Spirt filed for Chapter 11 again
#161
On Reserve
Joined: Dec 2023
Posts: 129
Likes: 51
From: 320 PIC
its targeted at insiders and creditors. Not employees.
They might go after all those fat bonuses they just paid out … hopefully, and rightfully so. That’s different.
#162
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Joined: Jul 2025
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yea exactly what I said earlier … it’s not for employee compensation. That isn’t a thing. No judge will ever allow creditors to go back and siphon money from an employee who already performed the work to keep the business running that period of time.
its targeted at insiders and creditors. Not employees.
They might go after all those fat bonuses they just paid out … hopefully, and rightfully so. That’s different.
its targeted at insiders and creditors. Not employees.
They might go after all those fat bonuses they just paid out … hopefully, and rightfully so. That’s different.
#163
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Joined: Dec 2022
Posts: 1,362
Likes: 127
Yep, NK has a specific court order from the judge authorizing the payment of prepetition wages in the dockets. It would be incredibly hard for any sort of creditor to attempt to clawback wages that were paid out under a specific court order that authorized those payments. Granted, that order is on an interim basis for now with a final hearing scheduled for Sep 30 as far as any extensions to that order.
Does prepetition wages mean money earned before the bankruptcy filling? Meaning all money being earned now is in limbo technically?
#164
On Reserve
Joined: Jan 2018
Posts: 46
Likes: 11
#165
I’ve never seen such nonsense and fear-mongering. The idea that Spirit can claw back your normal paycheck is just not true. I asked ChatGPT about this and it flat-out disagrees with what’s being said here.
Bottom line: your regular wages for trips you’ve flown are protected in bankruptcy. Once that money hits your account, it’s yours. The clawback rules in the Bankruptcy Code are for weird one-off pre-petition stuff like bonuses, severance, or insider payments. Not your paycheck.
Bottom line: your regular wages for trips you’ve flown are protected in bankruptcy. Once that money hits your account, it’s yours. The clawback rules in the Bankruptcy Code are for weird one-off pre-petition stuff like bonuses, severance, or insider payments. Not your paycheck.
#166
On Reserve
Joined: Dec 2023
Posts: 129
Likes: 51
From: 320 PIC
I’ve never seen such nonsense and fear-mongering. The idea that Spirit can claw back your normal paycheck is just not true. I asked ChatGPT about this and it flat-out disagrees with what’s being said here.
Bottom line: your regular wages for trips you’ve flown are protected in bankruptcy. Once that money hits your account, it’s yours. The clawback rules in the Bankruptcy Code are for weird one-off pre-petition stuff like bonuses, severance, or insider payments. Not your paycheck.
Bottom line: your regular wages for trips you’ve flown are protected in bankruptcy. Once that money hits your account, it’s yours. The clawback rules in the Bankruptcy Code are for weird one-off pre-petition stuff like bonuses, severance, or insider payments. Not your paycheck.
#167
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Dec 2012
Posts: 2,746
Likes: 51
I’ve never seen such nonsense and fear-mongering. The idea that Spirit can claw back your normal paycheck is just not true. I asked ChatGPT about this and it flat-out disagrees with what’s being said here.
Bottom line: your regular wages for trips you’ve flown are protected in bankruptcy. Once that money hits your account, it’s yours. The clawback rules in the Bankruptcy Code are for weird one-off pre-petition stuff like bonuses, severance, or insider payments. Not your paycheck.
Bottom line: your regular wages for trips you’ve flown are protected in bankruptcy. Once that money hits your account, it’s yours. The clawback rules in the Bankruptcy Code are for weird one-off pre-petition stuff like bonuses, severance, or insider payments. Not your paycheck.
Last edited by fcoolaiddrinker; 09-09-2025 at 06:44 AM.
#168
Line Holder
Joined: Mar 2020
Posts: 441
Likes: 96
I’ve never seen such nonsense and fear-mongering. The idea that Spirit can claw back your normal paycheck is just not true. I asked ChatGPT about this and it flat-out disagrees with what’s being said here.
Bottom line: your regular wages for trips you’ve flown are protected in bankruptcy. Once that money hits your account, it’s yours. The clawback rules in the Bankruptcy Code are for weird one-off pre-petition stuff like bonuses, severance, or insider payments. Not your paycheck.
Bottom line: your regular wages for trips you’ve flown are protected in bankruptcy. Once that money hits your account, it’s yours. The clawback rules in the Bankruptcy Code are for weird one-off pre-petition stuff like bonuses, severance, or insider payments. Not your paycheck.
#169
On Reserve
Joined: Jul 2025
Posts: 70
Likes: 22
#170
Prime Minister/Moderator

Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 44,841
Likes: 653
From: Engines Turn or People Swim
ACH transactions can be reversed. Also wages are priority claims, but are limited in how much get paid and how long it takes. Don't expect that last paycheck to show up anytime soon, and there might not be enough after secured creditors are paid. The rest would be prorated, but high income earners like pilots would probably get a substantially lower final paycheck, if any, and a few months late.
Yes anybody who can ACH into your account can also ACH out of your account. You almost certainly approved that in the fine print when you authorized ACH in the first place.
If they do that, even in error, then it's your problem to get the money back.
If I have any significant cash sitting in checking, I at least move it to savings for that reason. If it's a really large amount I e-transfer it to another bank account.
I had it happen once, complicated insurance claim and the insurance company got confused and decided to "unpay" part of the claim. Fortunately for me I'd already paid the contractors, so the reverse ACH failed due to insufficient funds. But some banks might just tap savings or credit lines to cover a shortfall like that, not sure.
Also why I don't ever use debit cards... is somebody adds a zero to a credit card charge, the credit card company will just reverse it. If it comes out of your checking, that's your problem to try to get it back.
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