5. Ignoring Creditor Collection Attempts after Filing and Discharge.
There
are a number of mistakes that debtors and their bankruptcy attorneys
make that often cause problems after discharge or after their chapter
13 is confirmed. These mistakes often make it difficult to enforce the
discharge or the automatic stay and can cause the debtor to suffer a
serious financial loss.
It’s human nature to avoid
embarrassment and conflict, if at all possible. So, it is not
understandable that Debtors would ignore calls and letters from
creditors after filing bankruptcy. They know the debt is no longer
collectible, so they throw away the collection and letters and ignore
the calls that keep on coming after filing and even, sometimes, after a
discharge is received. This, however, is a mistake.
Some
creditors intentionally ignore a bankruptcy notice hoping that the
debtor can still be coerced to pay. Whether it is to buy peace, ease
feelings of guilt, or believing it will help improve their credit,
debtors will often pay discharged debt even though they have no
obligation to do so. The problem with ignoring these illegal contacts
after bankruptcy is that the creditors will just continue to harass the
debtor with calls, letters, by illegally pulling their credit reports,
and they may even report the debt as active and collectible to the
credit bureaus.
These acts may prevent a debtor’s
credit score from properly rebounding after filing bankruptcy and
threaten the fresh start they were expecting. What all debtors should do
is keep every letter or email received from creditors, document each
phone call carefully and report these contacts to their attorneys.
There
are various laws that protect bankruptcy filers from these types of
illegal contacts, but they can only be successfully prosecuted if there
is evidence to show the court and jury. The actual letters, telephone
records and documentation of damages are all needed to prevail in
bankruptcy court, in state courts, or the federal district courts. But
nothing will happen unless an attorney who handles these type claims is
retained and he has the proof necessary to prevail.
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Showing posts with label credit pulls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label credit pulls. Show all posts
Monday, May 12, 2014
Common Mistakes Made by Bankruptcy Filers and Their Attorneys - #5
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
Mortgage Servicing Rights: A Cash-Cow for Servicers But A Nightmare for Consumers.

A recent trend in the mortgage lending industry is the sale by banks and mortgage companies of the lucrative servicing rights on the loans in their portfolios. Special servicers like Nationstar and Ocwen are taking over the collection of mortgage payments, processing of modifications and the foreclosure and collection of delinquent accounts. This is probably a positive development as the banks and mortgage companies have been doing a horrible job at it.
Unfortunately, the assignment of servicing rights on a mortgage loan can cause the consumer much grief. I can't count the number of times that a client has complained that they were current on their mortgage until the servicing rights were transferred and they suddenly had to make payments to another company. Invariably in the transition a payment would get lost or delayed and then the collection letters would start, late charges applied and suddenly a perfectly good loan was in default.
A Chapter 13 bankruptcy is often the only way to cure a loan that is in default. Those who do not qualify for Chapter 13 must file Chapter 7 and reaffirm the debt or surrender their homes and get a discharge of the mortgage debt. These filers who surrender their homes, however, should carefully monitor their credit after their discharge as the original lender, the original servicer and the successor servicers quite often will continue to report the account to the credit bureaus. And successor servicers will often act like the loan is still collectable. With all these assignments it is not unusual to find the original lender or servicer and the successor servicer reporting to the credit bureaus on the same loan and pulling credit reports when there is no longer any account relationship. This inaccurate reporting can significantly delay the recovery of a filer's credit score.
So, if you get a notice in the mail that the servicing rights on your home mortgage are being assigned to a new company be wary, monitor your credit reports carefully and if you find something that doesn't look right, seek professional help..
Monday, March 17, 2014
Consumers Need to Monitor Their Credit After Bankruptcy
It is a common belief that bankruptcy ruins a consumer's credit, but that's not necessarily true. The fresh start consumers are searching for when they file bankruptcy can apply to their credit too. When a consumer files bankruptcy all of his existing debt should be reported as "discharged in bankruptcy" and "balance -0-." If that actually happens, filing bankruptcy gives the consumer a clean slate. Sure, the bankruptcy is a negative, but its impact on the consumer's credit score will diminish in time. This gives the consumer an opportunity to re-establish their credit fairly quickly--often in six months to a year. Sure, a consumer won't have perfect credit with a bankruptcy on his record but his credit score will often be high enough to get car loan, rent an apartment or even refinance a home at market interest rates.
Unfortunately, this won't happen automatically. Creditors often do not report the bankruptcy to the credit bureaus, Experian, Transunion, and Equifax, correctly which will prevent the credit score from recovering the way it should. This is why is imperative for consumers to monitor their credit after bankruptcy. This can be done with a credit monitoring service or simply by going to AnnualCreditReport.com and doing it themselves.
For our clients it is part of our service. We help them get copies of the credit reports and then review them to be sure the reporting is correct. If it turns out to be wrong we get it corrected and do our best to make the offending creditors pay our fees. Either way, our client's never pay us a dime out of pocket.
For information on how to obtain your credit reports follow this link or, if you would like our assistance in getting a fresh start on your credit, visit our Website.
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Friday, March 14, 2014
Creditors Can’t Seem To Stop Illegally Accessing Credit Reports
It is a perplexing phenomenon but some creditors can’t stop illegally pulling consumers’ credit reports even after they are caught doing it. On numerous occasions we have sued a creditor for illegally accessing our client’s credit reports after their debt was discharged in bankruptcy. Once the debt is discharged they have no legitimate reason to be pulling them, yet sometimes before the ink on the settlement agreement is dry, they start pulling the credit reports again. In a few cases we have had to sue them three times before they finally stop. And it’s not because the penalties are small. Damages can run $500 to $1500 per illegal pull, plus actual damages, costs and attorney’s fees. If anybody has an explanation, let me know.
Friday, February 14, 2014
Don't Let Finances Destroy Your Marriage.
One of the most common refrains I hear from my bankruptcy clients is: "Why did I wait so long to file?" The problem is most people are optimistic and believe they will be able to turn things around. They hate to admit failure and don’t want to be saddled with the stigma of bankruptcy. So, they suffer unbearable stress and pain, year after year, struggling to make ends meet until their situation becomes unbearable. Few marriages can survive this trauma and as a result families are split apart.
The fact is, in our credit driven economy, bankruptcy is inevitable for a lot of consumers. A lost job, illness, business failure, or weakness for all the alluring products and services that are dangled out in front of us each day, can leave a consumer deeply in debt with no way out. In this situation, absent a rich uncle or a lottery win, these consumers will eventually have to face bankruptcy. I’m not saying consumers should take filing bankruptcy lightly, but if there is no realistic way to avoid it then sooner is better than later.
This was brought home to me early on in my career when I got a call from a widow of a man who had committed suicide because of his business failure. We put the business in chapter 11 and the man's brother turned it around in six months. The man had taken his life needlessly. So, it's always better to face the inevitable and file bankruptcy before the marriage is destroyed and family relationships irrevocably injured.
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