defending the use of cash. It is not squirreled away under the mattress, but rather went immediately to a wire transfer to a casino. I have learned my lesson about the irrationality of gambling, but it was an emotional, sobering road. So, my question is: does anyone have thoughts of proactively offering this explanation to the trustee at the initial 341 meeting or waiting for the round about question and data gathering? I strongly do not believe it was fraudulent, etc (stupid yes); I have paid numerous, numerous markers and balance transfers over the past 10 years (sad but true, so I can prove that this is a repeat history).
4. Do you agree or no? My reaction to these letters are that they are complete garbage and just seeking to scare me into a settlement, which I have no interest in. The burden of proof lies with them and I can prove where the money went. I had every intention of paying it back then, before my financial situation deterioriated further over the summer. And, I did not make minimum payments as my lawyer told me to not to, once I retained him.
5. Has anyone actually defended against an older than a 70/90 day cash advance/balance transfer AP process? Can you tell us how it went? I have 0% interest in settling, and would rather incur massive legal expense that I am confident that this law firm would need to reimburse my lawyer for.
My overall strategy is to (a) not offer them anything they can try to spin against me, (b) ignore them, (c) see if they show up at the 341 to see if they are really going to be a pain, and (d) as a last resort, have my lawyer call them and verbally tell them it was for gambling.
Can I ask for any advice if anyone else has received these letters threatening Adversarial Proceedings (I received these between filing and the 341 meeting)? I am a bit nervous that one law firm can represent multiple creditors, and they may be more willing to waste time which tends to deter most APs.
Thank you kindly.
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