Bankruptcy Law, Credit, Timothy Kingcade Posts

Five Credit Tips for College Grads

For recent college graduates, the end of college means entrance into the ‘real world’. While new grads tend to focus on pressing issues like submitting job applications and sending out resumes, it is important to pay attention to personal finances.

1.) Choose cards selectively and apply seldom: Be selective about which cards you apply for, and only apply for one credit card at a time. Most credit applications result in an extensive inquiry, and if you have too many inquiries in a short period of time, you may be less likely to be approved by lenders when you apply for additional lines of credit in the future.

2.) Use your cards wisely: To build strong credit, use your credit card to buy everyday items, preferably things that you’re getting rewards points and cash back for, and pay the bill in full every month.

3.) Pay down your student loans: If you have a student loan payment that’s too high, your best option is to negotiate with the lender and try and make a reduced payment every month. You’ll be paying down the debt at a slower rate, but it’s a start. You may also consider consolidating all your loans into one, which may help lower monthly payments and better manage your outstanding debt. Deferment and forbearance are not wise options. These simply postpone the inevitable.

4.) Pay your bills on time: Your payment history contributes to 35% of your credit score, and on-time payments matter. Set up alerts and use online (automatic debits from your bank account) payments to help you stay current when it comes to your bills. Any payment more than 30 days late will likely be reported to the credit bureaus as delinquent.

5.) Check your credit report: Go to www.annualcreditreport.com and check your credit report at least once every year. It’s free to do! A recent report by the Federal Trade Commission found that 20% of consumers had an error on at least one of their three credit reports. Errors may impact your ability to receive financing on things like a mortgage or car loan or limit your access to the best credit cards.

Click here to read more on the 5 credit tips for recent college graduates:

If you are in a financial crisis and are considering filing bankruptcy, contact an experienced Miami bankruptcy attorney who can advise you of all of your options. As an experienced CPA as well as a proven bankruptcy lawyer, Timothy Kingcade knows how to help clients take full advantage of the bankruptcy laws to protect their assets and get successful results. Since 1996 Kingcade & Garcia, P.A. has been helping people from all walks of life build a better tomorrow. Our attorneys’ help thousands of people every year take advantage of their rights under bankruptcy protection to restart, rebuild and recover. The day you hire our firm, we will contact your creditors to stop the harassment. You can also find useful consumer information on the Kingcade & Garcia website at www.miamibankruptcy.com.

Bankruptcy Law, Credit, Timothy Kingcade Posts

How to Obliterate your Student Loan Debt

homes underwaterPaying off student loan debt can often be just as difficult as earning your degree. According to the Pew Research Center, nearly 1 in 5 households carry student loan debt. That’s nearly double the number of households from 1998. U.S. students on average borrow $27,000 for education, according to the Project on Student Debt, which is more than twice what students borrowed, on average, about 20 years ago.

No matter what debt eliminating strategy you use, giving up a portion of your paycheck to pay off student loan debt takes discipline and oftentimes radical lifestyle changes. Here’s how three couples worked to pay down their student loan debt in record time.

Understand the Problem: It wasn’t until Deacon Hayes and his wife wrote down their student loan debt on paper that they got serious about paying it off. They credit their strict budgeting and using the debt snowball method (paying down debt starting with the smallest amount and working up) as the reasons why they were able to pay off all of their debt in just 18 months. In addition, they combined cell phone plans, saving $50 per month and sold Hayes’ brand-new car.

Close the Leaks: Once you understand where your money is going, plug budget leaks and open new income streams. Both tactics are helping Bryan Lovgren and his wife in their plan to tackle nearly $28,000 in loans in just 10 months. They bargain shop for necessity items and have switched to a more vegetable-based diet to lower food costs. More importantly, they have committed to living off one salary, while Lovgren’s wife devotes her entire paychecks to the loan. They have also generated $7,000 to $8,000 by selling things they own through a local classified service.

Stay Motivated: Statistically, consumers spend less when they use cash over credit cards, plan purchases in advance, automate their savings and keep projected savings goals in mind. Keeping your eye on the prize also helps. To pay off more than $100,000 in student loan debt in five years, Tricia Meyer and her husband made loan payments equivalent to their mortgage payments each month and built that into their necessary household expenses. To make the extra payment, they both took freelance consulting or teaching jobs and Meyer launched a couponing website where she now works full time. Together the couple generated between $10,000 and $15,000 annually in side income.

Click here to read more on how three couples paid off their student loan debt in record time.

