Is Bankruptcy A Good Option In This Case?
The situation, as reported by a friend of mine (no, it's not me, it really is a friend):
She racked up about $50K in government-funded educational loans. Once she got settled and got into a decent job and they started coming due, she got a consolidation loan from a private lender. Thus, the debts that were actually government-backed were, as far as she knows, paid off.
Then the bottom dropped out of the economy and suddenly the decent job wasn't there any more. Between the school loans and some credit card debt, she's considering bankruptcy, and it's looking more and more likely.
The question: since those educational loans are now held by a private lender and as far as she knows aren't actually government-connected any more, are they dischargeable under bankruptcy? She wound up paying on them for less than a year, and she's afraid that either 1) they won't be eligible for discharge since they were originally government, and of course the government exempts itself from everything, or 2) the private lender will cry "foul" and accuse her of something resembling fraud.
This situation is in Idaho, if that makes any difference. Opinions? Applicable laws?