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I have $218 on collection now that is showing on my report, that I don't know what its all about. How can I dispute it?
@Anonymous wrote:I have $218 on collection now that is showing on my report, that I don't know what its all about. How can I dispute it?
Send a letter to the collection agency or call them asking for debt validation. Other than that disputing with the CRA can make it just update and come back verified.
Finding a collection entry on one’s credit report does not trigger a right to validation. The collector would not be required to respond to a validation request.
Please list who the CA is.
FCRA 623(a)(1) places upon any party who reports information to a CRA the standard that their reporting must not knowingly be inaccurate.
Knowingly inaccurate means they willingly reported with knowledge that it was inaccurate. That is a difficult standard for a consumer to show.
If you either dispute the accuracy or the reporting, or in the case of a DV request sent to a debt collector, they must then conduct a reasonable investigation of the accuracy, and verification or validation then becomes a legal statement on their part that they have conductd a reasonable investigation, and that any verification is supported by the results of that reasonable investigation.
It is another layer of additional verification that must be supported by a current investigation based on current facts and in view of any additonal information provided by the consumer.
Additionally, congress structured the FCRA so as not to subject credit reporting to any civil action by a consumer based on any assertion of any violation of FCRA 623(a). FCRA 623(c) relieves creditors from civil actions by consumers based on the accuracy of their reporting.
Rather, it mandates that a consumer must first file a dispute with the CRA under the dispute process of FCRA 611, and thus impose the reasonable investigation process and a finding that the reporting is verified to be accurate before the consumer obtains any right to file a civil action regarding the accuracy of the reporting. Civil action is then based on lack of reasonable investigation, as required under FCRA 611, rather than directly upon having reported inaccurate information per se.
@DR527 wrote:
That doesn’t change the fact that the work of repair is placed on the consumer to fight items already on their report. It should be a illegal for a CRA to place any new negative items on your report without first conducting a investigation. Now if you have a positive account that becomes negative then ok. But to have a third party call up and say place this on this person report without a single piece of evidence is criminal
A CRA doesnt place anything on your CRs their customers do. I understand what you are saying and you should contact your US reps and Senators about it as the law is on their side at the moment. Knowingly placing false credit info on your CRs is punishible by law under the FCRA.
@Anonymous wrote:
This is the name: Professional Bureau of Collections
Open Date: 1/9/2019
Amount: $218
Just as everyone is saying, you should send a DV letter directly to this collector. Have you done so yet? They may have sent you a dunning letter to your address or an older address of yours. After not answering they assumed the debt as yours.
I am sure contacting them to send you information in writting is your best action. But make sure you do not admit to anything over the phone. As Robert said above, per section 623 of the FCRA - no information can be reported to the CRAs if they know the information is or could be inaccurate.