For the millions of Americans who rely on direct deposit for receipt of their monthly federal benefits, section 207 of the Social Security Act provides a necessary protection against creditors. This federal law protects federal benefits from garnishment, attachment and other legal processes, but the courts, federal agencies, consumer groups and other stakeholders are in disagreement over its scope. This Note serves as a comprehensive review of the exemption, discussing its policy and history as well as case law that highlights the difficulty of applying its provisions to modern day banking practices. This Note concludes by advocating legislative and administrative actions to protect recipients of federal benefits payments
With hundreds of millions of Americans owing more than $14 trillion in combined household debt, a ro...
Under traditional legal analysis, branch banks are regarded as mere agencies of the banking corporat...
This article evaluates the potential effect of this tort on the bank andits customer where the impro...
For the millions of Americans who rely on direct deposit for receipt of their monthly federal benefi...
In the span of a generation, consumer credit has reshaped the financial lives of millions of America...
Garnishment, a field once limited only by state or local regulation, has recently undergone a series...
This Article asserts that there are three major tenets of the social contract: (1) safety and soundn...
The question of the constitutionality of prejudgment wage garnishment had never before reached the S...
Since the late sixties the field of creditors\u27 remedies has undergone a series of changes brought...
This Article examines the recent history and implementation of one of the central provisions in U.S....
Historically, the statutory treatment of wage garnishment among the states has been characterized pr...
The purpose of this note is to reexamine the practice of wage garnishment in Washington in light of ...
The Act exempts certain individual retirement accounts from garnishment except under some conditions...
In the midst of the Great Depression, Congress created the Office of Thrift Supervision (“OTS”) to o...
When a federally insured bank fails, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (the FDIC ) typicall...
With hundreds of millions of Americans owing more than $14 trillion in combined household debt, a ro...
Under traditional legal analysis, branch banks are regarded as mere agencies of the banking corporat...
This article evaluates the potential effect of this tort on the bank andits customer where the impro...
For the millions of Americans who rely on direct deposit for receipt of their monthly federal benefi...
In the span of a generation, consumer credit has reshaped the financial lives of millions of America...
Garnishment, a field once limited only by state or local regulation, has recently undergone a series...
This Article asserts that there are three major tenets of the social contract: (1) safety and soundn...
The question of the constitutionality of prejudgment wage garnishment had never before reached the S...
Since the late sixties the field of creditors\u27 remedies has undergone a series of changes brought...
This Article examines the recent history and implementation of one of the central provisions in U.S....
Historically, the statutory treatment of wage garnishment among the states has been characterized pr...
The purpose of this note is to reexamine the practice of wage garnishment in Washington in light of ...
The Act exempts certain individual retirement accounts from garnishment except under some conditions...
In the midst of the Great Depression, Congress created the Office of Thrift Supervision (“OTS”) to o...
When a federally insured bank fails, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (the FDIC ) typicall...
With hundreds of millions of Americans owing more than $14 trillion in combined household debt, a ro...
Under traditional legal analysis, branch banks are regarded as mere agencies of the banking corporat...
This article evaluates the potential effect of this tort on the bank andits customer where the impro...