pretend you're the supervisor and tell creditor that the he/she was let go/laid off weeks ago!
Just reply in a female voice (like a pre recorded voice) that "all the route to this lines are busy, please try after sometime"...........if this wont help, then dude its time for you to change the house......
They should not be calling repeatedly during the day, nor at unreasonable times. If they keep calling in one single day, then it's a form of creditor harassment, you should keep notes of the time of each call and who you spoke to, and complain to the creditor or a professional body.
If calling in sick to work or school.
Remit a "cease and desist" letter to the agency via registered mail with receipt requested.
If they are calling from a 3rd party collection agency, all you have to do is ask them not to call you at a specific number, and by law they can't. That is not always the best thing to do, however. If you limit they amount of access they have to you, they are more likely to consider your account for lawsuit.
If you have asked this creditor to stop calling your work, that is not enough. You must put it in writting and mail it to them, at this point they are not permitted to call you at your place of employment or even your home if you request this in your letter as well.
Yes but if you are called at your place of employment and request you not be contacted there they have to stop.
by calling on his/her phone.
Stop Calling Me was created in 2001.
Stop Calling
Stop calling
There is no good sentence using the word creditor, unless that is how you make your living: That creditor keeps calling, no matter how many times I tell them that they have the wrong John Smith.
Tell the creditor in a firm voice "DO NOT CALL THIS NUMBER AGAIN". It is a violation of the Fair Credit Reporting Act for them to continue to call you. They can be cited for it. Ask to speak to a supervisor.
if he just doesn't kal because he doesnt want to then yes, you should bt if he's at work or school then you should give him a call he might be to tired to call you.
You can talk to the creditor and try to work somesthing out, or you can hope he gets tired of calling you in 3-4 months.
Have you tried mentioning calling your attorney next time they call? that usually stops them.
To end phone calls from creditors the debtor must send a "cease and desist" letter containg all the information needed for identifying the account and the applicable terms. The correspondence should clearly state that the creditor should stop calling the debtor at his or her home, employment, cell phone etc. and also cease contact with any of the debtor's family, employer, etc.