3 Steps To Sue Telemarketers And Win
Andr -Tascha Lamm has successfully sued telemarketers in small claims court and wants to share his secrets with you. For only $195 in filing costs so far, he's received $6160.00.
The 3 basic steps are:
1. Log the calls
2. Know and follow the local Small Claims Court rules
3. Prepare Your Case and Be Ready for Court
He goes into much more detail on his site about what each of these entail. Check it out.
Here's a list of local small claims court info.
Inside, we uploaded a sample form you can keep a couple of copies of by your phone for taking notes. — BEN POPKEN
Kill The Calls [via Consumerism Commentary]
Click to enlarge
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nam malesuada commodo erat et molestie. Duis pellentesque aliquam bibendum. Suspendisse venenatis lobortis eleifend. Mauris id est sed lectus convallis aliquam.
Post a comment
Comments:
I tried this several years ago with a really flagrant violator, but after carefully logging and recording all the calls, researching and locating the company involved (some shady operation out of Florida, natch), and getting everything else in order, I ran into a big brick wall. Apparently, in order to sue in small claims court, you have to serve someone here. In order to do business here locally, you are legally required to have a local agent. (An agent of record? Something like that.)
These guys didn't, though, so I wasn't able to sue them in small claims. I would have either had to go to civil court, or to Florida. Scary places, both.
This was a long time ago, so I hope I'm not misstating or misremembering anything. If I am, though, some mean lawyer will come and lay some smackdowns on me for it.
There's a serious and repeated error on his site -- in many states (I would GUESS most states), attorneys ARE allowed in small claims court. I just quickly checked the five largest states by population, and Texas, Florida, Illinois, and New York all allow attorneys in small claims; only California doesn't.
And even if you're in a "no attorneys in small claims" state, when you sue a corporation, you may end up facing a corporate attorney in small claims, which could be a nasty surprise.
@Spanky: It's possible they were just "hiding" their local agent. I've had this problem with a few corporations that figure the best way to stave off lawsuits is to illegally refuse to give you their information so you can't serve them. My favorite was a company that finally gave me the "correct legal name" and address of the corporation, and then moved for dismissal on the basis that I had sued the corporation under the wrong name -- the one they gave me, of course! (The judge was unimpressed.) So sleazy.
I would report them to the state Attorney General, though, if they have no local agent and you can't serve them. That'll theoretically bring down a world of hurt on them.
I do helldesk support which means I'm on the phone a lot at work. At home I'll either ignore the phone or let one of the kids get it. If it is a telemarketer I'll usually just hang up. A few times I've given the phone to the kids, told them the person was dead, that I was robbing the place, or put the phone down by the PC speakers and continue playing a game. I'm sure the sound of machine gun fire was fun to listen to.











Who still gets telemarketing calls? Since I've been on VOIP I've had 0 ... which has been a couple of years now.