Archive for 'debt buyers'

Lemberg & Associates released the following statement on February 1 in response to the Federal Trade Commission’s study on debt buyers:

Fair debt attorney Sergei Lemberg commended the recently released Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) study on debt buyers, “The Structure and Practices of the Debt Buying Industry,” but noted that it doesn’t go far enough. “Debt buyers are the underbelly of the debt collection industry, so it’s crucial that the FTC pulled back the curtain to reveal how they do business,” said Lemberg. “Nevertheless, the FTC report only peripherally addressed the heart of the problem – the inadequacies in the way debt buyers handle consumer disputes, the abuse of the court system in seeking summary judgments against consumers, and the disproportionate role that smaller debt buyers play in violations of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.”

Debt buyers purchase debt deemed “uncollectible” and charged off by original creditors or purchase debt portfolios from other debt buyers. The FTC study examined data from 90 million consumer accounts purchased by nine of the country’s largest debt buyers, which together accounted for three-quarters of the debt sold in 2008. The FTC found that debt buyers literally paid pennies on the dollar for old debt – four cents per dollar, on average. When debt portfolios are sold, the accuracy of the information is not guaranteed, which led the regulatory agency to estimate that consumers dispute one million debts each year.

Lemberg, who was targeted as the “most active consumer attorney” of 2012 by debt collection industry insider WebRecon LLC, said the findings of the FTC study mirror the experience of many of his clients who attempt to dispute debts. “Often, the debt does not belong to the client or the amount is incorrect,” said Lemberg. “Sometimes, the client has previously disputed the debt, but as the FTC points out, the dispute history of a debt isn’t included when a debt portfolio is sold. And, as the study correctly notes, collectors who work on behalf of debt buyers often ‘validate’ the debt simply by looking at the information on their spreadsheet rather than providing the proper underlying documentation.”

The FTC study noted that, as time passes and debt portfolios are resold, the process of debt collection becomes even more problematic. Further inaccuracies creep into the records and aging debts become time-barred. Each state has a statute of limitations, usually between three and six years, after which time debt collectors aren’t allowed to sue a consumer to recover the money. Lemberg says that this doesn’t stop collectors from trying. “Debt collection agencies – and debt buyers in particular – file tens of thousands of lawsuits against consumers each year yet generally don’t have to prove that the debt is valid or within the statute of limitations,” he said. “To add insult to injury, it is up to the consumer – who often isn’t even aware that he or she is being sued – to prove that the debt is time-barred.” Lemberg noted that this practice often results in summary judgments, whereby debt buyers are given the ability to pursue wage garnishment and recover money from consumer bank accounts. “The current situation is a recipe for disaster. If a debt buyer says John Doe owes money, and John Doe isn’t present to defend himself, the debt buyer can obtain a judgment and freeze John Doe’s bank account,” he said.

While the FTC study found that the largest debt buyers purchased a majority of portfolios from original creditors, a fifth of the debt purchased was between three and six years old and 11 percent was between six and fifteen years old. The FTC issued a caveat, saying, “[M]any purchasers of older debts and debts with larger numbers of past placements with third-party collectors are smaller firms.” This echoes Lemberg’s experience. He said, “Smaller debt buyers get the hard-to-collect leftovers, which often tempts them to cross the line into questionable behavior or even practices that violate the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.” One such behavior, Lemberg said, is to try and convince unsuspecting consumers to make a small payment on a time-barred account. “People don’t realize that making any payment – whether a penny or a hundred dollars – resets the clock and destroys protections afforded by the statute of limitations,” he said.

Lemberg applauded the Federal Trade Commission study, but said it needs to be expanded. “Smaller debt buyers need to be studied in order to get a true picture of the debt buying industry,” he said. “Debt buyers don’t share information about the debts they are trying collect, and then use the courts to obtain judgments against consumers who may not know they’re being sued. The current process leaves people’s lives in tatters, is an enormous burden on the taxpayer-funded court system, and is simply immoral.”

