I didn't know this. We keep getting them at our house and have just gotten to the point that we just don't answer the phone if we don't know the person or see it's a collection agency.Robo calls for debt collection are also againts the law, so you could sue them without the C&D if you wanted to, but the C&D gives you more ammo.
With UVerse, we can also block numbers. Unfortunately, if each person within the agency has a separate number, they just call using a different phone. I know. I tried doing this. It only helped for about a day.Thanks! With Vonage, we have an itimized (sp?) call list of incoming and outgoing calls available on their web site. So it's easy to just print that out.
Ooh, Thanks! We also have a Panasonic phone. I just checked, and yes, we have that feature. I just entered in the toll free number to block it. Hopefully that will do the trick!
That is something I didn't know. Thanks.
We have a friend who is an attorney if it comes down to it as a last resort.
Send them a certified letter. Tell them to quit calling you and be sure to cite "per federal debt collection laws".
Here is a sample letter I found:
You can tweak it to include your phone number of course since they have that. I would leave off your address info.


I've been getting 1-800 calls leaving VM's saying: This is an importance message for Erica Williams......
Every single day![]()
... (didn't even know something like that existed) ... 1-800-348-8727. This!
Robo calls for debt collection are also againts the law, so you could sue them without the C&D if you wanted to, but the C&D gives you more ammo.
This is an issue near and dear to my heart.
For the past 7!!!! years I have gotten collection calls for a Casey Morrow.
I have had my phone number for 19 years and I have never heard of a "Casey Morrow".
My poor kids have grown up not answering the phone if it is not a number they recognize since I am sure it is a collection company.
I have tried so many things. If I acknowledge I am not Casey Morrow they act like they do not believe me and I get attitude and no information. Once I pretended to be her (here is where someone wil tell me I acted illegally) just to get more info for these calls to stop. That did not work since I could not even provide basic info. One time I got a new guy who was suseptible to my pleading and told me her address. Since it was years old, it did not help me.
I asked him why these calls had continued for so long and didn't they drop off at some point. He said it was for a "Very large amount" so it just kept getting sold from one company to another.
I was mentionng this to my attorney neighbor and he gave me an exact script to say that would stop them but only until they got sold to the next company.
There are always about 6 months between collection company's calls so we have some peace.
I know it sounds bad but we are used to it and I am not changing my phone number I have had for this long.
If I evenr meet Casey Morrow, I am going to box her ears!![]()

I understand your frustration, OP, and I hope you're able to resolve it without having to change your phone number.
I ended up having to change my cell phone number a few years back, due to collection calls for the wrong person.
They simply would not believe me that I was not **** nor that I had no idea who she was. They just kept telling me that this was the number she had given them.![]()
Sheesh, of COURSE that is the number that she gave them...she's not completely stupid! She didn't give them her REAL number, she gave them YOURS If the collection agency robo-caller is giving you a name, I would do some research and try to find The Deadbeats new contact info & give it to the Collection Agency phone-mail system.
Try to find the Collection Agency's contact info & call them on their non-1(800) number. Do one of the following:
*Give them the deadbeats info.
*Tell them you are not The Deadbeats and that you are logging their calls and that your attorney will be filing harassment charges if the calls do not stop.
Make SURE that your credit report doesn't have The Deadbeats information co-mingled with yours.
agnes!
If the collection agency robo-caller is giving you a name, I would do some research and try to find The Deadbeats new contact info & give it to the Collection Agency phone-mail system.
Try to find the Collection Agency's contact info & call them on their non-1(800) number. Do one of the following:
*Give them the deadbeats info.
*Tell them you are not The Deadbeats and that you are logging their calls and that your attorney will be filing harassment charges if the calls do not stop.
Make SURE that your credit report doesn't have The Deadbeats information co-mingled with yours.
agnes!
Someone is on their way to the bank to pay their bill. Out of nowhere, a car flies around a corner hitting them head on. Now this person is sitting in the hospital half dead and 2 days later, the collection agency is calling their home about the debt they were on their way to pay.
My problem in this thread is you assuming the person is a deadbeat while they are half dead lying in the hospital.....
Since the OP has been getting the harassing phone calls for quite a while (at least long enough to become an issue to the OP...it doesn't seem like it's only been a couple of days. Did the OP say it was 2 days? Maybe I missed that...*anyway*) and in your version of events Mr/Ms Deadbeat had been 'half dead lying' in a hospital, they or their family do still need to work something out or at least communicate with their creditors. The calls being received by the wrong party doesn't make the debt go away.
And the advice I gave isn't necessarily negated by Mr/Ms Deadbeat's supposed circumstances, especially the OP researching their own credit file to make sure that different people's bad credit hasn't gotten co-mingled with the OP's file.
agnes!
.