Said I was an "emergency contact" for someone I've never even heard of. Told me that the state of South Carolina had given them the number and that this woman had allegations against her. Never called them back.
>>> police officers are there to enforce the laws, not dispense legal advice. If you keep up your fraudulent ways of trying to scam people, you going to get some advice from them --- advice related to Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966) <<<
Caller identified himself as "John Warren." Said he was calling for third time (no previous calls on record) about "formal allegations to be filed with the State of Texas." He did not identify his company or the purpose of the call. Asked for a family member to call him back, and wished this person "good luck."
If you received a loan, payday or otherwise, how does that involve you issuing a check, electronic or otherwise? And your "criminal lawyer's" ( in this case meaning a lawyer who is a criminal, apparently) advice was for you to pay based on a single phone call from "some guy," without communicating with the alleged debt holder himself? No, that's not how it works. That kind of advice can get a lawyer disciplined or even disbarred. As for the police giving you legal advice on what is essentially a consumer loan, it's illegal in all fifty states for persons, police or otherwise, to practice law without a license, so... that didn't happen, did it? My advice would be for you to get a competent criminal attorney for real, because I suspect you'll need one in the near future.