Lehigh Valley Bankruptcy Planning Attorney
Are you feeling overwhelmed by a mountain of unpaid bills, threatened foreclosure and harassing creditor phone calls and mailings?
Are you ready to try anything to relieve financial pressures on your Pennsylvania family?
Even in such circumstances, transfers of money or property to others may turn into booby traps which worsen, rather than improve, your situation. The utmost care must be taken well before actually filing for bankruptcy to ensure that prior transfers of funds and property do not have a negative impact on your ability to file, or even your ability to be discharged from bankruptcy later on. Some transfers already made may require you to significantly delay filing for bankruptcy or risk adverse consequences. Of course, some transfers or purchases are too important to delay or forego, in which case you will need to get the timing exactly right in order to avoid having the transfer declared void by the Bankruptcy Court and seeing the creditor you paid ordered to give up the payment or the asset you purchased returned to the seller.
If you are concerned about losing your home or other real estate in bankruptcy, and you have transferred a substantial amount of money or property in the past year, you may be in danger of having committed a fraudulent conveyance, or fraudulent transfer, or of having the transfer negated as an avoidable preference, which is less serious but nevertheless harmful to achieving the fresh start you seek. The solid support and legal guidance of an experienced bankruptcy attorney is essential to clearing up this matter.
The Philadelphia lawyer who has helped many clients in dire straits similar to the one you are in now — in the Lehigh and Delaware valleys and in South Jersey — is Joseph R. Viola. For almost 30 years, our law firm's founder has offered the highest-quality professional representation and attentive personal service that get results.
Joseph R. Viola has been given an AV Preeminent Peer Review Rating* by Martindale-Hubbell, an organization that helps buyers of legal services to identify, evaluate and select the most appropriate lawyer for a specific task at hand. An AV rating demonstrates that a lawyer has earned the highest possible rating in both legal ability and ethical standards.
Contact us. Bring your fraudulent transfer and bankruptcy legal problems to Joseph R. Viola for wise advice and immediate action. Your initial consultation is free. Call toll free: 866-974-8841.
Our law firm is a debt relief agency counseling clients according to federal Bankruptcy Code.
Debt Relief You Can Depend On, From a Skilled Lawyer You Can Count On
The 2005 amendment to the Bankruptcy Code was created in part to stop abuse of bankruptcy law by insolvent debtors.
Added to this amendment were several fraudulent conveyance acts that prevent debtors from transferring certain property or funds before the Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy is filed. Conveyances considered fraudulent include escalation of credit card debt, participation in wrongful trading or the transfer of real estate to another person's ownership within one year of a bankruptcy filing.
Joseph R. Viola can swiftly, decisively advise you on a proper course of action and help you select the debt relief solution that meets your unique, specific needs. Our lawyer works hard to take the risk out of your bankruptcy motion. You do not want it to be denied or to encourage an adversarial act by a creditor.
You can benefit from our lawyer's experience, expertise and effectiveness with fraudulent conveyance legal matters. Call, e-mail or fax our law office today.
Contact Philadelphia Fraudulent Transfer Attorney Joseph R. Viola
Secure a free consultation at 866-974-8841. If you need an evening appointment, we can provide it.
*AV Preeminent and BV Distinguished are certification marks of Reed Elsevier Properties Inc., used in accordance with the Martindale-Hubbell certification procedures, standards and policies. Martindale-Hubbell is the facilitator of a peer review rating process. Ratings reflect the confidential opinions of members of the bar and the judiciary. Martindale-Hubbell ratings fall into two categories: legal ability and general ethical standards.






