“I am repaying the debts of a crook,” protests Christelle Gillot. This school teacher in Sarthe thought she would be able to have a house built in 2020 but then learned that she was registered with the Bank of France. The reason: her ex-husband, from whom she divorced in 2016, is in debt and insolvent. A banking executive, it was he who was responsible for unbundling credits. A step which he therefore did not take. “I did not realize that he was likely not to take these steps,” she whispers in an interview on radio Ici.
At the time of the divorce, the two spouses agreed on the distribution of property: the man who shared their life for twenty-five years was to keep two houses and the associated credits. She, for her part, kept another house. From now on, her ex-husband no longer has a salary, so “the banks are turning to me to obtain repayment of the loans”. It costs 600,000 euros.
Tried for fraud
To top it off, Christelle Gillot learned that her former partner had become addicted to online games using the personal data of her clients on Meilleurtaux.com to take out consumer loans. A scam for which he was tried last November by the Le Mans court, specifies Here.
-“He lived beyond his means and sold his homes without ever repaying the loans. It revolts me,” the “brave civil servant still chokes […] It’s like I’m sentenced to life in prison even though I’ve done nothing.”
France