NO....DUHHHHHHHHHHHH
Money for your plan payment, tax refunds.
The trustee may take the refund and distribute it to creditors because a tax refund is not considered an exempted asset under bankruptcy laws.
Yes, but not until your discharge. If you take money out of a 401K after you file and before discharge, the money is no longer exempt and could be taken by the Trustee. If you take it out after your discharge the money is yours.
Making no sense. Who is "them"? Attorney took the money?.. it wasn't the Court trustee? If you inherit money within 180 days after the discharge of your bankruptcy, you must notify your attorney who will notify the trustee and they may have claim to some of the inheritance. If the case was discharged a year ago, it is no longer property of the bankruptcy trustee.
I think it depends on when the bankruptcy is discharged, but it would be discussed at your meeting with the creditors and the trustee. If it wasn't discussed, then the refund is yours.
If it has not been exempted, all of it.
Definately, and they often are. When you filed bankruptcy, you and your property were protected under the automatic stay. When you failed to satisfy the trustee during the bankruptcy and it was dismissed, the stay was lifted. At this time, neither you nor your property are protected. Repossession activities may and often will continue. Repossession is a waiting game. They have seven years from the date of your last payment to recover collateral or take other action to satisfy the debt.
Sure. Can you take the money and not pay it back as you promised from a business whose owner and employees have kids?
"Bankruptcy" does not take anything. The Chapter 13 Trustee is the one who "takes" anything there is to be taken. And, no, your settlement - if you mean a retroactive check for disability (SSDI) - is not available to the trustee. If you are talking about a settlement of a lawsuit, probably not, unless the cause of action existed at the time you filed the c. 13 and did not exempt any possible award. Talk to your bankruptcy lawyer.
Possibly. The trustee will take into consideration that the filer has assets to purchase property. It is possible that the bankruptcy can be dismissed, due to lack of good faith on the part of the debtor.
Not really. Cash advances can and will be scrutinized by the bankruptcy Trustee for up to ONE YEAR prior to your bankruptcy filing date. If you take a cash advance and then file bankruptcy, that portion of your debt may not be discharged, on top of having to account for why you took it and what you spent the money on.
Yes, even for 6 months after discharge. Depending on the source of the money, the trustee may have no way to take it, but not reporting it will leave you open to challenge later on. Ask your lawyer or get an experienced bankruptcy lawyer.