My question involves bankruptcy in the state of: Georgia

I had a Chapter 7 discharged in 2006. My "Intentions to Reaffirm" listed my auto loan on there which was a 5 year loan. So 2 years went by, I continued to make car payments on time, 2 months before the car is paid off its stolen in broad day light. So of course I had to go shopping for a new car, knowing I had been making payments for 2 years, my credit should be somewhat decent now. Wrong, dealers pulled my credit and the car was reported in the bankruptcy and showed I hadn't been making payments on it. I've contacted the company that handled the loan, they said they can't report anything to equifax other than what they have because it is a court order and they can't go against that. I've contacted equifax, they can't report anything different other than what the loan company gives them. Both of them said to contact the law office that handled my Chapter 7. My lawyer says there is nothing they can do, its already discharged, its my lost, to deal with it. Needless to say I had to find other means of getting a car besides financing.

Now im married, trying to trade in my wifes clunker and get her a better one, get us both on the loan to build up both our credit and we are running into the same problem with my credit.

My question is, what can be done to hold an attorney/or there office accountable for not doing there job properly? It is in my chapter 7 on my intent to reaffirm the debt. I am not a bankruptcy expert or a lawyer to have known that I needed to sign additional paper work so that I kept my car loan out of the bankruptcy. I assumed my car listed on the "intent to reaffirm" was all that was needed and that my lawyer would take care of the rest.

What can be done legally to hold an attorney/office accountable and is there any way to fix this so that my car loan can report 5 years of good history to equifax?