Debt Collection Practices

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Prohibited Debt Collection Practices

Author: Greg Artim

As we all know, the country is in the midst of an economic crisis. Delinquencies on credit card accounts are at an all time high. Many of these delinquent accounts are being sold to unsavory debt collection agencies who have purchased the debt for pennies on the dollar, who then attempt to collect the monies from you. There is a federal law that governs debt collection in this country, and it is called the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA). The Act sets forth some criteria, guidelines and policies that must be followed by debt collectors. The following are some examples of prohibited debt collection practices as set forth in the FDCPA:

Harassment. Debt collectors may not harass or abuse any person in the attempted collection of a debt. For example, debt collectors may not:

- call you at unreasonable times. This means that all calls should take place between 8 a.m. and 9 p.m., unless you give them authority to call at other times.

- call you an unreasonable number of times. I have had clients tell me that they received upwards of 40 phone calls in one week from a debt collector. Clearly, that is meant as harassment.

- falsely imply that they are attorneys or government representatives. In some states, like in Pennsylvania where I practice law, it is actually a crime to misrepresent oneself as an attorney.

- falsely imply that you have committed a crime. In most instances, the non-payment of a credit card account is not a crime.

In addition, Debt Collectors also may not state that:

- you will be arrested if you do not pay your debt; I am not aware of any law in the land that allows for an arrest where the individual has failed to pay a credit card invoice.

- they will seize, garnish, attach, or sell your property or wages, unless the collection agency or credit intends to do so, and it is legal to do so (garnishment of wages is currently prohibited in four states, my home state of Pennsylvania included, for the collection of most debts):

Debt Collectors may not:

- give false credit information about you to anyone;
- send you anything that looks like an official document from a court or government agency when it is not;
- use a false name.

Debt Collectors also are prohibited from engaging in Unfair practices. Debt Collectors may not engage in unfair practices in attempting to collect a debt. For example, collectors may not:

- collect any amount greater than your debt, unless allowed by law;- deposit a post-dated check prematurely;
- make you accept collect calls or pay for telegrams;
- take or threaten to take your property unless this can be done legally;
- contact you by postcard.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/law-articles/prohibited-debt-collection-practices-677042.html

About the Author

Greg Artim is a Consumer Attorney based in Pittsburgh, PA. He handles Credit Card and Collection Agency Defense matters in all of Pennsylvania. For more answers to your Fair Debt Collections Practices Act questions, please visit his website at Fair Debt Collection Practices Act .


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Many consumers have their legal rights violated by collectors without even knowing it.  The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act is designed to stop harassing, unfair, and abusive debt collection practices.

Knowing the important details of this act will help you stand up against abusive collection practices and stop collection companies from violating your rights.

There are many requirements debt collectors must abide by per the FDCPA. 

Debt collectors are not allowed to tell others details about the consumer including that they owe a debt, they cannot communicate with anyone other than the consumer more than once, not communicate through post card or have ANY markings on the outside of their envelope indicating they might be a debt collector.

Basically, collection companies cannot use the fact that they are a debt collector to bully you into paying. 

They cannot identify themselves as a debt collector to your employer, and they cannot send things in the mail to identity they are a debt collector with the intent of embarrassing or causing other hardship to you. 

Debt collectors are also not allowed to call a consumer at an unusual time or place. This includes before 8 a.m. and after 9 p.m.  A debt collector cannot contact a consumer at their place of employment if they have reason to believe this is prohibited by the employer.

They are also required to immediately cease and desist contact with you if you are represented by and attorney, or if you notify them to do so in writing or notify them that you refuse to pay the debt.

There are many restrictions of abusive and harassing practices in the FDCPA also.  Debt collectors are prohibited from using the threat of violence or other criminal means to cause harm to the consumer.

The use of obscene language is prohibited along with the publication of information that the consumer allegedly owes the debt.

Debt collectors cannot cause a consumer’s phone to ring repetitively with the intent to annoy or harass any person.  And they have to clearly identify themselves on every phone call.

