UAE Flight Attendant Faces Jail Over $100K Crypto Loan Default
A foreign resident of Abu Dhabi is facing jail time after his crypto investments from a $100K loan in 2017 tanked and he can no longer afford the payments.
A former Etihad Airlines flight attendant says he faces up to three years in jail in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) for being unable to make installments on a $100,000 loan he took out to invest in crypto around the all time high.
Reddit user Crypthomie, identified only as a 34-year-old man who is not an UAE citizen, posted an image to the Bitcoin subreddit on June 9 of his repayment schedule for a 338,000 Dirham loan — approximately $109,000 at the time— with Emirates Islamic Bank.
According to Crypthomie, he has lost his job with Etihad due to the pandemic and can no longer afford to pay the required monthly installments of roughly $2230. However, he is required to repay the bank 393,296.80 Dirham — about $127,000 at the time — by the end of 2021.
Investing after the peak
Crypthomie’s story went semi-viral in the crypto community in August 2018 after posting the same bank installment schedule image and revealing his tale of woe.
The aviation employee took out the loan on Dec. 18, 2017, the same day Bitcoin (BTC) reached its all-time high of almost $20,000.
After less than a year, he reported a 85% loss on his digital investments. The redditor said he had purchased Neo (NEO), Stellar (XLM), Litecoin (LTC), Ethereum (ETH) and “some shitcoins that lost 95 percent of their value.”
“It was my first speculative investment. I think it’s an age where we’re still unconscious and take a lot of risk if we don’t have big responsibilities like a kid or bills to pay.”
Facing jail time abroad
Unlike in many other countries, the UAE treats debt as a criminal matter rather than a civil one. If someone is unable to make his required monthly payments, they can be sentenced to up to three years in jail and possibly longer if the loan stays unpaid.
“We’ll be sent to jail within a few months,” he said referring to his former partner who has an unrelated debt, “and [the worst part] is that we won’t be able to communicate.”
Many countries prohibit jailing debtors but authorities sometimes find ways around them. In the United States, failure to repay fines for civil offenses like jaywalking and other traffic violations can often lead to prison time. The same issue contributes to high incarceration rates for indigenous people in Australia.
Fleeing the country?
Most Reddit users replying to the thread advocate getting out of Dodge quickly.
“Get out of that country and start a new life with new names and identities dude,” said user _Neev.
“Last time I checked, Abu Dhabi had ocean access. I’d be learning to sail real quick in your shoes,” said maxcoiner.
However, the original poster shot down these ideas. “We have a travel ban on us as the bank opened a case. We are stuck until we can pay but will be jailed within a few weeks if we don’t send anything.”