NCinDC (CC BY-ND 2.0) |
Posted on Jun 15, 2012
By Marian Wang, ProPublica
This piece originally appeared at ProPublica.
A few months after he buried his son,
Francisco Reynoso began getting notices in the mail. Then the debt
collectors came calling. “They would
say, ‘We don’t care what happened with your son, you have to pay us,’”
recalled Reynoso, a gardener from Palmdale, Calif.
Reynoso’s son, Freddy, had been the pride of his family and the first
to go to college. In 2005, after Freddy was accepted to Boston’s Berklee
College of Music, his father co-signed on his hefty private student
loans, making him fully liable should Freddy be unwilling or unable to
repay them. It was no small decision for a man who made just over
$21,000 in 2011, according to his tax returns.
“As a father, you’ll do anything for your child,” Reynoso, an American
citizen originally from Mexico, said through a translator.
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