| Beware of credit-repair scams | | By Dana Dratch
Bankrate.com |
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Thinking of paying someone else to clean up your credit
file? Anything they can do, you can do better. And cheaper.
But it takes time and dedication.
If your report contains genuine errors (read: debts that have been
on the report beyond the allowable time or debts that really aren't
yours, not just debts you wish weren't yours), you can fix that
yourself for free. And with a minimum of hassle.
But if the debts really are yours, the creditor can
keep them on your report, usually for seven years. And no third
party has the magic to make that go away. On the other hand, some
for-profit credit repair firms offer a viable option by disputing
items you believe to be inaccurate and pursuing the necessary paperwork
and follow-up you may not be able or willing to do.
"Anyone who promises to get accurate information less than
seven years old off a file is lying," says Gail Hillebrand,
senior attorney for Consumers Union.
Some other red flags: companies that contact you, hard-sell tactics,
outrageous promises and equally outlandish fees. "The standard
line is that if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is,"
says Chi Chi Wu, staff attorney for the National Consumer Law Center.
Here's a rundown of several of the most popular approaches
for separating consumers from their money with the promise of a
better credit rating:
Scam No. 1: We have
an in with the credit bureaus, speak their language or know some
super-secret regulation or handshake that will make them delete
the unflattering citations from your file.
What you need to know: There is no such thing. Some companies take
the money and run. Others will deluge the credit bureaus with frivolous
disputes of the debts in your file, says Linda Sherry, director
of national priorities for Consumer Action.
The bureau may list the debt as disputed while it investigates,
says Sherry. Debts may disappear during the short investigation
(after which they will return), and the company will show this temporary
"clean" report to collect its fee, she says.
Or, if the bureau realizes what the company is doing,
it may simply ignore what it recognizes as bogus requests, says
Joe Ridout, spokesman for Consumer Action.
In addition, the Credit Repair Organizations Act prohibits
any company from taking money until after it does what it promised,
says Susan Grant, director of the National Fraud Information Center.
So if anyone is trying to bypass that federal law (or banking on
the fact that you don't know about it) by getting you to send, charge
or wire money, that's a bad sign. "The crooks always ask for
money upfront," says Grant.
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