5. What should a bankrupt do or avoid doing after the granting
of a bankruptcy order?


Things that should be done
Bankrupts should attend the Official Receiver's Office for any interviews
about their current financial status. They should also attend subsequent meetings
with the Official Receiver/Trustee or their creditors regarding the future arrangement
of their assets and income.
Bankrupts should hand over all of their assets (both local and overseas)
to the Official Receiver/Trustee and submit all documents related to
their assets such as bank account statements or business account books,
etc. They should
also inform the Official Receiver/Trustee of all of their income and
earnings. Bankrupts may commit a bankruptcy offence and be liable to imprisonment
if they
fraudulently remove or transfer any part of their personal properties.
If the bankrupts are also civil servants, then the Official Receiver
will inform the departmental secretary of the relevant government department,
the
Civil Services Bureau and the Treasury. If the bankrupts work in banks,
then their employer must be informed. If the bankrupts work in another
part of the
private sector, however, then the Official Receiver/Trustee will not
approach their employers unless it is necessary for the collection
or investigation of
the bankrupts' financial information.
Things that should NOT be done
Bankrupts should not make repayments directly to individual creditors without
the approval of the Court and the Official Receiver. They should stop using
credit cards or applying for loans from financial institutions. They should
also stop paying life insurance premiums.
Bankrupts will not be able to act as company directors or to practise
in certain professions such as lawyer, estate agent or insurance agent,
etc. They
cannot purchase luxuries such as buying cars or travelling by taxi unless
they have reasonable grounds to do so.
Bankrupts may commit a bankruptcy offence and be liable to imprisonment
if they try to quit Hong Kong and take with them personal assets that
should be
distributed among their creditors. Bankrupts may also be liable to
imprisonment if they try to conceal or avoid receiving legal documents
in the bankruptcy
proceedings or cause any unnecessary delay in the proceedings.
For
more details of bankruptcy offences, please refer to "What are the criminal offences related to
bankruptcy?".
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