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Re: Bringing Expired Debt Back to Life,,,,,ribit, this post isn't for you LOL

By: ribit in ROUND | Recommend this post (0)
Tue, 03 Jan 12 5:44 AM | 37 view(s)
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Msg. 37608 of 45651
(This msg. is a reply to 37603 by capt_nemo)

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captain
...it looks to me like a guy who borrowed some money and didn't pay it back was outwitted.

There was a woman locally who bought a set of tires from a dealer and paid for em with a bad check. The guy tried for months to collect on the check to no avail. Then one of the tires developed a problem so she went back to the tire dealer to complain. The tire dealer took her car and put it up on the rack, removed the tires, set it back on the ground and rolled it back out into the street w/o any tires on it. He never did get his money, but he got a little satisfaction anyway.




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Liberals are like a "Slinky". Totally useless, but somehow ya can't help but smile when you see one tumble down a flight of stairs!




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Bringing Expired Debt Back to Life,,,,,ribit, this post isn't for you LOL
By: capt_nemo
in ROUND
Tue, 03 Jan 12 5:32 AM
Msg. 37603 of 45651

No one was more surprised than Thomas Carpenito with the credit-card invitation that landed in his mailbox earlier this year.

The 27-year-old deli owner from White Plains, N.Y., had about $10,000 in old debts and a credit rating 200 points below "good." He recalled thinking the post office had delivered the letter to the wrong house.

Far from a mistake, the offer was part of a controversial and growing partnership between debt collectors and banks that profits both. To get the new credit card, Mr. Carpenito agreed to repay $400 on a seven-year-old debt that had expired under New York's statute of limitations.

"It was totally worth it," he said. Having no credit cards made Mr. Carpenito feel "like dirt," he said, especially when out on dates. His new credit card, stamped with the MasterCard Inc. logo, was offered by Jefferson Capital Systems LLC, the debt-collection arm of CompuCredit Holdings Corp., in Atlanta.

[More from WSJ.com: The Investing Landscape for 2012 Could Be Rough]

CompuCredit, a leader in the business, collected about $15 million in newly resurrected debts and fees by issuing credit cards to people with banged-up credit in the first nine months of this year, according to a securities filing. It also has drawn scrutiny by federal authorities for allegedly deceptive practices.

Many U.S. banks, hungry for new revenue streams, are eager partners. They


http://finance.yahoo.com/news/bringing-expired-debt-back-to-life.html


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