Debt Collector Addresses Notice To "SHIT FACE"
Collection agency addresses collection notice to "SHIT FACE." The letter begins, "Dear SHIT..." Below a line where the debtor is supposed to sign, the pejorative again appears. Best of all, the debt is only $16.39, for Columbia House (purveyors of fine 1cent for 624,215 CD offers). The debtor signed an affidavit saying he didn't sign up under that name, nor did he use profanity in his correspondence. Consumer lawyer and sometimes Consumerist contributing blogger Sam Glover thinks the sobriquet is a deliberate touch by the debt collector. Debt collectors frequently resort to intimidation, though they "don't usually document their harassment."
Nationwide Collections addresses letter to "SHIT FACE" [Caveat Emptor]
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I once had a job selling phone systems to businesses and a collection agency was one of my customers. I had to visit a couple of their sites. It looked like the very worst place to work. The operators were all miserable and hateful and the management wrang the most work out of them they could, i.e. calls per minute and such. They talked about them like that were cattle. Cattle that couldn't be trusted. In front of them.
I have been grateful for every job I've had ever since.
I saw something similar to this on snopes about a year ago. It turned out that the programmer who created the form (or bill or whatever it was) put something vulgar as a placeholder where a name is inserted later. Someone forgot to actually put names on the ads/bills or there was a programming error, and they mailed about 10,000 people the same vulgar ad/bill. It said something like, "Greetings Mr. Asswipe," or something like that.
Unfortunately, I can't find the danged article! I wonder if the same thing happened here.
Found it! They addressed it to "Dear Rich Bastard", but it's undetermined. However, there's a true case of something like this happening to Wells Fargo included on the page. Enjoy!
Old debts revolve around "collections hell" where it bounces from one collector to another in a continuous cycle for eternity, even after you die. They really have nothing to lose as some people will pay.
I was an in-house collector for a company and it's amazing what you can say (legal or not) to get people scared to pay up.
@missbehave: No, they are still around, and still getting even smart people, myself included. I don't want to go to far into WHY I signed up for it, but it was online, and I did it because I wanted to win something completely different.
So naive...
@Jaysyn: "My step-father used to work with a man named Richard Wacker. I kid you not."
OMG, so did my mother. Was this by any chance at a rather large corporate law firm in Manhattan?





















Wow, I wish they would screw up like that more often... I should call up my collections ass hats and verbally abuse them, in the hopes they would do something like this.