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How to make the phone calls stop!!

About 8 months ago when H and I moved to a new city I changed my phone number to have a local number.  A couple months after I got my new number credit agencies started calling me about the lady who had the number before me.  I thought I finally got it straightened out that I was not her and this was no longer here number.

Fast Forward to today...

The same agencies started calling me again over and over again everyday, I thought I had this straightned out and now they are calling me again.  It is really driving me crazy I can't block the number because they are un listed.  I have talked and talked to them over and over and now I feel like I'm really getting no where with them. 

Has anyone else had this happened?  If so how did you sort it out?

Re: How to make the phone calls stop!!

  • Get the names and addresses of the agencies and send them cease and desist letters.
  • Change your number again
  • I kept getting calls from a ladies' gym once a week asking for Juana Diaz. I told them every single time that I was not Juana Diaz and to please take me off their list.

    The calls never stopped until I got a new number.

     My coworker who sits next to me get a call about once every 3 days asking about a department store credit card. She goes ballistic on them about calling her work number and she's not interested, and to take her off their list. She still keeps getting calls. It's pretty funny, actually.

    If it's really causing problems, I say tsend the companies a nasty e-mail/letter. If that doesn't work, change your number.

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  • Report them to the FTC.

    And tell them you've done exactly that and if the callers persist in calling, you'll file a harassment charge.

    (That's what the FTC told me to do when I kept getting calls for my bro's exFI. She owed money to a book of the month club and I was barraged with call after call from a collection agency)

  • Document, document, document. Get the name fo the agency calling, the name of the person calling, ask to speak with a supervisor and get their name too, note the date and time of each call. Research how to file a complaint with your state's attorney general, and then let them know that you'll be doing that.
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  • I don't know, but here is a related funny story I thought might ease your stress: In college my friend kept getting phone calls for Dignity, and she kept telling the lady Dignity didn't live there anymore.  The lady didn't stop calling.  So, one day she set her answering machine to say:  "This is so and so and if your looking for Dignity, Dignity is DEAD! (she wasn't of course), please leave a message."  LOL!  Hope this brings stress relief. 

  • First get the name over the person that is calling, a number that you would be able to return the calls, the name of the supervisor, the name of the co. and an address. Ask to speek with the persons supervisor. They may not want to connect you but insist on speeking to no one other then the supervisor. Once you have them make sure you have their name in case it is a different supervisor you were told before. Tell them that XYZ no longer has this number and you want the harassing phone calls to stop ASAP. If they do not stop you will file a complaint against the co and you are now keeping track of every call and the name of every employee that calls you. This is a lot of time and work but trust me it will work. 
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  • We use a 3rd party debt collection agency for one of our businesses and according to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act if you send a 3rd party debt collector a written notice, cite the FDCPA, and order them to stop the collection calls the agency is legally obligated to comply. Then the only legal contact they can do after is notify the debtor of specific actions, like they're taking you to court. 

    The FDCPA only covers 3rd party agencies. If an agency buys the former debt they're still covered and thought of as a 3rd party debt collector and not the original creditor. If the agencies are the original creditor I'm not sure what you can do. 

  • I just asked my DH about this and he said that you should write them requesting a written debt validation notice. They're required to give you one within 5 days of you asking and stating that you have the option of disputing the debt within the next 30 days. After receiving your dispute they're unable to contact you again until they've provided the information you've requested.

    If they don't send you anything for 30 days they're unable to contact you any further.

  • imagekriswife:

    I don't know, but here is a related funny story I thought might ease your stress: In college my friend kept getting phone calls for Dignity, and she kept telling the lady Dignity didn't live there anymore.  The lady didn't stop calling.  So, one day she set her answering machine to say:  "This is so and so and if your looking for Dignity, Dignity is DEAD! (she wasn't of course), please leave a message."  LOL!  Hope this brings stress relief. 

    hehe.

    Dignity is dead?

    Along with Chivalry?

    How sad.

    hehehe

  • Will that work the same if its not my debt though??  I will def try all the suggestions I really dont want to change my number again, thanks!!
  • imageMrs.Elsie:

    I just asked my DH about this and he said that you should write them requesting a written debt validation notice. They're required to give you one within 5 days of you asking and stating that you have the option of disputing the debt within the next 30 days. After receiving your dispute they're unable to contact you again until they've provided the information you've requested.

    If they don't send you anything for 30 days they're unable to contact you any further.

    That's only for people being harrassed by debt collectors where the person they are looking for is actually you.  Don't ask them to validate a debt that isn't yours! 

    Tell them that what they are doing is illegal and report them.   This link may help -- http://www.fair-debt-collection.com/searches/phone-calls.html 

  • imageNonny:
    imageMrs.Elsie:

    I just asked my DH about this and he said that you should write them requesting a written debt validation notice. They're required to give you one within 5 days of you asking and stating that you have the option of disputing the debt within the next 30 days. After receiving your dispute they're unable to contact you again until they've provided the information you've requested.

    If they don't send you anything for 30 days they're unable to contact you any further.

    That's only for people being harrassed by debt collectors where the person they are looking for is actually you.  Don't ask them to validate a debt that isn't yours! 

    Tell them that what they are doing is illegal and report them.   This link may help -- http://www.fair-debt-collection.com/searches/phone-calls.html 

    It's for anyone that is getting phone calls from a debt collector. Doing the written request will buy her more time to take other steps if that's what she needs to do.  Plus, it's a whole lot easier.

  • Wow, all of these suggestions sound like such a hassle. Personally, I'd just change my number.
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  • I don't know, but I feel for you, from experience.  As an aside, if you ever meet someone named Mary Soderbergh, punch her in the face for me.
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  • Just block all unlisted numbers through your phone provider.
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