Atlanta - In the first-ever report on the extent and impact of cooperation between courts and the private debt collection industry nationwide, the American Civil Liberties Union found courts in 26 states, including Georgia, in which judges issued arrest warrants for alleged debtors at the request of private debt collectors.
"Private corporations should never use our taxpayer-funded criminal justice system to to jail us, take away our freedom, or take us from our families, communities, and jobs simply because we may owe them money," stated Andrea Young, Executive Director of the ACLU of Georgia. "Yet, throughout our nation and the state of Georgia, powerful corporations have turned our taxpayer-funded prosecutors, judges, sheriff's, police, and courts into their own private collection agents. This practice betrays our fundamental constitutional principles of due process and equal protection under the law. We must and can stop this unlawful use of our government's resources."
Although Congress abolished debtors' prisons in 1833, private debt collectors are using the government's power to arrest and jail people who may owe money, even when a debt is in dispute or when the ability to pay is nonexistent. These alleged debts may be as small as a few dollars and may include every kind of consumer debt such as utility bills, medical fees, car payments, or student loans.