Debt Collectors Sneaking Robocall Exemptions Into Budget Bill 216
TCPALaw writes: Hate robocalls? In July, the FCC tightened the rules regarding robocalls to cell phones, especially debt collection calls (in particular limiting calls to wrong numbers or to anyone who is not the debtor). Now the debt collection industry is getting their revenge by sneaking in a massive exemption (see section 301 on page 10 to the PDF) to the the FCC's rules that would expressly permit debt collection robocalls to cell phones (and even collect calls!) for student loans, mortgages, taxes, and any other debt owed or guaranteed by the government. Time to make a few phone calls myself to some senators. The Senate switchboard is (202) 224-3121 or go to senate.gov to find the number for your senators. This may come up for a vote in 24 hours or less.
we're at the tipping point of Civilization (Score:2)
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Screw debt collectors.
Does that work?
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They learn from the one percenters and business owners.
Build up lots of debt, declare bankruptcy after stripping everything of value, then keep going like nothing happened.
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There really isn't any welfare (Score:2)
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While I understand how overbearing debt collectors can be (I once had one bugging me for a medical expense that I didn't even know I had for anesthesia, which was just a portion of the bill that nobody bothered to tell me that I owed until it was already in collections,)
Try having a debt collector making constant and obnoxious calls for someone you don't even know. Or for a debt you certainly don't owe. The latter is technically easy to handle since you just have to file a dispute, BUT what really happens is they sell it on to the next collector and the whole process starts from square 1. The former is impossible. Since you are not the (alleged) debtor you have no legal standing to order them to cease collection activities or to dispute the debt. And again, they will quick
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As for people who actually DO owe a debt, many of them took it on in good faith but then unforeseen circumstances left them unable to pay. Harassing them won't make the money appear.
Many is a relative term; I doubt it's a lot. How many advertisements (usually scams) do you see where people advertise "get out of debt" services? There's quite a lot of them, and it usually involves credit card debt (because that's the only debt they can manage, assuming it is legitimate.) The proper way to handle a credit card is to already have the cash available before you make the purchase, NOT just assuming that your next few paychecks will take care of it. Three reasons:
1) Interest will kill you
2) Yo
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That depends on the car. Any NEW car is certainly a luxury item (personally I've always had nice cars and never once have I owned a new one.)
A few months ago I personally sold my 2003 Buick Regal for about $2,000. Really nice car but I wanted more, so I bought a used 2013 Toyota Camry with all possible options and 40,000 miles for $10,000 cash. See the difference? Both are cars, both run great, but one looks nicer and accelerates faster.
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Well normally when I'm not working I just rely on savings to get by. However in that particular case, I took room and board as a roommate for $300 a month (which is easy to find in any area that is at or below the average national cost of living.) My unemployment check was enough to cover that, and it lasted about a year. I also had food stamps and AHCCCS at the time. And yes, I was able to completely (and easily) feed myself off of the amount provided by food stamps (I can only guess that people who can't
Don't answer your phone (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Don't answer your phone (Score:4, Insightful)
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Yes you can do something. Just start invoicing them for your time. If they pay, fine. If they don't, sell the debt to another debt collector.
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You could, I dunno, change your number or ditch the land line altogether,,,
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The Fair Debt Collections Practices Act allows statutory damages. Follow the rules, sue them in small claims, and then collect when they either default or the attorney settles as it is more of a hassle to show up. Collecting can be fun in its own way as well. I helped a guy who had the collectors dodge him for weeks, so we showed up at the office with a truck and started taking office furniture and anything else we could find.
Re:Don't answer your phone (Score:5, Informative)
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What happens is a debt collector tries to collect from you. When they can't, they sell the debt to another debt collector, and the cycle repeats.
My dad got a debt collection letter (Verizon credited his payment to his old account, decided his new account was overdue and sold it to a debt collector without ever calling him). I drafted a letter explaining the Verizon s
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Re:Don't answer your phone (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, they do. We get a message at least weekly for the former residents of our house, trying to collect various debts. Note, I've lived there over 9 years and we still get those calls. It's basically harassment, but there isn't much I can do because it's a bunch of different debt collectors, rather than just one company.
You can prepare a standard form letter and send it to every debt collector which calls. You can use this one-
I am writing in response to your letter or phone call dated (DATE). I do not believe that I owe this debt or what you say I owe.
Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, Section 809(b), Validating Debts:
“If the consumer notifies the debt collector in writing within the thirty-day period described in subsection (a) that the debt, or any portion thereof, is disputed, or that the consumer requests the name and address of the original creditor, the debt collector shall cease collection of the debt, or any disputed portion thereof, until the debt collector obtains verification of the debt or any copy of a judgment, or the name and address of the original creditor, and a copy of such verification or judgment, or name and address of the original creditor, is mailed to the consumer by the debt collector.”
I respectfully request that you provide me with the following:
1. The amount of the debt;
2. The name of the creditor to whom the debt is owed;
3. Verification or copy of any judgment (if applicable);
4. Proof that you are licensed to collect debts in the state of [STATE] 5. Proof of the last payment made on the account.
I am asserting my rights under the federal and state Fair Debt Collection Practices Acts and the Fair Credit Reporting Act, including these rights:
Because I have disputed this debt in writing within 30 days of receipt of your initial notice, you must obtain verification of the debt or a copy of the judgment against me and mail these items to me at your expense.
You cannot add interest or fees except those allowed by the original contract or state law.
Any attempt to collect this debt without validating it violates the FDCPA.
Also be advised that I am keeping accurate records of all correspondence from you and your company, including recording all phone calls, and I will not hesitate to report violations of the law to my State Attorney General, the Federal Trade Commission and the Better Business Bureau.
I have disputed this debt. Therefore, until it is validated, your information concerning this debt is assumed to be inaccurate. Accordingly, if you have already reported this debt to any credit-reporting agency (CRA) or Credit Bureau (CB), then you must immediately inform them of my dispute with this debt. Reporting information that you know to be inaccurate or failing to report information correctly violates the Fair Credit Reporting Act 1681s-2. Should you pursue a judgment without validating this debt, I will inform the judge and request that the case be dismissed based on your failure to comply with the FDCPA.
Finally, if you do not own this debt, I demand that you immediately send a copy of this dispute letter to the original creditor so they are also aware that I dispute the debt.
Sincerely,
[Your Name]
If they contact you again after receiving such a letter, even once, you can sue them. Up to $1000 per incident. Plus they would have to pay big fines $50-100k to the government as well. It's enough of a deterrent that I have never been contacted again after sending such a letter.
You still get bothered (Score:2)
The phone still rings, and you need to stop what you are doing and check it. With robocalls, they just don't stop either. They call day after day after day because it doesn't cost anything. So message or no (and they do leave messages) they'll just keep bothering you for years.
I had that problem with a home phone line that I had to ditch. The number it was assigned belonged to someone who had skipped on medical bills. Well these retarded collectors would just NOT get the message that I wasn't the person and
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I don't know if they are supposed to, but they do. It was annoying. The last of them finally quit a couple of years ago after getting a little threateny and my then saying I was going to get the general council on the line. Went on for years though.
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It is a rare occasion when I get a nuisance call these days,
I work for a large university (Score:2)
We are a phone company, as in we have a 5ESS that serves our 3 prefixes. As such, I don't control the phone system and get to choose what we do.
This is not uncommon for people who work for companies: Most don't have you get your own phone service, you use what is provided.
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Or we can hang the debt collectors and the congressmen that allow this suit to happen from a tree.
99 times out of 100, these last people are a waste of valuable food and oxygen anyway.
Ignoring them is exactly the wrong thing to do, they keep doing it because we fucking let them.
STOP FUCKING LETTING THEM. STOP TURNING THE OTHER CHEEK.
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Just don't answer your phone for any number that you don't recognize; if it's really important they'll leave a voicemail message. Debt collectors and scumbags don't leave messages, typically; there, problem solved.
How is that problem solved? You're still interrupted. You've still changed your phone habits to a whitelist - so will miss any calls, potentially important or emergency ones. (And then you have to check that voicemail, again inconveniencing you). You have to change your behaviour to out-of-the-ordinary to avoid dodgy new business practises.
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You've still changed your phone habits to a whitelist - so will miss any calls, potentially important or emergency ones.
