CRRR Demand letter Returned!!!

Discussion in 'Credit Talk' started by Erica, Jul 17, 2002.

  1. Erica

    Erica Well-Known Member

    What now??? That demand letter I sent to Midland Credit Management was returned as a non-deliverable address. Should I send it again? TIA
     
  2. Kiyi

    Kiyi Well-Known Member

    It was the same address on your credit report? Send that to CRA and say, how can you verify it if I can't?
     
  3. Erica

    Erica Well-Known Member

    The address isn't on my CR....I sent it to the address I sent my first validation letter to. The one it took them 5 months to respond from.

    What is my next step? Send it to a different address???

    BTW, this is the CA that sent me a photocopy of a signed application as their "validation" 5 months after I requested it. I sent them another validation demand letter....nothing.

    Then I get a settlement letter in the mail, so I propmtly send out a letter telling them that they have violated the law, and owe ME money. That letter was returned.


    TIA
     
  4. mindcrime2

    mindcrime2 Well-Known Member

    The address on the settlement letter, was this the same address you sent the validation letter to?
     
  5. Erica

    Erica Well-Known Member

    no....I sent it to the original address I had for them. An address they had sent me stuff from before. I finally just went to the BBB website and got their contact info from their website. I sent the letter again, thru email to their legal department. We'll see what they say to it.
     
  6. mindcrime2

    mindcrime2 Well-Known Member


    In addtional to e-mailing their legal department, I suggest, if you have the dollars for it, sending the validation letter again but this time through Fed-Ex or UPS, no one refuses those. Also, if you can find a fax number for the CA, fax them from a third party (like Kinkos) and save the confirmation sheet. Another option is to re-send your letter using 'delivery confirmation' through the PO. This is a service where no one is required to sign, but the mailman scans the envelope before delivering it.
     

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