New Jersey Debt Buyer Legislation Advances

The New Jersey State Consumer Affairs Committee has approved the “Consumer Credit Fairness Act”, a bill that seeks to prevent debt buyers from harassing consumers. The legislation (A1535), sponsored by John Burzichelli and Celeste Riley, would prohibit unfair and deceptive practices. In a press release, Burzichelli said, “Scheming debt collection agencies that purchase outstanding consumer debt are finagling their way into the pockets of consumers by way of intimidation. Most of the time, the burden of proof is left to the consumer to prove it’s not their debt or the debt is paid. If you have no regard for NJ consumers, then you are an insult to the industry.”

The bill would prohibit debt buyers from trying to get a consumer to affirm that he or she owes a debt if the debt is past the statute of limitations or if the consumer has gone through the bankruptcy process. It would also prohibit debt buyers from collecting or trying to collect additional fees and interest, as well as filing suit against consumers for time-barred debt.

The bill also outlines the steps debt buyers must take when filing suit against a consumer. For example, the bill says that the debt buyer must have valid documentation that the consumer actually owes the debt in question, and that the debt buyer has verification of the amount of the debt. When filing a lawsuit, the debt buyer would have to include evidence of the original debt (such as credit card receipts), as well as evidence that the debt buyer actually owns the debt along with documentation about transfer of ownership. In addition, the bill would make it difficult for debt buyers to obtain default judgments, in that it would require them to submit authenticated records about the origins of the debt and payment history.

If a debt buyer were to violate the law, a consumer could obtain statutory damages of up to $1,000, along with court costs and attorney fees.

The bill will move to the full Assembly for consideration.

The Occupy Wall Street movement is going toe-to-toe with debt buyers, and may just beat them at their own game. Rolling Jubilee, which will hold its launch party on November 15, is a project of Strike Debt and solicits donations in order to buy debt and then discharge it. Just as debt buyers purchase old debt for pennies on the dollar, Rolling Jubilee will purchase the same types of debt. But instead of trying to put the squeeze consumers to make a profit, Rolling Jubilee will simply abolish the debt. Rolling Jubilee’s video explains why it’s a bailout “by the people, for the people.”

Louisiana Turns to Debt Buyers

Since the start of the Great Recession, municipalities have increasingly turned to third-party debt collectors to recoup fines owed by residents. According to the Associated Press, Louisiana is kicking it up a notch. The state legislature has authorized a two-year pilot program that enables the state to sell old debt to debt buyers. This sets a dangerous precedent, since debt buyers are notorious for using shady collection tactics, and often go after the wrong person. Louisianans who have similar names as those who owe money, or who live at an address formerly occupied by a person who owes money, are particularly vulnerable.

Debt collection industry publication InsideARM reports that Oklahoma’s Bartmann Ethical Debt Collection Practices Act has stalled in the Oklahoma House of Representatives after passing the Senate on a 40-2 vote. As we discussed in an earlier post, the bill seeks to enhance consumer protections by requiring that debt buyers and their employees become licensed, banning collection of debts that are past the statute of limitations, and requiring debt buyers to prove that a consumer owes money and has received notification regarding filing lawsuits, among other provisions.

According to InsideARM, a coalition of debt collection insiders effectively killed the bill in the House Judiciary Committee for this legislative session. The opposition included debt collection industry groups ACA International and DBA International, as well as debt buyers themselves.

InsideARM, a debt collection industry publication, reports that the Georgia House Committee on Banks & Banking will consider S.B. 448 today. The bill, entitled the “Small Business Borrower Protection Act,” would essentially protect consumers who are co-signers of a loan that is in default and that is sold to a debt buyer or that results in a judgment which is in turn sold.

Although the title and wording of the bill leads one to believe that it is meant to protect commercial enterprises, it does not exempt individual co-signers. If passed and signed into law, the bill as written would place limits on the amounts debt buyers could collect, and would limit the collectible amount to what the debt buyer paid for the account plus interest, or the maximum amount permitted to be collected under the guaranty, whichever is less. The measure would most certainly bring debt buyers out of the shadows and ensure greater transparency regarding the debt buying process.