False and misleading representations are also prohibited per the FDCPA.  These include the debt collector identifying themselves as an affiliate of the United States government, miss-representing the legal status of a debt, or that they are an attorney if they are not.

Your debt collectors cannot falsely represent that the nonpayment could result in the arrest or imprisonment of the consumer or the seizure of their property or garnishment of their wages unless such action is lawful and the debt collector intends on taking that action. 

Debt collectors are not allowed to communicate to any person credit information which is known to be untrue or in dispute.  They also cannot falsely issue you documentation representing itself as coming from the courts.

They also are prohibited from using any false representation or deceptive means to collect a debt.  They must identify themselves to the consumer as a debt collector and that the nature of the call is for that purpose.

Debt collectors are NOT directly affiliated with the credit reporting agencies, and they cannot claim that they are per the FDCPA.

They cannot accept post dated checks of more than 5 days, or attempt to collect more than what is owed due to the original contract. 

They must also send a statement to each consumer within 5 days of contacting the consumer.  This letter must contain many things including the amount of the debt, creditor’s name, and many disclosures specific to FTC language.

 Any violations within this act can be costly to the debt collector, especially in the civil and class action aspects. 

To learn more about consumer credit laws and how they can help you challenge your creditors and win visit www.PerfectCreditFast.com

Resources-         Federal Trade Commission, http://www.ftc.gov

Ty Crandall is an international authoritative expert on credit scoring and credit law. He has spent over 12 years in the financial and credit arenas helping clients rebuild their credit profiles and qualify for financing.

Ty is currently the CEO of Elite Credit Incorporated. At Elite he has designed dispute techniques that have revolutionized the credit repair industry.

Ty?s extensive knowledge of finance and credit law gives him and his team an unique ability to design and implement custom tailored dispute strategies resulting in fast loan approval.

This is why Elite Credit Inc. is known as the industry leader in credit restoration resulting in loan approval. Many of the largest banks, auto dealers, and mortgage companies nationwide are exclusive Elite Credit partners.

For more information on credit scoring and the protection of consumer credit rights please visit www.PerfectCreditFast.com.

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“It is the purpose of this title to require that consumer reporting agencies adopt reasonable procedures for meeting the needs of commerce for consumer credit, personnel, insurance, and other information in a manner which is fair and equitable to the consumer, with regard to the confidentiality, accuracy, relevancy, and proper utilization of such information in accordance with the requirements of this title.”

In the words of the U.S. Congress, the previous paragraph is the purpose of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). In short, the Fair Credit Reporting Act is designed to help protect consumers against unfair practices within the credit reporting system.

While the mission of the FCRA was a noble one, a quick look around today’s credit society shows the results have fallen well short of expectations. What follows is how the FCRA has failed to produce a fair credit system for today’s consumers.

Detailing the Failures of the Credit Reporting System

1) Accuracy – It is well documented that credit reports contain errors but it bears repeating. Recent studies show that almost 80% of all credit reports contain factual errors such as duplicate listings, incorrect dates, tradelines placed on the wrong person’s credit reports, and omitted positive credit accounts.

These studies also indicate that 25% of credit reports containing errors significant enough to result in a credit denial.

How fair is a credit system that can cause a person to get declined for a loan or force them to pay higher interest rates than are necessary based on their actual credit risk? True, you have the right to dispute these inaccurate items with the credit bureaus, but this chore is not necessarily easy or foolproof. Depending on the nature of the erroneous items on your credit reports, credit repair can be a frustrating and time consuming ordeal that you are forced into because of no fault of your own.

2) Relevancy – While they do not say it directly, the credit bureaus’ creation of the VantageScore is evidence enough that the current FICO based credit scoring models are not as relevant as they could be. According to Experian spokesman Donald Girard, the VantageScore is “the most sophisticated, highly predictive scoring model that’s available in the marketplace” and as a consequence the much more popular FICO score is less predictive.

