|
The Debt Validation Strategy
It might be helpful to look at our illustration of the process before you get started.
1. Send a letter requesting validation to the collection agency. I have a letter posted here in my website you can use for this strategy. Always send letter
certified or in some way you can date when they received it. They have to have a properly dated response.
2. If you don't know the address of the collection agency, look it up on your credit bureau or on the internet.
3. Dispute the collection with the credit bureaus.
4. Wait 30 days to hear back from the collection agency. Most likely they will not respond or they will respond saying that they received your letter. Only a letter which
includes:
o Proof that the collection company owns the debt/or has been assigned the debt,
o Complete payment history, starting with the original creditor, and
o Copy of the original signed loan agreement or credit card application
is satisfactory.
5. If they haven't sent you satisfactory proof, send a copy of your receipt for your registered mail, a copy of the first letter you sent and a statement that they have
not complied with the FDCPA and are now in violation of the Act. Tell them they need to immediately remove the collection listing from your credit report or you are going to file a lawsuit
because they are in violation of the FDCPA, section 809 (b).
6. Wait 15-20 days to hear back after this second letter to the collection agency. They will either remove it or not respond.
7. If they do provide a contract with a signature from the original creditor showing that you owe the debt, there is one more thing you can try: see if they are legally
licensed to collect the debt in your state.
If you believe that they are not licensed, and licensing is required in your state, write them another letter and tell them they are in violation of your state's collection
laws and are subject to prosecution and fines. Cite your state's fines and procedures in the letter. This is a last ditch effort, but has worked in some cases.
8. Typically, your work will stop here, as most collection agencies will bow down to your demands and send you a letter agreeing to remove the listing. Now all you have to
do is send a copy of the letter to the CRAs. If the collection agency did not agree to remove the listing, then you need to continue to the next steps.
9. File a lawsuit in small claims court against the collection agency on the basis of violating the FDCPA.
10. Have the papers served to the collection agency. (You can find a paper server on the internet for about $25). Here is a good link. And here is another: http://www.1-800-serve-em.com/servicemap.html
11. In the meantime, in a parallel effort with your lawsuit against the collection agency:
12. If the collection comes back as "verified" from the credit bureaus, you now have proof of further collection activity from the collection agency. (The assumption is
that the credit bureau contacted the collection agency to verify the debt.) Since the collection agency did not validate the debt, further collection activity is a violation of the
FDCPA.
13. Contact the credit bureaus, and tell them that the creditors did not verify the debts under the FDCPA, and send copies of your proof. Request the method of
verification, which is your right under the FCRA. It is crucial to contact the credit bureaus before filing a lawsuit. Make sure you state that the collection agency did not respond to your
request for debt validation.
14. You can try sending them this letter to see if they will budge (letter). They may tell you that the request needs to come from the creditor. This is baloney. They are
basically being an accessory to the collection agency's illegal act of reporting you in the first place, and are teetering on the edge of "willful non-compliance" under the FCRA. Tell them
so.
15. File a small claims suit in court on the credit bureaus, on the basis of defamation of character. This is the easiest thing to prove since the fact that a collection
exists on your credit report hurts your character.
16. Have the papers served. (You can find a paper server on the internet for about $25). Here is a great link where you can search for the local office of the credit
bureau near you. http://www.llrx.com/columns/roundup14.htm
17. Notify the bureaus that you are suing them. You can use my letter. The credit bureaus will call the creditors and find out that there is a question about whether the
debt is legitimate. They should delete it immediately. If you want more legal ammo, you might also try looking up similar cases to cite.
18. If you don't want to spend the $25 to serve the agencies (although it is well worth it in my opinion), make sure you note the case number and court in which you filed
the suit when you notify the credit bureaus you are suing them.
I hope these tips have encouraged you. Good luck on pursuing financial freedom
|