While the IRS has stopped working with private collectors, many local District Attorney’s offices have not. A company called American Corrective Counseling Services provides for-profit services to local District Attorney’s offices, including Los Angeles County. The company sends out letters on District Attorney’s letterhead threatening prosecution and jail time for writing bad checks, even though there is little chance that the District Attorney’s will ever follow through with any action. They also charge hundreds of dollars in fees and share a portion of them with the DA’s offices they contract with.
Now if a private debt collector makes threats that they do not intend to or have the means to follow through on, they are in violation of the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act or FDCPA and can pay hefty fines. However, apparently those rules don’t apply to District Attorney’s and ACCS, since they joined together to convince House Rep. Barney Frank to support exempting them from FDCPA in 2006.
This certainly seems like a double standard and could really be an issue with loans secured by a check, namely payday loans. DA’s and ACCS could be inadvertently helping payday loan collectors falsely threaten prosecution against consumers who simply defaulted on a high interest, unsecured loan.
Tags: Attorney General, Collection Letters, FDCPA, Los Angeles County, Payday Loan Collectors, Payday Loans



