If you are in a financial crisis and are considering filing bankruptcy, contact an experienced Miami bankruptcy attorney who can advise you of all of your options. As an experienced CPA as well as a proven bankruptcy lawyer, Timothy Kingcade knows how to help clients take full advantage of the bankruptcy laws to protect their assets and get successful results. Since 1996 Kingcade & Garcia, P.A. has been helping people from all walks of life build a better tomorrow. Our attorneys’ help thousands of people every year take advantage of their rights under bankruptcy protection to restart, rebuild and recover. The day you hire our firm, we will contact your creditors to stop the harassment. You can also find useful consumer information on the Kingcade & Garcia website at www.miamibankruptcy.com.

Bankruptcy Law, Timothy Kingcade Posts

Lauderdale Lakes Rental Inspection Program Challenged in Federal Court

A group of Lauderdale Lake apartment complexes is suing the city in Federal court, claiming its new rental inspection program amounts to unnecessary and unwarranted searches of their property. The suit seeks to have the law declared unconstitutional and is asking for an injunction to keep the city from conducting inspections while the suit is heard.

City officials created the inspection program in February as a way of dealing with the foreclosure crisis that saw many single-family homes turned into poorly maintained rental properties. Under the program, inspectors go inside every rental to make sure the plumbing works, the electric circuits are wired properly, illegal rooms have not been added and walls and ceilings are not falling down.

The suit says even if there were a legitimate city purpose for the inspections, they would at least have to be required of all residences. In addition, plaintiffs believe that the inspection fee (of $150) is excessive and arbitrary because no such fee is charged to residential property owners whose apartment or residences are not for rent.

Click here to read more on the Rental Inspection Program being challenged in Federal court.

Choosing the right attorney can make the difference between whether or not you can keep your home. A well-qualified Miami foreclosure defense attorney will not only help you keep your home, but they will be able to negotiate a loan that has payments you can afford. Miami foreclosure defense attorney Timothy Kingcade has helped many facing foreclosure alleviate their stress by letting them stay in their homes for at least another year, allowing them to re-organize their lives. If you have any questions on the topic of foreclosure please feel free to contact me at (305) 285-9100. You can also find useful consumer information on the website, www.miamibankruptcy.com.

Foreclosures, Timothy Kingcade Posts

Property Values on the Rise in most Broward Cities

Property values in Broward County are on the rise according to new data. Cooper City leads the way with an 8.56-percent increase in taxable value; North Lauderdale comes in second with a 7.07-percent increase. Parkland has registered a 6.20-percent increase, while Coral Springs has seen a 4.08-percent spike in value.

These new numbers confirm the worst may be behind us. Mayor Vince Boccard expects property values to increase gradually in the next few years. Interest rates remain at historic lows, which have contributed to the shrinking inventory of homes on the market and an increase in housing prices all over the country. Many people are coming to realize that it costs less to purchase a home than to rent one.

Click here to read more on the rise in property values in Broward County.

Choosing the right attorney can make the difference between whether or not you can keep your home. A well-qualified Miami foreclosure defense attorney will not only help you keep your home, but they will be able to negotiate a loan that has payments you can afford. Miami foreclosure defense attorney Timothy Kingcade has helped many facing foreclosure alleviate their stress by letting them stay in their homes for at least another year, allowing them to re-organize their lives. If you have any questions on the topic of foreclosure please feel free to contact me at (305) 285-9100. You can also find useful consumer information on the website, www.miamibankruptcy.com.

Foreclosures, Timothy Kingcade Posts

Scott Signs Controversial ‘Fast Track’ Foreclosure Bill- Puts Florida Homeowners at Disadvantage

On Friday, June 7, 2013 Governor Rick Scott signed the controversial ‘fast track’ foreclosure bill. The bill is the first substantial change to Florida foreclosure laws since the burst of the real estate bubble in 2007, which pushed thousands of homeowners into default and overwhelmed the court system with foreclosures.

HB 87 requires homeowners to respond more quickly to foreclosure filings and gives community associations more power in the process. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Jack Latvala and Rep. Kathleen Passidomo, also requires lenders to have their paperwork in order before filing a foreclosure complaint. And it cuts the time period in which banks can seek a deficiency judgment against homeowners to one year from five.

Scott, along with other supporters of the bill believes it will help Florida’s economic recovery ‘by placing abandoned homes, caught up in the foreclosure backlog, back on the market.’

A major concern of opponents is the provision that gives homeowners only monetary damages if their home is foreclosed on fraudulently. The measure is meant to protect third-party buyers from losing the home after purchase, bill sponsors said. But defense attorneys and other opponents say the measure erodes time-honored property rights and is unfair to homeowners.
The law will also allow any lien holder, including community associations, to request a so-called “show cause” order that would require homeowners to present a defense more quickly and give the judge the ability to make a faster ruling.

Click here to read more on the foreclosure bill recently signed by Gov. Scott that puts Florida homeowners at a disadvantage.

