USTP Obtains $196,527 Judgment Against National Consumer Bankruptcy Firm for Code Violations
Summary
The DOJ's U.S. Trustee Program obtained a stipulated judgment from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Oregon against Recovery Law Group APC, requiring the firm to refund $196,527 in legal fees to dozens of clients. The judgment also bars RLG, owner Nicholas Wajda, and partner Grover Peters III from advertising legal services or filing bankruptcy cases in the district for 18 months. This is the USTP's third enforcement action against RLG in approximately one year.
What changed
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Oregon entered a stipulated judgment against Recovery Law Group APC, its owner Nicholas Wajda, and partner Grover Peters III on March 17, 2026. The judgment requires RLG to refund $196,527 in legal fees—including fees paid by 98 Oregon clients for whom no case was filed and fees from a debtor who nearly lost her home due to the firm's deficient services. The firm filed the debtor's case under chapter 7 despite her having nonexempt equity in her house when chapter 13 would have allowed her to keep the home. The firm's non-attorney staff prepared incompetent documents that required multiple amendments, and the case took nearly two and a half years to resolve.
Affected legal professionals and bankruptcy practitioners should note the USTP's escalating enforcement pattern—this judgment represents the third enforcement action against RLG in approximately one year, following actions in Virginia ($48,000 in sanctions) and Michigan ($392,000 in penalties and three-year suspension). The 18-month practice bar in Oregon demonstrates the consequences of providing substandard services and violating the Bankruptcy Code, particularly when non-licensed individuals prepare bankruptcy documents.
Penalties
$196,527 in refunded legal fees; 18-month suspension from advertising legal services or filing bankruptcy cases in the District of Oregon
Archived snapshot
Apr 18, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
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Press Release
U.S. Trustee Program Obtains Judgment Requiring National Consumer Bankruptcy Firm to Refund Nearly $200,000 Due to Bankruptcy Code Violations and Service Deficiencies
Friday, April 17, 2026
Share For Immediate Release Office of Public Affairs The Department of Justice’s U.S. Trustee Program (USTP) recently obtained a judgment requiring a nationwide consumer law firm to refund a total of $196,527 in legal fees to dozens of clients based on the firm’s deficient services and other violations of the Bankruptcy Code.
On March 17, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Oregon entered a stipulated judgment against Recovery Law Group APC (RLG); its owner, Nicholas Wajda; and one of its partners, Grover Peters III. As part of the judgment, RLG agreed to refund fees to a debtor who nearly lost her home because of the firm’s poor services and to refund fees paid by 98 clients in Oregon for whom the firm had not yet filed a case. The judgment also bars RLG, Wajda, and Peters from advertising legal services or filing bankruptcy cases in the district for 18 months.
“Consumer debtors’ attorneys who provide substandard services endanger their clients’ pursuit of a fresh start,” said Acting U.S. Trustee Jonas Anderson for Region 18, which includes the District of Oregon. “The USTP will continue to hold these attorneys responsible for their abusive conduct.”
The Oregon judgment marks the USTP’s third successful enforcement action against RLG in about a year for their actions affecting debtors throughout the country. Last April, the USTP obtained an order from the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia imposing $48,000 in sanctions and other relief against RLG and an affiliated attorney for their deficient legal services and violations of court orders. And in September, the USTP won a judgment in the Eastern District of Michigan imposing more than $392,000 in penalties and a three-year suspension against RLG for its false and misleading disclosures in more than 200 bankruptcy cases.
The USTP’s Oregon enforcement action stemmed from a case in which an elderly woman sought RLG’s help filing for bankruptcy to resolve debts she incurred as the victim of a fraud scheme. After a consultation from Wajda, who is not licensed to practice law in Oregon, the debtor paid a $1,838 fee to the firm to represent her in a chapter 7 bankruptcy case, and RLG had its non-attorney staff prepare the debtor’s bankruptcy documents.
RLG filed the case as a chapter 7 liquidation despite the debtor having nonexempt equity in her house that would be at risk for sale by the private trustee overseeing the case to pay creditors. The debtor was eligible for chapter 13, which would allow her to keep the house while paying her debts through a repayment plan, but Peters did not seek to convert the case to chapter 13 until after the chapter 7 trustee took steps to sell the debtor’s house. Peters — who also acknowledged at a hearing that the case never should have been filed under chapter 7 — continued to put the house at risk by failing to file documents on time and by filing documents that required multiple amendments as they were incompetently prepared by RLG’s non-attorney staff. In November 2025, nearly two-and-a-half years after the case was filed, the bankruptcy court confirmed the debtor’s chapter 13 repayment plan.
The USTP’s mission is to promote the integrity and efficiency of the bankruptcy system for the benefit of all stakeholders — debtors, creditors and the public. The USTP consists of 21 regions with 82 field offices nationwide and an Executive Office in Washington, D.C. Learn more about the USTP at www.justice.gov/ust.
Updated April 17, 2026 Topic Bankruptcy Component U.S. Trustee Program Press Release Number: 26-372
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