What are you talking about? If it's important or an emergency then they'd damned well better leave a message, or it's obviously not important. If it's someone you know and it's important or an emergency, then they're being somewhere between rude and violently stupid if they're not leaving a message, and if it's someone you know and they're not in the phonebook on your phone (so the number shows up as their name) then you're not being very smart, either. So which is it? Also again as previously stated, if it's something important or an emergency call from someone you don't know, they'll leave a message, or it's obviously not important. Also if glancing at your phone when it rings and not reaching over to hit 'answer' is such an inconvenience for you then again I'd have to wonder about you. Sorry if the world isn't all hearts and unicorns, Sunshine, and it all doesn't always go your way, but just like trolls on the Internet the best tactic to handle these types is usually just to ignore them, they'll eventually stop using their own resources to harass you and go look for lower-hanging fruit somewhere else (i.e. someone not smart enough to ignore harassing phone calls).
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How do you do that on a cell phone? I have Android if that helps.
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You've never dealt with the hard core scum that have multiple phone numbers and sell the debt on to the next hard core scum as soon as you figure out who and where they are.
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I pay my bills too. Too bad someone who does not has same first initial and last name (but is not related).
The fact that you blocked their number (singular) suggests that they were not the hard core scum I speak of that have multiple numbers and repeatedly sell the same debt back and forth.
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I've had a saying since my first cell phone. "If my phone doesn't know you, I probably don't want to talk to you." So if your not in my phone book my chances of answer are none. If its really important to you, leave a voice mail and I"ll call you back if it's important to me. This policy has served me well for over 10 years.
About debit collectors. They can't leave voice mail. There is a chance that some one else will over hear it, which I believe is now illegal.
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Sure, because debt collectors are so well known for not skirting on the ragged edge of illegality.
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Yes they DO leave voicemails, while still following FCC/CRTC guidelines. Its called careful wording.
Source: Someone who runs a national Collection Agency Automated Dialer
Some careful wording... They leave a message telling you who the call is for and telling you to hang up if it is not for you. They wait a few seconds and begin their spiel about owing them money. I figure it's just a matter of time until someone takes them to court for violating the rules.
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As long as you never have an emergency or something like that, that requires someone to reach out to you.
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I've gotten important robocalls from my utility companies. They do not leave a voicemail.
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Statistically you never will.
Spoken like someone who doesn't have kids. Or close friends for that matter.
"Statistically" I've lost count of the number of times I, or my sister, or one of our friends ended up stuck somewhere without our phone, calling from a friend's or kind stranger's phone because god knows you can't find public phones anymore.
And shit this was before the days of phones with batteries that go flat by lunchtime (only a slight exaggeration).
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Or get a Google Voice number as your main number and turn on call screening.
They only have a couple of seconds to leave their names and that's it.
Well that's just ducky. (Score:3)
Of course...
--
BMO
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I blame lazy government employees at the NSA. How else are they supposed to figure out which Americans have an "unhealthy" interest in certain laws? Break SSL encryption? Or just ask the senate.gov webmaster to refuse SSL connections?
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Your IP address is not on the whitelist of campaign contributors.
Debt collectors don't like robo calls either... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Debt collectors don't like robo calls either... (Score:4, Informative)
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Preparing to file for bankruptcy
Like contacting those credit counseling services for help. Just a front for the credit industry to collect intelligence on who might be ready to fall over the edge. These are the people that get put into the 'special emphasis' database.
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Debt owed to the US (Score:2)
unless such call is made solely to collect a debt owed to or guaranteed by the United States
This amendment only effects collection of debts owed to the US Government. Normal credit card, car loans, etc don't get the exemption.
Bottom line is: If you are having trouble paying back a loan, talk to the lender. The absolute worst thing to do is trying to avoid them.
But what if it isn't my debt? (Score:3)
I've gotten a lot of debt collection calls, at work and at home. Thing is, they've never been for me. I have never defaulted on any debt in my life. Yet these people would call and call trying to get a hold of someone else. Telling them "That's not me, you have the wrong number," didn't work.
So what is the solution?
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You do know that many deadbeats, when asked to please put their phone number on a check or provide one on a loan application, just put down someone else's.
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Try this. When called, read the line:
"Hello. Thank you for calling. For quality assurance reasons this call may be recorded and published. Please state clearly "I agree" that you agree to this"
Unless they say "I agree" (they won't), say "I am sorry, I may not continue this call unless you agree. For quality assurance reasons this call..."
