Bankruptcy Fraud Warning Signs
- Concealment of assets
- Serial bankruptcy cases
- Failure to keep usual business records
- Incomplete or missing books and records
- Conduct well outside ordinary business or industry standards and practices
- Unusual depletion of assets shortly before the bankruptcy filing
- Recent departure of debtor’s officers, directors or general partners
- Unanswered questions or incomplete information on debtor’s schedules and statement of financial affairs
- Frequent amendments to schedules, statements of financial affairs and monthly operating reports
- Inconsistencies among recent financial statements, tax returns and debtor’s schedules and statements of financial affairs
- Absence of knowledgeable officers to testify at the Section 345 meeting
- Inability to contact principals of debtor at debtor’s stated location
- Frequent dealings in cash rather than recorded transactions
- Sudden depletion of inventory post-petition without plausible explanation
- Inflated salaries, payments of bonuses or cash withdrawals byofficers, directors, shareholders or other insiders
- Transfer of property to insiders, shareholders and relatives shortly before bankruptcy
- Payoff of loans to directors, officers, shareholders, relatives or other insiders shortly before filing.
- Transactions with non-debtor subsidiaries, parent companies or affiliated corporations owned by the same or related persons or entity
- A history of prior litigation or post-petition litigation involving breech of contracts, fraud misrepresentations, etc
- Complicated corporate structures and relationships.
- Creditor confusion concerning corporate structure.
- Fire, theft or loss prior to or after filing.
- Failure to pay withholding and sales tax.
- Startup of a similar business near the time of bankruptcy filing.