Choosing the right attorney can make the difference between whether or not you can keep your home. A well-qualified Miami foreclosure defense attorney will not only help you keep your home, but they will be able to negotiate a loan that has payments you can afford. Miami foreclosure defense attorney Timothy Kingcade has helped many facing foreclosure alleviate their stress by letting them stay in their homes for at least another year, allowing them to re-organize their lives. If you have any questions on the topic of foreclosure please feel free to contact me at (305) 285-9100. You can also find useful consumer information on the website, www.miamibankruptcy.com.

Foreclosures, Timothy Kingcade Posts

72K Floridians to get $1,480 Foreclosure Relief Checks

Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi announced this week that more than 72,000 Floridians who lost their homes to foreclosure from 2008 to 2011 will receive $1,480 from the record $26 billion mortgage settlement. To be eligible, borrowers must have lost their homes to foreclosure between Jan. 1, 2008 and Dec. 31, 2011, suffered certain foreclosure abuses, submitted valid foreclosure claims and had mortgages serviced by Ally/GMAC, Bank of America, Citi, JPMorgan Chase or Wells Fargo.

According to Bondi, every borrower who filed a claim will receive a letter regarding their outcome in the upcoming weeks. Borrowers with questions about their National Mortgage Settlement payment can call the settlement administrator at 1-866-430-8358.

Click here to read more on foreclosure relief checks being mailed to Floridians who lost their homes due to foreclosure.

Choosing the right attorney can make the difference between whether or not you can keep your home. A well-qualified Miami foreclosure defense attorney will not only help you keep your home, but they will be able to negotiate a loan that has payments you can afford. Miami foreclosure defense attorney Timothy Kingcade has helped many facing foreclosure alleviate their stress by letting them stay in their homes for at least another year, allowing them to re-organize their lives. If you have any questions on the topic of foreclosure please feel free to contact me at (305) 285-9100. You can also find useful consumer information on the website, www.miamibankruptcy.com.

Timothy Kingcade Posts

Bipartisan Bill in U.S. Senate would make Tax Cheats Lose Federal Jobs

With the IRS scandal over targeting conservative groups still making headlines, two senators – one from each party – say that it is time to go after a real, proven target: federal employees who cheat on their taxes.
Senators Tom Coburn, Oklahoma Republican, and Mark L. Pryor, Arkansas Democrat, have introduced a bill that would allow federal agencies to fire any employee with “seriously delinquent” tax debt. This qualifies as outstanding debt for which a notice of lien has been filed in public records.

According to the most recent IRS data, almost 312,000 current and former federal employees owed more than $3.5 billion in unpaid federal taxes as of 2011. That is an 11.5 percent increase in the delinquency rate of federal employees compared with 2010, which also was up from the previous year. The 2011 figure included more than 107,000 current civilian federal employees who owed more than $1 billion in unpaid taxes, and almost 142,000 military and civilian retirees who owed $2.1 billion.

Senator Coburn has proposed additional legislation that would bar tax evaders from receiving government assistance- including grants, contracts, loans and agriculture-related tax credits. He has submitted the additional legislation as an amendment to the Senate’s $955 billion farm bill — a measure that includes agricultural subsidies and the food-stamp program. A vote is expected in the coming weeks.

Click here to read more on the proposed bill that would make tax cheats lose Federal jobs.

If you are in a financial crisis and are considering filing bankruptcy, contact an experienced Miami bankruptcy attorney who can advise you of all of your options. As an experienced CPA as well as a proven bankruptcy lawyer, Timothy Kingcade knows how to help clients take full advantage of the bankruptcy laws to protect their assets and get successful results. Since 1996 Kingcade & Garcia, P.A. has been helping people from all walks of life build a better tomorrow. Our attorneys’ help thousands of people every year take advantage of their rights under bankruptcy protection to restart, rebuild and recover. The day you hire our firm, we will contact your creditors to stop the harassment. You can also find useful consumer information on the Kingcade & Garcia website at www.miamibankruptcy.com.

Bankruptcy Law, Credit, Timothy Kingcade Posts

Casey Anthony Civil Suits Focus on Tampa Bankruptcy

Casey Anthony’s bankruptcy case resumed in Tampa with the focus primarily on the two defamation suits filed against her by Zenaida Gonzalez and Roy Kronk. Last month, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge K. Rodney May heard from attorneys representing the two. Gonzalez and Kronk want the judge to delay the deadline to object to the bankruptcy until after their civil suits are decided. The judge must also decide whether the suits should be resolved in state or federal court.

Anthony filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection in January in Tampa, claiming $1,000 in assets and $792,000 in liabilities. Gonzalez and Kronk were listed as creditors and their cases were put on hold. Gonzalez’s suit claims her reputation was ruined when Anthony told investigators looking for Caylee in 2008 that a babysitter named Zenaida Gonzalez had kidnapped her daughter.

