Beware Of Debt
Settlement Company Promises
In theory debt settlement is
simple: the debtor negotiates with the creditor to reduce a debt to an amount
that is regarded as payment in full. It sounds honest enough: the debtor cannot
afford to repay a debt, so the creditor agrees to accept a reduction. The
creditor is paid something and the debtor avoids bankruptcy.
In practice debt settlement is a nasty
game of chicken. The debt settlement company advises the debtor to stop making
monthly payments to the creditor. In response, the creditor pressures the
debtor to pay through harassing telephone calls, damage to the debtor’s credit
report, mounting interest and fees, and perhaps legal action. The resolution
comes when one side blinks: either the creditor is convinced that it better
take a settlement or risk discharge in bankruptcy; or the debtor realizes that
his or her credit is ruined and actually files bankruptcy.
Debt settlement is big business,
but many debt settlement companies have caused big trouble for their clients.
Take for example Debt Relief USA. This company, like many debt settlement
companies, advised its customers to stop paying its creditors and instead
deposit money into a Debt Relief USA settlement account. This money, held by
Debt Relief USA, was to be used as settle funds for the individual’s debts.
Customers were assessed fees for services including burdensome “administration
fees” and monthly “maintenance fees” that further damaged its customers’
financial situations. When a debt was settled, the Debt Relief USA charged a 13
percent “negotiation fee.”
In 2009 Debt Relief USA filed a
Chapter 11 bankruptcy and claimed that it owed its clients $5 million from
these settlement accounts. In December
2010, the bankruptcy court approved a $3.7 million disbursement to Debt Relief
USA’s clients. The case was also converted to Chapter 7 and Debt Relief USA is
no longer conducting business.
Bankruptcy attorneys regularly
see the damage caused by debt settlement companies. In some cases money is not
returned to debt settlement customers, or the company itself files bankruptcy,
or the individual’s credit is destroyed. Before agreeing to any debt relief
program, discuss your financial situation an experienced bankruptcy attorney.
There are powerful federal laws that can protect you from overwhelming debt,
and a bankruptcy attorney can review your legal options without risking your
cash.
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