How do I handle a debt turned over to a collection agency?

Anonymous
I've found myself in a strange situation.
After 8 years in the same apartment, I moved last July. I paid my final month's rent, along with what I thought was my final water bill. I left a forwarding address and phone number.
I received a letter from a debt collector stating that the leasing company sent a debt for a utility bill to collections.
I never recieved any sort of bill or notice from them and was completely unaware that I owed $.
I don't want anything on my credit, especially from a leasing company.
How do I resolve this? Do I pay the leasing company directly or do I pay the dept collector?
If I pay it how do I guarantee that it'll be considered paid on their end?
This is new territory for me.
Anonymous
Call the debt collector and ask what the protocol is for paying the debt. Explain that you left your forwarding info and you want to pay up. They don't often get calls like that. After you've paid it, ask for a letter showing you have a zero balance.
Anonymous
Is this DC WASA?
Anonymous
Don't pay yet...

Call the water company and pay them...if they sent it to collections then you have to pay the collections company...but make sure you get the bill...check that against your last bill to make sure everything is legitimate.
Anonymous
No, you don't have to pay the collections agency. Pay the people that you owe.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:No, you don't have to pay the collections agency. Pay the people that you owe.


+1
Anonymous
You may not owe the original creditor. If the debt was sold, you owe the new creditor, not the original creditor.

I'm an attorney and I've helped a number of people with old debt/zombie debt.

Here's my advice:

1. Tell them not to contact you by phone. Tell them to contact you in writing only. They have to adhere to that request.
2. Tell them not to contact you at work. They have to adhere to that request.
3. Tell them that you want them to provide you with evidence that 1) you owe the debt and 2) that you owe the debt TO THEM. They must give this to you in writing.
4. Do not pay them anything or promise to pay them until they give you proof in writing that you owe the debt to them.
5. Monitor your credit reports to make sure that this isn't being reported. If it is on your credit report, send a letter to the credit reporting agency stating that you don't owe the debt and you would like them to verify the debt with the credit agency. If they can't verify the debt, then it will be removed from your credit report.

9 times out of 10, the credit collection company cannot provide any evidence that you owe them what they say you owe them or that they have the right to collect the debt. It's just zombie debt, wandering around out there. They will give up trying to collect it from you and sell it someone else for 10% of what they paid for it. Then that person will try to collect it. Repeat the process again.

TLR -- Don't pay collection agencies unless they can show proof that you owe them.
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