Top 10 Ethics Traps and How to Avoid Them
Supreme Court Rejects Strict Liability for Discharge Violations
‘No objectively reasonable basis’ is the high court standard to find civil contempt for violating the discharge injunction.
Court:
McKinsey Said Disclosure Rules Were Confusing, But It Appeared to Ignore Its Own Primer
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Fifth Circuit Upholds Sanctions Against ‘Nationwide’ Law Firm
Appeals court lauds Bankruptcy Judge Jeffrey Norman’s ‘well-reasoned’ opinion.
Court:
Disclosing an Asset in the Wrong Place Won’t Invoke Judicial Estoppel, Circuit Says
Second Circuit won’t give a defendant a windfall if the debtor scheduled the lawsuit in the wrong place but told the trustee and the court.
Court:
Disciplinary Sanctions Held Nondischargeable Even Though Not Paid to the State
The Ninth Circuit BAP follows Kelley, even though the panel implies that the Supreme Court tortured the language in Section 523(a)(7).
Court:
Supreme Court Hears Argument on Good Faith as Defense to Discharge Violation
In Taggart v. Lorenzen, the justices sounded largely noncommittal, except for the Chief Justice, who seemed in the debtor’s camp favoring a stricter standard for contempt of the discharge injunction.
Court:
Judges Approve Settlement Between McKinsey and Justice Department
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Bifurcated Fees for Destitute Chapter 7 Debtors Approved in Utah
Copious disclosure required for post-petition payment of fees to be permissible in chapter 7.
Court: