Questions about settling tax liens that survived my bankruptcy:
Filed Bankruptcy in October 2005 (pro-se).
Personal assets under $5,000 (all declared as exempt.)
Unsecured priority claims (Schedule E)
My 1998 and 2000, tax returns were NOT filed prior to bankruptcy:
... IRS lien, tax and penalies due, about $60,000.
... California FTB lien, tax and penalies due, about $5,000.
Post-bankruptcy settlement offers:
IRS and FTB say pre-bankruptcy liens are enforceable against pre-bankruptcy assets.
FTB offered to settle $5,000 lien for $1,200.
... (already done)
IRS offered to settle $60,000 lien for $3,000.
... (IRS has accepted, will do it this week.)
Questions:
IRS and FTB made tax assessments based on W-2, 1099, and other records.
Do I still need to file 1998, 2000 tax returns? (Records missing, lost.)
OR, can I just settle the tax assessments as post-bankruptcy offers, and be done with it all?
Would filing 1998, 2000 tax returns re-open a new case, or will the post-bankruptcy settlement close these debts?
Even if I owe less than the ($60,000) tax assessments, could I get any refund? Probably not... so, why bother?
My current income is unpredictable, from part time, temporary jobs, less than $2,000 per month.
I can borrow $3,000 from a relative to settle with IRS, if it is advisable.
Any suggestions?
Filed Bankruptcy in October 2005 (pro-se).
Personal assets under $5,000 (all declared as exempt.)
Unsecured priority claims (Schedule E)
My 1998 and 2000, tax returns were NOT filed prior to bankruptcy:
... IRS lien, tax and penalies due, about $60,000.
... California FTB lien, tax and penalies due, about $5,000.
Post-bankruptcy settlement offers:
IRS and FTB say pre-bankruptcy liens are enforceable against pre-bankruptcy assets.
FTB offered to settle $5,000 lien for $1,200.
... (already done)
IRS offered to settle $60,000 lien for $3,000.
... (IRS has accepted, will do it this week.)
Questions:
IRS and FTB made tax assessments based on W-2, 1099, and other records.
Do I still need to file 1998, 2000 tax returns? (Records missing, lost.)
OR, can I just settle the tax assessments as post-bankruptcy offers, and be done with it all?
Would filing 1998, 2000 tax returns re-open a new case, or will the post-bankruptcy settlement close these debts?
Even if I owe less than the ($60,000) tax assessments, could I get any refund? Probably not... so, why bother?
My current income is unpredictable, from part time, temporary jobs, less than $2,000 per month.
I can borrow $3,000 from a relative to settle with IRS, if it is advisable.
Any suggestions?
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