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Hillis v. Equifax Consumer Services, Inc. and Fair Isaac Corp., Case No. 1:04-CV-3400 (USDC, ND GA) and Slack v. Fair Isaac Corp. and MyFICO Consumer Services, Inc., Case No. 1:07-CV-314 (USDC, ND GA)
A FEDERAL COURT ORDERED THIS NOTICE. THIS IS NOT A SOLICITATION FROM A LAWYER. THIS IS NOT A SOLICITATION FROM EQUIFAX OR FAIR ISAAC TO PURCHASE ANYTHING.
PLEASE READ.
You may be eligible to receive a benefit from a class action settlement if you purchased, paid for and received a credit score or credit monitoring offering from an Equifax website (Equifax.com), Equifax entity, Fair Isaac website (myFICO.com) or a reseller of the Suze Orman FICO® Kit between November 19, 1999 and February 8, 2007.

2007-03-14 19:26:36 · 5 answers · asked by CVR 1 in Business & Finance Credit

5 answers

I found this site:
http://www.hillisslacksettlement.com/notice.pdf

It has a toll free number in the text.. why not give it a call?
I've seen this kind of thing before.. I worked for a company that was involved in a class action suit, and as a representative I was not allowed to discuss it with customers who called, but had to refer them to the toll free number. It was legitimate.

2007-03-14 19:34:49 · answer #1 · answered by endorable 4 · 0 0

DO NOT RESPOND TO THIS E-MAIL if they ased you to do so by return e-mail. The Federal Government WOULD NOT e-mail anyone this way. It sounds like a scam and NEVER give out your e-mail or other information over the net. The Federal Government ONLY mails CLASS ACTION SETTLEMTENTS!!!!!!!!!!!!! Again DO NOT RESPOND!!!!!!!! Someone is phishing.

2007-03-15 02:36:18 · answer #2 · answered by gene m 3 · 0 0

If you know nothing about the case or the product, it IS a scam. In fact, even if you do have the product in question, I'm guessing it's a bit to steal your identity. Delete and forget my friend.

2007-03-14 19:30:13 · answer #3 · answered by indieforcutie 3 · 0 0

I agree... if you needed to sue someone you'd already know about it, you wouldn't need them to tell you. Email isn't reliable for distributing this kind of information anyway, so if it was genuine you wouldn't get it in your junk mail box.

2007-03-14 19:33:07 · answer #4 · answered by Jazzycat 2 · 0 0

Any unsolicited e-mail may be spam and need not be opened, last read and bother yourself. Better ignore it.

2007-03-14 19:56:50 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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