USA TODAY International Edition

Loaners go low for high interest

Loopholes keep predators in business

- Susan Tompor Columnist

DETROIT – Karl Swiger couldn’t believe how his 20-something daughter somehow borrowed $1,200 online and got stuck with an annual interest rate of roughly 350%.

“When I heard about it, I thought you can get better rates from the Mafia,” said Swiger, who runs a landscapin­g business. He only heard about the loan once his daughter needed help making the payments.

Yes, we’re talking about a loan rate that’s not 10%, not 20% but more than 300%.

“How the hell do you pay it off if you’re broke? It’s obscene,” said Henry Baskin, the Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, attorney who was shocked when he first heard the story.

Baskin decided he’d try to take up the cause for Nicole Swiger, the daughter of Karl Swiger who cuts Baskin’s lawn, as well as other struggling households caught in a painful debt trap.

Super-high interest loans should be illegal and several states have tried to put a stop to them through usury laws that set caps on interest rates, as well as requiring licensing of many operators. The cap on many types of loans, including installmen­t loans, in Michigan is 25%, for example.

Yet critics say that states haven’t done enough to eliminate the ludicrous loopholes that make these 300% to 400% loans readily available online at different spots such as Plain Green, where Swiger obtained her loan.

How do they get away with triple-digit loans?

In a strange twist, several online lenders connect their operations with Native American tribes to severely limit any legal recourse. The various tribes aren’t involved in financing the operations, critics say. Instead, critics say, outside players are using a relationsh­ip with the tribes to skirt consumer protection laws, including limits on interest rates and licensing requiremen­ts.

“It’s really quite convoluted on purpose. They’re (the lenders) trying to

hide what they’re doing,” said Jay Speer, executive director of the Virginia Poverty Law Center, a nonprofit advocacy group that sued Think Finance over alleged illegal lending.

Some headway was made this summer. A Virginia settlement included a promise that three online lending companies with tribal ties would cancel debts for consumers and return $16.9 million to thousands of borrowers. The settlement reportedly affects 40,000 borrowers in Virginia alone. No wrongdoing was admitted.

Under the Virginia settlement, three companies under the Think Finance umbrella – Plain Green LLC, Great Plains Lending and MobiLoans LLC – agreed to repay borrowers the difference between what the firms collected and the limit set by states on rates that can be charged. Virginia has a 12% cap set by its usury law on rates with exceptions for some lenders, such as licensed payday lenders or those making car title loans who can charge higher rates.

In June, Texas-based Think Finance, which filed for bankruptcy in October 2017, agreed to cancel and pay back nearly $40 million in loans outstandin­g and originated by Plain Green.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau filed suit in November 2017 against Think Finance for its role in deceiving consumers into repaying loans that were not legally owed. Think Finance already had been accused in multiple federal lawsuits of being a predatory lender before its bankruptcy filing. Think Finance had accused a hedge fund, Victory Park Capital Advisors, of cutting off its access to cash and precipitat­ing bankruptcy filing.

It’s possible Swiger could receive some relief down the line if a class action status that Baskin is seeking is approved, as would other consumers who borrowed at super-high rates with these online lenders.

“I don’t know where this is going to end up,” Baskin said.

Trapped in a loan you can’t afford

Baskin said once he heard Nicole Swiger’s plight he told her to stop making payments. She had already paid $1,170.75 for her $1,200 loan. The balance due: $1,922.

The online lender reported the stopped payments to credit agencies and Swiger’s credit score was damaged. Baskin would hope that a resolution would include possible relief to her credit score. If this loan is deemed unlawful in Michigan, experts say, consumers could challenge it and tell the credit reporting agency to remove it.

It all started when Nicole Swiger, who lives in Westland, Michigan, was sent an unsolicite­d mailing that told her that she could have $1,200 in her bank account the next day just by going online, according to the complaint filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan in Detroit.

Swiger, who makes $11.50 an hour at Bates Hamburgers in Farmington Hills, Michigan, said she was struggling with an “astronomic­al car note,” a bank account that hit a negative balance and worrying about making sure her 4-yearold son had a good Christmas.

Swiger, 27, needed money so she applied for the loan. Her first biweekly payment of $167.22 was due in December 2018. The loan’s maturity date was April 2020. Looking back, she said, she believes that online lenders should need to take into account someone’s ability to repay that kind of a loan based on how much money you make and what other bills you pay on top of that.

Run the numbers

Plain Green – an online lending operation owned by the Chippewa Cree Tribe of the Rocky Boy’s Indian Reservatio­n in Montana – markets itself as a source for “emergency cash lending.” Its online site remained in operation in early July.

Plain Green is not a licensed lender in the state of Michigan, according to the Michigan Department of Insurance and Financial Services. But it is not required to be licensed as it is a tribally owned corporatio­n.

In 2018, about 45,000 installmen­t loans were made by licensed lenders in Michigan for a total of $699 million, with an average loan size of roughly $15,500. This number represents loan volume from Consumer Finance licensees; it does not include loans made by banks or credit unions. The numbers would not include lenders affiliated with American Indian tribes.

Plain Green says online that it has served more than 1million customers since 2011. It posts testimonia­ls on YouTube for its biweekly and monthly installmen­t loans.

“I didn’t have to jump through any hoops,” one young man said in one such testimonia­l. “They didn’t have to have to call my employer like some other places do. It was real easy.”

If you go online, you can calculate your loan cost at the Plain Green site. Take out a $500 loan and you’ll pay 438% in interest. You’d make 20 payments at $88.15 in biweekly payments. Pull out your own calculator to add up the payments and you’d discover that you’re paying $1,763 for a $500 loan – or $1,263 in interest.

If you paid that loan off each month, instead of biweekly, you’d pay $1,910.10 – or $191.01 each month for 10 months. That ends up being $1,410.10 in interest.

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 ?? SUSAN TOMPOR/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Consumers need to watch out for loans that may charge more than 350%.
SUSAN TOMPOR/USA TODAY NETWORK Consumers need to watch out for loans that may charge more than 350%.

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