• Report: #503153

Complaint Review: AFNI-BLOOM

Thank You

Read how Ripoff Report saves consumers millions.

  • Submitted: Friday, October 02, 2009
  • Last Posting: Friday, October 02, 2009
  • Reported By: nikkicain — mobile New Hampshire USA
AFNI-BLOOM
POB 3427 Bloomington Illinois United States of America

AFNI-BLOOM Verizon can't find me but AFNI-BlOOM can? Bloomington, Illinois


1Author 1Consumer 0Employee/Owner

Respond to this Report

  • Respond to this report!
    What's this?
  • Also a victim?
    What's this?
  • Repair Your Reputation
    ...the right way!
    Corporate Advocacy Program

While engagement ring shopping with my fiance a few weeks ago, we both put in for credit and the jewerly store.  A few days ago i received a letter from the jewerly store saying they couldn't give me credit because of delinquent accounts.  I went and viewed my credit report online and found 2 accounts in collections from verizon. 

I didn't open these accounts and when I called verizon they couldn't find me in their system at all.  When I called AFNI-BLOOM they said they were willing to settle over the phone whatever amount I wanted to settle the debt. Well the debt isn't mine. So I went and talked to a financial advisor today who was also confused by my account. both accounts were opened on the same day 06/09, and reported the same day 08/09. What also didn't make sense to him that there was no inquiry from verizon on my credit report. I've been told to contact all credit reporting agencies immediately to fight these accounts which I will.

What confuses me about the whole situation is that if a company put an account that I owed in collections, why wouldn't they have me in their system, at all they couldn't even tell me the date they were opened. On my credit report it still says opened but since Verizon can't find me in there system I can't even close the accounts.

I'm 23 and getting married in 15 months and what to be on the right foot. The phantom accounts are hurting me, and nobody can explain to me why?

This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 10/2/2009 9:11:23 AM and is a permanent record located here: http://www.ripoffreport.com/collection-agency-s/afni-bloom/afni-bloom-verizon-can-t-find-24758.htm.

Ripoff Report has an exclusive license to this report. It may not be copied without the written permission of Ripoff Report.

Click Here to read other Ripoff Reports on AFNI BLOOM

Search for additional reports

If you would like to see more Rip-off Reports on this company/individual, search here:

Search Tips
Report & Rebuttal
Respond to this report!
What's this?
Also a victim?
What's this?
Repair Your Reputation!
What's this?
REBUTTALS & REPLIES:
1Author 1Consumer 0Employee/Owner
Updates & Rebuttals

#1 Consumer Comment

FDCPA VILOATIONS

AUTHOR: Laurie - Haslet (U.S.A.)

AFNI is a KNOWN FDCPA /FCRA violator. 

Immediately contact the 3 credit reporting companies and tell them you are disputing the trade lines as not your account. Try and get something in writing from Verizon as well.   

Most likely someone with a similar name and AFNI just attached them to your credit report instead of locating the correct person

Send a debt validation letter to AFNI disputing the bill, demand they remove the trade lines from your credit report. 

You can find debt validation letters on the Bud Hibbs website.  

If they do not remove them you can SUE them as well

 

File complaints with

Federal Trade Commission  

https://www.ftccomplaintassistant.gov/FTC_Wizard.aspx?Lang=en

Your State Attorney General

State Attorney General is every state they have offices

Link to all State Attorney General Websites

www.naag.org

If you or they are located in NY – use this SPECIAL Link  

www.NYDebtHelp.com

This special website was created by NY AG Andrew Cuomo specifically for reporting illegal debt collection practices.   HE’S CRACKING DOWN AND SHUTTING THEM DOWN!

Also report your calls and contacts with debt collectors at

http://www.budhibbs.com/index.html

  If the company is listed under agencies – report there. If not on the list YET, click on Watchlist! and add to the list.    You can also post here http://www.collectorsexposed.com/forum2/index.php?board=2.0

 

Debt Collectors DO NOT WANT YOU TO KNOW THIS INFORMATION!    

The INFORMED CONSUMER IS THE DEBT COLLECTORS WORST ENEMY!

 

Dealing with Debt Collectors

http://www.budhibbs.com/start.html

Statute of Limitations by State – always double check YOUR OWN STATE Government Website

http://www.budhibbs.com/statute_of_limitations.htm

Recording calls from Debt Collectors - always double check YOUR OWN STATE Government Website

http://www.budhibbs.com/record.htm

From Federal Trade Commission Website – FAIR DEBT COLLECTION PRACTICES ACT

Debt Collection FAQs: A Guide for Consumers

If you’re behind in paying your bills, or a creditor’s records mistakenly make it appear that you are, a debt collector may be contacting you.

