Posted on 08/04/2003 6:12:09 AM PDT by Brian S
Sure, you're behind on some bills, but nobody deserves to be treated like this.
Badgering phone calls and threats, insults and outright lies -- these are just a few of the unfair and illegal tactics that some debt collectors unleash on consumers. These rogue collectors don't represent the entire industry, but they are not uncommon.
"It's just threats and intimidation, but you keep it vague," says Michael Flannagan, a former debt-collection supervisor in Tacoma, Wash. "A lot of things bill collectors do are downright dirty and illegal."
Third-party collectors, agencies hired by creditors to collect unpaid bills, are some of the most abusive.
Just ask Angela M., a mother of two, in Denton, Texas. She fell behind on four credit card bills in late 2001.
"When it went to the collection agencies, it turned really personal," Angela says.
"They called me a deadbeat. They called me a criminal. I had perfect, spotless credit before this happened."
Angela's roughly $40,000 in overdue debt stems from a small business. She opened a children's boutique in 1998.
One debt collector accused her of running up her credit card balances with no intention of paying.
One collector told her to sell her house. Another threatened her home. One debt collector scolded her for taking her children to Chuck E. Cheese for pizza. Another collector told Angela, who is expecting another child, that she had no business being pregnant.
The calls were constant and the insults seemed endless.
"They were calling all the time and I told them I couldn't pay and they would just keep calling," Angela says.
"I was terrified. I thought I was going to end up in debtor's prison or at least lose my home."
Intimidation usually works
And that's exactly how a debt collector wants you to feel. They figure if they harass you enough, you'll pay up.
"The collection industry is sometimes so motivated to collect that they'll do anything and I mean anything to accomplish that," says Peter Barry, a consumer rights trial lawyer in St. Paul, Minn.
It doesn't matter that you don't have the money or that you have more important bills to pay first. It doesn't matter that you were sick or had an accident or lost your job.
"You're just an account number they need to get money out of," says Mary Fons, a consumer protection attorney in Stoughton, Wisc.
It may not even matter that it's not your bill.
"Many times the abuse continues anyway, even though it's not that person's bill," Fons says. "They just expect people are lying to them and that's how they treat people."
Not only is this kind of harassment rude and uncalled for, it's illegal.
Know the rules
The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act was passed in 1977 to protect consumers from abusive debt collectors. There's a whole list of rules third-party debt collectors must follow when collecting a debt.
All those brutal insults and threats aren't supposed to happen. For a summary of federal debt collection rules, click here.
Unfortunately for consumers, some debt collectors violate the law on a regular basis.
They'll threaten to garnish your wages or take away your car or home when they have no right or intent to do so. They'll threaten to press criminal charges.
"They threaten to get the police involved as if not paying a civil debt is a criminal matter," Fons says.
A dirty debt collector will call you at all hours of the day. They'll threaten to tell an employer or spouse or relative about your debt. They'll call you at work after you told them not to contact you while you're working.
"Even if they told you not to call them at work, how do you prove they told you?" Flannagan says. "You bend the rules when they can't prove it."
They'll call your employer several times in a single day to frustrate and embarrass you.
"I had one case where they placed 16 phone calls in 10 minutes to a lady at work," says Jerry Jarzombek, a consumer attorney in Fort Worth, Texas.
A debt collector could even inflate the amount you owe. How much could a debt collector up your bill? One family bounced a $12 check to Papa John's. A debt collector demanded $140.
"It's just rampant profiteering," says Rob Treinen, a consumer attorney in Albuquerque, N.M. "They tried to collect a lot more than allowed by law, more than 10 times the amount."
Why do some debt collectors violate the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act so often? Because they know they can get away with it.
"The odds are very small that you're going to get caught," Flannagan says.
