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Law.com Home > When District Attorneys Become Bill Collectors

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When District Attorneys Become Bill Collectors

By Joel Cohen All Articles 

Special to Law.com

November 19, 2012

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Stroock & Stroock's Joel Cohen

Stroock & Stroock's Joel Cohen

When someone feels threatened, personal fear consumes him and thoughts about the public policy implications at play are among those furthest from his mind. By contrast, when that person is asked to abstractly consider a questionable public policy that may victimize even significant numbers of people (albeit not him), he does not personally suffer. He doesn't typically empathize. He doesn't step into the shoes of the victim.

Step briefly, then, out of your comfort zone, and imagine the following scenario: Times are tough financially, and your family is living hand to mouth. Or perhaps you're simply down on your luck. You write a check to pay your mortgage or credit card bill, or maybe you write checks for both. But unbeknownst to you, your bank account does not contain the necessary funds. Or perhaps you're well aware that you lack the funds on account at the moment when you drop your check(s) in the mail, but you fully expect that checks payable to you will arrive in time to cover the outgoing sums -- a common occurrence. While it is technically a crime to issue a check on insufficient funds, you are likely to find yourself in a "no harm, no foul" situation. Your payee(s) will be paid without repercussion.

Assume, though, that the incoming checks never arrive, or that they do not arrive in time. Now, however unintentionally, you've "bounced" checks to companies that are victimized daily in this way. It hurts the corporate bottom line to lose access to the float, and there's often the cost of a bill collector to factor in, even if a simple dunning letter gets the job done quickly. Accordingly, shareholders, and thus corporate executives, are unsympathetic to bad check writers -- i.e., unsympathetic toward you -- whether you are a member of the underclass or, as is becoming more frequently the case, the middle class.

Imagine now that you and the payee corporation(s) are located in a jurisdiction whose local district attorney has a "Bad Check Restitution Program." Make no mistake, this is not some backwater community -- you're in a major city like Los Angeles, Baltimore or Detroit. Before you are able to pay up, you open your mailbox to find what appears to be a threatening letter from the DA's office. The initial shock of receiving such a letter will likely cause you to panic -- which, clearly, is the precise reason why the corporation referred your name to the district attorney in the first place. Scared out of your wits with paranoia overwhelming you (at least until you read the letter more carefully or consult with an attorney in a position to be more objective), you become obsessed with the fear that you must now deal with a prosecutor's office, not simply a bill collector's form letter.

This may sound borderline Kafkaesque ("How could this happen to me? I'm a law-abiding citizen!"). And yet, The New York Times -- in a September 15, 2012 lead story ("In Prosecutors, Debt Collectors Find a Partner," by Jessica Silver-Greenberg), not an editorial rant about the excessive, arguably abusive use of prosecutorial power over a bad check -- explained that this precise scenario happens daily to hundreds if not thousands of people nationwide as over 300 DAs have adopted the practice. Honest, hard-working citizens are forced to live in the fear that they may actually be carted off to jail, all for a bad check -- maybe even a check that they honestly believed they had sufficient funds to write. Can you not see this happening to you, or at least a loved one?

Check out this link to see the form letter used by the Alameda County district attorney. Its opening sentence says: "You have been accused of violating California Penal Code Section 476a, entitled "Making or Delivering Check With Insufficient Funds." The next sentence describes the potentiality of up to one year in jail upon conviction. Think about how you might react to such a letter. Doesn't a DA essentially abdicate institutional responsibility by sending such a letter without independently analyzing the merits of the individual case?

Let's be clear up front: This piece doesn't seek to challenge those corporations that are repeatedly victimized by bad check writers and who take up districts attorneys on such programs. Rather, this is about the possibility that prosecutors, indeed many honorable prosecutors whose programs are in some instances authorized by legislation, may go off the rails in letting themselves become "collection agents" on behalf of businesses in their communities.

The truth is, skilled attorneys routinely approach prosecutors because they recognize that the mere threat of criminal prosecution will obtain quick restitution from their clients' debtors. They see a simple threat of criminal investigation as a means of avoiding a costly civil litigation. And it often works.

Fortunately, most prosecutors do properly view their role as entirely distinguishable from that of private lawyers or bill collectors; they regard using a criminal complaint solely to accomplish payment of a civil debt as flat-out wrong and would be unwilling to do so. As a result, a prosecutor worth her salt will tell the "complaining" attorney that she simply will not allow her office to be used as a collection agent: A proper answer will sound something along these lines: "You've come to us with a criminal complaint. Understand this: If we see a criminal case here, we will go the whole nine yards, and we won't stop when or because you want us to stop, just because your client is made whole. We don't work for you or your client. We work for the People of the State of _______!"

On the attorney side of the transaction, and even though prosecutors don't usually raise this to the "complaining" lawyer, it happens to be unethical for a lawyer to threaten to file a criminal complaint against their client's debtor for the sole purpose of gaining civil relief for that client. And even though the "complaining" lawyer isn't the one writing the threatening letter, isn't that the precise purpose of the company referring the matter to a bad debt restitution program?

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  • RD Legal Funding

    November 19, 2012 12:53 PM

    The very nature of this arrangement may cause some citizens to file against the state for its misuse of power maybe not in action but in spirit. One has to wonder if the situation would go the other way for people who ask to be taken off a list from marketers looking to sell a product.

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Firms mentioned

    
  • Stroock & Stroock & Lavan

Companies, agencies mentioned

    
  • 2012 Times
  • Fordham
  • Federal Rules for Debt Collectors
  • Stroock & Stroock
  • Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
  • The Times
  • New York Times Company
  • Supreme Court of the United States

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