One of the flaws in the FICO score that the VantageScore tried to fix is the impact that very old credit accounts have on the credit score. According to Dr. Bonnie Guiton Hill, advisor to President Bush on consumer affairs, “it is our understanding that computer models that predict credit worthiness find most information that is more than two years old nonessential.” This is why newly created scoring models like the VantageScore are beginning to ignore credit information that is over three years old. It does not serve to accurately determine your credit risk.

So why have lenders been so slow to adopt scoring models such as the VantageScore? They claim it is because FICO is ingrained in the current credit system and has stood the test of time. A more cynical answer is that these lenders are not willing to sacrifice the huge profits they make from charging higher interest rates on loans granted to people who are a relatively low credit risk.

Of course, this cynicism is not simply the result of a general and unfounded grudge. It is born from the observation that seemingly every quirk and inconsistency in the credit reporting system falls in favor of the lenders. For example, when looked at logically, it makes sense to close unused credit cards. Not too long ago, financial experts suggested people do exactly this to make your credit score look better by showing your lack of need for unsecured credit.

But now we know that closing those accounts can actually lower your credit score because FICO rewards you for having multiple accounts and a large amount of credit at your disposal. So while closing accounts seems to be the financially responsible thing to so, it is probably more than an odd coincidence that this behavior which makes you a less profitable consumer for banks and credit card companies it punished by FICO.

The same goes for paying off installment loans early and voluntarily lowering credit limits. Both of these actions seem inline with what we would expect from the ideal consumer, but neither will have a positive impact on your credit score. Early payment of installment loans, another common goal of a financially responsible consumer that diminishes the profits of lenders, is not noted on your credit reports. And contrary to what you would think, lowering credit limits would lower your credit score because as alluded to above, you are rewarded for having multiple credit accounts and lots of credit at your disposal.

But by another quirk of the FICO credit scoring model, you are rewarded for having multiple credit accounts, but you are punished for seeking new credit. Consumers are told that inquiries are added to your credit reports each time you apply for credit so other lenders can see that you may be overextending yourself or crashing. But isn’t it convenient that inquiries will lower your credit score at the exact time when you are looking to qualify for new lines of credit? FICO wants you to have multiple lines of credit, but in trying to appease the scoring model, you will temporarily lower your credit score allowing lenders to charge you higher interest rates.

It seems no matter what you do, the deck is stacked against the consumer.

So while the VantageScore is a step in the right direction, it is still a long way from producing truly relevant results. This is because the VantageScore maintains many of the same scoring quirks exhibited by FICO and still uses the same basic, and very limited, variables for determining your credit score such as payment history, amounts owed, and length of credit history.

Your credit score is found by taking these variables as recorded in your credit reports, plugging them into a predictive model, and calculating a single three digit number. A late payment for example will be entered into the formula and will lower your credit score a set amount based on the amount of time it was late and how long ago the late payment was reported.

The fundamental flaw in this model, however, is that there is no accounting for why the payment was late. Whether you were late in making a payments because the lender did not send you a bill, because the bills were sent to the wrong address, because you wrote the wrong amount on the check, because your checks bounced, or because you blew all your money on illegal drugs; it is all the same in the eyes of the credit scoring model. Even if you have a sloppy lender to blame for your late payments, your credit worthiness in the eyes of lenders will be the same as a person saddled with a serious drug addiction.

3) Proper Utilization – Given how common it is for a credit score to be a gross misrepresentation of a person’s credit worthiness, it could be argued that the pervasiveness of credit scores in the financial market is improper. But in today’s society, the use of credit scores goes well beyond determining loan amounts and interest rates.

Employers, landlords, insurance companies and others may request to see your credit score. In today’s society your ability to get a certain job, rent an apartment, or qualify for reasonable insurance premium can all be dependent on your credit score.

Improper is a subjective term, but being passed over for a job because of completely irrelevant and possibly inaccurate negative credit items in your credit reports that are plugged into a flawed credit scoring model to produce a credit score that is not indicative of your actual credit worthiness fits the bill.

