Financial services firm, Aequitas Capital Management, Inc., will make refunds to the 41,000 students who borrowed money to attend Corinthian Colleges, per a settlement with federal and state agencies. The settlement is in the final stages and must win approval from the court in Oregon that is handling the Aequitas bankruptcy.
“Thousands of New Yorkers signed up at Corinthian College to build the skills they need to compete in today’s economy,” said New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman. “But Aequitas Capital Management took advantage of their ambition and schemed with Corinthian to saddle these students with high-default loans at the now-bankruptcy college. This was nothing more than a sham that victimized unwitting students and deceived the government and taxpayers.”
According to the terms of the settlement, students who borrowed money from Aequitas Capital to attend a Corinthian school and were attending school when it closed in 2014, or students who defaulted on their loans, will receive a full discharge of their student loans, in addition to accrued interest.
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