CajunDixie
<font color=purple>"Carpe diem, quam minimum credu
- Joined
- Nov 18, 1999
- Messages
- 3,282
I know the account wasn't yours but what I'm saying is keep every bit of documentation you have showing the account was not yours. I've seen it on creditboards . com before that people get a incorrect item off their reports and the collection agency waits a couple years then sell it to another collection agency for pennies on the dollar.As OceanAnnie said
What exactly are you saying here? (bolded part)
I am sorry if not having my SSN makes your job a little more difficult. The less people who have my SSN, the better.
PS You do know that the account that they wrote off was not mine, it was the thief that stole my identity, right?
Originally Posted by angwill
It sounds like CajunDixie may be one of the bad seeds who feel superior when she feels people are beneath her because they owe money so that makes her feel entitled to everyones personal info.
This is why the debt collector/agency doesn't write off the debt correctly when it is identity theft and it ends up being sold to another agency instead. It makes the bad seeds feel powerful over those they feel are beneath them. This is usually due to a lack of self confidence so they see no need to help others and would rather squash them lower than they see themselves in their own mind because it makes them feel better than and more powerful. They should be working on their own lack of self esteem in a healthy way. I saw a lot of those in collections but what goes around comes around in the end. If someone has suffered identity theft it is not fun to make it harder for them.
Apparently you need to learn to read and not assume things nor make up fiction. How am I a bad seed??
I work for an ambulance service not a collection agency. I'm the first one to help people set up payment plans as small as $10 on a debt of over $1,000. I bend over backwards to help our patients because I know medical emergencies are not cheap and not everyone has good insurance or even insurance at all. Ohhh and we don't charge interest either as long as I get some sort of payment monthly. Never call a credit bureau. In doing so you have no proof later when they put the wrong info back in your report or opt not to bother changing it in the first place. Its best to in writing by regiestered return receipt mail request a credit bureau verify the information and to remove all incorrect info. At the same time again by registered return receipt mail instruct the collection agency to validate the account they have listed on your account. I don't remember the exact timeframes for this but you can refer to creditboards for this basic info.You do realize that everyone at the credit bureau can see your social security number because it's on your file? Plus if you deal with identity theft or a mixed file and you call the credit bureau, you have to verify it before they can proceed to correct your information?
There's no other way.
Have you contacted Experian about the address? They will remove it if you let them know unless it's still linked to some item on the report. Keep in mind that the addresses listed come from the credit items.
Of course they may not help you if you don't provide your social security number. Their system is reliant on those at this time.
if you get a printed copy of your report rather than the online viewing there is a paper enclosed for corrections. Better in writing than phone.
Yup, I know that and provide it when investigating the ID theft and monitoring the credit report.
It is the collection agencies that I will not give it to.
I sent a registered letter with all of my info (including SSN) and have receipt of the fact that they got the letter back in April. My ID theft counselor said it takes several months to have this removed. I will give them 1 more month (4 is definitely several) and contact them again.
It is costly to send these letters with receipts. So far $30.00 for postage for this crap. Really irritating. And the thief pays nothing.
Thanks PlanoGirl!
It really shouldnt take months. Last I knew they had 45 days from when they received your letter to correct your information. You really should read all the newbie info on creditboards . com because 4 months is not acceptable per reporting laws.
Yep, still lazy. There are other ways to identify a person. You don't need their SSN. You don't even need it to send someone to collections.
That's because the lowest SSN is 001-01-0001, so by entering all zeros you won't be connected to anyone else.
For those that think giving the wrong SSN to a doctor, hospital, or insurance company is illegal; no it isn't. You are NOT required to give those companies your SSN, so by giving them a number different from your own, there is no legal ramification. Just don't give your employer, bank, or any government agency the wrong number.
You need to look up the meaning of lazy. The SS# is not used to identify the person in our account nor the collection agency accounts. It is used to to see if the person has a job or has filed bankruptcy. It is illegal for a collection agency to go after a person that has filed bankruptcy if the debt they are holding was included in the bankruptcy. It is also used to find the person, as quite a few of people that don't pay move from address to address to address.