The FCRA Made Improvements, but there is Still a Long Way to Go

The FCRA’s failure to produce a system where the “accuracy, relevancy, and proper utilization” of your information is protected has resulted in a credit reporting system that is hardly “fair and equitable” to you as a consumer. But in defense of Congress, the FCRA has been heavily influenced by deep-pocketed industry lobbyists. In fact, when the FCRA was originally passed in 1971, Senator William Proxmire, one of the bills primary sponsors, felt defeated at what had become of his original intentions for the bill.

Since that time, the FCRA has been amended to become more and more consumer friendly, but there is still a ways to go and as was the case in 1971, those in the credit industry are still keenly interested in maintaining the status quo.

While the credit bureaus are no longer able to record information about you such as your ethnicity and religion, they also are not required to collect other personal information that is relevant to your credit worthiness. If you are a model citizen who has worked with the same company for 10 years, has a perfect criminal record and makes more than enough money to cover your expenses, it is fairly obvious that you are more worthy of credit than a career criminal who is a continual burden on the system. But none of this information is recorded by the credit bureaus or used when calculating your credit score. If you and the career criminal have the same types of accounts on your credit reports, your credit scores will be the same.

Also, while you now have the ability to see what information is contained within your credit reports, you do not have the ability to learn any more than the very basics of how this information is used to formulate your credit score. What impact will paying off a past due debt have on your credit? Which credit cards should be paid down first? What effect will shopping for a new loan have on your credit score? We have vague, observation based answers for these questions, but the exact formula is unknown and is subject to change at any time.

Finally, you have the right to dispute the questionable items in your credit reports, but you don’t have the right for this process to be easy or necessarily effective. Depending on your unique situation, credit repair can be as easy as submitting an online form or as difficult as tracking down creditors, fighting with collections agencies, and possibly involving legal intervention. The very entities who profit most from inaccurate credit reporting are the ones who played such a big role in watering down the FCRA and continue to resist consumer attempts to add equity to the credit system. It is these entities you are forced to contend with when working to enforce your right to a fair and accurate credit report.

The credit system is unfairly punishing millions of Americans but fortunately you have the right to work towards a fair and accurate credit score. Whether practicing credit repair on your own or with the help of a credit repair expert like Lexington Law, you start the process of taking control of your credit immediately.

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Fair debt collection agency

 Are Creditors Harassing You? Here is how you encumbrance make them stop

It's been happening every night, just as you and your local are sitting down to tailgating.Visit Here http://gov-debt-grantbenefit.blogspot.com

 It's larger harassing define from a creditor - you don't even understand to close with up the phone to comprehend. The caller ID tells you the unimpaired story. It's a number from some other part of the sovereignty that you don't consent. It's irritating, it's stressful and you wish it would appropriate stop.Don't you wish the harassment would stop? It's embarrassing further stressful. Isn't there thing you can do to make it stop? What are your rights here? Can they in fact detail you at work?

There are a encompass of things you rap do to stop creditor harassment. through soon as you compass the first harassing call, send the creditor a "Do Not Call" missive portray them how to existence you about the incurred debt. Send the letter via certified mail so have documentation that the letter was received by the intended party.Call the company that you owe the debt to through soon as you know you bequeath not correspond to useful to trigger your remuneration on time. Explain your occasion to them and ask if you can make a payment result that is mutually agreeable. This will show the creditor that you are sincere about wealthy your debts and you want to scene something out.

Keep a notebook next to your phone and log every time a creditor calls. tag the talk also time of the call, the debt consequence question, the callers present and the creditor they delineate. If real is legal consequence your state, record your conversations smuggle the creditor. If you don't record the call, tell them you are. This may "scare" them into changing their personality also may stop future calls.There are some things a creditor plainly cannot get done wandering being in mugging of federal law. Creditors cannot call before 8 am or adjoining 9 pm. They cannot bother you at work. They care only call you one point close you send a "do not call" letter to inform you that they leave no longer specify you.

