Anyone deal with these on a credit report? I pulled my TransUnion report and I have $240 worth of parking tickets on it that are not mine. I have disputed them repeatedly and the license plate that is coming up is not my plate. TransUnion will not take these off my report because the parking people are saying that the tickets are valid. HOW in the world do I take care of these???
1*I have disputed them repeatedly and the license plate that is coming up is not my plate. 2*TransUnion will not take these off my report because the parking people are saying that the tickets are valid. 3*HOW in the world do I take care of these??? Jenn7172 ************************* 1*Then whose plate is it? You need to find out! 2*The validity of the tickets is not the question. Who do the tickets belong to is the question! 3*Send the Validation letter to whoever is reporting this. THE END ** *** ** LB 59 """"```--~~~~~~~~~--```'""''' PS: *****the license plate that is coming up is not my plate. *****So how are they able to tie this plate to your name????????????
I have no clue how they are tying this to my name. The minimum wage clerk answering the phone who REFUSED to let me speak to a supervisor wasn't in a hurry to divulge that information.
The "parking people" are usually answerable to a municipality such as a city, town or village. I would contact the city hall of the location where you got the ticket and ask to speak to somebody in the mayor's office or the city manager's office. Tell them you tried to get this resolved with the parking authority, and they refused to deal with you. If they can't help you, they can steer you in the right direction. If the parking authority is run by the police department (sometimes it is), call them and ask for the chief's office. Keep working up the chain of command in the city where you got this ticket. Remember: everybody answers to somebody.
Sorry, I realized you said the tickets aren't yours. My answer still stands. Work up the chain of command where these tickets were issued.
plate doesn't match up with plates on my car ================ Of course the plate don't match if you replaced your plates after you got the parking tickets! THE END ** *** ** LB 59 """"```--~~~~~~~~~--```'""'''
Send the validation, because that way you can know if it's a city parking ticket or from a private entity and should give you an idea of how to get to the source. . Do they put the license plate info on your credit report?
Re: Re: Re: Parking Tickets Yes, they put the first 4 digits of the license plate on my credit report. Starts with YEU, my plates start with YRS. And no.. I haven't changed my plates since I got them originally.
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Parking Tickets Get a letter from the DMV (ON THEIR LETTERHEAD) that says you do NOT OWN ANY VEHICLES WITH THOSE NUMBERS AND LETTERS AND NONE OF THE VEHICLES YOU OWN ARE EVEN CLOSE TO THOSE NUMBERS AND LETTERS... ATTACH IT TO AN ITS REMOVE IT FROM MY CREDIT REPORT OR SEND ME A CHECK FOR $1,000 AND I WILL LIVE WITH IT... ..or we will discuss it with the judge for MORE than $1,000
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Parking Tickets HOW in the world do I take care of these??? Jenn7172 ================ How is this going?
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Parking Tickets Car registrations are public info, all you need to do is go to the local motor vehicles office, and fill out a form, pay a nominal fee, and they will give you the registered owner's name/ address. You might be thinking of the police "running the plate" they can do that for no charge for legitimate police purpose, they will not "run the plate" for the average citizen, you have to go to motor vehicles dept. and ask/pay for it.
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Parking Tickets In California, DMV records are not public information. Again, I can only speak for my state. California Vehicle Code (CVC) statutes allow the DMV to give out your residence address to government, law enforcement agencies and authorized commercial companies: Insurance Companies Legal Owners Financial Institutions Lienholders Dealer/Agents (for the completion of registration transactions and documents) Attorneys (for motor-vehicle or vessel related incidents) Statistical Reporting (statistical research and reporting. Information released does not identify individuals.) Vehicle Manufacturers or their agents (for safety, warranty, or product recall)
I think that's true in a lot of states. The reasoning is that you could see someone in a car, get that info and go to their home for some illegal purposes (stalking, confrontation if you didn't like their driving, etc).