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Debt & debt collectors – know your rights

You are responsible for your debts. If you fall behind in paying your creditors or an error is made on your account, you may be contacted by a "debt collector." A debt collector is any person, other than the creditor, who regularly collects debts owed to others. This includes lawyers who collect debts on a regular basis. You have the right to be treated fairly by debt collectors.
The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) applies to personal, family, and household debts. This includes money owed for the purchase of a car, for medical care, or for charge accounts. The FDCPA prohibits debt collectors from engaging in unfair, deceptive, or abusive practices while collecting these debts.

Your rights under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act:

• Debt collectors may contact you only between 8 a.m. and 9 p.m.

• Debt collectors may not contact you at work if they know your employer disapproves.

• Debt collectors may not harass, oppress, or abuse you.

• Debt collectors may not lie when collecting debts, such as falsely implying that you have committed a crime.

• Debt collectors must identify themselves to you on the phone. • Debt collectors must stop contacting you if you ask them to in writing.

Credit billing & EFT statements – know your rights
It is important to check credit billing and electronic fund transfer (EFT) account statements regularly. These documents may contain mistakes that could damage your credit status or reflect improper charges or transfers. If you find an error or discrepancy, notify the company and contest the error immediately.
The Fair Credit Billing Act (FCBA) and Electronic Fund Transfer Act (EFTA) establish procedures for resolving mistakes on credit billing and electronic fund transfer account statements, including:
• Charges or electronic fund transfers that you – or anyone you have authorized to use your account – have not made. 
• Charges or electronic fund transfers that are incorrectly identified or show the wrong amount or date. 
• Computation or similar errors.
• Failure to reflect payments, credits, or electronic fund transfers properly. 
• Not mailing or delivering credit billing statements to your current address, as long as that address was received by the creditor in writing at least 20 days before the billing period ended. 
• Charges or electronic fund transfers for which you request an explanation or documentation, due to a possible error. 
The FCBA generally applies only to "open end" credit accounts – credit cards, revolving charge accounts (such as department store accounts), and overdraft checking accounts. It does not apply to loans or credit sales that are paid according to a fixed schedule until the entire amount is paid back, such as an automobile loan. The EFTA applies to electronic fund transfers, such as those involving automatic teller machines (ATMs), point-of-sale debit transactions, and other electronic banking transactions.
 
Credit applications – know your rights
When creditors evaluate a credit application, they cannot lawfully engage in discriminatory practices.
The Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) prohibits credit discrimination on the basis of sex, race, marital status, religion, national origin, age, or receipt of public assistance. Creditors may ask for this information (except religion) in certain situations, but may not use it to discriminate when deciding whether to grant you credit
The ECOA protects consumers who deal with companies that regularly extend credit, including banks, small loan and finance companies, retail and department stores, credit card companies, and credit unions. Everyone who participates in the decision to grant credit, including real estate brokers who arrange financing, must follow this law. Businesses applying for credit also are protected by this law.
Your rights under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act:
• You cannot be denied credit based on your race, sex, marital status, religion, age, national origin, or receipt of public assistance. 
• You have the right to have reliable public assistance considered in the same manner as other income.
• If you are denied credit, you have a legal right to know why.
 
Credit reports – know your rights
Your credit payment history is recorded in a file or report. These files or reports are maintained and sold by credit bureaus. You have a credit record on file at a credit bureau if you have ever applied for a credit or charge account, a personal loan, insurance, or a job. Your credit record contains information about your income, debts, and credit payment history. It also indicates whether you have been sued, arrested, or have filed for bankruptcy.
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) is designed to help ensure that credit bureaus furnish correct and complete information to businesses to use when evaluating your application. 

Your rights under the Fair Credit Reporting Act:

• You have the right to receive a copy of your credit report. The copy of your report must contain all of the information in your file at the time of your request. 

• You have the right to know the name of anyone who received your credit report in the last year for most purposes or in the last two years for employment purposes.

• Any company that denies your application must supply the name and address of the credit bureau they contacted, provided the denial was based on information given by the credit bureau. 

• You have the right to a free copy of your credit report when your application is denied because of information supplied by the credit bureau. Your request must be made within 60 days of receiving your denial notice.

• If you contest the completeness or accuracy of information in your report, you should file a dispute with the credit bureau and with the company that furnished the information to the bureau. Both the credit bureau and the furnisher of information are legally obligated to investigate your dispute. 

• You have a right to add a summary explanation to your credit report if your dispute is not resolved to your satisfaction.

 
How credit report mistakes are made
When a credit report contains errors, it is often because the report is incomplete, or contains information about someone else. This typically happens because:
• The person applied for credit under different names (Robert Jones, Bob Jones, etc.).
• Someone made a clerical error in reading or entering name or address information from a hand-written application.
• The person gave an inaccurate Social Security number, or the number was misread by the lender.
• Loan or credit card payments were inadvertently applied to the wrong account.
• Missing accounts on your credit report
• Your credit file may not reflect all your credit accounts. Although most national department store and all-purpose bank credit card accounts will be included in your file, not all creditors voluntarily supply information to the credit bureaus: Some travel, entertainment, gasoline card companies, local retailers, student loan lenders and credit unions are among this group of non-reporting creditors.
• If you've been told you were denied credit because of an "insufficient credit file" or "no credit file" and you have accounts with creditors that don't appear in your credit file, you might consider asking your creditors to begin reporting your credit information to credit bureaus. It won't hurt to ask, but keep in mind that creditors are not required to report consumer credit information to credit bureaus. Another possible option is to move your account to a different creditor who does report regularly to credit bureaus.
 

 Mathew Joseph cell no. 847-208-8508
 

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