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To Get New Credit Card: Pay Off Expired Debt?

Feds have fined debt collector for deceptive practices

By Neal Colgrass,  Newser Staff

Posted Jan 2, 2012 7:00 PM CST

(Newser) – Americans burdened with old debt and low credit ratings are getting an unlikely offer in the mail: a new credit card. But the fine print explains that accepting the card means reviving debts that had expired by law, the Wall Street Journal reports. For one New York deli owner, the debt transfer was "totally worth it" because he felt "like dirt" without a credit card, particularly on dates. To get his new plastic, he paid $400 on a seven-year-old debt that, yes, was expired. Others say the practice is deceptive and illegal.

Federal and state authorities have clamped down on CompuCredit, a leader in the business, for deceptive practices. But banks that team up with debt collectors say the debt-transfer cards—usually MasterCards—allow people to revive their credit ratings. Banks also benefit from the cards' fees and higher-than-usual interest rates. One Pennsylvania woman says she read the offer three times before rejecting it: The "legal hogwash" confused her, she says. "I am just grateful I didn't accept it."

This Sept. 21, 2011 photo, shows a MasterCard sign posted on a revolving door.
This Sept. 21, 2011 photo, shows a MasterCard sign posted on a revolving door.   (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)
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COMMENTS
Showing 3 of 12 comments
GeminiMishy
Jan 3, 2012 8:40 AM CST
"For one New York deli owner, the debt transfer was "totally worth it" because he felt "like dirt" without a credit card, particularly on dates." He should have been able to get a debit card with no problem at all. You can even have your paycheck get put on a card nowadays. This means he is broke and should be saving his money in the first place, not getting further into debt. Sounds like a textbook example of someone who is doomed to repeat his mistakes. 
JoeQ
Jan 2, 2012 11:49 PM CST
Usury laws are so 20th century.
Fascist_Jack
Jan 2, 2012 8:00 PM CST
"For one New York deli owner, the debt transfer was "totally worth it" because he felt "like dirt" without a credit card, particularly on dates." This pretty much sums up most of the middle class for me.  Poor people who live beyond their means to disguise the fact that they are in fact just poor people.  Take away their financed homes, their financed cars, their financed vacations, their very financed underwear that they bought with their credit cards...and what do you have?  A poor person living from check to check with no capital in the bank whatsoever to speak of. Design a life for yourself that is free from credit masters....and beware of women that will drag you into a middle class HELL.

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