Ira Distenfield-founder of We the People, a chain of legal self-help service centers that ultimately expanded to more than 170 franchises nationwide-has been sentenced to five days in jail for contempt of court. He and his wife, Linda Distenfield, the familiar face of We the People’s national advertising campaign (motto: “No Lawyers, Save Money!”), sold the company’s name and assets to Dollar Financial in 2005. However, a legal action against the shell of the original corporation-now known as IDLD-caught up with the Distenfields last month when a Los Angeles court ruled that they had ignored an order to turn over to the sheriff shares of company stock they still held, to be liquidated and the proceeds used to pay-ironically enough-a lawyer.
Los Angeles attorney Richard Lubetzky had won a judgment that the shell corporation owed him $115,000 plus interest for services rendered before the sale. But instead of turning over the assets, IDLD in early December suddenly emptied its corporate coffers, releasing $3.25 million worth of We the People stock to settle a separate legal tussle with Dollar Financial, and transferring the $460,000 left over into the Distenfield’s own personal account, leaving Lubetzky with nothing. “Mr. Distenfield was deceptive in his actions,” Commissioner Victor Greenberg of the Los Angeles Superior Court wrote in his December 12 contempt finding.
Greenberg stayed sentencing until January 21, giving Distenfield an opportunity to pay Lubetzky or file an appeal-which he did, but it was denied on January 8. A week later, the Distenfields filed for Chapter 7 personal bankruptcy, listing $5 million in debt including $900,000 owed to Dollar Financial and $700,000 to the IRS.
This could let him avoid jail on the principle that a person who has filed for bankruptcy is protected against creditors’ collection efforts until the bankruptcy is adjudicated. “That’s their position,” said Lubetzky. “Our position is that the contempt is a criminal proceeding not subject to the bankruptcy stay.” (At press time, the court had not ruled on the matter.)
Distenfield commented that he and his wife “have been disappointed in our legal representation.” He added, “We helped hundreds and thousands of people across the country, and I fell victim to the very industry that I was trying to reform.”
Distenfield explained that he did not pay Lubetzky, who was hired as outside counsel, because his company’s general counsel at that time, Jason Searns, did not agree with the billing. Furthermore, his attorney John Lauritsen took the position that the writ of attachment on his assets was not valid..
Lubetzky is by no means the only lawyer who claims not to have been paid what he’s owed by Distenfield. Searns himself sued him for nonpayment and is listed as one of the creditors in the bankruptcy papers, as is Santa Barbara’s Barry Capello, who represented We the People during legal tussles with Dollar Financial in the wake of the sale.
Besides the lawyers, a number of franchisees to whom IDLD was making settlement payments also stand to lose in the bankruptcy. Distenfield claimed that the franchisees’ grievances were with the new owners and that the old corporation that had made the original franchise agreements was named as a matter of course. The suits pertained to conflicts over what territory franchisees could expand into, said Distenfield, and what services they were entitled to. The disputes arose after the new owners fired the original management team, including his wife and himself. “They bought the system, and then they changed it,” Distenfield said. IDLD settled, he said, because it couldn’t afford to continue paying attorney fees to continue fighting Dollar Financial.
Distenfield shared an email, dated January 15, from We the People franchisee Carolee Lockhart (doing business as Glen Tiorem Moors), in response to his January 15 email explaining that he was declaring bankruptcy, which read, “Thanks for all the payments you were able to make : I am really sorry about the lawsuit. : I’ll never forget all the kind and thoughtful things you did for me while I owned my stores.”



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Kind of creepy all the way around.
I just go to the Court House library and get help there.
Less weirdness...less money.
Hey there's a new logo..
"less weirdness,saves you money!"
emenzies (Elizabeth Menzies)
January 22, 2009 at 8:38 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Most We the People franchisees are small entrapeneurers who are good people providing a needed service. Unfortunately, neither the Distenfields nor the current franchisor Dollar financial Group did their jobs as franchisors very well. Consequently, many, many people that invested a life savings in purchasing a We the People franchise have suffered life changing financial loses. Both the Distenfields and Dollar Financial Group should be ashamed. There is nothing wrong with wanting to be rich - until that desire becomes so strong it compromises ones ethics and damages other people.
wtplv (anonymous profile)
January 22, 2009 at 11:14 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Bummer. We The People did good things for many :) henry
hank (anonymous profile)
January 22, 2009 at 11:26 a.m. (Suggest removal)
At the beginning We The People cheerfully and helpfully provided a good service for those unable or unwilling to pay a lawyer for simple tasks, such as will planning, but they got too greedy and the personal touch went. Too bad.
