THE BLOG

09
Jan

OBAMA’S OPERATION CHOKE POINT SEEKS TO DESTROY PAYDAY LOAN INDUSTRY

JER TRIHOUSE MUST READ: From Breitbart News.

“In an exclusive interview with Breitbart News on Monday, Richard Manning, Director of Communications for Americans for Limited Government, criticized the Obama administration’s efforts to destroy the payday loan industry. “Their intent,” Manning said, “is to create a government sanctioned means of driving private industry out of the business of providing payday loans. They’ve never shown a great willingness to be restrained by free market principles over the use of government sanctions.”

Sources tell Breitbart News that a new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule designed to crush the payday loan industry is expected to be announced in January.

In an August 22 editorial, the Washington Times became the first media outlet to alert the public to this isssue. “President Obama,” the Times wrote,” doesn’t like payday lenders, and neither, particularly, do we. But rather than seek changes by legislation or an open rule-making process to propose reform, the White House simply cracked down on payday lending.”

Read this piece in its entirety here: Breitbart News – Operation Choke Point

Using the payday loan “store model?” Looks like a no-brainer! Start here: PaydayLoanUniversity.com

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08
Jan

Texas Payday Loan and Car Title Loans

“Payday loan customers in El Paso, Texas will only be able to borrow 20 percent of their gross monthly income and can only roll over or renew their loans three times under the city’s credit access business ordinance that will take effect next week.”

By: Jer – Trihouse Consulting

So… the payday loan and car title lenders with stores in El Paso will leave the city. They’ll close their locations, lay-off employees, move down the street, and employ the Internet to service their El Paso borrowers.

Consumers will drive further, commercial property lease rates will fall in El Paso, all the ancillary businesses that prosper as a result of PDL and car title loan transactions will suffer as well.

Ultimately, borrowers will be inconvenienced BUT they will still get their loans. And, payday loan and car title loan companies not operating in El Paso will have a competitive advantage over the few lenders remaining in El Paso.

Regulators cannot put an electric fence around El Paso! Jer – Trihouse

Read the original Credit & Collections article here: Credit and Collections – El Paso payday Loan Laws Implemented

Car Title Loan & Payday Loan University

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07
Jan

Car Title Loan Business

Car Title Loans – Licensing Issues and Car Title Loan Repossessions

By: Jer Trihouse

Interested in car title loans, repos and licensing? The president of the American Recovery Assoc. and a few of our car title loan clients received the following letter from the NY state attorney general:

Dear Mr. Hall:

I am writing to you in your capacity as the President of the American Recovery Association, Inc. (“ARA”) to bring to your attention a very serious situation that may affect your members from New York State.

As you may be aware, payday loans are illegal in New York State because they violate New York civil and criminal usury laws. You will not find any “brick and mortar” payday loan companies in New York State. Payday loan companies, however, have established a presence on the internet and continue to make payday loans to New York residents, even though the loans are illegal, void and unenforceable. A particularly pernicious type of payday loan is called a “title loan.” Title loan lenders require that consumers pledge their motor vehicles as collateral for the loan. When the consumer allegedly defaults on the title loan, the lender uses New York businesses to enforce their illegal, void and unenforceable loans by repossessing the vehicle. That is where your members come in.

The Office of the Attorney General (“OAG”) is investigating a title loan company that used several New York towing and recovery businesses to repossess the vehicles of New York residents based on illegal title loans. The OAG is investigating the New York businesses as well because of their role in enforcing the illegal loans.

Under N.Y. Executive Law, § 63(12) and N.Y. General Business Law Article 22- A, the OAG is authorized to file special proceedings against businesses that engage in illegal or fraudulent business practices. The OAG believes that repossessing motor vehicles based on illegal, void and unenforceable loans constitutes illegal, fraudulent and deceptive business practices for which a court could order penalties of up to $5,000 for each deceptive act, as well as costs.

To prove its case, the OAG is not required to show that a business intended to violate the law, or that it intended to engage in fraudulent conduct or that it acted in bad faith in repossessing the vehicles. See People v. General Electric, 302 A.D.2d 314, 315 (1st Dep’t 2003) (“Although [the company] argues that it conducted its [business activities] in good faith, neither bad faith nor scienter is required under Executive Law § 63(12).” (internal citations omitted); see also State of New York v. Ford Motor Co., 136 A.D.2d 154, 158 (3d Dep’t 1988), aff’d 74 N.Y.2d 495 (1989) Lefkowitz v. E.F.G. Baby Products Co., Inc., 40 A.D.2d 364, 367 (3d Dep’t 1973) (“that [the business] acted in good faith, even if believable, is irrelevant”).

Your members should be aware that the following loans are illegal:

a. a personal loan to a New York resident of $25,000 or less from a lender that is not licensed by the New York State Department of Financial Services, and

b. the loan is for personal, family, household or investment purposes, and

c. the unlicensed lender charges an annual interest rate of more than 16%.

If the lender is a federally chartered bank, or a bank that is chartered by a state other than New York State, the loan may not violate New York law. This would rarely be the case with a title loan.

Your members should be aware that if they repossess the motor vehicles of New York residents based on an illegal title loans, they too may find themselves the subject of an investigation and an enforcement action by the OAG.

I welcome the opportunity to speak with you to discuss what role the ARA could play in assuring that its members do not enforce payday or title loans that violate New York civil and criminal usury laws.

Very truly yours,
James M. Morrissey
Assistant Attorney General

So… If you’re in a state or province where car title lending is legal, and you need help starting or improving your operation, visit: PaydayLoanUniversity.com

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02
Jan

State AG’s Continue to Pile On Payday Loan Companies

'October 27, 2006: Bombers Away!' photo (c) 2006, Matt McGee - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/2.0/Just a few of the states piling on top of Western Sky, Cash Call and their servicers: New York, Georgia, Minnesota, and Virginia, Colorado, North Carolina and New Hampshire.

N.C. Attorney General Cooper and the North Carolina Office of the Commissioner of Banks filed against Western Sky Financial, CashCall, their owner John Paul Reddam for violating North Carolina laws that ban egregious interest rates on small consumer loans.

Payday and other high interest rate loans are against the law in North Carolina. N.C. regulators have fought to shut down storefront lenders. The last storefront payday lenders were forced from the state in 2006, but lenders outside of North Carolina continue to try to reach North Carolina consumers through the Internet and advertising.

The N.C. lawsuit requests the court cancel the illegal loans, order refunds for consumers, and ban the defendants from collecting on the loans and making any future illegal loans to North Carolina consumers.

Colorado AG filed suit against the same lendr, loan servicers and collection company.

The New Hampshire AG promised to enforce a state banking department order against the same entities targeted in the other state actions.

All three actions state actions are in coordination with a CFPB action filed December 16 suggesting a broad pursuit of purported “regulatory-evasion schemes.” The states are alleging that the lender violated state usury or licensing laws in the online origination of short-term, small dollar loans. The lender asserts that it is a Native American sovereign entity not subject to relevant state laws. The states also allege that a “servicer, either in its own name or through a related entity, provided the lender with marketing, web hosting and customer services, collected consumer information, and conducted the loans’ initial underwriting review, and then purchased all loans immediately after origination.” “The states further allege that either the servicers or a related debt collection company engaged in servicing and collections, and that the totality of the activities violated state lending and licensing laws by, among other things, financing and collecting on illegal payday loans.”

The state AG suits are similar to suits previously filed by other state attorneys general, including in New York, Georgia, Minnesota, and Virginia.

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