Anonymous wrote:Everyone else pays the pice for deadbeats. Do you feel no moral obligation to take responsibility for your actions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks everyone for the advice.
I like the idea of after 7 years the debt is wiped away because at the time I couldn't even afford to pay a bankruptcy lawyer.
And I didn't know that "settling" w/a lawyer would still make my credit suck.
I thought paying off the debt by settling would be better than not paying it at all.
Have you spoken to this lawyer and admitted the debt? If so, you might have reset the 7 year clock.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks everyone for the advice.
I like the idea of after 7 years the debt is wiped away because at the time I couldn't even afford to pay a bankruptcy lawyer.
And I didn't know that "settling" w/a lawyer would still make my credit suck.
I thought paying off the debt by settling would be better than not paying it at all.
Anonymous wrote:The debt does not go away, only the ability of the creditor to sue you for the debt. If you want the debt removed from your credit report, you need to pay it. Pay the full amount and don't settle, this would negatively affect your credit.
Anonymous wrote:In my reckless youth, I qualified for a few credit cards and foolishly maxed them all out. Sadly, I couldn't pay them off + then stupidly simply quit paying anything on any of them at all.
For awhile, I got the standard daily collection calls. They even called a few of my neighbors asking for me. I was "threatened" w/legal action, to garnish my wages in the future, but that never came into fruitation which I am not sure why. I know one credit card wrote off one debt as a charge off, while another one has forwarded my balance on to an attorney who sends me letters offering to settle for a lesser amount which I receive every four months or so.
My dad told me that since these debts were made in the mid-nineties, they are like a bankruptcy, they pretty much automatically are erased in the same manner. Yes, my credit score/record is still blemished, but the debts are erased vs. outstanding. In other words, I owe nothing just like if I had filed for Chapter 7.
Is this true? After a certain amount of time, such as 20 yrs., do debts just get erased automatically like they do in a Chapter 7?
Thank you for any and all advice/input.
Anonymous wrote:Don't you feel the least bit guilty that you haven't paid these? I feel like it's a crime not to pay your bills, just like your robbed a store.