What is the cost for bankruptcy today? Is there cheap bankruptcy for
American debtors? Any low cost bankruptcy in affordable range? Today, as
Americans are rightly outraged over the AIG Bonus and Excessive
Corporate Compensation issue, the American Bankruptcy Lawyers' show no
hint of showing responsibility or sacrifice as they reportedly continue
to demand and collect $1,000-per-hour fees for corporate bankruptcy
work!
With
the hard economic times and high unemployment in the nation, and many
Americans, individuals as well as businesses, increasingly hurting, the
central economic issue for many Americans is cost for bankruptcy, a
sacred right conferred by the Constitution. Do we all, perhaps, have to
"Go to Law School" in order to make out well as debtors and consumers in
the current Economy?
Reacting to the bankruptcy lawyers' charge
of $1,110-per-hour fee in a Chicago case liquidating the then giant
United Airlines, one outraged Chicago reporter, Knight Ridder, dished
out this advice to the workers who lost their jobs in the bankrupt
airline: "in your next lives, go to law school." ("UAL's Bankruptcy
Lawyers Document a Feast of Fees," Tribune News, March 5, 2003).
Bankruptcy
has recently been called "America's [current] growth industry" by the
British Times newspaper. At a time in which almost every other industry
in the United States, in deed in the whole industrialized world, is
experiencing massive economic burst and employment lay offs, the British
paper noted, American "Lawyers who specialize in representing failed
businesses are a hot commodity." (See Citation 1 below at the end of
this article). That may be great for the bankruptcy lawyers' pocket
book. But what about the rest of America, particularly if you're so hard
pressed that you have to file for bankruptcy? How much will it cost for
bankruptcy? low-cost bankruptcy
One American bankruptcy lawyer,
Jason Kilborn, wrote in a CreditSlips.com piece characterizing the
English newspaper report as "U.S.-bankruptcy-lawyer envy" by the British
lawyers which, he said, "is doubly powerful, as even bankruptcy lawyers
there are not as high-profile as in the U.S." He noted, however, that
even "here in the U.S. lawyers in other areas [of legal practice] must
be eyeeing their bankruptcy counterparts with envy, as our sector enjoys
(if we can use that word without multi-directional guilt!) rapid growth
while other areas are contracting," concluding by appealing to his
fellow American bankruptcy lawyers to "let us U.S. bankruptcy lawyers
try not to be too smug (for the humor impaired, yes, this is a little
joke!)" about their unique standing as a virtual lone professional
'growth industry' in the midst of economic wreckage and devastation in
the nation and the world.
In point of fact, Mr. Kilborn and his
fellow American bankruptcy lawyers actually have pretty plenty to be
apologetic for to the American people, and a lot of explaining yet to
do. "Corporate greed" for the AIG and Wall Street executives, right?
What about "bankruptcy lawyers greed"? Or the bankruptcy lawyers'
excessive selfishness, opportunism and lack of sacrifice, for such
remarkable conduct that this legal specialty has so amazingly displayed
as major professional players in the current American economic crises!
Not the least of these being that, to date, the legal profession are yet
to provide legitimate low-cost alternative bankruptcy filing system to
the lawyers' high cost bankruptcy system, and a system that brings
bankruptcy on the cheap to debtors and readily within their reach.
Somewhat
remarkably, it's something that has somehow managed to escape the
general public or media scrutiny, or even attention, that it clearly
ought to attract. One of the most recent cases frequently cited by
experts in such discussions, relates to the lawyers' liquidation work on
the now bankrupt airline giant, the United Air Lines. This is the case
involving the UAL's Chicago-based outside law firm, Kirkland &
Ellis, that is reportedly the first case that "broke through the
$1,000-an-hour barrier" in legal fees, as its charge in that case was an
hourly fee of $1,110 to liquidate the UAL in bankruptcy.
