Michael Vick's Massive Debt

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Michael Vick paid his debt to society. Now he's trying to pay back his massive debt to creditors.
Despite earning $4.1 million since signing with the Philadelphia Eagles, Vick lives on a shoestring budget set for him by a court-appointed trustee. Most of his salary goes toward paying back creditors Vick owed before entering federal prison. Those creditors, which include banks, former business colleagues and former endorsement partners, were protected because of Vick's 2008 filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

A 112-page, court-approved document serves as Vick's "reorganization plan." It was uncovered by ESPN legal analyst Lester Munson.
Among the facts Munson discovered in the plan:
• Two-thirds of every dollar Vick earns goes to creditors and taxes.
• The rest of the money is strictly controlled. Think of it as an allowance.
• Vick can spend $4,250 per month on rent and utilities and $472 per month on a car. His mother, who was on Vick's payroll during his headier, pre-prison days, can receive $2,500 per month.
• Other obligations Vick owes include mortgages, child support, fees for his agent (who gets $800,000 through 2015) and for his tax lawyers (who will eventually receive a total of $2.6 million). The allowance does allow for Vick to pay $1,355 per month for private school for the two children he has with his fiancee, Kijafa Frink. (Munson calls it a "rare bit of extravagance.")
• His creditors stand to receive $12 million through 2015, provided Vick continues to receive a multi-million dollar salary.

Munson also writes that before Vick filed for bankruptcy, he frantically gave away $5 million to family and friends so that creditors couldn't get to it. The court-appointed trustee is trying to recover that money, which was given to Vick's friends, family and the mothers of Vick's children. This is being done via a lawsuit, meaning that the man in charge of Michael Vick's money is also suing Michael Vick's family. (Though Munson says a judge will likely rule in the trustee's favor, recovering the money will be a much more difficult matter.)
There have been countless reports about Vick's financial woes since he first got into legal trouble for running an illegal dogfighting ring, but Munson's story is the clearest picture yet of what Vick still has to go through. To watch a broadcast of Vick's games and hear announcers rave about his recovery, you'd think everything was behind him. This document says otherwise.
The more money Vick makes, the more money goes to creditors. A salary under $2.5 million would force Vick to pay 25 percent. That percentage jumps to 40 if Vick signs a deal worth $10 million or more per season.

This path to financial redemption follows the same road that led to Vick's personal reclamation. In both, he made stupid mistakes and then compounded them by being dishonest once authorities found out. After serving his time, though, he's dedicated himself to making up for his past misdeeds. It's not heroic, per se, but it's admirable. He could have run away like he does so often on the field. Instead, he appears to be trying to make it right.
It's ironic. Vick's success on the football field is what caused him to get in trouble in the first place. That same success is now helping him get out of it.
 

And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
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Couldn't happen to a better guy
 

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wouldnt say he paid his debt to society.. he served a sentence a judge thought was fair, thats how it should be put
 

G$$

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so now he is playing for the love of the game right? because it sure cant be for the money
 
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Michael Vick paid his debt to society. Now he's trying to pay back his massive debt to creditors.
Despite earning $4.1 million since signing with the Philadelphia Eagles, Vick lives on a shoestring budget set for him by a court-appointed trustee. Most of his salary goes toward paying back creditors Vick owed before entering federal prison. Those creditors, which include banks, former business colleagues and former endorsement partners, were protected because of Vick's 2008 filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

A 112-page, court-approved document serves as Vick's "reorganization plan." It was uncovered by ESPN legal analyst Lester Munson.
Among the facts Munson discovered in the plan:
• Two-thirds of every dollar Vick earns goes to creditors and taxes.
• The rest of the money is strictly controlled. Think of it as an allowance.
• Vick can spend $4,250 per month on rent and utilities and $472 per month on a car. His mother, who was on Vick's payroll during his headier, pre-prison days, can receive $2,500 per month.
• Other obligations Vick owes include mortgages, child support, fees for his agent (who gets $800,000 through 2015) and for his tax lawyers (who will eventually receive a total of $2.6 million). The allowance does allow for Vick to pay $1,355 per month for private school for the two children he has with his fiancee, Kijafa Frink. (Munson calls it a "rare bit of extravagance.")
• His creditors stand to receive $12 million through 2015, provided Vick continues to receive a multi-million dollar salary.