Kronk, a meter reader who found Caylee’s remains in the woods near the Anthony home, claims his reputation was harmed when Anthony’s attorneys wrongly implicated him in the child’s death. Anthony’s civil attorneys have said both lawsuits are frivolous and should not deny her the “fresh start” she is seeking through bankruptcy protection.

Click here to read more on the latest in the Casey Anthony bankruptcy filing.

If you are in a financial crisis and are considering filing bankruptcy, contact an experienced Miami bankruptcy attorney who can advise you of all of your options. As an experienced CPA as well as a proven bankruptcy lawyer, Timothy Kingcade knows how to help clients take full advantage of the bankruptcy laws to protect their assets and get successful results. Since 1996 Kingcade & Garcia, P.A. has been helping people from all walks of life build a better tomorrow. Our attorneys’ help thousands of people every year take advantage of their rights under bankruptcy protection to restart, rebuild and recover. The day you hire our firm, we will contact your creditors to stop the harassment. You can also find useful consumer information on the Kingcade & Garcia website at www.miamibankruptcy.com.

Bankruptcy Law, Timothy Kingcade Posts

Joe Francis Claims Bankruptcy Trustee Aims to Destroy Girls Gone Wild Brand

Girls Gone Wild founder, Joe Francis says the bankruptcy trustee who recently took over his adult-entertainment business wants to destroy the company as part of his “moral personal crusade” against the brand. Since a bankruptcy judge appointed Neilson to take over Girls Gone Wild’s operations in April, Francis said that Neilson and his attorneys have been “raping the company of every dollar they can get” in legal fees.

“Todd Neilson is a devout Mormon who is hard pressed to destroy me and destroy Girls Gone Wild just because of personal animosity,” Francis, 40, said. “It’s religiously rooted.”

In an emailed statement, Neilson, an accountant, said that he and his attorneys “are fulfilling our well-established duties with respect to the bankruptcy estates—nothing more and nothing less.”

Francis is not the only businessman to complain about how much bankruptcy costs. Court papers show that Neilson got court permission to pay attorneys up to $980 an hour for their work. So far, Neilson has filed a lawsuit to try to pull the Girls Gone Wild trademarks, copyright and website names back from a quiet West Indies company that he said paid nothing for them, according to court papers. In court papers, Neilson said, “the West Indies company is part of a web of offshore entities used by an asset-protection specialist involved with Francis and the Girls Gone Wild entities.”

Click here to read more about the Girls Gone Wild bankruptcy lawsuit and founder, Joe Francis.

If you are in a financial crisis and are considering filing bankruptcy, contact an experienced Miami bankruptcy attorney who can advise you of all of your options. As an experienced CPA as well as a proven bankruptcy lawyer, Timothy Kingcade knows how to help clients take full advantage of the bankruptcy laws to protect their assets and get successful results. Since 1996 Kingcade & Garcia, P.A. has been helping people from all walks of life build a better tomorrow. Our attorneys’ help thousands of people every year take advantage of their rights under bankruptcy protection to restart, rebuild and recover. The day you hire our firm, we will contact your creditors to stop the harassment. You can also find useful consumer information on the Kingcade & Garcia website at www.miamibankruptcy.com.

Bankruptcy Law, Credit, Timothy Kingcade Posts

Rebuilding Credit after Bankruptcy

More than a million people file for bankruptcy each year in this country. It is important to remember that immediately after filing bankruptcy you can begin rebuilding your credit. Below are five steps you can take to rebuild your credit after bankruptcy.
1.) Go to annualcreditreport.com and pull your three credit reports (Experian, Equifax and TransUnion). Make sure all of the debts affected by the bankruptcy are listed. Also confirm all information is accurate on each of the reports.
2.) Start getting new credit. The best way is through a secured credit card. Almost everyone is approved and a deposit will guarantee that you are able to cover the charges.
3.) Pay off the card timely, along with all of your other bills each month.
4.) Start a savings account. Having emergency savings means you will not be as likely to tap into your credit.
5.) If you made mistakes, learn from them. You should not feel ashamed after filing for bankruptcy.

Click here to read more on ways to rebuild your credit after bankruptcy.

If you are in a financial crisis and are considering filing bankruptcy, contact an experienced Miami bankruptcy attorney who can advise you of all of your options. As an experienced CPA as well as a proven bankruptcy lawyer, Timothy Kingcade knows how to help clients take full advantage of the bankruptcy laws to protect their assets and get successful results. Since 1996 Kingcade & Garcia, P.A. has been helping people from all walks of life build a better tomorrow. Our attorneys’ help thousands of people every year take advantage of their rights under bankruptcy protection to restart, rebuild and recover. The day you hire our firm, we will contact your creditors to stop the harassment. You can also find useful consumer information on the Kingcade & Garcia website at www.miamibankruptcy.com.