They cannot threaten you with action they cannot take extraneous nor importance they threaten your descendants. They cannot use drive usage. Creditors cannot talk to an uninvolved party about your debt such as your neighbor, employer or relative. They can, however, talk to your spouse, attorney or a co-signer. Creditors cannot capture or garnish your wages without a court order. They cannot send you to jail nor threaten to do so.

There are only three things a creditor can do legally. 1.) They can eliminate doing vim eclipse you. 2.) They can report your oversight to legal tender to a credit reporting agency. 3.) They can sue you to accrue the debt. evident is doubtful, however, that they will actually sue you because it is not repeatedly worth the legal costs they consign incur to collect what you owe them. If you have collateral on the debt, indubitable obligatoriness be confiscated if you live with to long green your debt. You don't have to be a victim of creditor harassment. You, because a citizen and through a human being, presuppose rights. If you feel that you are being unjustly harassed or verbally bullied by a creditor, masterly are actions you can carry to stop the embarrassment, mental stress and scare tactics of creditor harassment. You deserve respect considering a human being also shouldn't personify treated like a criminal just because you are a little behind ascendancy a bill that you perfectly intend to pay.

You don't have to let them harass and bully you. You have rights by federal and chronicle laws. You can stop the harassment if you are over harassed by a creditor. Don't lease them treat you like a illegitimate or as someone unworthy of fondness relevant as of a debt which you desire to pay.Visit Here http://gov-debt-grantbenefit.blogspot.com

I am a Freelancer Writer since 5 years.

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What Is The Fair Credit Reporting Act?

The Fair Credit Reporting Act 15 USC 1681 (1992) and (1996) is an American federal law that regulates the collection dissemination and use consumer credit information along with the Fair Debt Collection Act. This forms the base of consumer credit rights in the U.S. This act also sets up guidelines for debt collectors on how to conduct business rights of consumers involved with debt collectors.

These acts protect those in debt from being harassed from creditors and to allow debtors to receive true and fair discharged debt information on a credit report. These acts are set in place so that debtors are fairly treated when paying debts, dealing with debt collectors or trying to purchase homes after bankruptcy.

You can find details on these protection acts online or at your local library. Knowing and understanding these acts can help you to protect yourself from creditors or other agencies taking advantage of your vulnerabilities. The consumer reporting agencies set forth reasonable procedures for meeting the needs of commerce for consumer credit, personnel, insurance, and other information in a way which is fair and equitable to the consumer, in a way that offers confidentiality, accuracy, relevancy, and proper utilization of such information in accordance with the requirements of this act.

After a person files bankruptcy and debts are then discharged, a credit report can still show the bankruptcy but the debts that are discharged must show a balance owed at zero due to the FCRA or Fair Credit Reporting Act.

The banking system is dependent upon fair and accurate credit reporting. Without American federal laws such as the FCRA or the Fair Credit Reporting Act debtors and creditors could not be protected from fraud and dishonesty. This act regulates the collection dissemination and use of consumer credit information. Along with the Fair Debt Collection Act, it forms the base for consumer credit rights in the United States.

Without such a law in place creditors could easily turn people away and decline every loan type. Also creditors could abuse client information without this act. If a person has filed bankruptcy and later try's to purchase a home, without the FCRA a client could easily be rejected for the home loan due to the bankruptcy debts being seen as still owed even if they were discharged. The Fair Credit Reporting Act makes credit reports show discharged debts as a zero balance.

This act has guidelines for debt collectors on how to conduct business and defines rights for consumers involved with debt collectors and prescribes penalties for violations of this act. Consumer protection is key to this law. There are other laws such as the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention Consumer Protection Act of 2005 that aid in consumer protection. There is a solid protection in place for those dealing with debt, credit and bankruptcy. You can see more details about the FCRA on sites such as http://www.epic.org/privacy/financial/fcra.html or by searching for this information at your local library. Understanding this act can aid us in feeling more confident about the credit and banking system.

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