A debt
collector, angered that a disabled US Army veteran was living off of disability
payments, told him he “should have died” in war instead of "taking
advantage of" other Americans.
Minnesota-based
debt collection agency Gurstel Chargo is now facing a lawsuit for verbally
abusing the Army vet over a $6,000 defaulted student loan, Courthouse News
reports.
“If you
would have served our country better you would not be a disabled veteran living
off Social Security while the rest of us honest Americans work our asses off,”
one of the agency’s debt collectors allegedly told the vet. “Too bad, you
should have died.”
Michael
Collier was declared 100 per cent disabled after suffering permanent spine and
head injuries while in the Army. As a result, both Collier and his wife receive
disability payments from the federal Social Security Administration, which are
exempt from seizure by debt collectors.
But in
an attempt to collect on the defaulted student loan, the collector seized the
money from Collier's wife’s savings account. The credit union then proceeded to
freeze her account.
The
Colliers filed an objection and requested a court hearing, at which the couple
was told their frozen funds were exempt from such garnishment.
But the
debt collection agency’s lawyer continued to harass the couple. Telling Collier
“he would need to get a lawyer in order to get his money back,” an unidentified
paralegal cursed at and threatened him over the phone.
“F--k
you!” the paralegal allegedly said, “Pay us your money! You can’t afford an
attorney. You owe us. I hope your wife divorces you.”
The
couple is now seeking compensation for actual damages, statutory damages, and
punitive damages for violations of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act
(FDCPA), privacy invasion, malicious infliction of emotional distress and
conversion.
The
FDCPA considers it abusive for a debt collector to make empty threats,
misrepresent the legal status of a debt, or use obscene of profane language.
According
to the Daily Beast, debt collectors sometimes use abusive techniques to pry
money from the indebted because of the commission rates they receive. On
average, debt collectors make 20 cents for every dollar recouped. At this rate,
the Colliers’ debt would be worth $1,200 to Chargo.
Verbal
harassment is a commonly-used technique to instigate debtors into making
payments. In 2010, the Federal Trade Commission received 50,000 complaints
about severe harassment from debt collectors, 18,000 of which included the use
of obscene language.
And some
say that number is low.
“That’s
just the tip of the iceberg, as far as I’m concerned,” attorney Sergei Lemberg
told the Daily Beast.
While
Chargo's berating took it too far for the Colliers, there are of thousands of
cases of abuse that never make it to court.
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