Anonymous wrote:If you pay anything at all, it “revives” the debt and allows them to sue you to collect it. Unless you’re prepared to pay it all, it’s better to disregard it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you pay anything at all, it “revives” the debt and allows them to sue you to collect it. Unless you’re prepared to pay it all, it’s better to disregard it.
+1 Don’t even admit that the debt was yours because your admission, in any way, will reset the debt clock. That’s probably what the debt collector is hoping for.
Anonymous wrote:If you pay anything at all, it “revives” the debt and allows them to sue you to collect it. Unless you’re prepared to pay it all, it’s better to disregard it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your husband still owes the money, but the owner of the debt can't use the judicial system to collect it. Whether you can "safely" disregard depends on your moral stance regarding debt.
I don’t think karma really cares if you ignore the debt collector who bought your 10 year old debt for thousands of a penny on the dollar.
Karma? If karma was real, we wouldn’t have a deadbeat for a President. Lenders charge interest for a reason. The original owner wrote it off and claimed their tax deduction years ago. Don’t pay and tell the collector to bug off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your husband still owes the money, but the owner of the debt can't use the judicial system to collect it. Whether you can "safely" disregard depends on your moral stance regarding debt.
I don’t think karma really cares if you ignore the debt collector who bought your 10 year old debt for thousands of a penny on the dollar.
Anonymous wrote:If you pay anything at all, it “revives” the debt and allows them to sue you to collect it. Unless you’re prepared to pay it all, it’s better to disregard it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your husband still owes the money, but the owner of the debt can't use the judicial system to collect it. Whether you can "safely" disregard depends on your moral stance regarding debt.
I don’t think karma really cares if you ignore the debt collector who bought your 10 year old debt for thousands of a penny on the dollar.
Anonymous wrote:Your husband still owes the money, but the owner of the debt can't use the judicial system to collect it. Whether you can "safely" disregard depends on your moral stance regarding debt.