Do I send a letter to Leading Edge Recovery to stop their harassment?

Post New Thread
Unregistered
Anonymous
Posts: n/a
Credits: 50,414


Sub: #17
Replied on 08-30-2010, 01:11 PM
Reply With Quote

Quote:
Originally Posted by Anonymous View Post
Hello Everybody,
I have been repeatedly called by Leading Edge Recovery Solutions at home after 9pm and at work. My boss and I have told them not call call me at work. I did receive a letter from them and am sending the following response. Please let me know if I'm setting the wrong tone. I don't know about the debt but would pay if it is real but want to set a definitive tone with them as to how they should treat and contact me. The letter is as follows:
so is this a good tack of a bad idea? Any thoughts are appreciated.

After what I went through and working where I do I've always recorded my phone calls with these people who do not give out such information. I've already filed a complaint with the FTC, and contacted a lawyer this morning. Your letter is fine just don't send them a letter that you can't back up. Have that lawyer, and always like my lawyer said record and documents everything!




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may post new threads
You may post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump



All times are GMT -8. The time now is 06:08 AM.






* Disclosures:
  • By signing up for counseling session, your provided details (Name, Email ID and Phone No.) will be forwarded to the company advertising on the DebtCC. However, you have no obligation to use their services.
  • Some creditors and collection agencies refuse to lower the pay off amount, interest rate, and fees owed by the consumer.
  • Creditors/collection agencies can make collection calls and file lawsuits against the consumers represented by the debt relief companies.
  • Debt relief services may have a negative impact on the consumer's creditworthiness and his overall debt amount may increase due to the accumulation of extra fees.
  • The amount which the consumer saves with the use of debt relief services can be regarded as taxable income.
Page loaded in 0.074 seconds.