A garnishment is usually due to a court judgment obtained by the creditor. This is a court backed action, you can't just remove it and you certainly can't remove it fast. You can go to court to fight the judgment but this takes time. This also takes time and money and requires that you have a valid reason to fight the garnishment (such as the income being retirement income, the debt being invalid etc). Further complicating things is the fact that a garnishment means the creditor tried many avenues over a long period of time to collect with no results. The court was then used to force payment, so it has gone as far as it possibly could and ended in a legal rememdy. It is much harder to find a resolution you will like at this point. Your best option is to contact the creditor for options. You could also change jobs and wait for them to find you again.
get a job. collect paycheck. pay off bankrupcy << Completely Useless Answer. Try this- there's not a whole lot you can do. You're looking at having to wait until the Statute of Limitations has run out. Typically 10 years.
Filing bankruptcy does not remove a charge off report from a credit card on your credit report. It just adds bankruptcy to your credit report.
The only way to remove a bankruptcy from your credit report is to dispute it to the credit bureaus. The credit bureaus have 30 days under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, to verify your bankruptcy withe the court that filed it or it must be removed from your credit report.
No, the information remains on your credit report.
Yes, a creditor can remove a charge off from your account and your credit reports. Credit bureaus can also delete charge offs from your credit report if they are disputed and not verified.
NO earned income credit is not safe from garnishment. It is the same as taking money out of your paycheck, if you owe, they remove funds from your account.
Yes, you can remove your name by writing the credit card company. You could also customer service and have your name removed.
No, they can obtain a court order of garnishment and remove your money at a cost to you.
get a job. collect paycheck. pay off bankrupcy << Completely Useless Answer. Try this- there's not a whole lot you can do. You're looking at having to wait until the Statute of Limitations has run out. Typically 10 years.
To do that you have use whiteout
Dispute them with the credit bureaus.
Filing bankruptcy does not remove a charge off report from a credit card on your credit report. It just adds bankruptcy to your credit report.
It stays on your credit report for ten long years and they won't remove it.
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The only way to remove a bankruptcy from your credit report is to dispute it to the credit bureaus. The credit bureaus have 30 days under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, to verify your bankruptcy withe the court that filed it or it must be removed from your credit report.
No, the information remains on your credit report.
After paying the child support, the bureau's creditor will make remove the bad mark from your credit score.