Difference between revisions of "Debt"

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|24 September 2014
|24 September 2014
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|n/a
|Chris
|Chris
|Loan for [[Son-Chu]]
|Loan for [[Son-Chu]]
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|1 March 2016
|1 March 2016
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|n/a
|Chris
|Chris
|PS4 purchase (via Fingerhut.com)
|PS4 purchase (via Fingerhut.com)
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|16 April 2016
|16 April 2016
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|n/a
|Chris
|Chris
|Payday loan (not counting the extremely high interest rates)
|Payday loan (not counting the extremely high interest rates)
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|11 November 2019
|11 November 2019
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|''15 January 2020''
|Chris
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|Second Round Sub garnishment hearing
|Second Round Sub garnishment hearing

Revision as of 02:04, 18 December 2019

How the hell CWC is going to pay all that?
Twitter user TaoOfMao1, on viewing the result for Chris's third debt lawsuit.
A bit at a time. Do Not Judge Me, Mao. It is wrong to judge others by outdated information and financial shit.
Chris's response[1]. He has been sued for nonpayment many times since.
The first of many debt lawsuits against the Chandlers.

Debt is money owed to a creditor. Due to their mutual laziness and propensities towards hoarding, Barbara and Chris are both heavily in debt. Both have been taken to court for their failure to pay debts. According to court records, Barbara owes at least $20,000, while Chris owes over $7,000.

As of 2019, Barb has been sued two times and Chris seven times (two being garnishment cases).

Debts

This table summarizes various unpaid debts charged to credit cards and other owed amounts between Chris and Barb. Keep in mind that these are only amounts found by Christorians via Chris's online posts and Virginia District Court public records.[2]

On 30 November 2016, Chris started a Patreon with a goal of $250,000; he estimates $200,000 to pay off the mortgage and other debts, plus an extra $50,000 for himself, just because.

Filed date Judgement date Debtor Item Amount ($) Notes
Barbara Mortgage payments to Seterus Inc 115,000.00 Mortgaged 14 Branchland Court for collateral to pay credit card debt. $900 per month, using money from Chris's tugboat[3]
24 September 2014 n/a Chris Loan for Son-Chu 9,000.00
1 March 2016 n/a Chris PS4 purchase (via Fingerhut.com) 540.00
19 February 2016 16 March 2016 Barbara Discover Bank debt lawsuit 4,706.93
16 April 2016 n/a Chris Payday loan (not counting the extremely high interest rates) 3,000.00
4 August 2016 14 September 2016 Barbara Capital One debt lawsuit 15,906.99
17 July 2017 24 August 2017 Chris Mariner Finance debt lawsuit Case dismissed
24 September 2018 16 January 2019 Chris Second Round Sub debt lawsuit 2,467.63 Failed to maintain payments; creditor filed for garnishment
23 October 2018 19 December 2018 Chris Midland Funding debt lawsuit 2,777.90 Failed to maintain payments; creditor filed for garnishment
2 April 2019 19 June 2019 Chris Portfolio Recovery Associates debt lawsuit 1,079.08
6 May 2019 19 June 2019 Chris Portfolio Recovery Associates debt lawsuit 1,602.62
24 May 2019 3 July 2019 Chris Midland Funding garnishment hearing Dismissed No Funds
11 November 2019 15 January 2020 Chris Second Round Sub garnishment hearing
Total 156,081.15

Causes of debt

Credit Cards

That Chris has managed to acquire several credit cards is very surprising, but the foolishness with which he uses them wouldn't surprise anybody at all. As of February 2009, Chris had managed to rack up $2,000 worth of debt (at the time of Mumble 4, $1,000 of that sum came from the PSN store, but his bill for PSN downloads increased by the day) and had even stolen his parents' credit cards to use when his own were maxed out. According to an e-mail Chris sent to Vivian Gee, by January 2010 his debt was around $3,500 and had apparently been higher at some point in the intervening time.

