9133125184
Country: USA
913 area code:
Kansas (Kansas City, Olathe)
Read comments below about 9133125184. Report unwanted calls to help identify who is using this phone number.
- Corky replies to Molly| 1 replyI guess I should be working. I am deaf and blind and a quadriplegic. I have to have my nurse type this for me. I have severe brain damage and can barely move. Now tell me what kind of job you have for me.
- Corky replies to CorkyYour cousin is lucky I can't even use a wheelchair because I get severe motion sickness.
- Holly replies to MollyHey Molly do you honestly believe the reason for the high interest is because of those who don't pay? Silly little simpleton!
Really your rate should be pretty low with the outstanding credit you must posses. - Gene SimmonsWhy don't these bottom feeders send 5 letters a day or 5 emails a day? I guess they only like the phone that way they can harass, intimidate and threaten.
- LabadorThey keep calling five times a day with different phone numbers and no message. When I get home I just get these silent blank hang ups. I only have one card with USAA and none of those shown above. I am a retired veteran and too old for Victoria Secret or any of those other stores.
- Caller: Comenity
- Call type: Debt collector
- HB replies to Patrickthey are dumb people that call us!lol!!
- Lind replies to Molly| 1 replyWell said Molly! These ppl didn't mind spending money that wasn't theirs but now they don't even feel bad about paying. My family has been hit hard this year and we are determined to pull ourselves back above water. We may never have a descent credit rating again but ar least we are paying for what we owe! It's called doing the right thing!
- Michael replies to jensonI find it funny how these people never leave messages. I personally do not answer calls from long distance numbers I do not know. I see it as if you want to talk to me or get a hold of me, you leave a message. They kept calling me because I was a few days late on my Zales account. I honestly forgot to pay them because I had not received my monthly e-bill from them. If they had left a message identifying themselves, I would've called them back and paid them.
- Michael replies to RjRJ, I don't know about you, but most people do not answer calls from outside of their area code from unfamiliar numbers. Also, if you really want to talk to someone, you leave a message. If a message is not left then it is assumed to not be important. When people I know call me and I don't answer my phone because I am either at work or busy with something else, if they do not leave a message, I do not call them back right away because I assume that the call was not important.
- Michael replies to RjMost Americans are one paycheck away from abject poverty. I know a lot of professionals who make $100,000 plus per year, but because of expenses and all around inflation, they do not have savings to fall back on. You would probably reply by saying don't spend so much, but many times in life you cannot get around spending money. You have to pay so much to live in the town you are working. You need a home that is comfortable and safe. Yes you could save money by moving into the ghetto, but then you are jeopardizing your safety. You also need reliable transportation to get to and from work. A lot of areas do not have that good of public transportation. For instance, some places in San Antonio or Houston it takes two or more hours to get to by bus, but if you drive it is only 15 minutes. You can say get cheap car, then the said cheap car does not run well and is broken down a lot and requires constant repair, that costs money. You also need certain accoutrements the do your job and that costs money. Before you know it, you are spending more money than you earn to make the money.
- Patrick replies to LindIs doing the right thing, harassing and threatening people? Because that's what this caller does.
- MikeEntertaining messages! Just keep in mind that there's often two sides to every story. I'm not positive what my "debt" is, but I have a sneaky suspicion it's the cable company that never got their $ from me because they didn't get their equipment returned on time. Yeah right-they've pulled that [***] with so many people I know and the sad thing is, there's nothing you can do about it. I wrote a long letter explaining how I returned everything, even made sure they checked it into their system when I brought it back, and had them double check to make sure they had it all-because I heard about what they pull. But nope, whoever makes these "he said/she said" judgments, they side with the company.
Anyway, it appears this number may also be associated with #'s 720-456-3680, 720-456-3695, and 614-212-5164. Sneaky, sneaky guys! Another # to add to my Verizon blocked caller list.- Caller: Unsure
- Call type: Debt collector
- MeI'm definitely on a roll - got another call 913-312-5184 - did not answer and no message.
- rachelUNWANTED CALLS.
- Caller: 9133125184
- witchywoman63@gmail.comI realize this is my debit but calling all hours of the day and night is unacceptable. So I just answer it put it next to the TV or give to my pit bull and let her lick the phone and bark at it then hang it up.
- Caller: It says unknown caller
- Wonderful & AmazingWow, I never knew it would be so entertaining to read the comments here. This was almost better than reading the reviews on Amazon for the sugarless gummi bears that cause uncontrolled butt leakage!
