• Legally Deleting a Credit Bureau Tradeline
    Sep 30 2021

    In the latest episode of the Debt Collection Drill podcast series, Moss & Barnett attorneys Aylix Jensen, Michael Etmund and John Rossman provide specific guidance on the circumstances in which a collection agency may legally delete all information previously furnished to a credit reporting agency, also known as a tradeline deletion. 

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    12 mins
  • Does Your Collection Agency Name Violate Regulation F?
    Aug 26 2021

    Regulation F contemplates debt collectors communicating with consumers using a scripted “limited content” voicemail message which contains the business name of the debt collector, but “does not indicate that the debt collector is in the debt collection business.”  While consumer advocates agree that this limited content message will be extremely beneficial to consumers, debt collectors must proceed cautiously with implementation to ensure full compliance with all requirements of the limited content message contained within Regulation F.

     

    In this episode of the Debt Collection Drill podcast, Moss & Barnett attorneys John Rossman, Sarah Doerr and Brad Armstrong provide practical guidance for implementation of the Regulation F limited content message and the attorneys also examine the legal restrictions regarding the use of certain words in a collection agency name.  

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    16 mins
  • Landmark Victory! Debt Collector Did Not Deceive Debtor Who Refused to Give Name
    Apr 13 2021

    A debt collector must verify the identity of a communication
    recipient to ensure a right-party contact while also avoiding a disclosure
    about the existence of the debt to a third-party. Thus, a debt collector
    must, when asked, provide meaningful information about the purpose of
    a telephone call to a third-party – even when the third-party refuses to
    identify herself – without disclosing that the call is an attempt to collect
    a debt.
    In the latest episode of the Debt Collection Drill podcast, Moss &
    Barnett attorneys John Rossman and Mike Poncin are joined by attorney
    Aylix Jensen who elaborates on her recent, complete victory in Federal
    Court establishing that a debt collector did not violate the FDCPA by
    stating it was a “financial services company” calling regarding a
    “personal business matter” to an unidentified individual – the Plaintiff –
    who the Court identified as the correct “customer for the account.”

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    13 mins
  • Pandemic Causes Historic Debt Collection Law Changes
    Sep 16 2020

    In this episode of the Debt Collection Drill podcast, Moss & Barnett attorneys discuss the recent, historic changes to the laws restricting debt collection and how agencies can comply.  

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    15 mins
  • CFPB Proposes Debt Collection Rule that Congress Rejected
    Sep 30 2019

    The CFPB’s proposed debt collection rules envision a much-needed update and modernization to many provisions in the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.  However, the CFPB’s proposed rules include a limit of the number of debt collection calls that may be made per week without regard to the REJECTION of call frequency limits by Congress.  Because our Congress considered and dismissed call frequency limits for debt collectors, the CFPB cannot implement such limits through rulemaking.

    In this episode of the Debt Collection Drill podcast, attorneys Mike Poncin and John Rossman re-enact (from official Congressional transcripts) portions of the April 4, 1977 debates in the United States House of Representatives regarding the FDCPA and specifically a then-proposed weekly limit on debt collection calls.  Members of Congress raised specific and detailed objections on the record about the Constitutionality of the call frequency limit proposal at that time and also concerns about false claims. 

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    12 mins
  • Common Sense Prevails! Seventh Circuit Affirms Consumer was not Harmed by Letter and Dismisses FDCPA case
    Jul 9 2019

    Debt collectors defending against hyper-technical FDCPA lawsuits by consumer attorneys commonly ask the same question: “How could the consumer possibly have been harmed by this supposed violation of the FDCPA?”  The question is especially poignant when the purported FDCPA violation arises from a collection letter the consumer never read or from the language in the collection letter upon which the consumer never intended to rely.  Does the concept of “no harm, no foul” apply to the FDCPA?

    In this episode of the Debt Collection Drill podcast, Moss & Barnett attorneys John Rossman and Mike Poncin discuss the recent ruling by the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in the Casillas matter dismissing an alleged hyper-technical FDCPA letter violation.  They also discuss the recent ruling by the Second Circuit Court of Appeal regarding interest and share thoughts on the CFPB’s proposed debt collection rules.

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    13 mins
  • Validation Notice Lawsuits: Overlooked Ruling from Third Circuit Proves Debt Collectors are Right!
    Apr 24 2019

    As most debt collectors know, sending any collection notice into Delaware, New Jersey or Pennsylvania (the States with Federal Courts in the Third Circuit) will likely result in an FDCPA class action lawsuit against the debt collector.  Typically these lawsuits assert that the validation language used in the collection letter does not require the consumer to communicate disputes in writing only allegedly in violation of the FDCPA.  While several appeals on this issue are pending and consolidated before the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, a decision from the Third Circuit in 2017 may provide guidance on how it will rule in favor of the debt collectors.  

    In the most recent episode of the Debt Collection Drill podcast, Moss & Barnett attorneys John Rossman and Mike Poncin are joined by their colleague, attorney Aylix Jensen, to discuss the Third Circuit validation issues, including the Jewsevskyj case, compliance with the new California privacy law (the CCPA) and credit reporting accounts in bankruptcy (see recent article on this issue http://www.insidearm.com/news/00044941-credit-reporting-debts-bankruptcy-deluge-/)

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    13 mins
  • Should Collectors Change the Validation Notices Sent into Pennsylvania?
    Mar 4 2019

    Debt collectors face an historic onslaught of FDCPA cases in Pennsylvania (and to a lesser extent New Jersey), all of which allege that statutory language in collection letters which tracks the FDCPA somehow violates the law.  The Courts in these cases take the position that a consumer must be apprised that a dispute must be in writing to be effective, even though this position is contrary to the plain language of the FDCPA and rulings by the Second, Fourth and Ninth Circuit Courts of Appeal.  This issue has been addressed extensively in InsideARM: 

    http://www.insidearm.com/news/00044725-22m-settlement-proposed-fcra-case-pulling/

    http://www.insidearm.com/news/00044669-open-letter-cfpb-1692g-issues-within-thir/

    In this episode of the Debt Collection Drill podcast, attorneys John Rossman and Mike Poncin directly address whether debt collectors should change notices sent into Pennsylvania and also discuss the impact of the settlement in the Crunch v. Marks decision along with the recent California out-of-statute disclosure.

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    13 mins