By that point, Chris's debt had gotten so out of hand that Bob was forced to step in, making Chris reduce and manage on his spending, and forcing Chris to make regular payments to pay off his outstanding debt. Chris, thoughtless and uninterested in the fact that unpaid credit card debt accrues severe interest, had historically made payments in the smallest installments possible.

Chris provided some more details about this situation in his e-mails to Jackie from July 2010. At some point, Bob paid off Chris's credit card debt and took payment in installments out of the tugboat in compensation. This foolish act of parental financial enabling allowed Chris to avoid the immediate consequences of his gross financial irresponsibility, and resulted in Chris learning nothing about how to manage his own finances, reinforcing Chris's attitude that he should be able to do anything that he wants and not suffer any negative consequences.

Best Buy MasterCard

Not surprisingly, it only took Chris a few short months to land himself in more financial trouble. In the Matthew Noble call, Bob himself revealed that Chris had not only acquired a MasterCard charge account through Best Buy, but as of the second week of August 2010, Chris had predictably used it to land himself in yet more debt and had been laden with fees for bouncing a card payment.

One of Chris's e-mails to Jackie reveals that Chris acquired the Best Buy charge card without his parents' permission; he only told them about it after receiving 2 bounced check fees that showed up on his bank statement, which his father was actively monitoring. In true Chris fashion, he tried to repay the minimum balance each month. When he was forced to reveal the debt to his parents, Bob was obviously less than thrilled. He promptly took control of Chris's bank account as well as his credit cards. From that point until Bob's death, he received only an allowance in the form of Visa gift cards, leaving him unable to accrue any more debt for a short time. At the time, the prospect of not being able to blow his welfare on frivolities stressed him out.

Curiously, even in his private communications with Jackie, Chris claimed that the overdraft fees that gave away the existence of the card to Bob were the work of trolls. Elsewhere in their conversations, however, he recounts other instances of "getting carried away" and accidentally overdrawing his bank account, suggesting that he was just using the trolls as a handy scapegoat for his own mistakes.

Bob, delusional and in the throes of some sort of conspiracy paranoia involving the staff and patrons of The GAMe PLACe, claimed that it was most likely Michael Snyder who had hacked Chris's credit card and checking accounts, though why someone who's been on a manager's salary for several years would bother stealing from any of the near-destitute Chandlers is unknown.

It's unknown why any financial institution would give Chris a line of credit at this point. Bob probably salvaged Chris's credit rating when he paid off all his prior card debt at once, but he angrily claimed Chris ruined it with the Best Buy debt (certainly true), and, in disturbingly Chris-like fashion, seemed to use this damning information to try to make Chris's latest brush with the law seem "petty" in comparison.

Credit card debt

Unverified information on Chris's credit card debt was leaked on the CWCki Forums on 4 June 2014. It was revealed that Chris had at least five active credit cards, with at least $7,600 in combined credit limit. Of the five known active cards, at least four were revealed to be maxed out, with at least $7400 in unpaid debt between the five cards. It was estimated that the minimum payment on Chris's known debt was at least $220 a month, and it was revealed that the only reason that Chris had been able to obtain the credit that he had was that, historically, he had almost always at least paid the minimum payment each month, although it was implied that he rarely if ever paid more than the minimum.[4]

Credit Increase

In June 2016, Chris's credit card company raised his credit limit. Chris reacted to this news by blowing his "bonus" on Transformers only to later beg for money over Facebook while blaming his mother for "impulsively" spending more on their overdue bills than the minimum amount due.

Payday loan

In early 2016, Arthur Spatchcock discovered that Chris had taken out a payday loan for $3,000.[5]

Chris "borrowed" three thousand dollars. What he did with it is hazy, sure, but how do you think he bought all those lego sets for Lego Dimensions?

A payday loan charges extremely high interest rates (usually at least 400%), which does not bode well for Chris, due to his habit of only paying back minimal amounts at a time.

See also

References