PLAYER57832 wrote:apey wrote:Yeah just be careful with them student loans
My hubby got a loan for 6,000 to pay for his school and we have paid over 40,000 for it and they still want more and to make it so much better we can't find an attorney who will help us get our money back because they are virtually untouchable (the loan companies)
Good luck. I had a similar experience. At one point, I had to get the dean of my school to verify that I was a student -- they accepted none of the official records, wanted a form that was none existant (seriously non-existant). He finally threatened that company would not be allowed to operate in his university if they did not acknowledge my enrollment and defer my loan.
Each time my loan was sold, it somehow reset to the full value. The loan transferred, but all payment records somehow dissappeared. In the end, I was part of a congressional investigation (no joking).... and I STILL had to pay more than I was due.
My advice. Keep each and EVERY piece of paper you get OR SEND to any loan official. KEEP hard copies of every check - -back and front. Call your congress folks (and KEEP calling). Be sure that you follow up ANY phone calls with a WRITTEN letter (phone calls are not legally binding) AND make sure to send it "return receipt" .. but also be sure to copy the letter, AFTER you sign it with blue ink -- and dated, then have the copy date-stamped by the post office and staple it with your letter. The company will still try to question this, but eventually, you should be some sort of reconciliation.
I don't know the details. If you miss even one payment, fail to submit documentation or fail to keep written proof, then those charges may well be considered valid. Be absolutely sure your husband is not trying to hide earlier poor record keeping.
If he truly HAS done everything correctly, then anything sent over the mail is considered Mail Fraud, and subject to penalties by federal law. Also, though these companies are EXTREMELY difficult to tackle, they are subject to other laws. The thing is, you have to be extremely diligent. Too many students plan is just to throw papers in the garbage, claim they haven't received bills .... etc.
We have the collection company on tape telling us that they are charging us 80% interest and that if we want information on what we owe that we have to send them 2000 bucks first and she threatened us numerous times but when we told her we were recording our conversations she said it was against the law so I looked up the law and faxed it to her I was right and she was wrong
