Protecting Against Scams Pre - And Post - Bankruptcy

Wednesday, February 24, 2010 by Mark Zuckerberg

As someone who's offered bankruptcy services in Indiana for almost twenty-five years, I tell myself I've seen it all.  But, for those who haven't, I feel compelled periodically to use my Indiana bankruptcy blog to prevent them from becoming fraud victims.

The Columbus bankruptcy lawyers who work in the Mark Zuckerberg bankruptcy law offices there agree - we've all found this to be an unfortunate truth: Scamsters tend to "hang around" wherever bankruptcy "lives". The first reason for that is that often, in a frantic attempt to stave off bankruptcy, debtors will look for any straw to grasp, and end up looking for help in all the wrong places, to paraphrase the old song about looking for love. That has been especially true during this economic downturn, with so many having lost jobs and medical insurance coverage.

Pre-bankruptcy predators include some payday lenders and some debt settlement agencies, according to the Center for Responsible Lending. There are "credit repair" scams, "debt consolidation" scams, mortgage modification scams, and foreclosure prevention scams to watch out for in addition to outright identity theft through stolen credit cards and IDs. People who are in financial trouble but who have not sought the advice of a bankruptcy attorney in Indiana tend to be the ones most vulnerable to believing there just might be a "quick fix" to their problems.

Financial planner Ken Clark, author of Getting Out of Debt, warns debtors against "Nigerian 419" scams (email request to help get money from Nigeria into the U.S., by accepting money into your own bank account in exchange for a handsome share of the money) and "Chain Letter" scams (email scam asking you to forward money to the sender and then invite 8-12 of your friends to do the same. The idea is for you to keep part of the money and forward on the rest, a modern version of an old type of pyramid scheme).

Some very innocent-appearing scam comes in the form of offers for a "free" credit report.  In order to get the report, you have to enter your credit card account number, which opens the door to identity theft.  Even in cases where an actually credit report is sent, sometimes charges begin appearing on your credit card account because somewhere in the "fine print" you agreed to that.  As a debt consolidation lawyer in Indiana, I'm constantly reminding my clients and bankruptcy blog readers - the only truly free reports come from the credit bureaus themselves.

The scamsters love to hang around even after bankruptcy has been processed! Post-bankruptcy predators offer low-balance credit cards to debtors emerging from bankruptcy, sometimes with activation and membership fees that push borrowers over their credit limits before they've really had a chance to use the card! Other scams masquerade as "credit rebuilding services". 

I've spent my entire career  as a offering Indiana bankruptcy help, even helping to craft the new bankruptcy laws in Indiana.  It really bothers me when so many debtors fall prey to scams when legitimate help is available through the bankruptcy safety net.  I'm doing all I can to spread awareness about scams and scamsters, hoping every debtor gets the message in time.

 

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