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US: Grieving father struggles to pay dead son’s student loans
By Marian Wang in ProPublica.
A few months after he buried his son, Francisco Reynoso began getting notices in the mail. Then the debt collectors came calling.
"They would say, 'We don't care what happened with your son, you have to pay us,'" recalled Reynoso, a gardener from Palmdale, Calif.
Reynoso's son, Freddy, had been the pride of his family and the first to go to college. In 2005, after Freddy was accepted to Boston's Berklee College of Music, his father co-signed on his hefty private student loans, making him fully liable should Freddy be unwilling or unable to repay them. It was no small decision for a man who made just over $21,000 in 2011, according to his tax returns.
"As a father, you'll do anything for your child,” Reynoso, an American citizen originally from Mexico, said through a translator.
Now, he's suffering a Kafkaesque ordeal in which he's hounded to repay loans that funded an education his son will never get to use — loans that he has little hope of ever paying off. While Reynoso's wife, Sylvia, is studying to be a beautician, his gardening is currently the sole source of income for the family, which includes his 18-year-old daughter Evelyn.
And the loans are maddeningly opaque. Despite the help of a lawyer, Reynoso has not been able to determine exactly how much he owes, or even what company holds his loans. Just as happened with home mortgages in the boom years before the 2008 financial crash, his son's student loans have been sold and resold, and at least one was likely bundled into a complex Wall Street security. But the trail of those transactions ends at a wall of corporate silence from companies that include two household names: banking giant UBS and Xerox, which owns the loan servicer handling the bulk of his loans. Left without answers is a bereaved father.
The risk of cosigning on Freddy's loans seemed to have been worth it when he graduated in May 2008 and began looking for a job in the music industry. He was on the way back from a job interview on the evening of Sept. 4 when he lost control of his car and it rolled over. Freddy's family learned of his death the next morning.
The grief was relentless; the debt collectors, ruthless. By law, debt collectors must go through a debtor's attorney if one has been hired, but even after Reynoso hired an attorney, he said they continued to call him every day, several times a day, for about a year and a half: "I would tell them to call the lawyer. And they would still say, 'The lawyer doesn't owe us. You're the one who owes us. You're the one who has to pay us.'"
Meanwhile, Reynoso was still reeling: "I was crying for him every day,” he said.
The question of to whom Reynoso's debts are actually owed — and who has the authority to forgive them — is a mystery that thus far neither Reynoso nor his lawyer has been able to solve.
One of Freddy's student loans was cancelled after his death without a problem: his federal loan. That's because the government cancels student loans if a student dies.
But the bulk of Freddy's loans were private student loans, which typically offer less favorable interest rates and fewer consumer protections. Only a few private student lenders offer debt discharges in the event of the borrower's death, though public outcry over specific cases has swayed lenders to grant occasional death discharges.
But for the Reynosos, just figuring out whom to appeal to has been an exercise in futility. Working with a law firm, Francisco Reynoso sent copies of Freddy's death certificate to any company that sent paperwork about the loans. He remembers being told by at least one company that they'd call him to work out a solution. But no one ever did, he said, and the bills kept coming — each time larger than the last with more interest, more late fees.
"We sent out death certificates to all of them," said Dolores Orozco-Serrano, a legal administrator with Borowitz & Clark, the bankruptcy law firm handling the Reynosos' case. Only the federal loan was discharged. "Everyone else was not cooperative at all."
Freddy Reynoso's private loans were originated by two companies — Bank of America and Education Finance Partners. Neither company still holds onto them. ProPublica tried to find out who did.
First, the Bank of America loan: Almost as soon as Bank of America originated it, the loan was sold to a Boston-based company called First Marblehead, once one of the biggest securitizers of student loans. But nowhere in the paperwork sent to the Reynosos and reviewed by ProPublica does the name First Marblehead appear. Instead, the Reynosos have received paperwork emblazoned with the logo of National Collegiate Trust. That's the name First Marblehead gave to bundles of loans that it turned into Wall Street securities and sold to investors. Was Freddy's loan bundled into a security? And if so, who owns it now? First Marblehead has not returned repeated requests for comment.
Freddy Reynoso's other loans followed an even more complicated path — and one tainted by scandal. Education Finance Partners, the private student loan company that originated the largest portion of Freddy's student debts, reached a $2.5 million settlement agreement with the New York Attorney General's Office in 2007 to settle charges that it had paid colleges across the country to steer students toward its high-interest loans. And Berklee College of Music, Freddy's alma mater, was one of the schools singled out in that investigation for accepting the improper payments. Berklee College of Music spokesman Allen Bush acknowledged in a statement to ProPublica that the school accepted a total of $23,000 from Education Finance Partners between 2005 and 2007, but said that "all of these funds were deposited into a financial aid account and disbursed through a need-based grant system to current Berklee students."
Education Finance Partners, Freddy's lender, never admitted any wrongdoing. A year after the settlement, the company declared bankruptcy.
But who holds Freddy's loans now remains a mystery. The company's archives — now kept by a company called Loan Science — show that his loans were scooped up by the Swiss bank UBS in October 2008. But the entire portfolio changed hands again in 2009. "That 2009 sale was private, it was bound by a confidentiality agreement and, therefore, we're not in a position to disclose the identity of the purchaser," wrote a UBS spokesman in an email.
