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Who called from 6369255300

51
Unwitting Reference
Received a call from a rather agressive caller who identified himself as Elliot Schneider.  He cited that a former neighbor had used me as a "reference" and requested assistance as to the neighbor's whereabouts.  I pushed the caller for further identification and clarification as to his identity and he reluctantly identified his company as a "financial institution" and then finally gave up the name of the company as "FAMS".  As I don't know the company, never authorized myself to be used as a reference in any capacity for the person identified by the caller, I wished him good luck and hung up.
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52
bla bla
how about you tt the people and see wat the bill is about and by law if someone ids thm self as the husband thn they are allowed to disclose info to tht person and if tht person is lying thts false id wich is against the law just be responsible and figure out y someone is calling rather then crying about it and writing a whole blog
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53
la la
dnc lists are for solicitation calls not for wen some one owes mny you cant run from a debt there is no list they are simply looking for the person that owes and since most of them run alot of w#s are dialed
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54
lala
you must owe them money your definatly not a victem jus pay your bill and no one cursed at you on a recorded line if so you wud hve a hell of a lawsuit to be working on rather than blogging
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55
Alfalfa
Your spelling and grammar skills are about as laughable as your knowledge of the DNC laws, which DO apply to debt collectors:

Under the TCPA, a consumer has a right to file a lawsuit and recover $500 for each call that violates the TCPA. The TCPA can also be used in conjunction with the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act in some situations.  

Generally, the TCPA does not apply to debt collectors making collection calls to debtors. However, if you are subjected to calls from a debt collector and you are not the debtor, you may file a lawsuit against the debt collector under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) and the TCPA.

This right was recently recognized by Judge Legrome D. Davis in a case called Watson v. NCO Group, Inc.  NCO Group is a debt collector that uses automated prerecorded collection calls.  In this case, Mr. Watson alleged he was getting hundreds of calls from NCO Group after he got a new phone number. Mr. Watson claimed he owed no debt to NCO Group, Inc.  Mr. Watson filed suit under both the FDCPA and TCPA.

David Israel, defense lawyer for NCO, argued that the TCPA should not apply to debt collectors.  Judge Davis rejected the argument made by David Israel. The judge ruled that Mr. Watson had a right to sue NCO Group Inc under the TCPA for $500 for each call.  Judge Davis wrote;

[The] Court is convinced that a non-debtor's rights are in fact violated when he is subjected to repeated annoying and abusive debt collection calls that he remains powerless to stop.

Judge Davis' ruling was based upon his interpretation that collection calls to non-debtors violate the privacy rights provided by the TCPA.  

So what can you do if you receive "wrong number" calls from debt collectors?

1. Sign up for the Do-Not-Call registry.
2. Save the calls captured by your voice mail or answering machine.
3. Contact a consumer lawyer.

http://consumerlawyer.typepad.com/blog/2008/02/the-do-not-call.html

Nice try, Troll.
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