Here's a question you don't want to ask on national radio: "How do I settle a repo?" But that's exactly what Cassie from San Diego called into The Ramsey Show to find out. The answer to why she needed to ask? Gambling.
Cassie explained to hosts George Kamel and Jade Warshaw that she'd had her car repossessed after attempting what might be the worst financial strategy ever conceived: doubling her car payments at the casino instead of actually making them. Spoiler alert: the casino won.
When the Casino Becomes Your Payment Plan
"Instead of making my payments, I was thinking I can go to the casino and double it to make payments and things like that," Cassie admitted. The math didn't work out in her favor. She now faces a $19,000 deficiency balance after her repossessed car sold at auction for a mere $3,500.
Cassie explained she's currently on Baby Step one of the Ramsey plan and has managed to save $1,000. The repo is the only negative mark sitting on her credit report right now.
Kamel jumped in immediately to ask whether she'd addressed the gambling issue itself. Cassie said she's blocked casino advertisements and promotional emails, but hasn't attended Gamblers Anonymous or sought formal help.
"I just want to make sure that we've resolved the root problem here before we just fix the repo," Kamel cautioned.
Life Without Wheels
Cassie doesn't have another vehicle and now depends on public transportation to get to her full-time job. Fortunately, her commute is workable. She brings home around $4,000 monthly after taxes, and her total living expenses including rent and food run about $1,500.
"I'm fortunate that I'm able to get transportation that leaves me close to work," she noted.
Her rent is $1,300 with utilities included, and bus fare costs her roughly $75 each month. She confirmed she has no other outstanding debts and no dependent children, as her kids are grown.
Settling the Deficiency
Warshaw and Kamel laid out a strategy: negotiate a lump-sum settlement. "Let's say you come up with, I don't know, $7,000. They might be willing to take that as a lump-sum settlement as paid in full," Kamel suggested.
They stressed the importance of getting everything in writing before sending a single dollar and warned against giving the creditor direct access to her bank account. Pay with a cashier's check or money order only.
"They're going to take you for a ride," Warshaw warned. "You're going to have to beat them over the head over and over. And at the end of the day, it's like, listen, guy, I don't have any money. My car got repoed. What you're getting are my last dollars, and this is it."
Cassie seemed ready for the fight. "I can probably do that in two months," she said. With her current income and minimal living costs, she calculated she could save approximately $2,500 monthly. That would give her $8,000 to put on the table as a settlement offer.
Once that debt is cleared, she'd be completely in the black. "That's amazing," Kamel responded.




