Sacramento bankruptcy & injury law blog

Stay informed with the James Keenan Law Blog, where you’ll find helpful insights on personal injury law, legal tips, and updates that matter to you. Learn your rights, understand the legal process, and get expert guidance to help you make confident decisions after an accident.

Payday Loan Debt

 Payday loan debt is a problem. It is a big problem. And as the payday loan industry rivals fast food restaurants in numbers, the problem is growing. Payday loans are loans borrowed against your paycheck. They can be taken against any postdated check you write. A borrower goes into a payday loan business and writes a postdated check for $350. In return, the customer gets maybe $300 in return. That's on a good day. If the postdated check does not clear when promised, interest begins to accrue. Big time. Average payday loan interest rates are around 450%. On top of the cut the business gets making the loan in the first place, it spells ripoff.

But payday loan debt ripoff is a price, literally, people are willing to pay. To get over a hump. To handle an unexpected bill. Coping with a temporary income loss. All are examples leading people to payday lenders. It is true in Sacramento, as this Sacramento Bee story points out, and it is true elsewhere. Seemingly, it has become a necessary evil for many in today's world.

Perhaps the economy is not as good as portrayed. Maybe it's that incomes have not kept up

Read more

Payday Loan Relief

Payday Loan Relief

Payday loan relief is a common concern of those considering bankruptcy. And it should be. Payday loans are some of the most predatory loans out there. Payday loans provide quick cash. They are easy to get. But they come at a cost. A big cost. Typically payday loans charge nearly 500% interest. That is a lot even for the lending industry. As this Chicago Tribune story points out, payday lenders are taking some heat.

The way payday loans work is you post-date a check and exchange that for a quick cash loan. Lenders such as Check ‘n Go, Check Into Cash and others offer easy money for those in need. Repaying these loans is not as easy. If the post-dated check is not honored, the extreme interest rates kick in. And this is on top of the loan processing costs and fees. So if your $350 check to the payday lender offered in exchange for a $300 loan cannot be cashed when promised, watch out. No wonder so many are in need of payday loan relief.

Part of the problem, too, is the aggressive nature of the lenders. Many borrowers look to payday loan options because their

Read more

Payday Loans in Bankruptcy

Payday Loans in Bankruptcy

Payday loans in bankruptcy are a common connection. If you don’t make good on that $300 post-dated check you gave to the local payday loan place for $250 cash, you are in for it financially. Interest rates nearing 500% kick in when your check doesn’t clear. And the amounts you can wind up owing accumulate faster than you can say usury.

Once upon a time usury, or loaning money at unusually high interest rates, was illegal. But no more–at least when in comes to payday loans. The industry carved out an exception to usury, arguing the inflated interest rates were necessary in light of the credit risk. Maybe so, but the amount you can wind up owing from unpaid payday loans can be astronomical.

Google has banned payday loan advertisements altogether. Here’s a story reflecting Google’s rationale. This payday loan philosophy only fuels the flow of payday loans in bankruptcy. Often when payday loans are not repaid in time, other payday loans are taken out to repay the previous ones. Soon this can become a cycle. Eventually options to borrow new money to repay old money run out.

Fortunately, payday loans can be discharged in bankruptcy.

Read more

Bankruptcy and payday loans

Bankruptcy and payday loans

Payday loans are the devil! Interest rates for such loans usually exceed 450% and, no, this is not a typo. If the postdated check you wrote for $350 you gave in exchange for the $300 you received is not honored, watch out. It will cost you! Often this results in the need to get another payday loan to cover the last one. Robbing Peter to pay Paul is not the answer.

Bankruptcy can eliminate payday loans. They are normally unsecured debts that can be eliminated in a bankruptcy discharge.

Linked here is an article from the Wall Street Journal illustrating the inequity of payday loans.

Read more