is this my fault?
Date: Fri, 03/23/2007 - 18:35
I would blame your grammar school English teacher.
I would blame your grammar school English teacher.
but anyway can i please get an intelligent answer please!!!!!!!!
but anyway can i please get an intelligent answer please!!!!!!!!!
If I was in your shoes I would send a dispute letter to the CA a
If I was in your shoes I would send a dispute letter to the CA and the original credit card company. Then I would put in a dispute with the credit reporting agencies. I would also call the credit card company and tell them what happened and ask them what happened on their end and ask why they never cancelled your card.
There are more people in here that can answer this better so please check back for more answers.
My answer is just what "I" would do. I might even call a lawyer and ask their opinion on what to do about the situation. Most give advise free over the phone.
The problem ends up being, how do you prove that you cancelled i
The problem ends up being, how do you prove that you cancelled it? If you did it over the phone and got no written confirmation, it would be hard to prove that you cancelled it.
I had a similar situation when dealing with Sears ... I paid my Sears card in full back in 2002, then moved and never changed my address with them. Ends up that my payment got there a couple days late, so they charged a late fee. Since I now had a balance, they kept charging a late fee and interest every month after that. 3 years down the road, that one late fee turned into a $246 balance.
I ultimately disputed it, showed them copies of my cancelled check showing the full payoff, and the wiped my slate clean.
yes i cancelled the account over the phone and never got a writt
yes i cancelled the account over the phone and never got a written confirmation but i feel when the operator says that the call will be monitored then they should have the proof their self. but i thank all of you for your advice and puddlejmpr i'm gonna ask a lawyer and see what they say.
It all maks sense to us. But who's going to use their own data
It all maks sense to us. But who's going to use their own data as evidence against themselves? You would need to subpoeana them for the recordings, and even then they would probably come back and say they only keep their recordings for 3 months or so.
Your best bet is probably just keep disputing it and request verification of the account balance. Send all your correspondence certified, return receipt requested.
Just an FYI, "call may be monitored" does not mean recorded. If
Just an FYI, "call may be monitored" does not mean recorded. If they gave you this disclosure over the phone, a trainer/manager MAY have been listening to the call. The odds are low, that even this happened, assuming a group of 6-15 collectors per manager. It is simply not possible to listen in to 10 conversations at once.
blinkberry you have a very good english.i have a terrible engli
blinkberry you have a very good english.i have a
terrible english and many people read my posts in this forum.debt consolidation care members never discriminate my english or my person because they are guardian angels that only want help people that really need help in this forum.i love your posts and i'm your fan already.
thanks everyone for all your help it's good to know that there a
thanks everyone for all your help it's good to know that there are still people in this world that you can count on.
I would contact the original company and try to settle it with t
I would contact the original company and try to settle it with them. Explain that you were a good customer while you were with them and that the card should have been marked paid in full with account closed. You may be surprised and they may work with you on this.
thanks that sounds like a good idea i will try that. thanks fedu
thanks that sounds like a good idea i will try that. thanks fedupinpa......
