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Dispute with the collection agency

Date: Tue, 05/30/2006 - 17:31

Submitted by anonymous
on Tue, 05/30/2006 - 17:31

Posts: 202330 Credits: [Donate]

Total Replies: 11


I just received a phone call from an Attorney's office, that was ratained to collect a debt owed by me to CACH,LLC. He told me they sent a letter, which as I was talking to him I went out and checked my mailbox and there it was. I explained to him I just received it and was reading it at that very moment, I proceeded to tell him that that I could take care of the debt on June 9, " ten days from now" That wasn't acceptable to him. I said according to the letter, which I just received, I have 30 days to dispute it. I told him I don't want to dispute it but doesn't that mean that I ""should" also have 30 days to pay it? He said, NO! in a firm voice, that means... bla, bla, bla..... Is that true! If they give me 30 days to dispute, I should get 30 days to pay? I just received the letter today. He's giving me 2 days to come up with the full amount, if not, he's going after our assets :cry:


Unfortunately, that's true under the federal laws. You have 30 days to dispute an incorrect debt. There are no specific laws that bound the repayment timeframe. I believe the company is forcing you to make the payment at the earliest.

I will like to send a partial payment through money gram or western union so that there is a proof of the payment effort. The company will not intend to take actions against you. If they cash the payment, the deal is struck. The receipt will prove that you were willing to take care of the matter, in case they don't accept your proposal.


lrhall41

Submitted by Gretchin on Tue, 05/30/2006 - 17:56

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Thank You Gretchin for responding so quickly. Also I'm glad I found this site, It's good to know that I'm not alone.

Thank You
Dee


lrhall41

Submitted by on Wed, 05/31/2006 - 01:02

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I agree with Gretchin. If you send a partial payment you can afford, it shows you are in good faith and intends to take care of the debt. Make sure you keep records/copies of all payments you sent in case you get a summons to the court. Usually, if you show the court you attempted to make good on the debts by sending payments when you could, the judge will rule in your favor. So keep good records! :)


lrhall41

Submitted by sapphiredreams on Wed, 05/31/2006 - 05:52

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Then there's no way other than your credit report for you to know of the debt and then pay it or dispute it. But they can't go far until the debt has been validted and you've recived written notification.

Edit: I recently read something that contradicts what I just said.

All they have to do is convince a judge that they 'attempted' to contact you.


lrhall41

Submitted by phonguy on Thu, 06/01/2006 - 10:32

( Posts: 42 | Credits: )


Yeah, from my experience with COLLECTCORP, they dont have to validate a debt, or notify the person that they owe them money or even have an accual account. All they have to do is find a SSN and start destroying credit files untill the person catches on that COLLECTCORP is trying to screw them out of money they never owed from a company that they have never heard of! I wonder how much money they make per year making up fake accounts and screwing people till they pay so they can have their credit back. I was almost tempted to pay the pigs their fraud bill because I needed my credit back to get my school loans that were being denied because they lied to the credit bureau.


lrhall41

Submitted by on Thu, 06/01/2006 - 14:51

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Once you find out however, you can request validation of each debt, and also dispute it with each credit agency who will do their own investigation. If the company can't provide satisfactory information on the debt to the credit agencies, then the CRA's will all remove it from their report. It takes a while, but it costs less than paying them something you never owed.


lrhall41

Submitted by phonguy on Thu, 07/06/2006 - 11:17

( Posts: 42 | Credits: )


Read this thread about Collectcorp putting inquiry in another person's credit and trying to hurt it. Dispute the item with the company as well as the bureau reporting it. Remember, incorrect collection inquiries must not stay in your file as they are hurting your credit scores severely.

http://forums.debtcc.com/settlement/unauthorized-inquiry.html


lrhall41

Submitted by Justme on Mon, 07/17/2006 - 08:49

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No, the collection agencies cannot hit unauthorized inquiries in anyone's credit. I am quite sure that the inquiry done in your file is disputed and violation of the fdcpa. You need to take advice of an attorney dealing in the lawsuits of FDCPA and FCRA violations and file a legal case against Collectcorp.


lrhall41

Submitted by Justme on Mon, 07/17/2006 - 12:09

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