I received a call at my work place for one of our employee today. They said that he should call as soon as possible. I could barely understand them. When I ask where they were calling from he said the federal investigation department.
I recieved a phone call from these people stating that they have a lawsuit against me. They had all my info, but they wouldnt give me much info on them. Does anyone know anything?
somebody called me from this number before some days. its some legal department and they were handling my case. they had my each and every details and i resolved the case with them. its all legitimate and i got the written documents at my mailing address in 16 days. i am really very thankful to them that it didn't affect my credit profile....
harry you are right. they called me too and had my case details and they really helped me to resolve my case out of the court. first i thought that its a scam but than i came to know that it is a legitimate company. thanks a lot to this people. i even received all the the paperworks as well.
I'm not the same anonymous who replied to larry but both anonymous and larry sound like shills for an extortion scam http://www.fbi.gov/news/pressrel/press-releases/paydayloanscam_120710 on this phone number. Lawyers use the US mail to send demand letters. Courts use the US mail to send summons. Neither will call you for payment. If you get called by a debt collector or a debt collector pretending to be a lawyer, be aware Section 809(a) says you have to get 5 items within 5 days of initial contact:
1. $amount of debt,
2. name of the current creditor (which may differ from the original creditor who might have sold your debt),
3. a statement that that debt will be assumed to be valid unless you dispute in writing within 30 days,
4. a statement that that if you do dispute in writing within 30 days, the collector must mail you written verification of the debt,
5. a statement that if you ask the collector in writing within 30 days, the collector must send you the name and address of the original creditor if it's different from the current creditor.