California Letter Informing Debt Collector not to Communicate with Debtor at Debtor's Place of Employment

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Control #:
US-01428BG
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Description

The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) prohibits harassment or abuse in collecting a debt such as threatening violence, use of obscene or profane language, publishing lists of debtors who refuse to pay debts, or even harassing a debtor by repeatedly calling the debtor on the phone. This Act sets forth strict rules regarding communicating with the debtor.


The collector is restricted in the type of contact he can make with the debtor. He can't contact the debtor before 8:00 a.m. or after 9:00 p.m. He can contact the debtor at home, but cannot contact the debtor at the debtor's club or church or at a school meeting of some sort. The debtor cannot be contacted at work if his employer objects.

How to fill out Letter Informing Debt Collector Not To Communicate With Debtor At Debtor's Place Of Employment?

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FAQ

This means that debt collectors cannot harass you in-person at your work. However, a debt collector, like a credit card company, may call you at work, though they can't reveal to your co-workers that they are debt collectors. If you ask the debt collector not to contact you at work, by law they must stop.

Debt collectors are generally allowed to call you at work, unless and until they have reason to know that your work forbids these kinds of calls. Under the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), debt collectors can't call you work once they have this information.

Can a Debt Collector Email Me at Work? Generally, under the CFPB's final rule, a debt collector can't communicate or attempt to communicate with you by sending an email to an email address that the debt collector knows is a work email address, subject to some exceptions.

A cease and desist letter is a formal letter requesting debt collectors to stop contacting you about a debt you owe. The Federal Fair Debt Collections Practices Act (FDCPA) requires debt collectors to cease any communication with you after they receive the letter.

Page 2. Collection Agencies and Your Rights: Sending a Cease Communication Letter. Federal law requires collection agencies to stop their collection efforts after they receive a written request to stop.

You can stop debt collectors from calling you at work fairly easily. Simply tell the debt collector that your employer doesn't want them calling your job or that you're not allowed to receive personal calls at work.

The safest and most effective way to stop harassing calls to your cell phone is to send a written cease and desist notice to the collector.

If you're being contacted by a lawyer on behalf of a creditor, the lawyer must stop contacting you too, provided he or she handles more than two debts in a year. The point of a cease and desist letter is to stop receiving harassing communications. Your creditors are still able to try to collect the debt owed, though.

A debt collector may call your employer once to verify your employment.

A cease and desist letter is a formal request that you send a debt collector to stop contacting you about a debt. This contact includes collection calls and demand letters. If you make this request over the phone, it won't be official or binding.

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California Letter Informing Debt Collector not to Communicate with Debtor at Debtor's Place of Employment