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The car they arelooking for in not even mine one of the employees is very rude I already talked to their supervisor. Can someone please tell me where I can call to stop these poeple, and make them understand that is not my car.

2007-07-27 13:06:53 · 6 answers · asked by nacha 1 in Business & Finance Other - Business & Finance

6 answers

Letters, man.
Write letters, send registered.

Phone calls don't mean sh**.

2007-07-27 13:10:31 · answer #1 · answered by ed 7 · 0 0

I had the same problem a few years ago. Lady with the same name that I had bought a car and financed it at the same place. When she went missing, they came after me thinking we were the same person. Or, you can always tell them that the person is in jail (or at the city morgue).

Does the person they are looking for have the same name as you? If not, the next time they call, tell them the person no longer lives there and skipped town owing you money and you are looking for them too.

If you have an account with this company yourself, give them your account number. It's possible that they pulled your number thinking you guys were the same.

If they are calling on a home number that is public (ie, not unlisted), then they should easily be able to run a reverse search on your number and know that it is not the person they are looking for. If it is a cell, maybe fax them a copy of your cell phone bill showing the number and your name.

If seems like everytime I move and get a new phone number, I get creditors calling looking for the people who used to have the number. I used to tell them that they had the wrong number, but they never believe that. I have suggested they do a reverse search (which works now, but takes almost a year for the reverse search engines to get updated). Anyway, I learned that the easiest thing to do is tell them you are in the same boat and looking for that person to and that you will call them if you find them and ask that they do the same. I never get a phone call from that particular creditor after that. If you get nasty with them, they get nasty back with you (including calling over and over) and think you are really that person and are trying to hide that fact. So, just "befriend" them and they'll leave you alone.

2007-07-27 20:16:38 · answer #2 · answered by sortaclarksville 5 · 0 0

How did they get your number? Even if the car isn't yours, do you know who the car belongs to?

If the financial company can't get their needed information from you, they will then call for a repo man, and the true owner can have a warrant issued for their arrest.

If it's an honest mistake, then you need to deal with the financial company that is only trying to recover their loss. You can send notarized, certified letters, but that may not end the calls.

2007-07-27 20:17:08 · answer #3 · answered by Diana 4 · 0 0

Talk to the Supervisor's supervisor, Call the attorney General in your state and the state they are calling you from, get the fax number of the company and fax them a letter stating you will file a complaint should thye continue to harass you for a debt that is not yours. Report them to the better business bureau, you can file a complaint on line.

2007-07-27 20:16:55 · answer #4 · answered by Cynthia R 1 · 0 0

you could report them to the better business bureau -- also if you want to be rude and crude you could call them every day and ask for a different person and have them waste their time going through all the details of taking out a loan . hack you could chances are if you have the least bit of talent do it while you are answering question on yahoo. after a while they will realize you are playing games with that and like i all say pay back can be hexx and sometimes a lot of fun.

2007-07-27 20:17:19 · answer #5 · answered by mister ed 7 · 0 0

if its a major bank where you can go into the branch. then you should go into the branch and talk to the branch manager. tell them what's been happening. they can help u. you also might want to run a credit report on yourself, someone may be using your identity and bought the car with it. if so, take what ever paper work you have to your local law enforcement agency. pd or sheriff

2007-07-27 20:17:15 · answer #6 · answered by Laura B 4 · 0 0

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