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Economy
In reply to the discussion: Weekend Economists Volvemos a Puerto Rico May 22-25, 2015 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)50. Woman Billed $1,000 For Credit Card Error Gets $83 Million Verdict, But IRS Gets Last Laugh
http://www.forbes.com/sites/robertwood/2015/05/20/woman-billed-1000-for-credit-card-error-gets-last-laugh-83-million-verdict/?utm_campaign=Forbes&utm_source=TWITTER&utm_medium=social&utm_channel=Investing&linkId=14380825
Juries sometimes do strange things, and one in Missouri has ordered a company that buys up consumer debts to pay an astounding $83 million to Maria Guadalupe Mejia of Kansas City. Why, you may ask? The jury said the credit company wrongly tried to collect an erroneous $1,000 credit card bill. Credit.com has an extensive story about this shocker, the woman who sues a debt collector, and then wins $83 Million. KCUR reported the verdict and the jury finding that the defendantPortfolio Recovery Associates LLCwas guilty of violating the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.
That law contains many safeguards for borrowers. With the small $1,000 disputed debt, as you might imagine, most of the verdict was for allegedly bad conduct, The verdict called for $250,000 in damages plus a few dollars shy of $83 million in punitive damages. The verdict calls it malicious prosecution, the debt not being hers to begin with.
PRA Group Inc., which owns Portfolio Recovery Associates, sent an email statement to Credit.com: This outlandish verdict defies all common sense, wrote spokesman Michael McKeon. We hope and expect the judge will set aside this inappropriate award, and we plan to file motions to make that request formally in the near term. Any fair reading of the facts of this case makes plain that a verdict of this size is not justice by any means, and cannot stand.
CONTINUES WITH TAX ADVICE FOR THOSE EXPECTING A WINDFALL SETTLEMENT...
Juries sometimes do strange things, and one in Missouri has ordered a company that buys up consumer debts to pay an astounding $83 million to Maria Guadalupe Mejia of Kansas City. Why, you may ask? The jury said the credit company wrongly tried to collect an erroneous $1,000 credit card bill. Credit.com has an extensive story about this shocker, the woman who sues a debt collector, and then wins $83 Million. KCUR reported the verdict and the jury finding that the defendantPortfolio Recovery Associates LLCwas guilty of violating the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.
That law contains many safeguards for borrowers. With the small $1,000 disputed debt, as you might imagine, most of the verdict was for allegedly bad conduct, The verdict called for $250,000 in damages plus a few dollars shy of $83 million in punitive damages. The verdict calls it malicious prosecution, the debt not being hers to begin with.
PRA Group Inc., which owns Portfolio Recovery Associates, sent an email statement to Credit.com: This outlandish verdict defies all common sense, wrote spokesman Michael McKeon. We hope and expect the judge will set aside this inappropriate award, and we plan to file motions to make that request formally in the near term. Any fair reading of the facts of this case makes plain that a verdict of this size is not justice by any means, and cannot stand.
CONTINUES WITH TAX ADVICE FOR THOSE EXPECTING A WINDFALL SETTLEMENT...
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I sincerely doubt that anyone at the FDIC will waste this long weekend in pursuit of failure
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May 2015
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Woman Billed $1,000 For Credit Card Error Gets $83 Million Verdict, But IRS Gets Last Laugh
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May 2015
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