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6 Ways to Fend Off Debt Collectors

SandEagle

Lifer
in case some of you forgot during these tough economic times...

http://www.kiplinger.com/magaz...f-debt-collectors.html

CREDIT
6 Ways to Fend Off Debt Collectors
Whether or not you owe money, the law protects you from abusive practices.
By Jane Bennett Clark, Senior Associate Editor
From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, September 2009

You owe money, and a debt collector is calling you night and day. Or maybe you don't owe money, and a debt collector is calling you night and day. Collectors are applying the thumbscrews -- often illegally -- as recent complaints to the Federal Trade Commission bear out.

But the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act protects you from abusive and annoying practices on the part of third-party collection agencies -- companies that buy debts from creditors and attempt to collect on them -- and collection attorneys. The law does not cover collection attempts made by creditors (but some state laws do). Virtually every state prohibits serious harassment no matter who does the collecting. (To learn the law in your state, visit www.privacyrights.org.)

Here are six steps to take when a collection agency hassles you.

1. Get the facts. In its first letter, the collection agency must provide you with the name of the creditor, the amount of the initial debt, a breakdown of penalties and interest, and an explanation of your rights. If the collection agency calls rather than writes, get the details on the phone and remind the caller that you are entitled to the written information within five days.

Ask for an address and a phone number so you can follow up if necessary, and start a file that includes a record of every call and a copy of every document involved in the claim.

2. Set the record straight. If you don't recognize the debt, or know you're being dunned in error, write a letter disputing the claim to both the collection agency and the creditor. Include details, dates and copies of any supporting paperwork, and send the letters by certified mail, with a request for a receipt, within 30 days of the first written notice. The burden is on the agency to make its case -- say, by providing a copy of the creditor's judgment. If it doesn't, you're in the clear, for now. Agencies sometimes sell their accounts to other collectors. Be prepared to fight the claim all over again.

3. Hang up on harassment. Collection agencies are prohibited from calling you between 9:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m. and from using abusive or threatening language. If you don't want to be called or contacted at all, write to the agency and say so. It must abide by your terms, although it can send one more notice telling you how it will proceed. If your lawyer writes the letter, the agency must communicate only with him or her.

4. Agree on a plan. If the debt is yours, work with the agency to come up with a realistic plan for paying it back. "Don't promise something you cannot do," says Robert Markoff, of the National Association of Retail Collection Attorneys. Debt collectors would rather adjust the terms of repayment than face future defaults, he says. "They want payments that come in like clockwork, so they can move on to the next case." Fail to come to terms and you could end up in court; lose there and the agency wins the right to put a lien on your property (certain property is exempt) or have your wages garnished.

5. Tell the authorities. Still have a problem? Complain to the Federal Trade Commission (www.ftc.gov), which enforces the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. Your complaint, added to others, can help it identify and pursue the most egregious bad guys, although it probably won't help get your case resolved. Also contact your state attorney general's office. Depending on state law, that office may be willing and able to pursue your case.

6. Sue the bums. You can sue a collection agency that flouts the federal law and collect statutory damages of up to $1,000, plus real damages and attorney's fees. Many lawyers will take your case on a contingency basis or charge a fee of, say, $25 to $100, says Robert Hobbs, of the National Consumer Law Center. Some will also represent you in serious cases involving collectors who are not covered by the federal law. To find a lawyer in your area, go to www.naca.net.
 
Some collections place kept calling me endlessly looking for a guy who used/had our number... i talked to a manager who was basically a c**t and extremely bitchtastic and finally i had to email them after researching that fair credit reporting act and told them to stop fvcking contacting me. I didn't threaten them at the time with a lawyer but felt that if they continued to call me looking for him, a blatant violation of that act, i may have done so just on principle. Ass lickers, i hope everyone at the company gets swine flu. This retard who didn't pay his debts has had various people calling us now for three years that we've had this phone number.
 
1. Start off by sending a cease and desist. Don't talk on the phone. Just send the letter.
2. Validate. Even if it's yours, validate and dispute. Keep track of the time lines, remember that they have 30days (usually) to respond.
3. Consider if you even want think about paying it. Keep in mind that making a payment can reset the statute of limitations and renew your credit report entry.
4. If you do decide to pay, trade the payment for them deleting it from your credit report. A paid collections is just as bad as an unpaid one as far as your credit report goes. See #3. Get it in writing.
5. Assuming you did #1, sue for any breach.
 
Originally posted by: Drako
"Pay your bills" should be number 1

I was harassed by collectors over a debt that was not mine. I was sued and won in court. But it took an act of congress to get the some stop bugging me in the meantime.
 
I got sent to collections for a charge that was made on a cancelled credit card. I have documents from the bank and the original creditor proving that the card was cancelled before the charges were made. The original creditor send me something to sign disputing the charges, but retarded me forgot about it. What are the chances that they collect on me? I'm thinking zero.
 
Good thing I'm Asian, we usually don't spend beyond our means and live paycheck to paycheck like white people, who are often "victims" of collections agencies due to mistaken identity.
 
even though the best way to avoid debt collectors is to not have debt accumulated and unpaid, that doesn't excuse abusive and blatantly illegal/unethical behavior, nor does it protect you against getting contacted for debt that is NOT yours. I was lucky that I only got a phone call asking about someone's debt and wasn't tagged as related to the person the collection agency was seeking.
 
Originally posted by: Xanis
I got sent to collections for a charge that was made on a cancelled credit card. I have documents from the bank and the original creditor proving that the card was cancelled before the charges were made. The original creditor send me something to sign disputing the charges, but retarded me forgot about it. What are the chances that they collect on me? I'm thinking zero.

was this recent? if you got paperwork that you owe, youre gonna hear about it at some point, at the very least itll ding your credit.
 
Under the Federal Debt Collection Practices Act, a debt collector MUST cease live contact if you put it in writing that you will not be paying a debt (for whatever reason) even if it's a valid debt.
 
Originally posted by: Baked
Good thing I'm Asian, we usually don't spend beyond our means and live paycheck to paycheck like white people, who are often "victims" of collections agencies due to mistaken identity.

...facepalm?
 
Originally posted by: Corporate Thug
Under the Federal Debt Collection Practices Act, a debt collector MUST cease live contact if you put it in writing that you will not be paying a debt (for whatever reason) even if it's a valid debt.

right. its good to remember that this doesnt mean that you dont have to deal with the debt properly, it just means you cant be called about it. it can still ding your credit and you can be sued for it if you ignore it.
 
These rules are good for some of the underhanded debt collectors out there, that flaunt the rules, and will harass and threaten, rather than cajole and work with the debtors. Yes, you should just pay your bills and never get into that situation, but with the economy in the dumps, and people getting laid off left & right in the past year, there's some very well meaning people that found themselves in a situation they never imagined they'd be in.

Me, I'm just glad I spent the past 4 years paying DOWN debt, instead of racking it up like so many other people did during that time!
 
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