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She Discovered $186K In Debt Her Mother Created — Now She's Rebuilding From Scratch

MarketDash Editorial Team
6 hours ago
Jessica from South Carolina learned at 18 that her mother had stolen her identity since age two, racking up $186,000 in credit card debt. After clearing the fraud, she's left with no credit history and is trying to finish college, buy a car, and start over.

Some people discover credit problems when they apply for their first apartment. Jessica from Columbia, South Carolina found out the hard way when she tried to buy a car at 18 and got rejected across the board. The reason? Her mother had been using her identity since she was two years old, creating a staggering $186,000 in credit card debt.

Jessica called into "The Ramsey Show" looking for guidance, and hosts Ken Coleman and Rachel Cruze walked her through the messy aftermath of financial identity theft.

Sixteen Years of Fraud

The identity theft stretched back to 2005, Jessica explained, with the most recent fraudulent account opened in 2021. Think about that timeline: her mother had been systematically opening accounts in her name for practically her entire childhood and teenage years.

Jessica managed to get an attorney who successfully wiped the fraudulent history from her records. You'd think that would be the end of it, but here's the catch: clearing fraud doesn't magically create a credit history. It just erases everything, leaving her with a blank slate. Lenders kept declining her applications because, from their perspective, she simply didn't exist.

Even stranger, Jessica said some financial advisors actually suggested marriage as a workaround to her credit problems. Coleman seemed puzzled by that advice, and honestly, it's hard to see how that helps anything.

After relocating from Florida to South Carolina for better job opportunities and to be closer to family, Jessica and her partner were sharing a single car. She was earning $18 to $19 an hour working as a debt collector, which has to be particularly frustrating given her own situation. Coleman suggested she save up and buy a used car with cash, sidestepping the credit system entirely.

Back to Basics

"Let's get some money saved. Let's get on a budget and let's buy a car," Coleman said, mapping out her immediate priorities.

Cruze pointed out that Jessica was making decisions based on credit scores instead of her actual needs. A credit score, Cruze reminded her, mainly shows how well you borrow money, not how well you manage it. Jessica confirmed she had no consumer debt but had burned through her savings during the move from Florida because the job market there "weren't any good."

Cruze encouraged her to focus spending on the essentials: food, shelter, utilities, and transportation. With her current income, there was room to start rebuilding savings and gaining some stability.

The Education Roadblock

Jessica revealed another complication: she had just one semester left to complete her associate degree, but the identity theft had contaminated her tax forms, blocking access to both grants and loans. Even cleared fraud creates ripple effects that touch everything.

Cruze suggested picking up evening or weekend work to boost income. She said many callers had managed to earn "an extra $1,000 or $1,200" on top of their regular paychecks, which could cover tuition without needing loans.

Jessica mentioned that her family had always emphasized maintaining "great credit," and she still felt pressure to rebuild her score despite everything. Cruze pushed back on that mindset, telling her to "pay cash for anything" moving forward. If any company questioned her blank credit history, she could simply show them the police report documenting the fraud.

Cruze also advised Jessica to keep her finances separate from her boyfriend as she worked toward her immediate goals: buying a car, funding her final semester, and completing her degree. After 16 years of someone else controlling her financial identity, keeping clear boundaries probably sounds pretty appealing.

She Discovered $186K In Debt Her Mother Created — Now She's Rebuilding From Scratch

MarketDash Editorial Team
6 hours ago
Jessica from South Carolina learned at 18 that her mother had stolen her identity since age two, racking up $186,000 in credit card debt. After clearing the fraud, she's left with no credit history and is trying to finish college, buy a car, and start over.

Some people discover credit problems when they apply for their first apartment. Jessica from Columbia, South Carolina found out the hard way when she tried to buy a car at 18 and got rejected across the board. The reason? Her mother had been using her identity since she was two years old, creating a staggering $186,000 in credit card debt.

Jessica called into "The Ramsey Show" looking for guidance, and hosts Ken Coleman and Rachel Cruze walked her through the messy aftermath of financial identity theft.

Sixteen Years of Fraud

The identity theft stretched back to 2005, Jessica explained, with the most recent fraudulent account opened in 2021. Think about that timeline: her mother had been systematically opening accounts in her name for practically her entire childhood and teenage years.

Jessica managed to get an attorney who successfully wiped the fraudulent history from her records. You'd think that would be the end of it, but here's the catch: clearing fraud doesn't magically create a credit history. It just erases everything, leaving her with a blank slate. Lenders kept declining her applications because, from their perspective, she simply didn't exist.

Even stranger, Jessica said some financial advisors actually suggested marriage as a workaround to her credit problems. Coleman seemed puzzled by that advice, and honestly, it's hard to see how that helps anything.

After relocating from Florida to South Carolina for better job opportunities and to be closer to family, Jessica and her partner were sharing a single car. She was earning $18 to $19 an hour working as a debt collector, which has to be particularly frustrating given her own situation. Coleman suggested she save up and buy a used car with cash, sidestepping the credit system entirely.

Back to Basics

"Let's get some money saved. Let's get on a budget and let's buy a car," Coleman said, mapping out her immediate priorities.

Cruze pointed out that Jessica was making decisions based on credit scores instead of her actual needs. A credit score, Cruze reminded her, mainly shows how well you borrow money, not how well you manage it. Jessica confirmed she had no consumer debt but had burned through her savings during the move from Florida because the job market there "weren't any good."

Cruze encouraged her to focus spending on the essentials: food, shelter, utilities, and transportation. With her current income, there was room to start rebuilding savings and gaining some stability.

The Education Roadblock

Jessica revealed another complication: she had just one semester left to complete her associate degree, but the identity theft had contaminated her tax forms, blocking access to both grants and loans. Even cleared fraud creates ripple effects that touch everything.

Cruze suggested picking up evening or weekend work to boost income. She said many callers had managed to earn "an extra $1,000 or $1,200" on top of their regular paychecks, which could cover tuition without needing loans.

Jessica mentioned that her family had always emphasized maintaining "great credit," and she still felt pressure to rebuild her score despite everything. Cruze pushed back on that mindset, telling her to "pay cash for anything" moving forward. If any company questioned her blank credit history, she could simply show them the police report documenting the fraud.

Cruze also advised Jessica to keep her finances separate from her boyfriend as she worked toward her immediate goals: buying a car, funding her final semester, and completing her degree. After 16 years of someone else controlling her financial identity, keeping clear boundaries probably sounds pretty appealing.