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by Turing_Machine
1046 days ago
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Hmmm... One would expect that the cases that actually get to the point of lawyers and courts are atypical. It seems likely that the ones who can't document the debt would probably drop the matter when first challenged, long before that stage. Is that not the case? |
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He happened to have all the original paperwork on file and it proved they hadn't followed the required legal procedures.
Trying to forge an essential document wasn't going to help their case.
I've heard from a number of people who work for banks, lenders, and insurers that record keeping is a complete mess, and a certain amount of unlawful creative improvisation isn't unusual.
So... they may claim to have proof, but there's a reasonable chance that if it's examined closely and/or all original correspondence is kept, they don't.
This seems to be worse in the US where debts are traded and retraded and the original paperwork may be long gone.