Houston Chronicle Sunday

‘Debt parking’: Howfake debts can end up on your credit report

Surprised victims often pressured to pay collectors

- By Ann Carrns

‘Debt parking’ puts fake debts on your credit reports.

Consider this unnerving situation: You apply for a loan only to learn your credit report is marred by a delinquent debt — one you already have paid or maybe don’t recognize.

You could be a victim of unscrupulo­us debt collectors who’ve placed invalid or fake debts on your consumer credit reports to coerce you to pay them. The tactic is called illegal “debt parking,” or sometimes “passive debt collection.”

The Federal Trade Commission recently took action against a Missouri collection company and its owners, alleging they collected more than $24 million from consumers, largely by placing “bogus or highly questionab­le” debts on their credit reports.

“The defendants used this illegal ‘debt parking’ to coerce people to pay debts they didn’t owe or didn’t recognize,” Andrew Smith, director of the FTC’s bureau of consumer protection, said in prepared remarks about the agency’s settlement with the company, Midwest Recovery Systems.

The FTC said in a related blog post that the case was its first legal challenge to debt parking under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.

In debt parking cases, collectors don’t contact the consumer before reporting the debt to credit bureaus. That means people learn about the debt only when it’s flagged as they are applying for a mortgage or a car loan or even a job. Because they don’t want to lose the loan or the job offer, consumers may feel pressured to pay off the “bad” debt quickly.

Midwest Recovery received thousands of complaints from consumers each month, the FTC’s complaint said. When the company itself investigat­ed the complaints, it found as many as 97 percent of the debts were inaccurate or not valid, the agency said.

That’s not surprising, to the FTC says, because many of the debts Midwest Recovery was pursuing had been obtained from other companies, including payday lenders, that the agency previously had sued for illegal practices. (Debts often are sold, sometimes multiple times, to different collection agencies.)

The debts Midwest Recovery sought to collect included payday loans, some of which were “fabricated from consumers’ sensitive financial informatio­n,” the complaint said.

The debts also included “significan­t quantities” of medical debt, which often causes confusion because of the complex system of insurance coverage and cost sharing associated with health care bills.

More than 43 million people have medical debts on their credit reports, and medical debts make up more than half of the debts reported by collection companies, the FTC said.

In one example cited in the complaint, a consumer applying for a mortgage was told a $1,500

medical debt placed on his credit report by Midwest Recovery had lowered his credit score, putting his loan approval at risk.

The borrower contacted the hospital and learned he owed just an $80 copayment, which he then paid.

Despite the finding, the FTC said, Midwest Recovery refused to remove the larger debt and threatened the consumer with a lawsuit if he didn’t pay.

In some cases, the company appears to have rereported debts that it had removed from the consumer’s credit reports — sometimes after the borrower paid the company and was assured the

debt would be struck from the credit report.

Rohit Chopra, one of the trade commission’s five members, voted against the settlement and criticized it as inadequate. In a statement, he said he disagreed with the terms because the defendants weren’t barred from working in the debt collection industry and consumers “will receive almost no help whatsoever.”

Chopra said he would like to see the FTC work closely with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on such cases because that could help victims qualify for compensati­on from the bureau’s civil penalty fund.

Also, he said, a “systemic fix” for debt parking probably requires the major credit-reporting bureaus — Equifax, Experian and TransUnion — to take action to cut off debts submitted by problem collection firms.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is expected to publish a second round of debt-collection rules this month to address debt parking, among other issues.

Here are some questions and answers about debt collection:

Q: How can I protectmys­elf against debt parking?

A:

Check your credit report regularly, said Chi ChiWu, a lawyer with the National Consumer Law Center. If you find items that appear incorrect, contact the lender or collection agency listed on your report, as well as the credit bureau that issued the report.

Q: How do I checkmy credit report?

A:

You can get free credit reports from Equifax, Experian and TransUnion at annualcred­itreport.com. Normally, you can get just one free report from each bureau once a year. But because of the pandemic, the bureaus are offering free weekly reports through April.

Q: How can I dispute a debt I believe is incorrect?

A: It’s best to dispute the debt in writing to both the collection agency and the credit bureau that provided the report, Wu said. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau offers letter templates and other tips for dealing with debt collectors on its website.

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 ?? Brian Britigan / New York TImes ?? You could be a victim of unscrupulo­us debt collectors who’ve placed invalid or fake debts on your consumer credit reports.
Brian Britigan / New York TImes You could be a victim of unscrupulo­us debt collectors who’ve placed invalid or fake debts on your consumer credit reports.

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