My former roommate borrowed $12,000 while covering up losing his job

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pmlinstrot

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Here are the basic details: I live in California and my roommate turned out to be a pathological liar who lies to everyone around him, even when confronted on it. He lost his job last December and for over six months came up with excuses to not pay his portion of the rent, like he lost his checkbook or money was in the mail from a closed bank account (turns out the IRS was auditing him). I ended up paying my portion of the June rent 3 times due to his deception. He has now borrowed/conned $11,833.40 from me with the promise (I have records of this) that he would be paying me back right away.

All of this was a lie and we had to end our lease in June at the request of our landlord who had also been lied to and given fake checks by him. He left the apartment trashed and had to be physically removed from the premises over a day after he was legally required to vacate. The only source of payment I have secured is that the landlord will be sending me the roommate's half of the security deposit (~$3,000) directly, though this will likely not be the full deposit due to the roommate's actions last weekend.

I already have a signed promissory note from him saying he owes me the full amount of money, but there's no date on the contract for when to require payment. He has no source of income, and has been essentially disowned by his family (though he's made promises of borrowing money from them to pay me back that never happened). He has told some of my acquaintances that he owns land and has stocks, a 401k, and possibly money in Bitvoin. I know he will lie about all of this (and anything else) if asked directly as that is his M.O.

So... should I get a lawyer, take him to small claims court on my own (with a $10,000 limit in California), send him a demand letter, or perhaps contact his family (he's in his mid-20s)? I have texts, emails, and chat messages backing up my side 100%, including the support of the former landlord.

Thank you for your time and advice.
 
You can do any of the things you mentioned.

Assume you prove your case and receive a judgment for $10,000.

Then you have to TRY and collect.

He's a lying, deceiving, DEADBEAT.

He couldn't pay a few dollars of rent money.

Unless he inherits his rich Aunt Abagail's fortune, or hits the lottery, he'll always be a lying. conniving, deceiving deadbeat!

The choice is yours.

If I were you, I'd use it as a $10,000 life lesson.

Don't loan anyone money.

Give them money, but don't expect them to repay you.

You might want to rethink taking his half of your security deposit.

He might be able to lay claim to HALF of the security refund, and those deadbeats are quick to sue you for what they believe is theirs.
 
You can try suing in small claims court for some less than due you - for more you would have to sue in a higher court. Even if you get a judgment against him, the problem is collecting.
 
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