Hi Adam and All,
--- Adam Kuehn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> jerry dycus wrote:
>
> > > As are many other lesees, he's
> > > contemplating all the
> >> possible options for keeping (like having some
> >> 'steal' it, etc.)...
I didn't say this , it was the first poster,
kidding.
I did not say to make a false police report
either.
I said to tell them, GM Finance, you lost it.
Then you say it was your fault and offer to pay for
it. No insurance company nessesary.
The most they can do is have a court force you to
come up with it. If you offer to pay for it they can't
say they lost any value, thus no harm. And since they
have pay-offs for wrecked, stolen cars they can't say
they don't let others pay-off.
It can be legally lost in the same way political
ads are done for other people so you really don't know
where the car is.
If you pay the value for it it is yours. They
can't charge you for something, you pay it and then
say you stole it. You have the receipt. They would be
laughed out of court. With the receipt titling is
easy.
My advice to see a lawyer was so it was done the
right way, legally.
I never said to dis-obey a law. But anyone who
knows about laws, contracts, knows there are legal
ways around them. That's what lawyers are for.
So be careful about assuming,
jerry dycus
>
> This is just plain wrong. There are at least three
> legal criminal
>
> You are obviously civilly liable, regardless of and
> in addition to
> any criminal offense.
>
> GM's acceptance of the payment changes your civil
> and criminal
> liability not one jot.
>
> > I'm not a lawyer so check with yours,
>
> Best advice of the post. As stupid and
> anti-consumer as GM's policy
> is, there is simply no way to legally keep the car
> at or before the
> expiration of the lease unless you enter into a new
> contract with GM.
>
> --
>
> -Adam Kuehn
>
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