New Jersey bankruptcy Article
Debt Collectors Face a Hazard: Writer’s
Cramp
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By DAVID SEGAL
Published: October 31, 2010
When Michael Gazzarato
took a job that required him to sign hundreds of affidavits in a
single day, he had one demand for his employer: a much better pen.
“They tried to get me to
do it with a Bic, and I wasn’t going — I wasn’t having it,” he said.
“It was bad when I had to use the plastic Papermate-type pen. It was
a nightmare.”
The complaint could have
come from any of the autograph marathoners in the recent mortgage
foreclosure mess. But Mr. Gazzarato was speaking at a deposition in
a 2007 lawsuit against Asset Acceptance, a company that buys
consumer debts and then tries to collect.
His job was to sign
affidavits, swearing that he had personally reviewed and verified
the records of debtors — a time-consuming task when done correctly.
Sound familiar?
Banks have been under
siege in recent weeks for widespread corner-cutting in the rush to
process delinquent mortgages. The accusations have stirred outrage
and set off investigations by attorneys general across the country,
prompting several leading banks to temporarily cease foreclosures.
But lawyers who defend
consumers in debt-collection cases say the banks did not invent the
headless, assembly-line approach to financial paperwork. Debt
buyers, they say, have been doing it for years.
“The difference is that
in the case of debt buyers, the abuses are much worse,” says Richard
Rubin, a consumer lawyer in Santa Fe, N.M.
“At least when it comes
to mortgages, the banks have the right address, everyone agrees
about the interest rate. But with debt buyers, the debt has been
passed through so many hands, often over so many years, that a lot
of time, these companies are pursuing the wrong person, or the
charges have no lawful basis.”
The debt in these
cases — typically from credit cards,
auto loans, utility bills and so on — is sold by finance
companies and banks in a vast secondary market, bundled in huge
portfolios, for pennies on the dollar. Debt buyers often hire
collectors to commence a campaign of insistent letters and
regular phone calls. Or, in a tactic that is becoming
increasingly popular, they sue.
Nobody knows how many
debt-collection affidavits are filed each year, but a report by the
nonprofit
Legal Aid Society found that in New York City alone more than
450,000 were filed by debt buyers, from January 2006 to July 2008,
yielding more than $1.1 billion in judgments and settlements.
Problems with this
torrent of litigation are legion, according to the Federal Trade
Commission, led by Jon Leibowitz. The agency issued a report on the
subject, “Repairing a Broken System,” in July. In some instances,
banks are selling account information that is riddled with errors.
More often, essential
background information simply is not acquired by debt buyers, in
large part because that data adds to the price of each account. But
court rules state that anyone submitting an affidavit to a court
against a debtor must have proof of that claim — proper
documentation of a debt’s origins, history and amount.
Without that information
it is hard to imagine how any company could meet the legal standard
of due diligence, particularly while churning out thousands and
thousands of affidavits a week.
Analysts say that
affidavit-signers at debt-buying companies appear to have little
choice but to take at face value the few facts typically provided to
them — often little more than basic account information on a
computer screen.
That was made vividly
clear during the deposition last year of Jay Mills, an employee of a
subsidiary of SquareTwo Financial (then known as Collect America), a
debt-buying company in Denver.
“So,” asked Dale
Irwin, the plaintiff’s lawyer, using shorthand for Collect
America, “if you see on the screen that the moon is made of
green cheese, you trust that CACH has investigated that and has
determined that in fact, the moon is made of green cheese?”
“Yes,” Mr. Mills
replied.
Given the volume of
affidavits, even perfunctory research seems impossible. Cherie
Thomas, who works for Asta Funding, a debt buyer in Englewood
Cliffs, N.J., said in a 2007 deposition that she had signed 2,000
affidavits a day. With a half-hour for lunch and two brief breaks,
that’s roughly one affidavit every 13 seconds.
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