Hemet

Do you think your Car may be Repossessed....

Call us before it's to late...

we stop foreclosures, garnishments, repossessions and lawsuits while helping you regain financial control. When the whirlpool of debt has paralyzed you, let Absolute Bankruptcy and Charles Andersen help you regain financial control using the Bankruptcy Code!  

Bankruptcy and Car Repossessions

The number one mistake people who have had a car repo in Hemet CA is giving the car back and pretending it's all over. Months go by and they think life has returned to normal. Wrong! You have a lawsuit in your future, and the longer you put it off, the more penalties and interest are going to hit you until you deal with it. If you pretend it's over, you're fooling yourself. If you wait too long, we can't help you because you've you don't have time or money to stop the garnishment. Then you are stuck letting them suck your paycheck every pay period until you've paid the whole thing.

Chapter 13 can Stop Repossessions

Chapter 13 can stop repossessions. If a car or other vehicle has been repossessed but not sold by the creditor when the case is filed, the court may order the creditor to return it to you. Under Chapter 13, interest charges may be reduced, and your monthly payments can often be lowered. In certain cases, the balance secured by the vehicle may be reduced to its market value, even if this is much less than the loan balance. [11 USC §1325(a)(5) & unnumbered last subparagraph] In Chapter 13, you pay for the car in a single monthly payment which consolidates all of your bills. Often this one payment can be lower than your old car payment alone.
Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy
We work with you to help you keep as much of your property as possible while putting an immediate stop to:

Hemet Bankruptcy Attorneys: Home foreclosures

Hemet Bankruptcy Attorney: Car repossessions

Hemet Bankruptcy Attorney: Garnishments

Hemet Bankruptcy Attorney: Credit card debt

Hemet Bankruptcy Attorneys: Creditor harassments

Hemet Bankruptcy Attorneys: Lawsuits

For us, filing bankruptcy is about elimination of your problems and helping you move on.

Hemet, California

Hemet is a city in Riverside County, located in the San Jacinto Valley and it covers a total area of 27.1 square miles (70 km2), or about half of the valley, which it shares with its neighbor to the north, the city of San Jacinto. In 2007 the city's population was estimated to be 74,185 according to the California Department of Finance. Hemet was founded in 1887, predating the formation of Riverside County, and was incorporated on January 20, 1910.The formation of Lake Hemet helped the city prosper, and allowed further agricultural growth in the area, as well as population growth. The city is probably best known for being the home of "Ramona", California's official and one of the longest running outdoor plays, having been started in 1923. Hemet has also been named a Tree City USA for 20 years by the Arbor Day Foundation for its dedication to the local forest.[3] The city is also home to the Hemet Valley Medical Center, a 320 bed general hospital.

Hemet Library

The City of Hemet public library was created in 1906 when citizens wanted a place to gather and read various books. Members of the Women's Club opened a reading room at the corner of Harvard street, and Florida avenue.

In 1910 after the city had incorporated, citizens of the newly formed city voted for its own library, and the city took over the operation of the facility built in 1906. Shortly after, the reading room became to small for the growing community, and groups and citizens lobbied to get a new larger facility built. This would help to house the growing collection of books. A woman of the community named Mrs. E.A. Davis was on the one who wrote to Andrew Carnegie seeking funds to help build a new library. The city received $7,500 to fund part of the construction, and Mr. and Mrs. St. John donated land to the city to build the new Carnegie Library. The new library was finished in 1913, and served the city for 52 years. The building was declared unsafe by the Fire Marshall, and the building was razed in 1969, and the new C.B. Covell memorial Library was built. This building however, also became to small for the city.

The library moved again in 2003, to its current facility, re-located for the first time since 1913. The new facility is now located at 300 North Latham Avenue. Just blocks from its former location. The new building is two stories tall, and contains 52,000 square feet. It was designed by John Loomis of 30th Street Architects.[25][26]