It was a
fee whose magnitude prompted another reporter in a more recent
bankruptcy case, to call the fee of $950 per hour charged by the New
York law firm of Weil, Gotshal & Manges in the largest American
bankruptcy case in history, the Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc case, to
"look cut-rate and a mere" paltry sum. Recent reports about exorbitant
bonuses taken or planned by the executives of wealthy but troubled
institutions like the Lehman Brothers, the AIG, the automobile companies
and others, has sparked a gradual groundswell of political and public
outrage and condemnation across America about excessive lifestyle by
corporations, and exorbitant compensation and "corporate greed" by
business executives. (See Citation 2 below).
But where has similar
outrage been by the Washington and local politicians and the public -
or the reportage about it by the media - against the outrageous
$1,000-plus-an-hour fees charged by bankruptcy lawyers in corporate
bankruptcy work? Or, a similar outrage against the equally outrageous
average fee of $2,000 to $2,500 that lawyers charge struggling debtors
in the simplest types of Chapter 7 personal bankruptcy cases?
President
Barack Obama has publicly called such conduct 'shameful.' And, since
the latest story broke public condemnation, with well-publicized public
demonstrations and protests at AIG offices and the homes of most
recently about the attempt of the AIG executives to parcel out fat
bonuses of some $160 million or so to their workers, prominent American
politicians, from President Barack Obama to members of Congress,
Democrats as well as Republicans, have taken turns to rush before the
camera and to the airwaves to denounce and condemn the "corporate greed
and thievery" of America's business executives and institutions in high
places. And even the general public have joined the parade of its
executives in Connecticut. A common refrain by the protesters and
persons who condemn such predatory conduct as to what particularly
enrages, is that it is simply outrageous and intolerable for persons or
institutions in positions of privilege or advantage to "exploit the
misery" of Americans in vulnerable situations who are unable to meet
their routine financial obligations in the current depressed economic
conditions (e.g., landlords against tenants, mortgage lenders against
home buyers, and the like), and live lives of opulence or extravagance
even as the poorer and less fortunate Americans are mired in suffering
and hardship.
That's all fine and proper, and very much welcome.
But, a central question: IN THE INTEREST OF AMERICAN FAIRNESS, EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY AND EQUAL TIME, WHERE IS THE OUTRAGE AND PROTEST FOR A
SIMILAR CONDUCT BY THE BANKRUPTCY LAWYERS IN AMERICA? Where is some
bankruptcy on the cheap for cash strapped American debtors?
For
most Americas seeking bankruptcy, the crucial impediment is cost for
bankruptcy. How much will it cost for bankruptcy. Yet, in terms of
personal bankruptcy of the Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 types, for example,
which are the bankruptcy domain in which primarily you find the poorer
and the less privileged and more voiceless classes of the society, it
has been estimated by experts that at least the same 1.1 million or so
debtors in number who filed bankruptcy in 2008, additionally wish to
file for bankruptcy, but fail to do so merely because they're not able
for afford the legal fees required for filing one. Putting it very
simply, these are, in effect, Americans who are deprived, each year, of
filing for bankruptcy - to legitimately exercise a special
constitutional right of citizenship - to relieve themselves of their
debt burden. And why? Primarily because of, and out of, the financial
greed and selfishness of the personal bankruptcy lawyers. No less than
the AIG executives and corporate executives who are, and quite
understandably so, the recipients of the outrage and condemnation of the
politicians and the public today.
We may, perhaps, have come to
the time when the American people will have to demand and insist, under
the threat, perhaps, of public protests and demonstrations, that,
particularly in the current economic crisis, the legal fees charged by
the nation's bankruptcy lawyers for personal as well as corporate
bankruptcy, be drastically brought down and capped - just like the
famous Wall Street executives and others for whom such a policy has been
advocated by President Obama and several members of Congress. Or, at
the very least, the President, the members of Congress and the American
public - as well as the media - should begin publicly to call attention
to, and point a finger of shame and condemnation at, the bankruptcy
lawyers. In either case, it will require a visibly enraged class of
debtors, the American general public, and even creditors, and a
sensitive but courageous class of politicians truly sensitive about the
role of such exorbitant legal fees by bankruptcy lawyers in further
compounding and worsening the already deep economic hurt of the
debt-burdened Americans and American companies already swimming in deep,
deep debt burdens in the current economic recession.
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