Repeat as needed 'til they hang up.
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No, not only for debt owed to the US Government but also guaranteed by the US Government
- Private Student Loans
- VA Guaranteed Mortgages
- SMB loans
- FEMA guaranteed loans
- ETC. ETC. ETC.
Get government out of the loan-business (Score:3)
Very simple solution — get the government out of the loans-business altogether. Why it got there in the first place is, sort of, a mystery...
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Banks have made billions in profits off it, so why shouldn't the government try it?
Stop letting people weasel out of their debts and we might be able to repeal the income tax on the profits from the loan business...
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Pizzerias have made billions selling pizzas, why shouldn't the government go into baking?
For the same reasons, you don't put Seti@Home into kernel.
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so why shouldn't the government try it?
Conflict of interest.
The government is there to be the final insurer against credit defaults just so the banks can run a zero risk business. Getting into the actual banking business* would create an entity that would have to balance default risk against loan profits. So they would be motivated to attract lower risk lending customers by offering better terms.
*The next time a bank like Washington Mutual fails, have the Federal Reserve take it over. Then just swap the WaMu signs on the branches with FedReser
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As a result it has damage my credit record, and I can't even get them into court to correct it.
If this is on your credit report, you now have an address.
We won't even get into how it got on your credit report if it wasn't for you originally though...
I won't be calling my Senator. (Score:3)
I think Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey have already got the memo, seeing as they were the ones that originally sent it. [senate.gov]
cellphones are a special matter (Score:2)
The problem when unemployed is that you need to monitor your phone for job-related calls, so you have to keep the ringer on.
Also, my particular cell phone makes it really difficult to blacklist numbers.
I seem to recall that the rules state that if you send them a note by snail mail, they are required to stop contacting you by phone.
Recently I was late on paying a Chase card, and I literally got called every single day about the matter. Eventually I called up and said, hey, I'm unemployed, I'm waiting on a
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Damn, I wish every bank and credit card company did this. Heck, I think there should be a law requiring them to do this.
I knew I had put a $10 charge on my BofA credit card (my lone annual charge to prevent them from c
Maybe stop issuing junk credit? (Score:2)
What I don't understand about all this bad debt is that most of it seems self-inflicted by the lender.
If they don't do adequate credit checks and issue credit to people who can't repay the loans, aren't they kind of likely to end up with bad debt?
I'm sure their argument is "But we wouldn't sell as many widgets if we didn't offer easy credit". Which is logic I don't undertstand -- how do you make money on widgets if you give them away and don't get repaid?
It almost seems like there's some kind of accounting
Not sure I have a problem with this... (Score:2)
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Mumble, then when they upped the volume on their headset use a referee whistle. It's not really much, but sadly as close as you get to strangling the asshole.
Hello. This is Lenny. (Score:2)
n/t.
I'll get rich (Score:3)
Once I invent a device that allows you to kill people via the phone.
Terrorism is spreading (Score:2)
"This may come up for a vote in 24 hours or less."
Ironically, there are two groups of people that come to mind who regularly force these kinds of demands on innocent citizens.
Lawmakers and Terrorists.
It's rather strange people don't mind being threatened by the very person they elected to represent them.
Re:GOOD! (Score:4, Insightful)
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Evidently you never had someone make a purchase in your name without you knowing and then ignoring you when you tell them you didn't make it or in my case.....
Someone purchase something online and just happen to give them a random phone number that ends up being yours so you end up telling them 50 times that the person they are looking for doesn't live there, you never met them before, you don't know them and you didn't purchase anything.
"no" once should suffice. (Score:5, Insightful)
And don't accept your word that you aren't them, don't know them, and have no responsibilities for their bad debts.
And keep calling back.
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I get those. I tell them it isn't me and that it was the last owner of the number. I am polite but firm.
If you can talk back to the caller, then it is NOT A ROBO-CALL, and has nothing to do with this issue.
Ah that's where you are wrong (Score:5, Interesting)
For Instance:
- Be in the Military
- Get injured on the job, maybe fall and break four ribs in your back, just supposing here
- Go to a civilian hospital that has agreed to accept the military payment as payment in full, any hospital that accepts Medicare has to
- Go about your life getting stationed overseas
- Return to the States after 5 years and try to buy and house and discover the that Hospital fucked up and marked the bill as unpaid, turned it over to a bill collector and not only can you not get approved to buy the house the damn bill collector starts harassing you and your wife with phone calls day and night.