Munson also writes that before Vick filed for bankruptcy, he frantically gave away $5 million to family and friends so that creditors couldn't get to it. The court-appointed trustee is trying to recover that money, which was given to Vick's friends, family and the mothers of Vick's children. This is being done via a lawsuit, meaning that the man in charge of Michael Vick's money is also suing Michael Vick's family. (Though Munson says a judge will likely rule in the trustee's favor, recovering the money will be a much more difficult matter.)
There have been countless reports about Vick's financial woes since he first got into legal trouble for running an illegal dogfighting ring, but Munson's story is the clearest picture yet of what Vick still has to go through. To watch a broadcast of Vick's games and hear announcers rave about his recovery, you'd think everything was behind him. This document says otherwise.
The more money Vick makes, the more money goes to creditors. A salary under $2.5 million would force Vick to pay 25 percent. That percentage jumps to 40 if Vick signs a deal worth $10 million or more per season.

This path to financial redemption follows the same road that led to Vick's personal reclamation. In both, he made stupid mistakes and then compounded them by being dishonest once authorities found out. After serving his time, though, he's dedicated himself to making up for his past misdeeds. It's not heroic, per se, but it's admirable. He could have run away like he does so often on the field. Instead, he appears to be trying to make it right.
It's ironic. Vick's success on the football field is what caused him to get in trouble in the first place. That same success is now helping him get out of it.

This is completely false. Vick was introduced to dog fighting when he was only 8 years old and it was always a part of his life growing up, thats where it started. Long before he became a star football player...
 
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This is probably the best thing that could ever happen to Vick because he actually has some forced discipline regarding money management instead of blowing his money as he sees fit; when he's 45 he'll be glad this happened.
 

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I had no idea the guy was in financial trouble.

Probably a reason he is playing so well this season is that it's an escape from thinking about this [the financial issues] .
 

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people forgot or just dont know that he lost everything and some, as well as serving 2 years in prison.
there are rapists and murderers that have not had it this bad.
 

I never ever got beat-I just run out of Money
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For any one on this forum if you ever drink,drug,beat your wife-G/F, swear again even one curse word, please don't ever ever ask the BIG man upstairs for forgiveness even the day your dying, just think of as you committed a life time of crime and sin and YOU should never ever be for given for anything in your life.

Who gives a flying F@ck what Micheal Vick has done in his life, he fucked up and payed the price for the roads he chose to ride.
 

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Lol @ deserving life imprisonment for killing a dog. Do you people know how the cows/chickens from 99% of the restaurants and grocery stores die at factory farms? It makes Vicks dog killing look like amateur night.
 

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structure will definently help him, along with dungy mentoring him.

this isnt permanent though, reorganization expires in 2015 and then he should be free from creditors.

even though almost all of his money is going to the creditors, he still lives better then most americans.
 
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Lol @ deserving life imprisonment for killing a dog. Do you people know how the cows/chickens from 99% of the restaurants and grocery stores die at factory farms? It makes Vicks dog killing look like amateur night.

very good point
 

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This is probably the best thing that could ever happen to Vick because he actually has some forced discipline regarding money management instead of blowing his money as he sees fit; when he's 45 he'll be glad this happened.

Agreed. This (likely) will teach him that money doesn't grow on trees. He's likely to sign a 4 or 5 year $10 million + deal after this season....and will be back on solid ground.

I'm a huge dog lover, as big as anyone. But I agree that he paid his debt. I also think the sentence given to Plaxico Burris was a total joke. That's a waste of prison space keeping him locked up....

---
 

Home of the Cincinnati Criminals.
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He was a product of his environment. I honestly think he has changed.

I hope he signs a huge contract and makes all lost and then some.

I'm rooting for the guy.

We all make mistakes
 

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