Can I start a thread to share experiences on this topic?
I often read that trustees or lawyers ask for 6 months, 1 year, 2 years worth of records. I doubt many of us kept paper copies of bank and credit card statements that far back. I can imagine that CC may not be that helpful to you once you are defaulting.
I have pretty good personal records on Quicken, but I wonder whether one's own records is that acceptable. I checked some of my accounts on-line, and lo and behold, they are no longer accessible to me as I have moved my funds elsewhere.
So, here are some questions:
1) How far back did your trustee ask you for?
2) How far back were you able to provide your trustee in "paper copies"?
3) Did you have to rely on Quicken or other home spreadsheets to fill the gap? Or on-line statements?
4) What happened when you were not able to provide everything?
From what I gather from the forums, most people have been pretty good at keeping paper copies of bills and bank statements in the few months before filing. It seems rare that a TRUSTEE will ask for anything much more, except if you run into a 2004 examination or some such. Then, it seems a 2 year is often requested (though they can of course dig more years in the past).
I thought people's experiences would be helpful for all of us in the "preparation phase". Better to be prepared and honest, well ahead of the post-filing panic days...
Thanks to all who can share.
I often read that trustees or lawyers ask for 6 months, 1 year, 2 years worth of records. I doubt many of us kept paper copies of bank and credit card statements that far back. I can imagine that CC may not be that helpful to you once you are defaulting.
I have pretty good personal records on Quicken, but I wonder whether one's own records is that acceptable. I checked some of my accounts on-line, and lo and behold, they are no longer accessible to me as I have moved my funds elsewhere.
So, here are some questions:
1) How far back did your trustee ask you for?
2) How far back were you able to provide your trustee in "paper copies"?
3) Did you have to rely on Quicken or other home spreadsheets to fill the gap? Or on-line statements?
4) What happened when you were not able to provide everything?
From what I gather from the forums, most people have been pretty good at keeping paper copies of bills and bank statements in the few months before filing. It seems rare that a TRUSTEE will ask for anything much more, except if you run into a 2004 examination or some such. Then, it seems a 2 year is often requested (though they can of course dig more years in the past).
I thought people's experiences would be helpful for all of us in the "preparation phase". Better to be prepared and honest, well ahead of the post-filing panic days...
Thanks to all who can share.
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