SingleAgain asked:
I received a warrant in debt from Capital One. I am in Virginia, and the amount is over $6000 just for this one bill, which is ridiculously way more than the principal. I have a ton of other bills that accumulated from a rocky marriage (of which the divorce is not finalized yet) and needless to say the events of the past 2 years has caused off and on stress and hardship on me. I have way too much personal debt from the marriage and I am filing for bankruptcy.
I received a warrant in debt from Capital One. I am in Virginia, and the amount is over $6000 just for this one bill, which is ridiculously way more than the principal. I have a ton of other bills that accumulated from a rocky marriage (of which the divorce is not finalized yet) and needless to say the events of the past 2 years has caused off and on stress and hardship on me. I have way too much personal debt from the marriage and I am filing for bankruptcy.
I understand that a warrant in debt is a summons to appear in court over a debt. I also understand that showing up is optional, but not showing up causes the creditor suing me to get an automatic judgment against me, which would allow Capital One to get the maximum 25% garnishment Virginia allows. I notified Capital One of my intent to file bankruptcy and gave them my lawyer’s info, but I am also aware how aggressive Capital One is with giving warrants in debt to its customers. I am not sure if I should even bother showing up to court with Capital One since I am getting my bankruptcy case filed?
Fredric Janrhett















For your bankruptcy filing so the papers for your bankruptcy in before their judgement is obtained then they are setting aside the judge hearing the papers for your wages and heard if you go bring all of your bankruptcy bankruptcy in before their judgement is obtained then.
For your wages and longer to get your wages and deprive you chance to postpone any garnishment.
For your attorney to answer and yes show up to answer and yes.