Breast
cancer survivor handcuffed and thrown in jail over a mistaken $280
medical bill as 'debtor's prisons' return to the U.S
A
breast cancer survivor who was sent to prison over a mistaken $280
medical bill has highlighted the return of debtor's prisons in the
U.S.
20
April, 2012
Illinois
resident Lisa Lindsay had received the medical bill in error and was
told she did not have to pay up.
However,
the bill was turned over to a collection agency and state troopers
arrived at her home and took her away in handcuffs.
Lisa
Lindsay testifies before officials from the Illinois Department of
Financial and Professional Regulation Wednesday during a hearing on
'debtors' prisons' Lindsay, a breast cancer survivor, was jailed due
to a unpaid $280 medical bill
The
Illinois teaching assistant eventually had to pay more than $600 to
escape prison, as legal fees were added to the bill.
'I
paid it in full so they couldn't do it to me again,' said Lindsay
whose plight has alerted law-makers in Illinois to the growing
problem.
The
case of Lindsay as well as others suggests that more people than ever
before in the U.S are being thrown in 'debtor's prisons' for not
being able to pay back loans.
Disabled
roofer Jack Hinton sat in jail until he could come up with $300 on a
debt he owed a lumberyard.
According
to a hearing transcript, a central Illinois judge listened to
Hinton's story, noted he'd recently been paid after finishing a
roofing job, and said: 'Mr. Hinton, you had $1,000 in your pocket,
you chose to spend it elsewhere in violation of the court order. That
lands you in jail.'
Hinton's
wife took out a loan to buy his freedom. Her $300 went to the debt
collector.
Debt
collectors have become so aggressive claim some that poor people who
are behind on payments of as little as $25 a month are being sent to
jail.
Even
though debtor's prisons have been illegal since 1833, lenders are
being accused of exploiting legal loopholes to have their borrowers
found and sent to jail until they pay up.
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future share of U.S. debt? There's an app for that
'Debt
noose' tightens: Families forced to pay £200 a month - just to cover
the interest on loans
Acting
within the law, debtors aren't arrested for nonpayment, rather for
failing to arrive to court hearings thereby falling foul of contempt
of court laws.
This
results in a police arrest warrant being issued for 'failure to
appear', the debtor is tracked down, packed off to jail and can only
get out by paying the set bail bond which of course matches the
amount owed.
The
state of Illinois is waiting for their senate to approve a law which
will plug loopholes enabling lenders to use state resources to chase
their debts
Affecting
everyone who owes money from health care services to automobile
loans, debt collectors are using publicly funded courts, sheriff
deputies and county jails to pressure people with prison to pay back
their money reports CBS News.
And
now some state legislators are trying to plug this loophole by making
court notices be served in person rather than mail, arrest warrants
to expire after a year and the bail bond returned to the debtor not
the lender.
Jack
Hinton, a sporadically employed roofer was sent to jail by a central
Illinois judge until he could come up with $300 on a debt he owed a
lumberyard
Following
a spate of hard-working people being forced to spend time in prison,
state legislators across the U.S are examining ways to change the
law.
Critics
of legal loopholes allowing prison time to be dished out to bad
borrowers say it is reminiscent of 19th century Victorian debtor's
prison like this one at St Briavels Castle in Wales
In
fact in Illinois alone, legislation designed to plug loopholes aimed
at debtors is waiting to pass through the state senate.
'Creditors
have been manipulating the court system to extract money from the
unemployed, veterans, even seniors who rely solely on their benefits
to get by each month,' said Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan
last month in a statement voicing support for the legislation.
Despite
the Supreme Court outlawing debtor's prisons since 1833, lenders are
exploiting loopholes to put borrowers in jail for failure to pay back
their loan
'Too
many people have been thrown in jail simply because they're too poor
to pay their debts. We cannot allow these illegal abuses to
continue.'
A
2010 report by the American Civil Liberties Union that examined five
states - Georgia, Louisiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Washington --
discovered that people were being imprisoned at 'increasingly
alarming rates' through legal debts.
Some
of the examples cited included a woman who arrested four individual
times for failure to pay $251 in fines and costs related to a
fourth-degree misdemeanor conviction.
Another
example that the ACLU used was of a mentally ill juvenile imprisoned
by a judge for a conviction for stealing school supplies.
'The
sad truth is that debtors' prisons are flourishing today, more than
two decades after the Supreme Court prohibited imprisoning those who
are too poor to pay their legal debts,' said the ACLU.
Affecting
everyone who owes money from health care services to automobile loans
debt collectors are using publicy funded courts, sheriff deputies and
county jails to pressure people through jail to pay back
'In
this era of shrinking budgets, state and local governments have
turned aggressively to using the threat and reality of imprisonment
to squeeze revenue out of the poorest defendants who appear in their
courts.'
Impoverished
people are being pursued through the courts for back rent, medical
debt and payday loans
An
unemployed Urbana resident, Michelle Gilliam, was picked up by
sheriff's deputies and jailed twice for missing court dates as a debt
collector pursued her in court for a decade, she and her attorney
said.
Gilliam
got help from a nonprofit group offering free legal services and the
court dismissed the case, essentially forgiving her debt on the
grounds she was too poor to pay.
While
critics say that these measure essentially criminalise poverty,
law-makers recognise the problem.
Advocates
in Minnesota unsuccessfully tried to pass a bill that would have
allowed debtors to fill out an affidavit stating their income and
assets when the sheriff arrived at the door to execute a warrant,
according to Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan's office.
'More
people are unemployed, more people are struggling financially and
more creditors are trying to get their debt paid,' said Madigan.
Learning
of the problem last year, Madigan and her office were getting reports
of impoverished people pursued through the courts for back rent,
medical debt and payday loans, she said.
Defenders
of the imprisonment of borrowers say that if you borrow money then
the lender must have legal recourse to reclaim it
One
woman who owed money on a vacuum cleaner spent weeks in jail before
someone lined her up with free legal services.
'We're
using public resources to collect private debts,' explained Madigan.
'At
what point do you say it's illegal?'
In
court, debtors rarely have an attorney, while creditors hire
experienced legal representation.
Lawsuits
against debtors are a last resort, said Eric Mock of the Illinois
Collectors Association. 'A consumer that has been arrested or jailed
can't pay a debt. We want to work with consumers to resolve issues,'
he said.
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