Bankruptcy fraud is a white-collar crime.
While difficult to generalize across jurisdictions, common criminal
acts under bankruptcy statutes typically involve concealment of assets,
concealment or destruction of documents, conflicts of interest,
fraudulent claims, false statements or declarations, and fee fixing or redistribution arrangements. Falsifications on bankruptcy forms often constitute perjury.
Multiple filings are not in and of themselves criminal, but they may
violate provisions of bankruptcy law. In the U.S., bankruptcy fraud
statutes are particularly focused on the mental state of particular actions.[11][12] Bankruptcy fraud is a federal crime in the United States.
Bankruptcy fraud should be distinguished from strategic bankruptcy, which is not a criminal act since it is creates a real (not a fake) bankruptcy state. However, it may still work against the filer.
All assets must be disclosed in bankruptcy schedules whether or not the debtor believes the asset has a net value.
This is because once a bankruptcy petition is filed, it is for the
creditors, not the debtor, to decide whether a particular asset has
value. The future ramifications of omitting assets from schedules can be
quite serious for the offending debtor. In the United States, a closed
bankruptcy may be reopened by motion of a creditor or the U.S. trustee
if a debtor attempts to later assert ownership of such an "unscheduled
asset" after being discharged of all debt in the bankruptcy. The trustee
may then seize the asset and liquidate it for the benefit of the
(formerly discharged) creditors. Whether or not a concealment of such an
asset should also be considered for prosecution as fraud and/or perjury would then be at the discretion of the judge and/or U.S. Trustee.
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