Getting in contact with the right CREDITORS?

xselent

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before i start....i used the search button...i read cyba's threads (really good btw) ...but im looking for this specific thing only

Im trying to fix a small credit problem i have


i had two accounts

a best buy accoutn and a guitar center account

they were both under hsbc bank


i set up an automatic payment with both compaines

then i went on deployment....when i got back both accounts were closed and sent somewhere else because they said they werent recieveing payments



somewhere down the line they werent being taken out automatically anymore


so lets say i owe like $4000...im only saying that because im not sure how much it is really


anyways....my credit score use to be high 600's

now im really low and on those reports there are no contact info

i wrote letters to the credit bereaus and no response


so whats the best way to consolidate those two creditors and get them payed off


im asking because its only a small amount of debt but i cant pay it at once...and i dont wanna have too many allotments
 
Talk to your legal folks about the Soldiers and Sailors Relief Act. Then find your base financial managment people ( Family Support Center is a start) The can contact the creditors for you just like the credit repair compaies and get you straight with them
 
Talk to your legal folks about the Soldiers and Sailors Relief Act. Then find your base financial managment people ( Family Support Center is a start) The can contact the creditors for you just like the credit repair compaies and get you straight with them

never thought of that


thanx
 
before i start....i used the search button...i read cyba's threads (really good btw) ...but im looking for this specific thing only

Im trying to fix a small credit problem i have


i had two accounts

a best buy accoutn and a guitar center account

they were both under hsbc bank


i set up an automatic payment with both compaines

then i went on deployment....when i got back both accounts were closed and sent somewhere else because they said they werent recieveing payments



somewhere down the line they werent being taken out automatically anymore


so lets say i owe like $4000...im only saying that because im not sure how much it is really


anyways....my credit score use to be high 600's

now im really low and on those reports there are no contact info

i wrote letters to the credit bereaus and no response


so whats the best way to consolidate those two creditors and get them payed off


im asking because its only a small amount of debt but i cant pay it at once...and i dont wanna have too many allotments

www.creditboards.com
 
Sounds like the accounts have been "charged-off" by the original creditors, which means that they're now the property of whatever debt collection agencies bought the accounts from the original creditors. I'd suggest googling "debt validation" or looking it up on creditboards.com. You're going to want to handle this ASAP since collections agencies like to sue you where you used to live, thereby getting an automatic default judgment against you. You DO NOT want a judgment on your credit report.
 
do not pay the debt.
only pay after you sure they are allowed in your state, and make sure you get in writing that they will take it off of your credit report completly!-A paid collection is the same as unpaid collection.

and they should have at least a mailing address on your report as to who is posting such derogatory info.
 
S&S Act will nullify the lawsuit angle and give you the right to go back to the original creditor and straighten it out with them.
 
Talk to your legal folks about the Soldiers and Sailors Relief Act. Then find your base financial managment people ( Family Support Center is a start) The can contact the creditors for you just like the credit repair compaies and get you straight with them

This is what he meant by the S&S Act.
Part of what it does is to limit the actions creditors can take against active duty deployed military personnel.
 
Servicemembers Civil Relief Act
New Law Rewrites Soldiers & Sailors Civil Relief Act (SSCRA)
By Rod Powers, About.com


Jan 22 2004
On 19 December 2003, President Bush signed into law the “Servicemembers Civil Relief Act” (SCRA). This law is a complete revision of the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act (SSCRA).
The SSCRA provided a number of significant protections to servicemembers. These include: staying court hearings if military service materially affects servicemembers’ ability to defend their interests; reducing interest to 6% on pre-service loans and obligations; requiring court action before a servicemember’s family can be evicted from rental property for nonpayment of rent if the monthly rent is $1,200 or less; termination of a pre-service residential lease; and allowing servicemembers to maintain their state of residence for tax purposes despite military relocations to other states.

The SSCRA was largely unchanged from its enactment in 1940. The SCRA was written to: clarify the language of the SSCRA: to incorporate many years of judicial interpretation of the SSCRA; and to update the SSCRA to reflect new developments in American life since 1940. The new law, SCRA:

(1) Extends the application of a servicemember’s right to stay court hearings to administrative hearings. It now requires a court or administrative hearing to grant at least a 90-day stay if requested by the servicemember. Additional stays can be granted at the discretion of the judge or hearing official.

(2) Clarifies the rules on the 6% interest rate cap on pre-service loans and obligations by specifying that interest in excess of 6% per year must be forgiven. The absence of such language in the SSCRA had allowed some lenders to argue that interest in excess of 6% is merely deferred. It also specifies that a servicemember must request this reduction in writing and include a copy of his/her orders.

(3) Modifies the eviction protection section by precluding evictions from premises occupied by servicemembers for which the monthly rent does not exceed $2,400 for the year 2003 (an increase from the current $1,200). The Act provides a formula to calculate the rent ceiling for subsequent years.

(4) Extends the right to terminate real property leases to active duty soldiers moving pursuant to permanent change of station (PCS) orders or deployment orders of at least 90 days. This eliminates the need to request a military termination clause in leases.

(5) Adds a new provision allowing the termination of automobile leases for use by servicemembers and their dependents. Pre-service automobile leases may be cancelled if the servicemember receives orders to active duty for a period of 180 days or more. Automobile leases entered into while the servicemember is on active duty may be terminated if the servicemember receives PCS orders to a location outside the continental United States or deployment orders for a period of 180 days or more.

(6) Adds a provision that would prevent states from increasing the tax bracket of a nonmilitary spouse who earned income in the state by adding in the service member’s military income for the limited purpose of determining the nonmilitary spouse’s tax bracket. This practice has had the effect of increasing the military family’s tax burden.

(7) Adds legal services as a professional service specifically named under the provision that provides for suspension and subsequent reinstatement of existing professional liability insurance coverage for designated professionals serving on active duty. While the SSCRA specifically names only health care services, legal services have been covered since 3 May 1999 by Secretary of Defense designations. The SSCRA permitted such a Secretarial designation, but this revision will clarify this area.

Historically, the SSCRA applied to members of the National Guard only if they were serving in a Title 10 status. Effective 6 December 2002, the SSCRA protections were extended to members of the National Guard called to active duty for 30 days or more pursuant to a contingency mission specified by the President or the Secretary of Defense. This continues in the SCRA.


http://usmilitary.about.com/cs/sscra/a/scra1.htm


Check with the nearest base/post legal folks or Family Support Center's Financial Aid. Each post should have a civilian financial aide rep that can assist you with contacting the original creditor and correcting the situation ( get you back to the original balance or less). That's their job so let them help you. I referred alot of my Airmen to them for similar problems and they fixed each case.
 
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