7143805377
Country: USA
714 area code:
California (Anaheim, Buena Park, Fullerton)
Read comments below about 7143805377. Report unwanted calls to help identify who is using this phone number.
- mike replies to Yoda1725| 10 repliesWhat collector, we never dealt with a collector? And I've never known the personal address of any collector that's called me on our other bills. What are you talking about?
- mike replies to U.R.Fullofitfor the simple fact that you're also so into the word "shilling" you prove your pompous attitudes. If you can help on here, great, but if not, I'm not trying to match wits with anyone, just stating what I know since its been over a month since I came on here.
- Yoda1725 replies to mike| 4 repliesNo one is buying what you are selling. Keep shilling away.
- mike replies to Mike| 4 repliesThis is what the judge said when it comes to these types of calls. The person calling you should have your full social security # along with the original account# and original creditor. If they have that, you can call the original creditor's charge off or recovery department. They'll forward you to the chain of title or the company you need to speak to. Once you're done calling those numbers, you should be back to the company calling you. If not they're scamming. Hope this helps those looking for help
- mike replies to Yoda1725| 3 repliesI also googled some collection agencies that I know are legit because I deal with them for a old car balance. They have the same kind of complaints with people like you claiming they're a scam. I'm starting to thing you internet nerds are the scam
- D'oh replies to mike| 3 repliesSo - in other words, you/your wife did NOT PAY YOUR BILLS. Is that correct??
- MidNYteStorm replies to mikeYou do not seem to understand that we do not believe you.
- D'oh replies to mikeI think I found your problem ---you THING instead of think.
- MidNYteStorm replies to D'ohIt is amazing how many of these debt telemaggoters come here claiming that these calls are legitimate. Obviously it is a part of the job.
- If they are "legit" replies to mikelike you keep claiming, then why haven't you posted up the name and address of the law office which sued you? The only reason you wouldn't post this information up is if it's a scam - which other posters have made clear due to the calls for people who don't live there, as well as refusing to mail proof of debt per federal law.
Short version: no one here believes you. - Wrong. replies to mike| 2 repliesPer federal law, the debt collector (or law office acting as or on behalf of the debt collector) MUST mail - email or fax not legally valid - information showing that you owe that money to them. Refusal to mail this information is a blatant violation of federal law.
http://www.consumer.ftc.gov/articles/0258-fake-debt-collectors
Consumers across the country report that they're getting telephone calls from people trying to collect on loans the consumers never received or on loans they did receive but for amounts they do not owe. Others are receiving calls from people seeking to recover on loans consumers received but where the creditors never authorized the callers to collect for them. So what's the story?
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the nation's consumer protection agency, is warning consumers to be on the alert for scam artists posing as debt collectors. It may be hard to tell the difference between a legitimate debt collector and a fake one. Sometimes a fake collector may even have some of your personal information, like a bank account number. A caller may be a fake debt collector if he:
is seeking payment on a debt for a loan you do not recognize;
refuses to give you a mailing address or phone number;
asks you for personal financial or sensitive information; or
exerts high pressure to try to scare you into paying, such as threatening to have you arrested or to report you to a law enforcement agency.
If you think that a caller may be a fake debt collector:
Ask the caller for his name, company, street address, and telephone number. Tell the caller that you refuse to discuss any debt until you get a written "validation notice." The notice must include the amount of the debt, the name of the creditor you owe, and your rights under the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.
If a caller refuses to give you all of this information, do not pay! Paying a fake debt collector will not always make them go away. They may make up another debt to try to get more money from you.
Stop speaking with the caller. If you have the caller's address, send a letter demanding that the caller stop contacting you, and keep a copy for your files. By law, real debt collectors must stop calling you if you ask them to in writing.
Do not give the caller personal financial or other sensitive information. Never give out or confirm personal financial or other sensitive information like your bank account, credit card, or Social Security number unless you know whom you're dealing with. Scam artists, like fake debt collectors, can use your information to commit identity theft – charging your existing credit cards, opening new credit card, checking, or savings accounts, writing fraudulent checks, or taking out loans in your name.
Contact your creditor. If the debt is legitimate – but you think the collector may not be – contact your creditor about the calls. Share the information you have about the suspicious calls and find out who, if anyone, the creditor has authorized to collect the debt.
Report the call. Contact the FTC and your state Attorney General's office with information about suspicious callers. Many states have their own debt collection laws in addition to the federal FDCPA. Your Attorney General's office can help you determine your rights under your state's law.
Also good info at the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau:
http://www.consumerfinance.gov/askcfpb/1699/h ... legitimate.html - You're the only one... replies to mike...trying to mislead people - intp paying a bogus debt, a debt that's already been paid off, or even a debt that is owed - but not to the caller! Obvious shill is obvious!
- Yes you did... replies to mike...any attorney acting as or on behalf of a debt collector - must abide by federal debt collection law. Face it, you've managed to do a bang-up job of burning this number. Now anyone who comes to this site can see what kind of BS your bosses are trying to pull! Good job!
- Mike replies to Wrong.| 1 replythe problem is if they've sent it already to an old address that I didn't update with the original creditor then they've done their job. Per the law, it was our responsibility to update all of our creditors with changes in our information.
- mike replies to D'oh| 1 replycorrect, like most the people on here trying to get valid info about this
- The Black Knight replies to mikeSo are you honestly saying this judge you stood before told you that if you receive a call from someone and they have your full social security number, with the original account number and the original creditor's name and call the original creditor's recovery department and all that jazz then they are a legit company?
Okay, "Mike", let me tell you something about what my wife and myself went through. My wife and I have had numerous calls over the last few years claiming we owe a debt. Many of those have left messages with our full social, an account number and the number of the supposed original lender to contact. We've called the numbers and got the same spiel. Only to find incorrect dates of loans being deposited into an account that was closed well before those dates. On top of that, the supposed original lenders were ones we never heard of before. A high percentage of these calls also involved the same supposed debt, by the same supposed lender and completely different dates then the call before that and the call before that and the call before that and on and on. Of course this was before we chose an attorney, a trusted one that actually works for their client's best interest who educated us on the difference between true debt and bullpoo. We attended government approved credit counseling courses that gave us additional education. Both the classes and our attorney opened our eyes as to what is true and what is not. Additionally the registered moderators of this site have been spot on with everything the classes and our attorney taught us.
cam collections firms spew bull fecal matter while they hold a database stolen or purchased. That data holds information that has been updated as it has been passed along or purchased. Payday, online lenders, and collectors flip to new company names, phone numbers, addresses and fabricate caller names as they duck and dodge the law.
Sorry, but I'll have to call major falsehood on what this supposed judge told you as it goes against everything we were educated on. - This is how.. replies to gregCollections sending phony police, phony process servers and setting up a make shift courtroom with fake judges.
http://bankruptcylawyerpa.com/blog/brazen-deb ... titious-judges/
http://www.rawlslawoffice.com/legal-news/8/De ... -its-Office.htm
Fake process servers to give it that "real feel".
https://getoutofdebt.org/29403/fake-process-s ... ut-of-consumers - That's replies to Mikeanother crock of BS.
- The Black Knight replies to mikeD'oh's post, "So - in other words, you/your wife did NOT PAY YOUR BILLS. Is that correct?"
Your answer, "correct, like most the people on here trying to get valid info about this" just verified that you are a shill.
Thank you for showing us we were right about you from the start. Fact over fiction, shill. Fact over fiction. - CWG40 replies to MikeYou posted the same information on 714-380-5384. And 714-415-3613.
Report a phone call from 714-380-5377: