In fall of 2009, I made several charges on my AMEX card. I had laser eye surgery for $3000 (in Oct.) and made several other charges that brought the total of my card to $7000. This is no different than any other card I had. I have a long standing history of major purchases.....thus me filing Ch 7.
At wits end, and finally realizing that I was in way over my head. I consulted a Debt sebtlement company. They, of course, promised me the moon. They instructed me not to pay any of my creditors (this would reduce the chance of debt sebtlement) and they began drafting my account for their fee of $850 per month for the first 4 months. Well, after a couple months of the phone calls increasing (not stopping like they promised). I finally knew that this was not the way to go.
In Jan. of 2010, I made one minor payment to all of my creditors ($50). I know this wasn't the amount required, but I wanted to send something. I was working 2 jobs (my wife stayed at home with our twins). My hours were cut on one job and my second job gave me a pay cut and reduced my hours. My income dropped tremendously. My wife found a job and went back to work in March. My income was still lower than before. I finally filed for Ch 7 on June 1. My discharge date is Aug 30th.
Amex sent a letter to my attorney saying "they may consider filing a dispute to discharge" saying that I made these charges with no intent to pay back and "didn't even make a single payment." This is not true. Although small, I did make the one small payment. It is true, I made the charges. But then my once manageable monthly payments....could no longer be made. Then I consulted the debt sebtlement company with no luck. Then, I lost my income. I made the small payment.....then ended up filing Ch 7.
What should I do? My attorney said I had two options....
1. Ignore the letter and see if they actually do file. These charges were outside the 90 day period.
2. Contact them for a settlement.
The attorney for AMEX is wanting an explanation for the charges and then no repayment. Should I write them and explain as I did here or wait it out?
thanks
At wits end, and finally realizing that I was in way over my head. I consulted a Debt sebtlement company. They, of course, promised me the moon. They instructed me not to pay any of my creditors (this would reduce the chance of debt sebtlement) and they began drafting my account for their fee of $850 per month for the first 4 months. Well, after a couple months of the phone calls increasing (not stopping like they promised). I finally knew that this was not the way to go.
In Jan. of 2010, I made one minor payment to all of my creditors ($50). I know this wasn't the amount required, but I wanted to send something. I was working 2 jobs (my wife stayed at home with our twins). My hours were cut on one job and my second job gave me a pay cut and reduced my hours. My income dropped tremendously. My wife found a job and went back to work in March. My income was still lower than before. I finally filed for Ch 7 on June 1. My discharge date is Aug 30th.
Amex sent a letter to my attorney saying "they may consider filing a dispute to discharge" saying that I made these charges with no intent to pay back and "didn't even make a single payment." This is not true. Although small, I did make the one small payment. It is true, I made the charges. But then my once manageable monthly payments....could no longer be made. Then I consulted the debt sebtlement company with no luck. Then, I lost my income. I made the small payment.....then ended up filing Ch 7.
What should I do? My attorney said I had two options....
1. Ignore the letter and see if they actually do file. These charges were outside the 90 day period.
2. Contact them for a settlement.
The attorney for AMEX is wanting an explanation for the charges and then no repayment. Should I write them and explain as I did here or wait it out?
thanks
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