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the nation’s consumer protection agency, enforces the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), which prohibits debt collectors from using abusive, unfair, or deceptive practices to collect from you.

Under the FDCPA, a debt collector is someone who regularly collects debts owed to others. This includes collection agencies, lawyers who collect debts on a regular basis, and companies that buy delinquent debts and then try to collect them.

Here are some questions and answers about your rights under the Act.

 

What types of debts are covered?

The Act covers personal, family, and household debts, including money you owe on a personal credit card account, an auto loan, a medical bill, and your mortgage. The FDCPA doesn’t cover debts you incurred to run a business.

 

Can a debt collector contact me any time or any place?

No. A debt collector may not contact you at inconvenient times or places, such as before 8 in the morning or after 9 at night, unless you agree to it. And collectors may not contact you at work if they’re told (orally or in writing) that you’re not allowed to get calls there.

 

How can I stop a debt collector from contacting me?

If a collector contacts you about a debt, you may want to talk to them at least once to see if you can resolve the matter – even if you don’t think you owe the debt, can’t repay it immediately, or think that the collector is contacting you by mistake. If you decide after contacting the debt collector that you don’t want the collector to contact you again, tell the collector – in writing – to stop contacting you. Here’s how to do that:

Make a copy of your letter. Send the original by certified mail, and pay for a “return receipt” so you’ll be able to document what the collector received. Once the collector receives your letter, they may not contact you again, with two exceptions: a collector can contact you to tell you there will be no further contact or to let you know that they or the creditor intend to take a specific action, like filing a lawsuit. Sending such a letter to a debt collector you owe money to does not get rid of the debt, but it should stop the contact. The creditor or the debt collector still can sue you to collect the debt.

 

Can a debt collector contact anyone else about my debt?

If an attorney is representing you about the debt, the debt collector must contact the attorney, rather than you. If you don’t have an attorney, a collector may contact other people – but only to find out your address, your home phone number, and where you work. Collectors usually are prohibited from contacting third parties more than once. Other than to obtain this location information about you, a debt collector generally is not permitted to discuss your debt with anyone other than you, your spouse, or your attorney.

 

What does the debt collector have to tell me about the debt?

Every collector must send you a written “validation notice” telling you how much money you owe within five days after they first contact you. This notice also must include the name of the creditor to whom you owe the money, and how to proceed if you don’t think you owe the money.

 

Can a debt collector keep contacting me if I don’t think I owe any money?

If you send the debt collector a letter stating that you don’t owe any or all of the money, or asking for verification of the debt, that collector must stop contacting you. You have to send that letter within 30 days after you receive the validation notice. But a collector can begin contacting you again if it sends you written verification of the debt, like a copy of a bill for the amount you owe.

 

What practices are off limits for debt collectors?

Harassment.

Debt collectors may not harass, oppress, or abuse you or any third parties they contact. For example, they may not:

      

use threats of violence or harm;

      

publish a list of names of people who refuse to pay their debts (but they can give this information to the credit reporting companies);

      

use obscene or profane language; or

      

repeatedly use the phone to annoy someone.

 

False statements.

Debt collectors may not lie when they are trying to collect a debt. For example, they may not:

      

falsely claim that they are attorneys or government representatives;

      

falsely claim that you have committed a crime;

      

falsely represent that they operate or work for a credit reporting company;

      

misrepresent the amount you owe;

      

indicate that papers they send you are legal forms if they aren’t; or

      

indicate that papers they send to you aren’t legal forms if they are.

 

Debt collectors also are prohibited from saying that:

      

you will be arrested if you don’t pay your debt;

      

they’ll seize, garnish, attach, or sell your property or wages unless they are permitted by law to take the action and intend to do so; or

      

legal action will be taken against you, if doing so would be illegal or if they don’t intend to take the action.

 

Debt collectors may not:

      

give false credit information about you to anyone, including a credit reporting company;

      

send you anything that looks like an official document from a court or government agency if it isn’t; or

      

use a false company name.

 

Unfair practices.

Debt collectors may not engage in unfair practices when they try to collect a debt. For example, they may not:

      

try to collect any interest, fee, or other charge on top of the amount you owe unless the contract that created your debt – or your state law – allows the charge;

      

deposit a post-dated check early;

      

take or threaten to take your property unless it can be done legally; or

      

contact you by postcard.

 

Can I control which debts my payments apply to?

Yes. If a debt collector is trying to collect more than one debt from you, the collector must apply any payment you make to the debt you select. Equally important, a debt collector may not apply a payment to a debt you don’t think you owe.

 

Can a debt collector garnish my bank account or my wages?

If you don’t pay a debt, a creditor or its debt collector generally can sue you to collect. If they win, the court will enter a judgment against you. The judgment states the amount of money you owe, and allows the creditor or collector to get a garnishment order against you, directing a third party, like your bank, to turn over funds from your account to pay the debt.

