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I got a phone call from my father. He said that he had my credit card and bill. I said, "huh???" Basically, what it boils down to is that the company changed my address to his, because they SAID that they got return mail with his address as the forwarding address. I called the USPS and they do not have any forwarding addresses for me. What I am concerned about is the disclosure of personal credit information to a third party without my consent. Or am I just being stupid?? I mean, what if my father was a dead beat and charged up my card??

2006-12-12 09:00:56 · 4 answers · asked by styckx 2 in Business & Finance Credit

4 answers

Actually, I'm bashing my head against the brick wall known as Chase Bank on this very issue just now. Haven't had a bill from them in three months. They also refuse to close the account. I am getting very close to speaking with an attorney.

2006-12-12 09:14:30 · answer #1 · answered by skip 6 · 0 0

Then your father would have been breaking the law. Not the credit card company.

Creditors have the right to keep your address current. Fathers have no right to open adult daughters mail.

2006-12-12 09:03:29 · answer #2 · answered by Gem 7 · 0 0

I have personal experience with this exact scenario. No, it doesn`t prevent the initial pending charge since it is in your name and old address. However, I did get my money back on the online purchase by filling out a hard copy form detailing why and dated and signed. It took 2 weeks.

2016-05-23 15:41:36 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

just ask them for a new card and give them all the correct info.

2006-12-12 09:12:02 · answer #4 · answered by tirebiter 6 · 0 0

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