25 April 2013
The Bankruptcy Abuse
Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 gave the US Trustee’s
office the power to audit consumer bankruptcy cases for fraud and abuse. It was to identify “material misstatements”
to root out fraud and abuse.
The way it worked in
practice in the past was that an accounting firm notified the debtor that the
case had been selected for audit. The
notice would request certain documents, such as tax returns, bank statements,
and pay advices (pay stubs) to be provided within a certain period of
time. If you did not provide the
documents/information, there was a problem.
Upon receipt of the documents/information, the accounting firm conducted
the audit, presumably performing the same calculations the debtor and his
attorney would perform, and assess whether there were material misstatements. In the US Trustee’s 2012 it described what
the auditors do. It stated in part:
An audit consists of a
comparison between selected items on a debtor’s originally filed bankruptcy
papers and documents produced by the debtor at the request of the audit firm.
Audit firms also conduct at least two searches using commercially and publicly
available database services to look for unreported assets and to verify the
market value of assets.
There
are 2 ways that a bankruptcy case can be audited. One is simply random. The other is called an exception audit. The US Trustee’s report described the 2 types
of audits in this way:
Random audits are selected
randomly from all consumer bankruptcy cases within a federal judicial district.
In contrast, cases designated for exception audit must meet specific criteria
established by the USTP. These criteria are based on income or expenditures
greater than a statistical norm for the district where the case was filed, as
specified under uncodified section 603(a)(2)(C) of the BAPCPA.
The US Trustee’s 2012 annual
report shows that material misstatements were found in about 16% of consumer
cases that were randomly audited and in 31% of cases selected for an exception audit.
A material misstatement was found in twenty-five percent of case overall. Although this does not mean that the US
Trustee’s office took substantive action upon the finding of a material
misstatement, such as seeking to object to the debtor’s discharge, but it certainly
is something you want to avoid if you are a debtor.
In March of this year the US
Trustee’s office made the following announcement, in part, concerning audits:
As authorized in Section
603(a) of Public Law 109-8, the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer
Protection Act of 2005 (BAPCPA), the United States Trustee Program (USTP)
established procedures for independent audit firms to audit petitions,
schedules, and other information in consumer bankruptcy cases. Pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 586(f), the USTP contracted with independent accounting firms to
perform audits in cases designated by the USTP.
Due to budgetary
constraints, the USTP has indefinitely suspended its designation of cases
subject to audit and has notified the independent accounting firms performing
the audits.
. . . .
Despite
the fact that audits have been suspended for now, an audit is just one
component of the bankruptcy system designed to ensure that debtors are honest,
forthcoming, and accurate. It is still imperative
to make sure a debtor handles a filing correctly. In the event that you are considering
engaging an attorney to represent you in a bankruptcy, please feel free to
call.
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