Articles Tagged with FTC

FTC logo      If you are getting debt collection calls you are not alone. About one in seven people in Mississippi is being hounded by a debt collector. Buying debt and debt collection is a billion dollar business and becoming a larger, more complex industry. The original creditor sells their debt to a debt collector, and often they sell the same debt multiple times meaning that multiple debt collection companies are attempting to collect the same debt! Debt collectors often attempt to collect from the wrong person, overstate or inflate the amount owed by adding collection fees, and even attempt to collect debts that are not real (may have been paid in the past or was never a debt to begin with).
Along with these abuses, details of the original debt are lost or outdated. Creditors selling debt are basically selling lists that have contact information and amounts owed – and little more than that in way of details.  Collectors then may have a mixture of valid debts, debts that have been since settled, or debts that are past the statute of limitations and can no longer be collected. It’s not clear exactly how many consumers are wrongly harassed for accounts that are not their debt. Debts purchased by the large debt-buying firms have no documents, contracts or other proof of the debt. Your debt will be sold to a debt collector for pennies on the dollar. It’s not just the original credit that sells debt.  Debt collection companies then may sell the lists they have purchased to other debt collectors, who may then sell it to another, then another, and another. It’s not uncommon for people to all of a sudden be receiving debt collection calls and letters about something that happened years ago but now, the debt has shown up on a list that has been sold to another company, and here we go again. Continue Reading ›

The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) provides specific rights to consumers who are or believe they are the victim of identity theft. If someone uses your name, Social Security number, date of birth, or other identification without the authority to do so in order to commit fraud, it is considered Identify Theft.  For example, if someone used your personal information to get a loan or to get a credit card, they may have committed identity theft.

Here is a short summary of these rights that were designed to help you recover:

  1. You have the right to ask that nationwide consumer reporting agencies place “fraud alerts” in your file to let potential creditors and others know that you may be a victim of identity theft.

Contact Information