bankruptcy legal research

What would have happened to Michael Vick if he did the dog fighting in another country where it IS LEGAL?
Was reading the news and saw the judge reject his plan to get out of bankruptcy. I know dog fighting is wrong to our laws and culture, but the question is if he really wanted to do it, why not do it in a country where that is legal? I did do some research and found quite few countries allowed it either by being legal outright or if illegal, not enforced. Would he have avoided a lot of trouble if he simply did it elsewhere where that is legal?
Again, it is reprehensible to do it at all, but since there are countries that do allow it, I can’t judge another countries customs or culture against my own.
If it was legal, he still would be playing football…
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Paralegal Practice & Procedure: A Practical Guide for the Legal Assistant $5.49 AU Deborah E. Larbalestrier AF Los Angeles, CA. DE This immensely popular reference book is the first place the effective, efficient paralegal turns to for answers. Literally packed with thousands of step-by-step procedures, facts, figures, definitions, model forms and diagrams, qit-Paralegal Practice and Procedure-qit covers virtually every significant law and computerised research tool in every … |
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The Independent Paralegal’s Handbook: Everything You Need to Run a Business Preparing Legal Paperwork for the Public $29.95 Now in its fifth edition, Ralph Warner’s The Independent Paralegal’s Handbook is billed as a how-to guide for people who want to take the law into their own hands. This is a good road map for a profession that has grown quickly in recent decades, as motivated consumers seek to avoid intermediaries (lawyers) and handle their own legal matters in areas such as bankruptcy, personal injury settl… |
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The Effects of the Changes in Chapter 7 Debtors’ Lien-Avoidance Rights Under the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (Technical Report (RAND)) $19.97 The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (BAPCPA) limited the types and quantities of exempt household goods on which debtors could avoid certain liens. Part of the motivation for these changes was a perception that debtors were using household goods as collateral to obtain loans that they never intended to repay. This study found no changes in debtor or creditor behavio… |



