9/19/16 Update: Since ITT’s closure on September 7, 2016, we are now taking clients for representation to seek a discharge of their federal student loans (including Parent Plus federal loans taken by a parent for a student). New federal guidelines created following the closure of Corinthian go into effect on November 1, 2016 to allow for former students to potentially discharge debt due to fraudulent representations by the school in violation of state law.
It is too early to say whether former students of ITT will be able to assert a defense to repayment of their federal student loans. It’s possible because there are several open investigations into various ITT campuses and if they find evidence of fraud or illegal behavior, you may be eligible for relief. The DOE is expected to wrap up its final regulations regarding borrower defenses to repayment of federal student loans by the end of this year. We believe that the new regulations will expand the current environment which mostly only permit an administrative discharge when a school is closed within 120 days of your attendance and your credits are non-transferable.
We are maintaining a database of clients who have contacted us about their profit or non-profit schools’ fraud and misrepresentations. We are in a holding pattern until the final regs come out. At that point, we hope to apply for a full discharge for our clients’ federal student loans at fraudulent institutions where the education was not what was promised, did not result in jobs after graduation, should not have been accredited or were accredited under agencies that were meaningless to employers or other educators. These student loans are a noose around our clients’ necks. They cannot obtain decent jobs, obtain advanced degrees, or afford to go back to a real school and re-do their undergraduate degrees. And they are often $50,000 – $100,000 in debt for an essentially worthless education.
Some of the schools we will be focusing on include any Corinthian, Everest, DeVry, Wyotech, IADT, Heald, CEC/Sandord-Brown and other similar schools. To get on our email list for updates on the new federal regulations or for further information please contact us at Arkovich Law If you get a moment you might also scroll back through some of our recent blogs re: helping student loan borrowers, check out our reviews, or our Student Loan Survival Center.