According to a press release issued by Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley, revised state debt collection regulations that took effect March 2, 2012, align more closely with existing state and federal laws.

Saying that the revisions offer additional protections for consumers, they were undertaken as part of a larger effort to streamline regulations relating to the Consumer Protection Act. The amended regulations include a new definition of “creditor” that includes debt buyers, a new definition of “debt” that includes first mortgages and loans greater than $25,000, and a provision that debt collectors must make a good-faith effort to ensure a debt is not past the statute of limitations, and to make a specific disclosure to consumers in this regard.

We’ve all heard horror stories about debt buyers – those who buy old debt for pennies on the dollar. In the worst cases, debt buyers have very little documentation regarding the debt in question, sue the wrong consumers (those with similar names or who now live at the addresses of the consumer in question) and conduct “gutter service” (whereby the consumer being sued is never notified of the lawsuit). Before the consumer knows what’s happened, the debt buyer has a court judgment against him or her and is garnishing his or her wages. Debt buyers who purchase time-barred debt (debt that’s past the statute of limitations and is therefore immune from a court judgment) have been known to try and trick consumers into making a small payment or acknowledging the debt, thereby “restarting the clock” and making the debt current again.

Now, California consumers are one step closer to being protected from predatory debt buyers. The California State Senate passed SB 890 (Leno), The Fair Debt Buyers Practices Act. According to California Attorney General Kamala Harris’ press release, the bill would “prohibit debt buyers from obtaining a judgment in a debt collection lawsuit unless the debt buyer can document their ownership of the debt, the balance of the debt, the date of the default or last payment, the identity of prior owners of the debt and the name and address of the debtor in the original creditor’s records.”

Lawsuits filed by debt buyers have been clogging courts in California and around the country – at an enormous cost to taxpayers. While the California legislation now must move on to the state’s Assembly, it should serve as a model for other states.

At the end of June, Congressman Steve Cohen (D-TN) introduced the Fair Debt Collection Improvement Act, aimed at reining in some of the abuses of debt buyers. According to a press release issued by Cohen’s office, the bill would clarify that lawsuits to collect on time-barred debt constitute a violation of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. It goes on to say:

The bill would also ensure that any debt collector that purchases time-barred debt on the secondary market informs the debtor that:

* The new debt collector now holds the debt, not the original creditor;

* Because the debt falls outside the statute of limitations, the debt collector may not sue to collect the debt; and

* If applicable under state law, any payment towards the debt may revive the entire debt.

While this legislation would go far in protecting consumers against unknowingly “resetting the clock” on debt that’s past the statute of limitations, it’s unclear whether the bill has the momentum to move forward. One complication is that, under the Dodd-Frank Act, the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau can – once a director gets Senate confirmation – can engage in rulemakings regarding the FDCPA. Moreover, the Federal Trade Commission has held public meetings regarding the need to update the FDCPA to cover communication with modern technologies. In a previous Congress, Senator Al Franken (D-MN) introduced legislation to protect consumers from predatory debt collection agencies, but the bill never moved forward. Nevertheless, Cohen’s bill makes an important statement about the need for greater transparency from debt buyers.

Debt collectors, and debt buyers in particular, often use the court system as a way to bypass traditional debt collection efforts and obtain legal judgments against consumers. Once they have these judgments, debt collectors often freeze bank accounts or garnish wages. We’ve often stated that, by using the go-to-court method first, debt collectors are saddling taxpayers (who, though taxes, fund the court system) with the cost of debt collection.

According to a story in the Baltimore Sun, Maryland courts are recognizing that this approach is problematic, and are putting the brakes on the most egregious offenders. For example, the Sun reports that Sunshine Financial Group failed to obtain a collection agency license; as a result, Maryland District Courts are freezing 900 cases filed by Sunshine Financial Group, preventing judgments against consumers. This follows on the heels of the dismissal of 27,000 cases filed by Mann-Bracken last year, and Midland Funding’s agreement to drop 10,000 Maryland cases in a class action settlement.

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