May 26, 2008
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A Bankruptcy Expert Says Payday Advance Businesses Are Worse Than The Mafia
From:
Gayle Sollenberger (e-mail
her)
Re: Joe Guzzardi’s Column:
In Over Your Head On Credit Card Debt? Help May Be On
The Way!
The
Memorial Day holiday reminded me of a recent story
revealing that several hundred of our military were so
stretched out financially that they had incurred
thousands of dollars in debt with an interest rate of
nearly 400 percent at
payday advance businesses. [Payday
Lenders Bait Legislators but Don’t Change Rate,
Thomas Suddes, Plain Dealer, April 28, 2008]
The federal government was supposed to crack down on
these predatory lenders, as well as the credit card
issuing banks Guzzardi referred to in his column. But of
course it has done nothing about either.
I work for a bankruptcy attorney and can say with
absolute certainty that 8 out of ten petitions contain
at least five to ten debts listed for check
cashing/payday advance legal loan shark operation.
These places prey on poor people, including gullible
immigrants.
Payday advance businesses are a modern version of
those fake grocery stores that the
Mafia used to run to cover up its gambling and
usurious lending operations in the back.
I know because my Dad ran a
pool hall in
Baltimore when I was a kid that was really a
front for illegal gambling. The card games and
bookmaking that were the real businesses ran in the
rear.
Now, though, with the government's blessing, anyone
can get a payday advance in every strip mall.
The government didn't get rid of the
Mafia; it just sanctioned its businesses while
sending all the bosses to jail.
Another major problem is shysters who sell debts
discharged in bankruptcy to new companies and then the
new company tries to collect.
Our clients are told immediately that once the debt
is discharged they no longer have to pay, not even if
the debt was sold 500 times.
But many of the unsuspecting actually pay because
they don't know any better.
People should be responsible enough not to patronize
check cashing scam businesses. But the come-ons are
strong and it all sounds so
pleasing and easy.
What the customers don’t realize is now fast the
renewal fees add up - and how badly the lender doesn’t
want anyone to pay off his debt.
Sollenberger lives in
Tennessee.