Yes, a person is still bondable. They just have to be able to pay their bond or have a clear background check to be bondable.
Can a person who declared bankruptcy be bond-able?
According to bankruptcy Canada site, you are bondable during bankruptcy, but...it may cost more during prior to being discharged to be bonded, depending on the agency used for bonding. http://www.bankruptcy-canada.ca/bankruptcy/2007/08/bankruptcy-means-not-bondable.html
He never declared bankruptcy.
Yes, a person is still bondable after being charged with an assault. A person is only unable to get bonded if charged with a felony.
Bondable - He wants to know if you can be trusted to deliver money or valuables. Traffic violations - He wants to know if you can be trusted driving a company vehicle. Bankrupt - I don't think he is normally allowed to ask this. But it might be a condition of bondability. It might also be that someone is trying to garnish your wages illegally. If you have declared bankruptcy, that attempt is illegal if the bankruptcy discharged the debt. This is a scam unscrupulous creditors often try.
While many small companies (mom and pop) business have declared bankruptcy the biggest is GENERAL MOTORS who declared bankruptcy.
A bankruptcy filing or discharge in bankruptcy should not have any effect on your US passport.
If your country's laws allow you to travel to the US with the legally declared bankruptcy, which can be on a person's public record for 5 years to life depending on the country, then that bankruptcy by itself will not prevent you from traveling to the US. In the US declared legal bankruptcies are considered a civil matter, which are about contractual obligations, and NOT a criminal matter, which are actual violations of the law, so the US State Department will not prevent individuals from traveling to the US based upon their declared bankruptcy. In the US NO ONE, even an international visitor, is barred from any travel due to a declared bankruptcy, or as US law states, a discharged bankruptcy.
A person is bondable if they can find someone who will carry the bond. In this case, you can probably find someone to insure you, you just may have to pay a higher premium.
bankruptcy
Yes
bankruptcy
People with criminal records are not bondable.