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Can I sue the collection agency?

Date: Mon, 10/19/2009 - 01:27

Submitted by anonymous
on Mon, 10/19/2009 - 01:27

Posts: 202330 Credits: [Donate]

Total Replies: 9


I received a letter from LTD Acqusitions dated Oct 12th, 2009 informing me that they purchased an old defaulted credit card account from Chase and that I have 30 days to dispute it. I called Chase and they told me they sold the account to LTD on March/2009.

So I pulled my credit report today and was shocked to see that LTD has been reporting this account on my credit reports since March 2009. Can they report a debt to the credit bureaus before they even contact me about it?

Do I have grounds to sue LTD? If so, what law did they violate?


Quote:

Originally Posted by Anonymous
I received a letter from LTD Acqusitions dated Oct 12th, 2009 informing me that they purchased an old defaulted credit card account from Chase and that I have 30 days to dispute it. I called Chase and they told me they sold the account to LTD on March/2009.
So I pulled my credit report today and was shocked to see that LTD has been reporting this account on my credit reports since March 2009. Can they report a debt to the credit bureaus before they even contact me about it?
Do I have grounds to sue LTD? If so, what law did they violate?

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YOU HAVE THE LEGAL RIGHT to Verify your debt.
Send the collector a "Cease and Desist" along with a Validation request as allowed by the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act as well as the Fair Credit Reporting Act. You can ask them for a number of things. 1: Proof that you are required to pay them, copy of signed agreement that you owe them debt. Proof they are allowed to collect debt in your State. Ask for all records of payments to prove the balance they are asking for is correct. ALL receipts that you signed. You have 30 days to Dispute your debt and ask for verification. If they cant verify you may be able to have the debt deleted if any info in inaccurate or incomplete. Make sure and send copies to your credit reporting agencies. Oh, make sure and add that while they are getting this info for you and untill it is validated they can not report you to any cra and must now report this debt as disputed. Not intended as legal advice.

Good luck!!


lrhall41

Submitted by Joanna jensen on Mon, 10/19/2009 - 11:00

( Posts: 12 | Credits: )


my situation is this: In July my daughter got a dunning letter from Green & Cooper attorneys representing Asset Acceptance on an account they claim she had. They were saying the balance was a little over 700.00. The letter was dated 7/15 and we sent them a debt validation which they signed for on 8/13 which is 29 days from the day they made their letter even though the envelop is postmarked 7/16. We never received anything back from them and then today she gets served with a summons. Isn't that a clear violation of the FDCA or FDCPA? Just wondering if I am right and should try and collect from them.


lrhall41

Submitted by on Mon, 10/19/2009 - 13:48

( Posts: | Credits: )


If the attorney signed for your validation and they did not send info validating the debt and they still continue to try to collect the debt they are in violation of the FDCPA. You should check your daughters credit report and see if they continued to report or filed as disputed. If you have your dispute and request for validation papers you can bring them with you to the hearing. You will most likely be known as the "least sophisticated consumer". You can also try to contact the collector again, but I would say that is a

violation that is worth more than your debt. Make sure and go to the hearing if you dont they may get a default judgment. Also, the courts do have free legal aid your daughter can call and talk to someone and use her income so you wont have to pay. I had a client that came to me two weeks ago, she had a writ of execution sent to her by the creditor sent to her in an envelope with no return address. I think they did this so she would not open the mail. So call the creditor and make sure they didnt send the info, and let them know they may be in violation.


lrhall41

Submitted by on Mon, 10/19/2009 - 19:41

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What type of debt is this? Have you checked to see if it is within the SOL for your state? As stated above do not miss the hearing or they will win by default. What you should have done is pulled a copy of your daughters CR after you sent the DV letter. If it is on her CR you should have disputed it as not my account because while it is in dispute Asset would not have been able to verify it with the CRA.

Keep all records because I think you can win this one.


lrhall41

Submitted by kfstaff24 on Tue, 10/20/2009 - 03:55

( Posts: 1448 | Credits: )


this is on a Victoria Secrets account she had. it's been almost two years since she paid anything on it. since the attorneys office didnt validate it before they filed the lawsuit what do you think would happen if we sent them a letter letting them know they violated the FDCPA and that we could sue them but instead we would take a paid settlement letter and have the suit dropped instead of them having to pay out the 1000 dollars and attorneys fees. the account amount is only a little over 700 dollars that they want anyway.


lrhall41

Submitted by on Wed, 10/21/2009 - 06:40

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Quote:

Originally Posted by Joanna jensen


YOU HAVE THE LEGAL RIGHT to Verify your debt.
Send the collector a "Cease and Desist" along with a Validation request as allowed by the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act as well as the Fair Credit Reporting Act. You can ask them for a number of things. 1: Proof that you are required to pay them, copy of signed agreement that you owe them debt. Proof they are allowed to collect debt in your State. Ask for all records of payments to prove the balance they are asking for is correct. ALL receipts that you signed. You have 30 days to Dispute your debt and ask for verification. If they cant verify you may be able to have the debt deleted if any info in inaccurate or incomplete. Make sure and send copies to your credit reporting agencies. Oh, make sure and add that while they are getting this info for you and untill it is validated they can not report you to any cra and must now report this debt as disputed. Not intended as legal advice.

Good luck!!



Quote:

Send the collector a "Cease and Desist" along with a Validation request


You can't ask them to validate but to not contact you. Kinda defeats the purpose of requesting validation.


Quote:

You can ask them for a number of things. 1: Proof that you are required to pay them, copy of signed agreement that you owe them debt. Proof they are allowed to collect debt in your State. Ask for all records of payments to prove the balance they are asking for is correct. ALL receipts that you signed.


None of that is required for validation under the FDCPA


Quote:

must now report this debt as disputed.


That was the only thing accurate in your post


lrhall41

Submitted by NASCAR_Devil on Fri, 10/23/2009 - 18:48

( Posts: 4671 | Credits: )