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6 Ways to Fend Off Debt Collectors

Whether or not you owe money, the law protects you from abusive practices.

By Jane Bennett Clark, Senior Associate Editor

From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, September 2009
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You owe money, and a debt collector is calling you night and day. Or maybe you don't owe money, and a debt collector is calling you night and day. Collectors are applying the thumbscrews -- often illegally -- as recent complaints to the Federal Trade Commission bear out.

But the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act protects you from abusive and annoying practices on the part of third-party collection agencies -- companies that buy debts from creditors and attempt to collect on them -- and collection attorneys. The law does not cover collection attempts made by creditors (but some state laws do). Virtually every state prohibits serious harassment no matter who does the collecting. (To learn the law in your state, visit www.privacyrights.org.)

Here are six steps to take when a collection agency hassles you.

1. Get the facts. In its first letter, the collection agency must provide you with the name of the creditor, the amount of the initial debt, a breakdown of penalties and interest, and an explanation of your rights. If the collection agency calls rather than writes, get the details on the phone and remind the caller that you are entitled to the written information within five days.

Ask for an address and a phone number so you can follow up if necessary, and start a file that includes a record of every call and a copy of every document involved in the claim.

2. Set the record straight. If you don't recognize the debt, or know you're being dunned in error, write a letter disputing the claim to both the collection agency and the creditor. Include details, dates and copies of any supporting paperwork, and send the letters by certified mail, with a request for a receipt, within 30 days of the first written notice. The burden is on the agency to make its case -- say, by providing a copy of the creditor's judgment. If it doesn't, you're in the clear, for now. Agencies sometimes sell their accounts to other collectors. Be prepared to fight the claim all over again.

3. Hang up on harassment. Collection agencies are prohibited from calling you between 9:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m. and from using abusive or threatening language. If you don't want to be called or contacted at all, write to the agency and say so. It must abide by your terms, although it can send one more notice telling you how it will proceed. If your lawyer writes the letter, the agency must communicate only with him or her.

4. Agree on a plan. If the debt is yours, work with the agency to come up with a realistic plan for paying it back. "Don't promise something you cannot do," says Robert Markoff, of the National Association of Retail Collection Attorneys. Debt collectors would rather adjust the terms of repayment than face future defaults, he says. "They want payments that come in like clockwork, so they can move on to the next case." Fail to come to terms and you could end up in court; lose there and the agency wins the right to put a lien on your property (certain property is exempt) or have your wages garnished.

5. Tell the authorities. Still have a problem? Complain to the Federal Trade Commission (www.ftc.gov), which enforces the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. Your complaint, added to others, can help it identify and pursue the most egregious bad guys, although it probably won't help get your case resolved. Also contact your state attorney general's office. Depending on state law, that office may be willing and able to pursue your case.

6. Sue the bums. You can sue a collection agency that flouts the federal law and collect statutory damages of up to $1,000, plus real damages and attorney's fees. Many lawyers will take your case on a contingency basis or charge a fee of, say, $25 to $100, says Robert Hobbs, of the National Consumer Law Center. Some will also represent you in serious cases involving collectors who are not covered by the federal law. To find a lawyer in your area, go to www.naca.net.

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Reader Comments (11)

Posted by: JD at 08/24/2009 12:11:03 PM

Way #7: Pay your debts.

Posted by: Jimmy37 at 08/26/2009 11:24:18 AM

Way #8: Stop living on revolving credit. Forget the "Buy now, pay later" line. How about "Save now, buy later"?

Posted by: C. Hyter at 08/26/2009 08:30:22 PM

Both of you have great points but the article is for those who feel like the collection agency is being a little pushy.

Posted by: Jack1973 at 08/27/2009 11:10:32 AM

Way #9, stop playing the game altogether...Jimmy37...thinks all poor people are simply running up credit cards and tapping their lines of credit equity. I'm sure they would "Save now" if they weren't living off most of their principle take home pay...guess what...if they didn't buy now, the lower tiered consumer goods that they can afford, the stuff that you could afford would go up in price double, even triple. Stop living on revolving credit? Isn't that what the entire banking system and most of the stores in Brooklyn, NY and similar do... using other people's money, making interest on it, and paying it later? How about Way #10 - Start teaching kids SOUND MATH AND ECONOMICS IN HIGH SCHOOL AND STOP OFFERING THEM CREDIT CARDS IN COLLEGE AND A LINE OF CREDIT THAT EXCEEDS THE FACT THAT MOST OF THEM DON'T HOLD A JOB. Way #11 - Everyone stop spending, buy second hand and start bartering again. Refuse to pay ponzi scheme taxes which is as bad as paying tribute to a King or Queen or worse (an organize group of crooks called the FED) and who have been around in some form since the beginning of time...

Posted by: Big M at 08/27/2009 11:52:46 AM

Here's another way to deal with them. Change your phone number and pay to have it unlisted, and get a PO box without divulging your old address. Only give the address to people who you want to receive mail from...They aren't going to go out of their way to find you if they don't have an address or a phone number.

Posted by: J.M. Pece at 08/27/2009 11:54:33 AM

Pay your debts? Who are you, a debt collector? Many of us have lost our jobs, our homes, etc. There IS no money to pay "the debts". Haven't you heard.. the economy crashed and burned!

Posted by: Mark at 08/27/2009 12:27:36 PM

Some clarification is needed. The collection agency must provide verification of the alleged debt within 30 days of a request to do so. It it does not, then it is in violation of the FDCPA. Each violation of the FDCPA is subject to a $1000 fine. If a collection agency violates the act 10 times, it is subject to a $10000.00 fine.

Posted by: Mike at 08/27/2009 01:32:54 PM

Very simply, check to see if the account has been charged off by the original creditor. If it has, they have collected insurance against that account and if a collection agency buys that debt, too bad for them. You never had a contract with them and are under no obligation to pay them. It is securities fraud to collect insurance on these accounts and then try to collect on them after the fact. THat is the first place to start.

Posted by: GordonFreeman at 08/27/2009 05:37:32 PM

Some of the people end up having debt due to no fault on their part, but for most of us it's a different story. The debt collectors are not responsible for your financial situation. Pay what you owe. No job? No problem! Sell the crap you bought that you shouldn't have in the first place!

Posted by: Shane at 08/27/2009 05:50:07 PM

They are lending you money that they don't have. The money is created magically as a bookkeeping entry. You sign the agreement, and 'poof', they now have a credit on their books -- your promise to pay. It's a scam, and there is no 'consideration' (legal term). Check out the 1969 court case of Jerome Daly.

Posted by: J. Campbell at 08/29/2009 07:03:08 PM

My question is 'where do you draw the line between rude and abusive'? I was working as a subcontractor a few years ago and for a short time had no medical insurance when I was hit with a life threatening illness. I have been working on paying these debts off for about four years now. I am happy to say that the end is finally in sight. While most collectors have been willing to work with my husband and I on payment plans, a collector for one company was insistent that the multi-thousand dollar ER/ICU bill be paid right away in a lump sum. He then commented that 'perhaps your wife shouldn't seek out medical care that she can't pay for.'



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