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How to deal w/ Collection Agencies?

Question:
1. When you receive a letter from a collection agency, is it the SAME thing as a legal attorney's office? The wording and appearance makes it appear so.
2. You've opened the letter, and "no response in 30 days indicates you agree to our terms blablabla" what is that?
3. Will companies try to sue for a damage claim or to seize assets for any amount owed? Wether Disputed or not? PS. It is a three year old issue that I thought I was done with.


Answer:
-This doesn't apply to your question but may be helpful and is in regard to harrassing phone calls. My ex-neighbor owned a collection business. He told me that (at least in Pennsylvania) if you send the agency a request to not call (certified mail) and they then called that you could sue and win for damages.

-I had a credit issue arise last year. In 1999, I paid a final cell phone bill over the phone with a debit card, and then cancelled the phone service
(don't pay your bills over the phone, btw). The cell phone company charged my card, but never credited my cell phone account. The cell phone company was then absorbed by some other cell phone company. So last year, I was contacted by a collection company with a law-firm sounding name, claiming I owed ~$350 for this cell phone bill that I had paid five years prior. I remembered paying the bill, so I knew that this was bogus. I dug through my files and found my bank statement reflecting the charge to my debit card, which I faxed to the collection company as proof of my payment. The company told me they couldn't read the fax, and asked me to mail a copy. I sent a registered letter with a copy of the bank statement. The collection company then told me that a bank statement doesn't qualify as proof-of-payment. The amount on my bank statement was exactly the amount the collection company claimed I owed. If somebody somewhere along the line had tacked interest onto the collection amount, I would have been screwed. I was then told by the collection company that I would need a letter from the cell phone company stating that the account had been paid. So now I'm responsible for getting a letter from a cell phone company that no longer exists. I contacted the company who had absorbed my old cell phone company, and they could find no record of me anywhere in their files (since I had never had an account with them). When I asked the new cell phone company to write a letter stating that I didn't owe them anything, they refused, because they could find no record of me ever having an account with them. After months of going back and forth between the collection company and cell phone company, I finally reached somebody with the cell company who had access to the old cell phone company's records, and who determined that I had actually called any paid my bill. The cell company sent a letter to me and the collection company, stating that I had actually paid the bill five years ago. This whole process began in April 04 and was finally resolved in October of 04. What's the point? I don't know. but it's a good idea to contact, and stay in contact with, the collection company until the issue is resolved. If you do have to pay them, get the terms in writing. You can always try to make a deal, many collection companies will settle for much less than the amount owed. Get a letter from the collection company once the item is closed acknowledging resolution. Keeping good financial records and getting everything in writing is key. I think the fact that I paid the bill over the phone was a big reason that my account was never properly credited.



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