Posts Tagged ‘bankruptcy attorney San Bernardino County’

Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Filings for Inland Empire, October 2009

Monday, November 9th, 2009

From the Curtis Law Group Blog:

“Chapter 7 bankruptcies filed by residents of Riverside County and San Bernardino County are filed in the Riverside Bankruptcy Courthouse.  Data from that court points to the following ten cities as having the highest number of Chapter 7 bankruptcies for residents of those counties for October 2009:

Corona, Fontana, Hemet, Hesperia, Moreno Valley, Murrieta, Ontario, Rancho Cucamonga, Riverside, and San Bernardino.”

Chapter 7 Bankrutpcy Filings For August 2009

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Chapter 7 bankruptcy filings in the Riverside County Bankruptcy Courthouse for August 2009 reveal that the top ten cities in Riverside and San Bernardino County with the most Chapter 7 bankruptcies were:

Corona, Fontana, Moreno Valley, Murrieta, Ontario, Rancho Cucamonga, Riverside, San Bernardino, Temecula, and Victorville.

Bankruptcy attorneys from Riverside and San Bernardino County are also witnessing a high number of filings from debtors residing in Chino, Chino Hills, Hemet, and Hesperia.

Bankruptcy Cramdown Bill Facing Defeat in Senate Today

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

The much anticipated legislation allowing bankruptcy judges to modify mortgages looks like it is fated not to pass the Senate.  Riverside County bankruptcy attorneys and San Bernardino bankruptcy attorneys, along with many Inland Empire residents facing foreclosure, were hoping for some relief from Congress.  A different consumer-related bill, relating to credit card regulation, looks like it will pass, however.

From Yahoo news:

“Two consumer-oriented pieces of legislation opposed by the financial services industry appear to be headed for radically different fates in Congress.

A credit card reform bill with enhanced consumer protections is progressing fairly smoothly, while a so-called cramdown bill-which would let homeowners use bankruptcy court as a an alternative to the foreclosure process-appears unlikely to become law, according to business and Congressional sources.

The difference may be as simple as the level of pubic support from the White House at a time when relations between the administration and the financial services industry are deteriorating amid tension over TARP money, bank stress tests and executive pay.

‘There will be a credit card bill,’ predicts one well-placed industry source. ‘It makes sense. Everybody in America understands the issue. If you had to pick a legislative fight, with this you win.’

‘The cramdown is a much tougher one to do, which is part of what is going into the thinking,” says veteran banking analyst Bert Ely of Ely & Co. “There’s a lot of people who don’t have a mortgage. Credit cards are more of a populist issue.’”

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