Tag: BBB

  • Tips on How to Avoid Paid Credit Repair Scams

    Tips on How to Avoid Paid Credit Repair Scams

    If you’re like millions of other Americans, you likely began 2015 with a handful of resolutions to improve your physical or financial health. Unfortunately, there are all too many predatory companies and scam artists who want to turn your commitment to better yourself into a quick profit for themselves. And just as you should steer clear of anyone shilling for a diet that has you eating only foods of a particular color, so too should you know how to avoid credit repair scams.

    That is one of the New Year messages from Better Business Bureau (BBB) chapters from Illinois to Louisiana. As the BBB notes, the credit repair scams promise a quick-fix for the sort of credit woes that prevent people from either obtaining a mortgage or a car loan or instead compel them to pay a high interest rate for those loans. In exchange, these local and national companies vowing to provide a clean bill of credit health charge upfront fees as high as $250 – and sometimes follow those up with additional monthly charges as well.

    How to avoid credit repair scams

    As the BBB makes clear, these credit repair scams do nothing more than make already financially vulnerable people’s situations even worse. “No one can make bad credit scores simply disappear,” says a BBB statement. “After consumers pay these companies hundreds or even thousands of dollars in upfront fees, frequently these companies do nothing to improve your credit report and many simply vanish with your money.”

    In fact, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) lists the many signs of a credit repair scam that consumers should watch out for. At the top of the list is a request by so-called credit repair companies that you pay them before they will do any work on your behalf. This is illegal. Other signs of a credit repair scam include being told not to directly contact the credit reporting companies – including Experian, TransUnion and Equifax – that maintain credit reports and calculate credit scores. The FTC also advises avoiding any company that urges you to dispute information included in your credit report that you know is correct or tells you to provide false information on a credit application.

    BBB Advises how to avoid credit repair scams.

    Things to Watch out for: Free Things You Can Do to Improve Your Credit:
    •  Company asks you to pay up front before any work is done
    • Being told not to directly contact the credit reporting companies: Experian, TransUnion and Equifax
    • Urges you to dispute information in your credit report
    • Tells you to provide false information on a credit application
    • Create a personal debt repayment plan and stick to it
    • Take advantage of the legal right to access and check your credit report for free once per year – go to www.annualcreditreport.com or call 1-877-322-8228 – you can get a copy of your report from each of the three reporting companies
    • Dispute any errors you find on your credit report

    Truth is, improving credit doesn’t happen in a hurry. Instead, the BBB suggests devising a personal debt repayment plan and sticking to it and taking advantage of the legal right to access and check your credit report for free once every year. If you come across errors that are harming your credit, take the time to dispute them. “If your credit is less than golden, there are steps you can take to repair it on your own, at no cost,” says the FTC. “Only time and a personal debt repayment plan will improve your credit.”

  • New FBI Prepaid Card Scam – Alert By Better Business Bureau

    New FBI Prepaid Card Scam – Alert By Better Business Bureau

    Criminals have certainly been hard at work lately. As anybody who has picked up a newspaper or logged onto the Internet recently knows, retail giant Target and tens of millions of its customers were the victims of a holiday season heist of payment and other personal information. And on January 17th, the Better Business Bureau issued an alert about a new FBI prepaid card scam.

    According to the announcement from the Council of Better Business Bureaus (BBB), this most recent thievery attempt involves a phone call from someone claiming to be an agent from the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI). The caller impersonating an FBI agent follows a familiar script, according to the BBB. “You answer the phone. The caller ID says “Federal Investigations,” and the person on the other line claims to be an FBI agent. He or she says the FBI is monitoring your online activity, and they know you have an overdue payday loan.”

    From there, the BBB says a caller will demand that whoever answered the phone pay the alleged debt off instantly via a prepaid debit card or wire transfer. If someone fails to do so, the supposed FBI agent will threaten legal action and jail, an especially unnerving threat because the caller often has personal information such as a social security number, address and place of work.

    No matter how persuasive someone may sound on the phone, the BBB says to never agree to pay anything. “Despite the threats, these “FBI agents” don’t have power over you,” reads the BBB’s alert. “Don’t give in and pay money you don’t owe; it’s likely scammers will just be back for more.”

    To help consumers avoid becoming victim to these scams, the BBB suggests taking the following steps. First, hang up and don’t call the number back. “It is temping to get the last word, but you may end up giving scammers information they can use later.” After hanging up the phone, the BBB suggests contacting the local police department to report the impersonation of a law enforcement officer.

    Additionally, the BBB points out that caller ID spoofing is easy so don’t be fooled by what appears to be a legitimate institution. If you do stay on the line with the caller, ask him or her for an official validation notice of the debt. “Debt collectors are required by law to provide the information in writing. The notice must include the amount of the debt, the name of the creditor and a statement of your rights under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act,” reads the statement. “If the self-proclaimed collector won’t provide the information, hang up.”

     

     

     

     

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