Colorado Notice of Violation of Fair Debt Act - Improper Contact at Work

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Multi-State
Control #:
US-DCPA-3
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This form is for use by debtors in unfair collection practice situations, a Notice of Violation of Fair Debt Act regarding Improper Contact at Work. It is available in Word or Rich Text format.
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FAQ

Deceptive And Unfair Practices Calling you collect so that you have to pay to accept the call is an example of an unfair practice. Engaging in any practice that forces you to pay additional money other than the debt you owe is considered an FDCPA violation.

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 Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) The FDCPA prohibits debt collection companies from using abusive, unfair or deceptive practices to collect debts from you.

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.

Your credit card debt, auto loans, medical bills, student loans, mortgage, and other household debts are covered under the FDCPA.

7 Most Common FDCPA ViolationsContinued attempts to collect debt not owed.Illegal or unethical communication tactics.Disclosure verification of debt.Taking or threatening illegal action.False statements or false representation.Improper contact or sharing of info.Excessive phone calls.

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.

It's not necessarily illegal for a debt collector to call you at work, but the FDCPA prohibits debt collection calls to your job if the debt collector "has reason to know" that your employer forbids those calls.

Among the insider tips, Ulzheimer shared with the audience was this: if you are being pursued by debt collectors, you can stop them from calling you ever again by telling them '11-word phrase'. This simple idea was later advertised as an '11-word phrase to stop debt collectors'.

Debt collectors cannot harass or abuse you. They cannot swear, threaten to illegally harm you or your property, threaten you with illegal actions, or falsely threaten you with actions they do not intend to take. They also cannot make repeated calls over a short period to annoy or harass you.

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Colorado Notice of Violation of Fair Debt Act - Improper Contact at Work