| Metric | Value | |--------|-------| | Total capital raised | $4 000 000 (1 000 tokens) | | Average coupon paid (year‑1) | $120 per token (3 % of principal) | | IRR (including ecological bonus) | 12 % | | Token liquidity (secondary market) | Average daily volume: 15 tokens; price premium: + 3 % to face value after year 2 |
In some documented cases, "Rose Wild Debt4k" appears on a credit report for a debt that never existed. This is "phantom debt"—a completely fabricated claim hoping that a consumer will pay $4,000 just to make the collection calls stop.
In a landmark small claims case in Davidson County, Tennessee (March 2024), a consumer known as "J.P." was sued by a collection agency operating under an alias strikingly similar to Rose Wild. The plaintiff demanded $4,250.
J.P. requested validation. The agency could not produce a signed contract. The original creditor had gone bankrupt in 2019. The judge dismissed the case with prejudice (meaning Rose Wild can never sue for that debt again) and awarded J.P. $1,000 in statutory damages for FDCPA violations, including "false representation of the character of the debt."
This case underscores a vital point: "Rose Wild Debt4k" is often a paper tiger.
Wild roses (genus Rosa) occupy a unique niche across temperate and subtropical biomes. Their dense, thorny thickets protect soils from erosion, provide nectar for pollinators, and act as “stepping‑stone” habitats for many bird and mammal species (López et al., 2019). Recent meta‑analyses estimate that each hectare of intact wild‑rose cover sequesters 0.8 t CO₂ ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹ (Kumar & Singh, 2022).