Wage garnishment happens when your employer withholds part of your compensation to pay your debts. Your wages usually can be garnished only as the result of a court order. Don’t ignore a lawsuit summons. If you do, you lose the opportunity to fight a wage garnishment.

 

Can federal benefits be garnished?

Many federal benefits are exempt from garnishment, including:

      

Social Security Benefits

      

Supplemental Security Income (SSI) Benefits

      

Veterans’ Benefits

      

Civil Service and Federal Retirement and Disability Benefits

      

Service Members’ Pay

      

Military Annuities and Survivors’ Benefits

      

Student Assistance

      

Railroad Retirement Benefits

      

Merchant Seamen Wages

      

Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Death and Disability Benefits

      

Foreign Service Retirement and Disability Benefits

      

Compensation for Injury, Death, or Detention of Employees of U.S. Contractors Outside the U.S.

      

Federal Emergency Management Agency Federal Disaster Assistance

But federal benefits may be garnished under certain circumstances, including to pay delinquent taxes, alimony, child support, or student loans.

 

Do I have any recourse if I think a debt collector has violated the law?

You have the right to sue a collector in a state or federal court within one year from the date the law was violated. If you win, the judge can require the collector to pay you for any damages you can prove you suffered because of the illegal collection practices, like lost wages and medical bills. The judge can require the debt collector to pay you up to $1,000, even if you can’t prove that you suffered actual damages. You also can be reimbursed for your attorney’s fees and court costs. A group of people also may sue a debt collector as part of a class action lawsuit and recover money for damages up to $500,000, or one percent of the collector’s net worth, whichever amount is lower. Even if a debt collector violates the FDCPA in trying to collect a debt, the debt does not go away if you owe it.

 

What should I do if a debt collector sues me?

If a debt collector files a lawsuit against you to collect a debt, respond to the lawsuit, either personally or through your lawyer, by the date specified in the court papers to preserve your rights.

 

Where do I report a debt collector for an alleged violation?

Report any problems you have with a debt collector to your state Attorney General’s office (

www.naag.org

) and the Federal Trade Commission (

www.ftc.gov

). Many states have their own debt collection laws that are different from the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. Your Attorney General’s office can help you determine your rights under your state’s law.

 

For More Information

To learn more about debt collection and other credit-related issues, visit

www.ftc.gov/credit

and

MyMoney.gov

, the U.S. government’s portal to financial education.

The FTC works for the consumer to prevent fraudulent, deceptive, and unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide information to help consumers spot, stop, and avoid them. To file a

complaint

or to get

free information on consumer issues

, visit

ftc.gov

or call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. The FTC enters consumer complaints into the

Consumer Sentinel Network

, a secure online database and investigative tool used by hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad. 

 

 

 

AFNI, Inc.

fka/Anderson Financial Network, Inc. 404 Brock Drive      Bloomington , IL 61701 Phone: 866-633-4384      309-828-5226

800-767-2364 or 888-338-2364 Fax: 877-435-8073    (309) 828-0931

309-663-4510     309-829-2682 Web Address:

www.afnicollections.com

 

Head Debt Collectors: Bruce F. Griffin   Chairman and Chief Executive Officer President Ronald L. Greene Vice President Gregory J. Donovan Secretary Gregory J. Donovan Treasurer V. Curtis Oyer

 

Consumer Comments Below

 

Bud Says

 

CONSUMERS ARE WARNED NOT TO FALL FOR THEIR SCAM OF ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT ON TIME BARRED DEBTS FROM VERIZON/GTE ACCOUNTS THAT DATE BACK TO THE EARLY 90'S. AFNI CANNOT SUE ON THESE DEBTS, THEY CANNOT REPORT THEM ON YOUR CREDIT FILES. AFNI IS HURTING FOR COLLECTION ACCOUNTS & PAID PENNIES FOR THIS WORTHLESS PORTFOLIO, HOPING TO CASH IN. THIS IS A SCAM -- YOU DO NOT HAVE TO PAY ON THESE OLD, OUTDATED ACCOUNTS!

FAX A LETTER TO AFNI AT (309)-828-0931

STATING: I REFUSE TO PAY THIS DEBT !

Get a receipt it was received 

CAUTION : I recommend you

NEVER

disclose your bank account or credit card information to a debt collector, as you risk them emptying your account, or maxing out your credit card. If you feel they are reporting on your credit bureau files in error or need assistance in dealing with them, email  the details w/your location.  Assistance and referral to a consumer legal specialist may be available.

 

 


Respond to this report!
What's this?

Advertisers above have met our
strict standards for business conduct.