samuel (anonymous profile)
January 22, 2009 at 11:31 a.m. (Suggest removal)
The germ of a good idea there, helping people fill out forms, corrupted by an insatiable appetite for money, while scorching the earth all around him(employees, store owners, the acquiring company.) Hope something can be saved from it.
wtper (anonymous profile)
January 22, 2009 at 4:46 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Its worth pointing out that Dollar Financial, the company that the Distenfield's chose to sell We The People to, is primarily involved in "pay day loans", a sector of the financial services industry that has repeatedly been singled out for predatory lending practices and taking advantage of the working poor with usurious interest rates and entrapping people into never ending repayment plans. At the time of the sale of WTP I wondered how honest an outfit like that could be and the wisdom of the Distenfield's decision (and whether both sides of the transaction didn't deserve each other).
Lie down with dogs and you're liable to get fleas.
emptynewsroom (anonymous profile)
February 1, 2009 at 2:15 p.m. (Suggest removal)
They botched my divorce filing, it cost me tens of thousands down the road. You get what you pay for, bite the bullet and use an attorney, fast food law is bogus.
lordleadbetter (anonymous profile)
February 2, 2009 at 6:57 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Ira Distenfield is a man without integrity, who hires people and then refuses to py them, claiming bankruptcy while still living a lavish lifestyle with vacations, fine dining, and million dollar homes. Bad man, all around. Just pay your creditors already, and save a little face.
sacreblue (anonymous profile)
March 17, 2009 at 2:38 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Mr. Lubetzky"s mere $115,000 puts him only in the average creditor amount listed within the Distenfield's Bankruptcy petition filed in court January 14, 2009. Top raking creditors are:
$900,000 Dollar Financial Corp. of Berwyn, PA
$760,000 Golden Dog, LLC of Santa Barbara, CA
$703,505 Internal Revenue Service
$340,000 Scrivener Enterprises, LLC of New York, NY
$312,601 Bank of Santa Barbara of Santa Barbara, CA
$220,000 New Millennium Corporation of San Rafael, CA
$187,000 Community West Bank of Goleta, CA
$184,953 Northern Trust, NA of Chicago, IL
$150,000 Searns & Associates of Greenwood Village, CO
$150,000 Langbert Financial, Inc. of Dallas, TX
Bryne & Nixon of Los Angeles, CA
Cappello & Noel, LLP of Santa Barbara, CA
And too many more to list with a total of $5,190,499.17
The Distenfields don't want people to know about themselves.
Anyone considering doing business with the Distenfields should be very careful.
The Distenfields should be ashamed of themselves but they cannot feel such.
WTP_Owner (anonymous profile)
March 23, 2009 at 1:37 p.m. (Suggest removal)
The following is my opinion. I got to see first-hand Distenfield, Dollar's CEO and CFO in action. And to be acquainted with the inner workings of the WTP organization. Distenfield had really created a very solid business model with WTP. And he was a superb spokesperson for WTP. After that it went downhill fast. Distenfield was seriously cash-strapped, "robbing peter to pay paul" everywhere, physically burned out, reputed to have had a heart attack, and just totally desperate to have somebody to buy him out. The WTP buy-out was engineered by a LA leverage buy-out firm that also took Dollar public at the same time WTP was acquired --- for big fees. There is no way Dollar's skilled CFO and CEO would not have seen the deceptions in his financial records. Dollar was skilled at buying businesses. (Note that payday lenders like Dollar prey on poor minorities and charge annual interest rates in excess of 500% per year because their typical loan contracts are rolled over an average of 8 times by their desperate customers.) Dollar had to have known that WTP's books were cooked --- and probably planned all along to sue Distenfield after the sale for fraud to minimize their acquisition cost. Dollar had a flawed business strategy in this acquisition. Dollar was skilled at victimizing poor minorities but not running some other types of business. Perhaps their only reason for buying WTP in the first place was to get its self-help divorce business. Some 80% of the divorces in California are done in pro per. Dollar might have thought it could loan such customers the funds for their divorces. Under Dollar there are now less than 75 functioning WTP stores. Dollar had the cash but no vision for running an ethical business.
WTP_Customer (anonymous profile)
May 10, 2009 at 6:36 p.m. (Suggest removal)