Important Bankruptcy Recap: Don't Bank where you owe Money!

By Sean McDaniel on November 29, 2011 11:42 AM |

We tell clients this repeatedly.

Why mention this? It's simple: If a creditor (like a bank, for instance) has direct access to your bank account (as banks often do), then you can consider your checking balance dumped into the rancor pit as your creditor laughs their trademarked Jabba the Hutt laugh above you.

You know...

The pit? The one with a Rancor in it? From Star Wars?

Okay, let's put it this way then: If you owe money to a bank where you also store money in a savings or checking account, there's all kinds of technicalities that allow them to siphon the money out of your account without your knowledge or approval. If you owe money and have not made payments they will seize the opportunity, it's a proven fact. It is what they do.

If you're already filing a Bankruptcy then you may have glossed over some of the information you've been given because there's a lot relating to a bankruptcy that's occasionally hard to digest. This isn't one of those things you can sit around to consider; this is an immediate call to action that should have you setting up a bank account elsewhere ASAP.

You can't afford to wait for someone to remind you that you might want to keep your money, so take care of it before the bank makes it a moot point.

If you're still looking into your options to resolve your financial issues and Bankruptcy is on the list, you MUST keep this in mind. DO NOT bank where you owe money if you are filing a Bankruptcy in Arizona (or anywhere else for that matter), because the bank will swim around in your funds like Scrooge McDuck in his money bin, take photos of themselves with YOUR money and leave a bunch of zeroes lying around in your account.

In order to file a Bankruptcy, you'll have to stop paying your creditors and that includes credit cards. Often people will hesitate because they've worked so diligently to protect their credit score and bank accounts to date that doing things like not paying sounds ludicrous or dishonest. If you have misdirected feelings about protecting an unsecured creditor (this counts for ANY unsecured creditor) you need to stop paying them anyway prior to filing because failing to do so means that creditor will be sued by the trustee, which is a bigger hassle for everyone involved. Even the creditor that you were trying to protect.

If there's just one thing you take to heart from this, let it be that you won't be banking where you owe money when you file Bankruptcy. You need a bank account just on general principle, but you need a bank you can rely upon to store money instead of taking it.

It just depends on how much you care about keeping your money.