Repossession Agent Impersonates Law Enforcement to Take Vehicle
Credit Acceptance Corporation conducted a repossession using agents who impersonated law enforcement. The consumer asserts the vehicle was never legally transferred to them. This conduct violates repossession law and consumer protection statutes.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyDebt collectors forging court documents to pressure repossession victims
Auto loan debt collectors send falsified court-styled letters and impersonate attorneys to extract payments from borrowers after repossession. Victims have no quick way to verify document authenticity or stop illegal collection tactics. The CFPB receives these complaints but individual consumers lack tools to immediately identify and report forgery.
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Credit Acceptance Corporation pursued a remaining loan balance after repossessing a vehicle, with the consumer disputing the charges. Post-repossession deficiency balances are common in subprime auto lending and frequently involve questionable accounting practices. Consumers lack adequate tools to validate and dispute these balances.
Auto Lease Vehicle Repossessed in Violation of Consumer Rights
Stellantis repossessed a leased vehicle in a manner that violated consumer protection rights. Auto repossession processes lack real-time consumer notification and challenge mechanisms. Consumers facing wrongful repossession must navigate legal processes without accessible self-service dispute tools.
Auto Lender Rushes Borrowers Through Paperwork with Verbal Pressure to Agree
Auto loan representatives instruct consumers to verbally agree to all terms without allowing time to read paperwork at signing. The high-pressure tactic prevents consumers from understanding terms they are committing to. Disputes about the resulting loan terms are difficult because the consumer signed documents without understanding them.
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