Man, some lawyers are disgusting.
Once again, the combination of contingency fees and law enforcement spells trouble: an article by Tresa Baldas in the National Law Journal reports that controversy is mounting over the activities of private firms that go after noncustodial parents’ child support obligations in exchange for a percentage share of the bounty (“Suits collecting around child support collectors”, Sept. 17, no free link). “Critics of the industry — many of them lawyers — claim that private collectors of child support are engaging in predatory practices, such as charging excessive contingency fees as high as 50%, and using aggressive collection tactics that run afoul of federal laws.” The private agencies escape the scrutiny of federal debt collection laws and have been operating effectively without regulation, but state lawmakers are now moving to fill the gap, with 13 states having passed laws intended to protect the services’ clients (if not always their adversaries) by capping fees, prohibiting the agencies from collaring state-directed payments, and giving clients more leeway to withdraw from contracts.
The National Council of State Legislatures details a range of complaints made against some of the collectors:
* written and oral communications with obligees designed to look or sound like they are from the state child support agency or other government entity,
* repeated harassment of employers, family members and neighbors of obligors,* keeping as payment for services 50% or more of support collected,
* intercepting current support payments from the state agency to apply to back support they contracted to collect for the obligee,
* charging a fee for collections made by the state agency,
* refusing to terminate contracts when requested by the obligee, and
* requesting income withholding from employers without proper authority.
Literally taking money out of the mouths of kids. Nice.
“kill all the lawyers”…….. at times it sounds like a good idea.