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Federal Jury
in Los Angeles Orders Debt Collector
Arrow Financial Services to Pay
Consumer $100,000.00 for Unfair Debt
Collection and False Credit
Reporting
On May 4, 2007, a unanimous
federal jury in Los Angeles,
California ordered debt collector
Arrow Financial Services to pay
Laura Nelson $100,000.00 for a
multi-year pattern of unfair debt
collection and false credit
reporting practices. Laura Nelson v.
Arrow Financial Services, LLC,
United States District Court Case
No. CV06-1568 RGK (PLAx).
Los Angeles, CA (PRWEB)
May 9, 2007 -- Following a three-day
civil jury trial, a Los Angeles jury
unanimously ordered debt collector
Arrow Financial Services to pay
Laura Nelson a total sum of
$100,000.00 for false credit
reporting and unfair debt collection
practices. The jury awarded Ms.
Nelson $85,000.00 for her emotional
distress and mental anguish, and
also added a $15,000.00 penalty
against Arrow for its repeated
violations of the Fair Debt
Collection Practices Act. Laura
Nelson v. Arrow Financial Services,
LLC, United States District Court
Case No. CV06-1568 RGK (PLAx).
Ms. Nelson was represented in the
case by Robert F. Brennan, Esq. of
Brennan, Wiener & Associates in La
Crescenta, Ca.
The account reported to Ms.
Nelson's credit reports was false
from the start, as Ms. Nelson never
owed the alleged debt. The false
reporting of the account began in
2001 and Ms. Nelson had previously
disputed the account numerous times
to Arrow, to the three major credit
bureaus and also to Direct
Merchants, the supposed original
creditor on the account. Direct
Merchants even wrote to Arrow to
advise them not to report the
account.
Ms. Nelson previously sued Arrow
in 2003 over the account, and part
of the settlement of that case
included a permanent removal from
her credit reports. However,
literally as she was signing the
settlement agreement from the
previous lawsuit, Arrow began
re-reporting the account to Equifax,
one of the "big three" credit
bureaus, using a different account
number. When Ms. Nelson later
disputed the account's re-appearance
to Equifax, Equifax could not locate
the account because it had been
re-reported with a different account
number. Ms. Nelson then brought the
lawsuit.
"Arrow subjected Ms. Nelson to
five years of false credit
reporting, and insisted until the
very end that it had done nothing
wrong," stated Brennan. "What was
most upsetting was the fact that
Arrow had kept the account in its
system, adding interest to it and
continuing to credit-report it, all
the while knowing it was a
completely fraudulent account. I
certainly hope Arrow re-evaluates
some of its business practices in
the wake of this verdict."
Mr. Brennan also expressed his
characteristic dismay at the way in
which the debt collectors and large
creditors are becoming the new slave
masters in our culture. "America no
longer creates any new products. All
it creates any more is debt. The key
product of our economy is debt,
plain and simple, and the debt
collectors and major banks use debt
to control, and destroy, our entire
lives. I'm picking up more and more
discontent from consumers because of
this debt-driven economy and how
we're all hamsters in hamster-wheels
working our tails off just to pay
interest to debt collectors and big
banks. One day, it's all gonna break
and it just might be a good thing
when it does." |