An explanation of the roles of the Official Receiver & Trustee in administering a bankruptcy order.
Official Receivers are civil servants within the Governments' Insolvency Service. Upon making a bankruptcy order, the court appoints an Official Receiver who is primarily responsible for:-
You are required to fully co-operate with the Official Receiver. Failure to do so can have severe consequences ranging from a delay in bankruptcy discharge to a recommendation for a full criminal investigation of your affairs.
The Officer Receiver will require you to complete a questionnaire similar to the "Statement of Affairs" that you would have already completed if you had petitioned for your own bankruptcy.
The Official Receiver contacts all your creditors, inviting them to prove any claim for a debt held against you.
The Officer Receiver (or an member of their staff) will interview you by phone. You will required to attend for interview in person at the Officer Receiver's office in the case where:
The Official Receiver has a wide range of powers and can, where appropriate arrange for:
The Official Receiver registers the bankruptcy with the Land Registry and advertises it in:-
The Official Receiver also arranges for your bank account(s) to frozen.
Within 12 weeks of the bankruptcy order, the Official Receiver can arrange for a meeting of the creditors in order to appoint a Trustee. The appointed Trustee is normally a licensed Insolvency Practitioner. If no Trustee is appointed, then the Official Receiver becomes the Trustee.
When the Trustee is appointed, or the Official Receiver becomes the Trustee, all your assets vest into the control of the Trustee.
The Trustee is primarily responsible for:-