Few consumers are aware of their rights, so they take whatever abuse a debt collector decides to dish out. "They don't know better," Flannagan says. And many consumers feel so stressed out and demoralized that they keep right on taking the abuse. "They think 'I didn't pay my bills so I deserve to be treated this awful way,' '' Fons says. "They don't know they can get help." They don't know the law is on their side and they can fight back. The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act gives consumers the power to strike back against abusive debt collectors. The right to stop contact It's a good idea to send the letter certified mail, so you'll have proof that the debt collector received it. Once the collector receives your letter, they may not contact you again except to say there will be no further contact or to notify you that the debt collector or the creditor intends to take some specific action. Will firing off a letter to debt collector that tells them to stop contacting you actually work? Will the threatening phone calls stop just like that? "More than half the time, yes, because then you've made a paper trail," says Fons, whose handled debt collection cases for consumers for 15 years. "Some don't because they don't care. Some don't because they're disorganized." Keep in mind that sending a letter to a collector will not make a debt go away if you owe the money. The debt collector or your original creditor may still sue you. The right to dispute a debt. A collector may only renew collection activities if proof of the debt, such as a copy of a bill, is sent to you. The right to sue. For more details and tips on how to fight back against a debt collector, check out this article from Bankrate.com. Whatever strategy you choose, it's important to get proof of any harassment. "I tell people all the time, 'If you can't prove it, it didn't happen,''' Jarzombek says. "That's my line of lines." If a debt collector is breaking the law and harassing you, you'll need evidence. File all collection letters and keep detailed notes of collection calls. Note the day and time of each call, the name of the collection agency, the first and last name of the caller and what was said. Make a tape of each collection phone call. Flicking on a tape recorder is a great way to swing back at an abusive debt collector. Thirty-five states and the District of Columbia allow you to secretly tape your phone conversations. For a listing of states, check out this chart. In the other 15 states, you can tape with the other party's permission. And if you tell the debt collector you are going to tape and he or she keeps talking, that's considered giving permission. "Just having that recorder on will keep a bill collector on the up and up," Flannagan says. After contacting an attorney and learning about her rights, Angela M. started taping calls from debt collectors. She won't even talk to a debt collector if her tape recorder isn't going. "Nine times out of 10 they say things they shouldn't," Angela says. "If you don't have it taped, it's just your word against theirs." Even with the aid of a tape recorder, going toe-to-toe with a debt collector is no easy task. These folks are experts at intimidation. "It can be exhausting at first. It can be stressful when talking to people who are so mean and so brutal," Angela says. "After awhile you feel like a crusader. You're out there and you' re not letting people get away with harassment." She encourages other folks who are feeling harassed by debt collectors to fight back. "Stand up to them," Angela says. "Look at it as you're standing up for the little people." |
|
No one should be treated the way some of these guys treat people. I know of one instance where they told an eight year old child that his Mom and Dad were going to jail, and the child would go to a foster home, if the parents didn't pay their past due bill. Of course, he started crying and hung up the phone.
These people didn't have 12 dollars in the bank? Why would they make a rubber check? Why would they even order a pizza if they knew they were broke.
It went to a collection agency that kept after me for years despite my telling them how they could easily determine that I didn't owe the money. Did they persist in believing I would fold under pressure and pay up?
Their tactics included a practiced slurring of names and a feigning of indignance when asked questions. That would be followed by hanging up on me.
I finally got rid of them after calling and recalling each time they hung up and demanding answers to my questions.
This from the same person who has no problem making the blanket claim real estate brokers/agents do "under the table" deals and are as bad as lawyers...
Everyone but you noble debt collectors are unscrupulous..Right?
By definition she is a deadbeat
They called me a criminal.
Not paying for goods and services rendered is criminal it's called "stealing."
I had perfect, spotless credit before this happened."
Irrelevant
Angela's roughly $40,000 in overdue debt stems from a small business. She opened a children's boutique in 1998.
Likewise irrelevant. She should have done more market research up front
One debt collector accused her of running up her credit card balances with no intention of paying.
Very frequently true
One collector told her to sell her house. Another threatened her home.
They can't force her to do this in any state that I know of.
One debt collector scolded her for taking her children to Chuck E. Cheese for pizza. Another collector told Angela, who is expecting another child, that she had no business being pregnant.
She shouldn't be spending money on restaurants, and she shouldn't download another offspring if she can't afford it. I wonder who is going to end up paying her doctor bills. Lemme see. The hospitals are forced by law to provide care for anyone who wanders in. Many can't or won't pay. Health care costs money. conclusion - higher costs for those of us who can pay and carry the freeloading bums in the system.
Simple solution...go to your HR Dept. and have them fax the creditor a letter stating you cannot receive personal phone calls at work. I have done this for employees many times.
Right before I declared bankruptcy (nasty divorce, hubby cleaned out the accounts and left me with the kids and the bills) I even had a debt collector show up at my work and physically shove me in front of witnesses when I would not allow him access to the building as we are considered a Govt. facility...he did not realize that I was his intended "target". I told them I was going to file criminal assault charges so they decided to settle and wrote off the debt.
I did file bankruptcy, but I paid my debtors 100% of what I owed them and paid it off early. Even so, it has been 7 years since my bankruptcy was paid off, my credit still sucks, most people I know that wrote off all their debts have a better chance at getting credit than I do. I thought it was supposed to "drop off" after 7 years, apparently not.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.