Thanks for the good time. Although next time I will make sure and bring microwave popcorn!! - Patrick replies to Mal| 1 reply(Reuters) - U.S. authorities arrested seven people on Tuesday for what they said was a multimillion-dollar scam by a debt collection company that victimized more than 6,000 people, and a prosecutor said a wider crackdown was underway.
Williams Scott & Associates LLC wrongly threatened people with arrest, used aliases such as "Investigator Ace Rogers" and tried other tricks to collect at least $4.1 million from consumers whose debt it bought for pennies on the dollar, prosecutors said.
The company was owned by John Williams of Norcross, Georgia, who authorities said went on to operate a new debt collection business using the same tactics after the FBI conducted a search of its office in May.
A criminal complaint filed in Manhattan federal court charged Williams, 48, the company and six employees with conspiracy to commit wire fraud in connection with the scheme, which had run since 2009.
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said the case was an example of "an absolute epidemic of abusive debt collection practices."
Bharara said he reached out to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and Federal Trade Commission about bringing more cases as part of a broad crackdown and was also looking into creditors who assign debts to abusive collectors.
"We are far from finished looking at the seedy side of debt collection," he said.
Others arrested included employees Benita Cannedy, Rudy James, Arthur Cook, Christopher Lenyszyn, Clark Smith and Titus McDowell.
Lenyszyn's lawyer said he could not immediately comment, while attorneys for the other defendants could not be immediately identified.
The criminal case followed an earlier civil action by the FTC in which the company agreed to an order stopping it from collecting allegedly fake payday loan debts.
The criminal complaint said WSA employees using aliases such as "Mr. Cline" and "Investigator Ace Rogers" told victims that the "national check fraud center" had filed complaints against them and that they faced jail time.
To sound convincing, the employees read from a script containing phrases that sounded like official legal language, the complaint said.
"Failure to respond will lead to criminal charges being pursued," one line in the script read.
"It's a Class A felony pending against you for theft of property," another read.
The Williams Scott & Associates employees also told victims that WSA stood for "Warrant Services Association."
The case is U.S. v. Williams Scott & Associates, LLC, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, 14-mj-2546. - Patrick(Reuters) - U.S. authorities arrested seven people on Tuesday for what they said was a multimillion-dollar scam by a debt collection company that victimized more than 6,000 people, and a prosecutor said a wider crackdown was underway.
Williams Scott & Associates LLC wrongly threatened people with arrest, used aliases such as "Investigator Ace Rogers" and tried other tricks to collect at least $4.1 million from consumers whose debt it bought for pennies on the dollar, prosecutors said.
The company was owned by John Williams of Norcross, Georgia, who authorities said went on to operate a new debt collection business using the same tactics after the FBI conducted a search of its office in May.
A criminal complaint filed in Manhattan federal court charged Williams, 48, the company and six employees with conspiracy to commit wire fraud in connection with the scheme, which had run since 2009.
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said the case was an example of "an absolute epidemic of abusive debt collection practices."
Bharara said he reached out to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and Federal Trade Commission about bringing more cases as part of a broad crackdown and was also looking into creditors who assign debts to abusive collectors.
"We are far from finished looking at the seedy side of debt collection," he said.
Others arrested included employees Benita Cannedy, Rudy James, Arthur Cook, Christopher Lenyszyn, Clark Smith and Titus McDowell.
Lenyszyn's lawyer said he could not immediately comment, while attorneys for the other defendants could not be immediately identified.
The criminal case followed an earlier civil action by the FTC in which the company agreed to an order stopping it from collecting allegedly fake payday loan debts.
The criminal complaint said WSA employees using aliases such as "Mr. Cline" and "Investigator Ace Rogers" told victims that the "national check fraud center" had filed complaints against them and that they faced jail time.
To sound convincing, the employees read from a script containing phrases that sounded like official legal language, the complaint said.
"Failure to respond will lead to criminal charges being pursued," one line in the script read.
"It's a Class A felony pending against you for theft of property," another read.
The Williams Scott & Associates employees also told victims that WSA stood for "Warrant Services Association."
The case is U.S. v. Williams Scott & Associates, LLC, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, 14-mj-2546. - sharon wilsonRecieving unsolisited calls from this number. when I amswer they hang up.
- Caller: dont know
- cynthiaalways calling
- Caller: 913 312 5184
Report a phone call from 913-312-5184: