"You wouldn't think you'd go to jail over medical bills": County in rural Kansas is jailing people over unpaid medical debt

Authored by cbsnews.com and submitted by irish_fellow_nyc

There is at least one issue a divided electorate can come together on this election year: A recent poll finds 90% of those surveyed agreed on the importance of making health care more affordable.

As CBS News correspondent Meg Oliver reports in partnership with ProPublica, some people are even going to jail because they're squeezed by a system that's putting new demands on overburdened incomes.

Tres and Heather Biggs' son Lane was diagnosed with leukemia when he was 5 years old. At the same time, Heather suffered seizures from Lyme disease.

"We had so many — multiple health issues in our family at the same time, it put us in a bracket that made insurance unattainable," Heather Biggs said. "It would have made no sense. We would have had to have not eaten, not had a home."

Heather Biggs of Coffeyville, Kansas. CBS News

Tres Biggs was working two jobs but they fell behind on their medical bills, then the unthinkable happened.

"You wouldn't think you'd go to jail over medical bills," Tres Biggs said.

Tres Biggs went to jail for failing to appear in court for unpaid medical bills. He described it as "scary."

"I was scared to death," Tres Biggs said. "I'm a country kid — I had to strip down, get hosed and put a jumpsuit on."

Bail was $500. He said they had "maybe $50 to $100" at the time.

In rural Coffeyville, Kansas, where the poverty rate is twice the national average, attorneys like Michael Hassenplug have built successful law practices representing medical providers to collect debt owed by their neighbors.

"I'm just doing my job," Hassenplug said. "They want the money collected, and I'm trying to do my job as best I can by following the law."

Heather and Tres Biggs. CBS News

That law was put in place at Hassenplug's own recommendation to the local judge. The attorney uses that law by asking the court to direct people with unpaid medical bills to appear in court every three months and state they are too poor to pay in what is called a "debtors exam."

If two hearings are missed, the judge issues an arrest warrant for contempt of court. Bail is set at $500.

Hassenplug said he gets "paid on what's collected." If the bail money is applied to the judgment, then he gets a portion of that, he said.

"We're sending them to jail for contempt of court for failure to appear," Hassenplug said.

In most courts, bail money is returned when defendants appear in court. But in almost every case in Coffeyville, that money goes to pay attorneys like Hassenplug and the medical debt his clients are owed.

"This raises serious constitutional concerns," said Nusrat Choudhury, the deputy director of the ACLU. "What's happening here is a jailhouse shake-down for cash that is the criminalization of private debt."

CBS News went to court on debt collection day. They wouldn't allow our cameras in, but we watched more than 60 people swear they didn't have enough money to pay, and only one of them had an attorney representing them.

prodbyflaws on February 10th, 2020 at 05:20 UTC »

Same from Wichita, KS. Happened to me. The meanest people I’ve ever seen were representing these medical companies. When I was taking my case in court an old lady next to me said she lives off $1100 a month and the amount she put was all she could do. But that wasn’t good enough and the man said “I have the right to take 25% of your check, plenty of people survive off less than that a month.” Hell I put down $150 a month on my paper of what I could pay and the guy was still trynna squeeze another $100 a month out of me over a $800 bill, threatening the same thing. A couple months later I got called to court again for another medical bill and this time I missed my court date. I was threatened with a warrant if I didn’t show the next time. When I showed for court I was sat next to an old man who lived off $1400 with medical issues and they were trying to hold him in contempt for not giving his banking info. It was sickening. Every time I left the court house my stomach was turning and I was angry. I felt so small. I felt so bad for everybody in the room. The poor and the sick.

rml23 on February 10th, 2020 at 03:05 UTC »

Correct me if I'm wrong, but debtors prison is illegal in the US? However skipping court can land you in jail for contempt?

Bokbreath on February 10th, 2020 at 02:33 UTC »

attorneys like Michael Hassenplug have built successful law practices representing medical providers to collect debt owed by their neighbors.

That law was put in place at Hassenplug's own recommendation to the local judge.

Firstly, fuck this guy. Secondly, who lets Judges make law ? That's the legislature's job.