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serving plan and disco prior to hearing on adequacy of

Posted: Wed Feb 01, 2012 7:43 pm
by Yahoo Bot

Disco is shorthand for Disclosure used by some attorneys.
On Wed, Feb 1, 2012 at 7:39 PM, Dennis McGoldrick wrote:
> **
>
>
> Kirk:
>
> You need to sit down and read the rule book. Chapter 11 is not for people
> who don't know the rules.
>
> A disclosure statement is not a disco.
>
> I used to go to disco's in the 70's, had long hair, danced a bunch with
> one finger in the air. Don't do that in court.
>
> A disclosure statement is a security. If you don't have an exception to
> the Federal and State securities laws, I wouldn't be mailing one all over
> the place. You could go to prison.
>
> dennis
>
> *From:* Kirk Brennan
> *To:* Cdcbaa Yahoo Listserv
> *Sent:* Wednesday, February 1, 2012 7:32 PM
> *Subject:* [cdcbaa] serving plan and disco prior to hearing on adequacy
> of disco (chapter 11)
>
>
> For those of you who do chapter 11s:
> When you initially file the Plan and Disco Stmt, but prior to the hearing
> on the adequacy of the Disco Statement, do you generally serve the Plan and
> Disco Statement on creditors?
> Or do you just serve the Notice of Hearing on adequacy of Disco Statement,
> and then wait for the hearing, since you might have to amend the documents
> based on what the judge says at the hearing?
>
>
>
> --
> Kirk Brennan, esq.
> California Law Office, P.C.
> www.calibankruptcysite.com
>
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Kirk Brennan, esq.
California Law Office, P.C.
www.calibankruptcysite.com
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This e-mail and any attachments are for the
exclusive and confidential use of the intended recipient. If you are not
the intended recipient, please do not read, distribute or take action in
reliance on this message. If you have received this message in error,
please notify us immediately by return e-mail and promptly delete this
message and its attachments from your computer system. We do not waive
attorney-client or work product privilege by the transmission of this
message.
TAX ADVICE NOTICE: Tax advice, if any, contained in this e-mail does not
constitute a "reliance opinion" as defined in IRS Circular 230 and may not
be used to establish reasonable reliance on the opinion of counsel for the
purpose of avoiding the penalty imposed by Section 6662A of the Internal
Revenue Code. The firm provides reliance opinions only in formal opinion
letters containing the signature of a director.
Disco is shorthand for Disclosure used by some attorneys.On Wed, Feb 1, 2012 at 7:39 PM, Dennis McGoldrick <easky1@yahoo.com> wrote:
Kirk:
You need to sit down and read the rule book. Chapter 11 is not for people who don't know the rules.
A disclosure statement is not a disco.

The post was migrated from Yahoo.