Debt collector calls cardiac patient hundreds of times and sues despite cease-and-desist
A finance company made hundreds of calls to a hospitalized cardiac patient whose doctor advised avoiding stress, then filed suit despite receiving a cease-and-desist and an offer to pay in installments. The collector used multiple phone numbers to evade call blocking. This is an extreme FDCPA violation pattern targeting the most vulnerable debtors.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyDebt collector harasses hospitalized patient despite medical hardship notice
A debt collector continued calling a hospitalized patient multiple times daily from multiple numbers even after being explicitly informed of a cardiologist's orders to avoid stress, and then filed suit during the hospitalization. FDCPA cease-and-desist protections are being ignored without consequence during medical emergencies.
Debt collectors continue calling after written cease-communication request
Consumers who request written-only communication from debt collectors continue receiving multiple daily calls from rotating phone numbers—a clear FDCPA violation. The frequency and multi-number pattern suggests systematic disregard of consumer rights, and individuals lack practical tools to document and enforce these violations.
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Debt collectors continue calling workplace after explicit cease request
Consumers who have explicitly instructed debt collectors to stop calling their place of employment continue to receive harassing calls in violation of the FDCPA. The lack of an accessible mechanism to document and enforce cease-and-desist requests leaves consumers vulnerable to ongoing harassment with no practical recourse beyond legal action.
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