Reality Check! The telephone number, (615) 671-3047, belongs to a Limited Liability Corporation registered in a handful of states: Delaware, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Utah, are the states I found before giving up. According to the State of New Hampshire 2014 Annual Report filing, the limited liability corporation: Business Loan Center, LLC., lists their Principal Office Address, and Principal Mailing Address, required on such documents, reveal the Tennessee Digital Darling was plugged in by the person(s) at:
1 Independence Pointe, Suite 102,
Greenville, SC 29615.
This same address and Suite number is shared with Ciena Capital,LLC; BLX Commercial Capital, LLC; BLC Capital Funding, LLC, closed its corporate offices (wonder what "BLC" stood for), reopening as Business Loan Center, LLC., which is a wholly owned subsidiary of Ciena Capital, which is in turn owned by two corporations, one of which is a New York corporation. Suite 102 must be huge! An awful lot of companies must think Suite 102 is some kinda' sweet suite! At least that's the shell game was set up for play when I checked. Notice I didn't mention anything about money laundering and wide scale corruption. I'm sure I don't know what it even entails, and am certainly not qualified to make such groundless accusations. Confused? I think that's the point!
If it makes you feel any better, the Corporations' Execeutive Vice President, and other listed executives , must make a 12 hour commute to arrive at their South Carolina home office, as they listed their "home" addresses as businesses and/or residences in high-rise buildings on Columbus Circle, Pennsylvania Avenue, and Park Avenue, in New York City!
So, why set up shop in a Tennessee town whose biggest building seems to be a prison? If this were a script for a movie; some my call that "foreshadowing;" but this isn't a script. It's real. Tennessee is one of too many states, where largely unregulated lenders can really rake in the cash, based on small loans, with insane, up to triple-digit interest rates and transaction fees. These are the same corrupt state legislatures who allow businesses to provide payday loans, a week before a person gets their paycheck, minus 15 percent, plus transaction fees. A $1,000 loan from the lender, is, I'm sure, rewarded by guarantees and tax breaks from the SBA. The lender will get paid, and then some. When the 90-day loan comes due at $1,750 plus transaction fees, it's a near guarantee default. That's when the real interest, penalties and fees kick in. The lender might settle for a monthly $200 payment for the next twelve years, but best not be a day late! These financial figures are based on mere speculation on my part. I understand the real numbers, practices and penalties are far more harsh, bordering on the insane. I'd rather take a loan from the mob and have my arms broken than borrow so much as a pencil from the sociopaths running these scams. That's just the way I roll!