There is something suspicious to me about "Say What!".
I googled the phone number, and apparently this guy has been harrassing a bunch of people. He claims to work for a debt collector, but nobody can get information out of him before he hangs up on them.
So? If the debt collector has these legally binding documents, why not cough them up?That assumes the debt is legit-- and given HW's rep, there's a good chance that it's not. And sorry the law says they have to provide proof of that debt, it's up to them to make sure it's getting to the right person. If they refuse to validate, then then they can't collect.
Wrong Grizzly Adams! The burden of proof is ALWAYS on the debtor because their client has YOUR signature all over the signed legally binding lease.
Have you actually read any part of this thread? The collector isn't even telling him what the debt might be for. How is it RoJoHen's responsibility to prove that a debt isn't his when he's not being told what the charge is? Should he go back and check every single thing that might have resulted in a debt? I'm amazed at how adament you are that not only is RoJoHen in the wrong, but how every American who has reported or complained about a debt collector is lying.If you can't prove within the first 30 days that the debt is not yours then it is and they can LEGALLY report it to the credit bureaus and proceed with further actions after that.
Yes, but that doesn't stop someone from claiming you didn't pay some fee or you missed a payment and year later they come after you even after the rest is paid off. Or for that matter, you can pay a bill off and it still end up in collections over a clerical error.
Where have you been? Telemarketers and debt collectors don't let you get their phone numbers. They show as "restricted."
There is something suspicious to me about "Say What!".
On a side note, just having read this thread for the first time, why the frak is there a debt collector on here? And posting exactly like how they talk on the phone with the same bully tactics too!
The name of the debt collector and the agency have been mentioned in this thread, and this forum is open and presumably searchable to Google. I would not be surprised if Say What! is trolling around the Internets looking for ways to bully supposed debtors into paying up.![]()
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Well I feel disappointed that Hunter Warfield has never called me with false debts and idle threats. Unless they're one of the unlisted numbers that have called.
I always Google the numbers of unknown calls I get. If they're debt collectors I block them. March of Dimes has been pretty annoying lately with all the calls I've been getting from them from multiple numbers. This really isn't making me want to donate money to them.
Plus it could be an old debt hanging over the apartment passing from person person. Basically someone stiff the landlord and they just pass the debt down to each new tenant till someone pays. Had a classmate that this happened to once.Good to see I'm not the only one getting funny vibe off Say What! He doesn't seem to have returned either. And I was thinking of notifying the mod before 4th hanson bro dropped in on him (notifying the mod literally, not 'notifying the mod')
I go with the crowd that says unless they validate, don't pay. Have you tried ringing your former flatmates? Maybe the bill was in their name and that address, and it's been redirected to you or something?
And when asked if it is legal for a collections agent to "friend" a debtor online without mentioning the debt, the FTC sent this e-mail response:
FDCPA mandates that collectors must disclose that they are attempting to collect on a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. It also requires that collectors state in subsequent communications with the debtor that they are a debt collector. A collector's failure to make these disclosures would violate Section 807(11).
Hmm..Say What also didn't identify himself properly per FTC guidelines regarding Social Media..
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=128464415&ps=cprs
RoJo..you might have been targeted specifically by this "gentleman"..and might have a case...And when asked if it is legal for a collections agent to "friend" a debtor online without mentioning the debt, the FTC sent this e-mail response:FDCPA mandates that collectors must disclose that they are attempting to collect on a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. It also requires that collectors state in subsequent communications with the debtor that they are a debt collector. A collector's failure to make these disclosures would violate Section 807(11).
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