Medical school graduate sees nearly all of his $440,000 in student loans discharged

A medical graduate with more than $440,000 in student debt recently saw nearly 99% of his loans cancelled by a bankruptcy court in California, highlighting the growing trend of certain student loans being dischargeable.

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San Diego-based Seth Koeut was born to Cambodian refugees who came to the U.S. when he was a child and later pursued a medical degree in hopes of becoming a doctor.

After he failed to obtain a residency role — a required part of the transition from medical school graduate to licensed medical professional — Koeut ended up working menial jobs for before filing for chapter 7 bankruptcy in May 2012 while holding $440,465.66 in federally-backed student debt. (As many as 10,000 medical school graduates in the U.S. are not matched with residency programs, according to a recent New York Times report.)

In 2015, Koeut filed an adversary proceeding to discharge his student loans as part of his bankruptcy. After the adversary proceeding was dismissed, Koeut filed an appeal in 2018. In October 2020, arguing against a discharge of the loans, the Department of Education (ED) contended that he had “not given his best effort to find better employment."

Read more: How to repay student loans: The full breakdown

Seth Koeut. (Photo from Alumni US)
Seth Koeut. (Photo from Alumni US)

In December 2020, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of California ruled in Koeut's favor, granting a discharge of 98.9% of his debt balance — leaving him with $8,291.67 at an interest rate of 0.11%.

The ED did not appeal the ruling, and the agency is reviewing its handling of these kinds of cases and others.

“Our new leadership team is currently conducting a review of ongoing litigation to understand the positions the agency has taken and identify areas where we may or may not want to take a different posture,” an ED spokesperson told Yahoo Finance. “This includes bankruptcy cases as well as many others.”

The case contributes to a growing number of student loan debtors obtaining relief through personal bankruptcy, further dispelling the notion that student loans are exempt from court-ordered discharge.

'Koeut deserves a break'

Born in a Cambodian refugee camp in Thailand, Koeut came to America in the 1980s.

His family "lived in extreme poverty," the filing stated, "collecting cans from the trash to supplement the family income." Koeut did well in school and earned a bachelor’s in marine biology and Spanish from Duke University in 2002 before moving to Bangkok to study clinical tropical medicine.