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2007-04-22 07:23:22 · 2 answers · asked by Kevin F 1 in Business & Finance Credit

2 answers

Generally you have the right to see any bill that someone says you owe. The basic principle is that you don't have to pay a debt until the amount and content of the debt is verified to your satisfaction.

Thus, credit card companies, mortgage companies, service people all have to show you the bill you supposedly owe.

A growing problem is people and firms who buy debts that have been written off by a bank or credit card company and then try to collect them from literally anyone with the same name as the debtor.

Or they try to collect the bills after they have already been paid.

The #1 rule in these cases is that the debt collector cannot collect the debt until it first shows that the debt is valid and gives the debtor evidence of this.

2007-04-25 03:01:25 · answer #1 · answered by John W 4 · 0 0

Not here. You need to contact whoever the bill is from. Public Q & A sites can't help you.

2007-04-22 16:38:07 · answer #2 · answered by STEVEN F 7 · 0 0

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