Skip to main content
Reports Co-Opting California Courts: How Private Creditors Have Turned the Judiciary Into a Predatory Student Debt Collection Machine

Co-Opting California Courts: How Private Creditors Have Turned the Judiciary Into a Predatory Student Debt Collection Machine

In a report, Claire Johnson Raba, a SBPC fellow and clinical teaching fellow at the University of California Irvine School of Law’s Consumer Law Clinic, shows the effect of predatory private student loan collection practices on borrowers in California. With creditors dragging borrowers into court for debts they often do not owe and lacking the documents necessary to back up their claims, the report lays out the harmful long-term impacts to borrowers’ credit and finances.

With over 12,500 California borrowers having faced private student loan debt collection lawsuits over the past 13 years from large, out-of-state creditors including the National Collegiate Student Loan Trusts, lawmakers in the state are moving forward legislation that would protect borrowers from these harmful practices.


Read the Report: Co-Opting California Courts: How Private Creditors Have Turned the Judiciary Into a Predatory Student Debt Collection Machine

Read the Blog: Shocking New Data Show Why California Lawmakers Must Protect Borrowers and Rein in Abusive Student Loan Debt Collectors

Join our mailing list Stay informed on the fight to protect Americans with student debt

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.