Payday loan disaster: A holiday splurge leads to a 651% interest rate
By Petula Dvorak,
WashPost
Updated: Thursday, March 8, 12:05 PM
It was holiday generosity that ultimately led Tyrone Newman to make a desperate deal.
And who could blame him?
Laid off and unemployed for a year, picking up the kids and doing laundry while his wife worked as a security guard, you could understand why a 47-year-old guy would want to celebrate a bit after a good, long year at a solid job.
“I did it all up. I bought a tree this time, we got a turkey with all the trimmings,” Newman told me, his golden eyes growing wide as he explained the largesse that was his undoing. “You know, you get happy and you just start spending.”
All told, the maintenance man for a Northeast Washington apartment building went overboard by about $1,500.
Come January, he didn’t want his wife to know that he’d spent that month’s mortgage payment on Christmas gifts. Stuck in traffic on the way to work, the radio spoke to him.
(More here.)
WashPost
Updated: Thursday, March 8, 12:05 PM
It was holiday generosity that ultimately led Tyrone Newman to make a desperate deal.
And who could blame him?
Laid off and unemployed for a year, picking up the kids and doing laundry while his wife worked as a security guard, you could understand why a 47-year-old guy would want to celebrate a bit after a good, long year at a solid job.
“I did it all up. I bought a tree this time, we got a turkey with all the trimmings,” Newman told me, his golden eyes growing wide as he explained the largesse that was his undoing. “You know, you get happy and you just start spending.”
All told, the maintenance man for a Northeast Washington apartment building went overboard by about $1,500.
Come January, he didn’t want his wife to know that he’d spent that month’s mortgage payment on Christmas gifts. Stuck in traffic on the way to work, the radio spoke to him.
(More here.)
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