One possibility: Freddy's loan may have been among those acquired by the Swiss National Bank, Switzerland's equivalent of the U.S. Federal Reserve, when it bailed out UBS. (See our sidebar.)
Reynoso and his lawyer don't even know exactly how much he now owes, but it appears to be well into the six figures. The loan that Bank of America originated is clear: At the end of March, the balance was around $7,400, according to Mike Reiber, a spokesman for PHEAA, a company that once serviced that loan. (With the loan in default, it now resides with First Marblehead, Reiber said.) But the other, much larger portion of Reynoso's debt remains murky. A 2009 lending disclosure document indicates that through Education Finance Partners, UBS extended nearly $160,000 in credit to Freddy Reynoso, and projected that if he made all payments as scheduled, the loan for his music education would end up costing him $279,000.
Seemingly the only party who knows — and is obligated to tell Reynoso — about this debt is the servicer, ACS Education Services.
Citing privacy reasons, ACS declined to disclose any specifics about the loans to ProPublica, even with Reynoso's full consent. Three weeks ago, Francisco Reynoso himself sent a letter to ACS asking who currently holds the loans, but he has received no response.
ACS is a subsidiary of Xerox, so ProPublica put in several calls there. Given more than a full week to respond, Xerox's corporate communications team has yet to provide a response to queries about when Reynoso can expect basic information about his son's loans, including the amount he owes and the name of the company that now owns the debt.
Even with the help of a lawyer, Reynoso's options are limited. Unlike most kinds of debt, private student loans are not dischargeable through bankruptcy, though Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., is leading an effort to change that. So for the time being, Reynoso's hope hinges on a narrow provision in the bankruptcy code called a hardship discharge. The bar for proving "undue hardship" is high, but Reynoso still hopes for the best as he waits for a ruling from the bankruptcy judge. As he puts it: "I'm in the hands of God."
Comments
Free...speech too
Good feedback guys! The freedom portion is certainly key and I'll be the first to point out that people are free to not click my columns. Pleasing each and every person that follow my column would be a hopeless task and not one I would fool myself into believeing could occur.
Also, a column and an article are entirely different things. I wouldn't aim to shock as such in an article, however I'd also rarely muzzle myself in an opinion piece. It's kind of like dinner table language at grandmas and bar talk with the guys. Two different ballgames entirely.
My opinion is exactly that and if I observe a scenario in life a certain way then I won't neuter my own opinion for the sake of a few folks.
I also wouldn't refer to them as sad, desperate and undignified. In my opinion, that is a far more condenscending and inarticulate assumption when compared to the hyperbole of a likely hypothetical 57 year old prostitute used as a "cringeworthy literary device."
Again though, that is my opinion and you have yours and we both have this great venue to freely braodcast them!
Local story?
It's not that I am uninterested in the US student loan situation, I just don't read the Boundary Sentinel for that. When I read a local publication I am looking for local content, otherwise why would I come here? One has to wonder--what is this doing here--Is this just "filler"? This was a trick the Gazette got into a lot at various points--I guess it is much cheaper (ok, free or next to free!) to generate column inches to hang the ads around this way, than to actually pay someone to come up with local stories. I do sympathize with the cost pressures you must face, but at the same time it's no excuse. I eventually and reluctantly gave up buying the Gazette because of all the filler, and won't subscribe now through their new paywall for the same reason. If you have to chose between filler (ie non local) stories and no stories at all--please choose the latter. I can find the stories on US student loan problems should I care to, without the Sentinel's help just fine thank you. Please stick to the BOUNDARY part of Boundary Sentinel and we will get along fine. I have nixxed my Gazette bookmark because of the paywall and that the ever dropping number of local stories don't justify the price, but I retain the Sentinel bookmark for now...so keep up the good work. Cheers and thanks for an otherwise great effort.
Editor to you: Readers can choose to read or not
Thanks for the comments tiredtaxpayer2. The Sentinel doesn't need content to "hang" ads on - our page is as long as it wants to be and the ads can grow with or without content - we're on the web!
But like any web-based resource we like to provide a variety of content for our readers - especially things we think might be overlooked by so-called mainstream media in our province and our world.
We clearly mark our content as local, regional, provincial, etc so readers can easily choose which section they are interested in. As a small independent company we certainly strive to cover our local news to the best of our capacity and I take pride in the quality of what we produce vs. quantity.
We do have readers that take in our national and international sections, perhaps because we give them an alternative to mainstream news, perhaps because of the convenience of the site. Whatever the reason, I am happy to provide some other content for their reading.
But international content is at the bottom of the page so you can tell the priority we place on our local original content.
So thanks for the bookmark, thanks for reading and keep on commenting!
The Sentinel is free, and you're free to read whatever you want
If you want local stories, no sense clicking on a story whose headline is "US: ..."
No doubt the Sentinel's editor felt this was an important story worth disseminating. As long as important local stories are also covered—a local paper's main mission—I see no reason to constrain a media outlet.
It's a small world, after all.
I really appreciated your comments regarding the most recent Electric Grapevine, thanks for those. I also felt some parts of the article were in very poor taste.
Keep that bookmark for now!