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Before we discuss the fact that failure to repay payday loan is not fraud, please note:
I often talk to people who have taken payday loans to help them pay their bills as they come due.
These people often can’t get more traditional loans, or negotiate to reduce payments, and so have no option other than borrowing money at a high rate of interest.
They can keep up this way for a time, but since payday lenders often charge interest rates of up to 782% in Minnesota, it won’t work for very long.
A mortgage, as of March 2018, had an interest rate of about 4.1% as a comparison.
When the borrower inevitably proves unable to pay the fees and interest for the payday loan, the lender will start making phone calls.
These calls tend to be meaner than other collection calls.
They say things like “we are sending the sheriff out right now to get you.”
If you tell them that you can’t go to jail for debt they will say “this is different, you committed check fraud.”
You need to know that:
And
Here’s what you need to know:
The person on the phone for the payday lender will try to convince you that you might go to jail, but they are misleading you.
Payday lenders will tell you that you committed check fraud because:
Check fraud is potentially criminal, and they will make a big deal of this.
They will say that
They may even send you letters that look as if they are from the police which are designed to scare you into paying them right away. They want you to borrow the money from someone else to pay them off.
The truth is, however, that failing to pay a payday loan isn’t fraudulent.
In order to show that it is fraudulent:
This is virtually impossible to prove because they don’t know what you were thinking, as per this Check Fraud FAQ.
In my experience, people only take out payday loans because they need the money to pay their bills.
They always intend to repay them, but the fees and interest are too expensive, and it becomes impossible to repay the loan.
As you can see, you can’t believe what you hear on the phone from a debt collector.
Remember:
Filing for bankruptcy can stop:
If you are getting phone calls that threaten you with jail time or other consequences, it is time to call an experienced Minnesota bankruptcy lawyer, at 612.724.4357.
We have free consultations at our Minneapolis, St Paul, Blaine, and Brooklyn Park offices, and we are happy to talk through what creditors can and can’t do to you.
What are you waiting for?
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Walker & Walker Law Offices, PLLC