Ok that is my husbands above, mine is Earthlink.
I have paid them the "final balance" 5 times now. I am not kidding. They keep adding more to it and I haven't had service with them in 8 months. Give me a break, this has to be illegal. The balance is always just 35 bucks but it NEVER goes away.
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Is there anyone you feel particulary GOOD about filing Ch. 7 against?
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The lawyer that lost my kids in the custody battle. lying bastard should not be practicing.
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If successful, discharging a malicious lawsuit against us by a looneytune who has also APed this bankruptcy. In any case, when the lawyer told us all lawsuits would be tolled, we literally said "what? The suits will stop?" We both burst out in tears. The lawyer said, "well I thought that is why you are here?" In tears we said, no, we got no money, that's why we are here. This is wonderful news." Now the a$$h*le is fighting the bk.
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I have many....
First and foremost, my MOTHER IN LAW.
When I think back to everything I charged over the years, I feel guilty. Sometimes I'll look at something in the house and think "I didn't pay for that".
I feel guilty over my furniture and my vacation....both done close to filing.
US Bank and my mother in law are two of my favs.
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CApital One
Capital one.. that's easy because I USED to work for them
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I really nailed it to Equity One finance..My wife and I fell into some hard times for about two years and were barely scrapping by, like many other americans..I called them and told them about our situation and stated that I could only send in about $100 of the $165 payment...I thought it was good on each end according to the branch manager. 2 months later they tried sueing me for the entire balance approx. $8,000..even though I was only about $130 in the hole..Needless to say they didn't get crap..
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BOFA, MBNA and Citibank for sure. As others have noted, yes, it was our own poor decisions and lack of money management that put us in the situation to begin with, but they surely didn't help. I can't begin to say how many times we'd get close to our limit, and rather than dialing things back, they'd just give us another $3K-$5K limit increase. In this regard, I don't feel bad for these mega-banks, because all they had to do was pull a credit report and they would have saw that while we were making all minimums every month, we definitely were in way over our heads.
That's another thing. We had credit scores in the 700s (mine was high 700s), we always paid our debts (even if just the minimum) for well over a decade, and the first time we were more than a day late, our rates went from sub 10% to over 30%. I'm agnostic, but I sure hope there is a special place in hell reserved for those #&@$heads.
The only one I feel we should have "IIB" and didn't (other than the house, but my wife was adamant we keep it) was Wells Fargo Financial. We have some furniture financed through them, 0% interest, never been late, as a matter of fact, will be paying it off 6 months earlier than expected in November, yet they report that it was "IIB" on our credit. Jerks. I'm going to see if we can get that fixed, but I won't hold my breath.
I feel bad about one debt though. It was through my former employer's credit union that was taken over by a larger, local one. My loan was given to me on nothing more than a handshake. The gentleman who approved it is long retired, but I still have big pangs of guilt every time I think about it.
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BofA for sure ! They were the WORST people to deal with and I hope they go under.
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My husband and I had problems with them too for a bill that was a little over $100. When we first got the bill, I called and asked if we could make payments. I was told, "Sure, just as long as you have it paid off in within 5 months, we won't report it." I had made one payment (took the total and divided it by 5) and they started sending the nasty-grams in the mail. It wasn't a huge deal because they were the least troublesome of the collectors.Originally posted by BearChaser303 View PostNext in line was Labcorp, who got unbelievably nasty over a bill of only $100.
As for the original question, that would have to be the place that did an MRI on my husband's hand (he fractured it). Our insurance only paid about $300 leaving us with $1,200 to pay. Like usual I called them to tell them that we couldn't pay it all at once, but that I could make payments. They said it was fine, and that they wouldn't report it as long as we were making payments. I had made two payments to them. One day I got an e-mail alert from our credit monitoring, and sure enough, there it was. I kept making payments, and yet every month they would call. The first woman I spoke to was very nasty and asked a lot of questions that were none of her business. I put forth an honest effort to work with them and just when I thought things were settled, they would call again demanding we make payment in full. I would then have to repeat again what agreement was reached from the prior 100 phone calls. The last time they called, of course the collector started off with that smug attitude before I barely got, "Hello" out of my mouth. It brought me so much pleasure to tell that woman that we filed and here's our attorney's info. It was amazing how fast her attitude changed once I told her we had filed.
Add another BoA to that list. Though I don't exactly feel good about it, I don't feel bad about it either. They lowered our credit limit due to THEIR mistake. Once it was corrected, they said they would put it back where it was prior to the mistake after their next review. By then it was too late. It lowered our income to debt ratio, and the other CC companies noticed this. In turn our rates started to rise as did our payments, which helped push us on into that black hole we are all too familiar with.
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Bank of America for sure. They didn't want to work with me when I was struggling, and I owed them the most. Three accounts, actually. The rates went sky high after missing a payment by a day once, late fees were high, and terrible customer service.
Capital One because, for some unknown reason years ago, they changed things and my minimum monthy payment doubled. It wasn't interest going up, it was just what they required for a minimum payment by their new rules.
The best one, however, was the law firm I first filed a Chapter 13 with. They were hard to work with and hard to get ahold of when my situation changes, I couldn't make the plan payments, and needed to file Chapter 7. I think I stiffed them for about $1500. Hahahahaha.
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Citibank - On the evening of Sept. 10, 2001 I mailed off a payment to Citi. Because of what happened on the morning of the 11th that payment did not go anywhere until planes started flying again. Got there sometime the following week. Got hit with a late charge. After trying to plead my case - up until that time I was NEVER late, with the explanation, all those scumbags said that I should have paid it online and NEVER reversed the late charge. In 2004 I burned them to the tune of over $7500 in my Chapter 7 filing.
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American General. We had a loan with American General and they held two car titles. One car burned up, and the other blew an engine. They were crafty enough to send a reaffirmation agreement all filled out, except for signatures, to our Trustee, not the attorney. At our 341 he gave it back. We took it and shredded it. I think they thought when handed by the Trustee, we would sign it.Last edited by AngelinaCat; 09-09-2008, 05:29 AM.
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I hate to say it but I really am not too overly concerned about bailing on BofA. We had contacted them about our home mortgage, made a plan with them very much in the loop, and when it can time, they bailed on us giving all kinds of different explanations. The bottom line was the market scared everyone into not writing mortgages and that was thier problem not us, but we got screwed from it. Even though we have NEVER been late on a house payment in well over 15 years. I know we are not the only ones, but not being able to get a mortgage devastated our finances. We really did plan and talk to all the "experts" before moving forward........(CountryGirl wanders away mumbling under her breath and shaking her head.)
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Hmm...I would probably have to say that I was glad to include Cross Country Bank (Applied Bank now). CC companies will always have the deck stacked against you, and they are more than ready to push high fees, interest rates, etc onto their debtors. The only way the consumer will win is to stop playing the game. I know that now, I sure don't know why I didn't think about that earlier. Probably because I was in the "easy money" mindset. For a long time I used credit responsibly, but, then over the course of a few months with unexpected expenses I was in a big hole and it took me over two years to figure out I was never going to get out of it.
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