- Hospital finally admits bill was in error but sorry they sold it to the bill collector so not their problem and the damn bill collector ain't gonna stop calling
Now tell me how paying my bills kept the calls away???
Re:Ah that's where you are wrong (Score:5, Informative)
Write a physical letter to the hospital.
If no response a week later. Call.
If no response from calls and follow ups then
---- Send it certified (you will get a response).
Send response to credit agencies and bill collection agency.
Ask collection agency for a letter of clearance.
If no response send it certified.
If no response it doesn't matter if it's cleared from credit reports.
However if it isn't removed by the collection agencies OR you insist on complete closure and the collection agency doesn't respond the go and file a small claims suit. You WILL get a response. If you are in the right it WILL be dismissed.
Cost: Time and effort and perhaps some money ($4.00 for each certified letter and $20.00 or so for the small claims court filing).
Is it a pain-in-the-a$$? Yes.
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Why not send the mail certified the first time then? It may cost you a few dollars but it will make a statement.
Re:Ah that's where you are wrong (Score:4, Insightful)
Here's a true story: my girlfriend has bought into one of those worthless LifeLock plans. Feels secure, and has sterling credit (over 800 score). Through some small-time credit transactions finds out that some guy with a Hispanic name has been using her soc number, but with HIS OWN NAME, to get credit cards. LifeLock, now knowing there is an "issue" alerts her every time her number is used to access credit. She tells several jurisdictions about the issue as well. After several go-arounds on the phone with banks, institutions, and precincts the end result is NO ONE CAN DO ANYTHING ABOUT IT. The best she can do is call the issuing institution when she finds out about it and they MAY close the account, etc.
This has been ongoing for the last 5 years. The situation is laughable if not so serious.
Re:Ah that's where you are wrong (Score:4, Insightful)
Trust me we did all that except small claims court.
- The hospital acknowledged the error in writing but said they couldn't take off credit report because the Collection agency had put it on the report and well you know what the CA said, "Show me the money" no percentage in the CA removing it
- Even got the Military Medical people involved AKA TriCare who provided assistance in the form of a letter to the hospital wanting to know why I was charged to begin with.
- The bank wouldn't give me the loan with the bad debt on my report, only bad item on the report by the way.
- Finally a hospital officer "Mr. Friendly" real name and I will never forget it, provided a notarized letter to my lending officer stating the debt was in error and that it should never have been entered against me. So I got the loan.
- Took another two years for it to clear from my credit history so I kept the letter for a damn long time.
In my opinion the only "Bad Actor" in the whole deal was the CA, once informed the debt was in error by the hospital they should have taken action to clear it. But no they wanted the money for the debt they had purchased. Fuck them it's the risk they take for being in that business.
The hospital had made a mistake and acknowledged same. The credit could of taken a verbal but wanted everything in writing, CYA and I get that.
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Ever dealt with these guys?
You don't get enough info to call them yourself, because they do not want enraged people tracking them down at the office. They call you. They hear sob stories all the time. They do not have the resources to actually check any of them out, and they're kinda scummy, so you tell them anything but "this is my new Credit Card number," they simply ignore it. Your debt stays on their books, on your credit report, and you keep getting calls. Eventually they sell your debt to a new agency
Re:Ah that's where you are wrong (Score:4, Interesting)
And all the steps take some serious time and when you are moving back from overseas and trying to close on a house for you family you don't really have that kind of time.
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- Hospital finally admits bill was in error but sorry they sold it to the bill collector so not their problem and the damn bill collector ain't gonna stop calling
If you demand it, preferably in writing, they must verify the debt and provide you with documentation as to its validity--which is very hard to do after the hospital has already determined that the debt was never valid in the first place. There are plenty of websites on how to fight back against illicit collection attempts, you need to google "FDCPA" (Fair Debt Collection Practices Act)
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Oh yeah the hospital did their part but it was the Collection Agency that put the negative remark on my Credit Report. Try to get any Collection Agency to remove a negative remark without giving them money and sometimes even not then.
My real problem was I needed the Mortgage now and all the work to clear stuff up takes real time.
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It's rather easy you just file a dispute on their website. 99% of the time they just remove it (even if it's a valid) if your bill is paid up with the current company. I did this with all 3 of the credit scoring companies and no problem for late or missed payments.
Collection agencies can not leave remarks on your credit report only the company that you owe the debt too.
Re:GOOD! (Score:4, Interesting)
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Good luck getting any money from people without telling who you are :)
That goes both ways, if they won't tell you who they are, they can't extract money from anybody either as no one would know who to pay.
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Offer to pay but before you can pay you need to know who and where they are. If they give you a PO box you still have a name of the company.
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Except when you did not actually buy anything and the calls are a harassment to hope you will pay just to make it go away.
Talk to anyone that has been a victim of identity theft.
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I take it you have never been to a hospital?
The local hospital in my area has stopped sending bills, and now just sends all the bills to a debt collector. You then get inundated with calls to pay a bill that you can't even verify, which possibly could be fraud. Do you pay?
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Complete and utter bull. Even if you are perfectly punctual it is simply random whether you have been or will be shafted by some other person.
In my case it was some Kyesha chick in Mississippi who stuck my google voice number in the hat of bill collectors a few years after I had it.
Took years before those calls dried up. Explaining it is a bad/unrelated number is irrelevant. Blocking is irrelevant. Welcome to the world of only answering known numbers and all else to voice mail.
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Pay your bills, no one calls.
Horse-Fucking-Shit!!!!
I had a debt collector calling my house and hanging up for six months before they made robocalling illegal and I didn't even know who was calling or why. After I finally got my first call by a real human it was obvious they were looking for someone I did not know with the same last name as me. It took another three months to get them to stop calling despite them obviously calling numbers at random. I had to escalate to a supervisor and threaten filing a lawsuit and reporting them
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Pay your bills, no one calls.
Nonsense. I used to get several debt collection robo-calls every week, for someone I never heard of. Apparently, this deadbeat either used to have my phone number, or just listed my phone number on his credit app. Since it is a robo-call, there is no human at the other end to tell I am not the person they are looking for. I was only able to stop the calls by buying a $39 call blocker from Amazon.
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" that's the cost of not paying on time."
Not even once has a debt collector who has called my phone even been trying to reach me, let alone for a debt that I had actually incurred.
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If only. It's also the consequence of happening to have the same last name as an unrelated debtor, or having a phone number one or two digits off from a debtor, or attempting to do business with a merchant that doesn't understand that they have to actually provide a product or service to you if they want you to give them money, or a hospital that doesn't understand that they have to send you a bill if they hope to be paid, etc.
Re:GOOD! (Score:5, Insightful)
People running away from their debt, this is why the country goes to shit.
No. I don't think that's a leading factor. Debt collectors not following the rules, that's not a reason for the country "going to shit either", but it doesn't help.
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Yeah, tell me about it.
Back in 2004, I moved into a new rental apartment. The previous occupant, it transpired, had skipped out owing a whole load of money to major retailers.
Now, at no point did I get any of this on my credit record (though I did buy copies of my reports), but what I got for about 3 years after that point was a constant stream of letters and calls (roughly 50/50 human/robocall) to the landline. Some of these were extremely threatening. On one occasion, I had to take a day off work because
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I heard a story that was pretty good about dealing with debit collector. I can't validate if its true, so it probably isn't but its still a good story.
A FOAF was called over and over by a collector for a debit that wasn't his. Even after submitting proof it wasn't they kept calling. It was the same person too. So finally the FOAF had enough and sued the caller for harassment. They didn't sue the collection company but the person on the other end of the phone.
Being several states away the caller di
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Good luck getting the person's real name.
You can however sue the debt collection agency in small claims court and win when they don't show up, then submit the debt to a debt collector when they fail to respond.
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The person with the wrong number may feel obligated to pay off the bill collector just to stop the phone calls. The debt collector keeps the money and sells the debt to another debt collector, while never marking the debt as paid. Otherwise known as legalized exhortation.
Um, no. Legalized exhortation [google.com] would be the hour long info-mercials with a "Buy Now!! Limited Time Offer!!! Buy one, get ten FREE!!!!!! (pay separate S&H)" spiel.
They're just as scummy, really, but not actually costing you anything besides increased blood pressure and thumb blisters on the remote-holding hand.
tl;dr ;-)
I think you meant "extortion"