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CREDITWRENCH-TheTruth

This blog is dedicated to illustrating the depths of depravity to debt collectors and their cronies who infest various message boards spewing their spam, insults and filth can and do sink. They will stop at nothing to berate others while trying to elevate their own perceived worth.

Saturday, January 08, 2005

This blog is dedicated to exposing the lies about creditwrench promoted by a debt collector's blog who calls himself CREDITWRENCHSCAM and is also known as "Enormis", "Enormis Debtor", Uncle Normie and any other false screen name he can think of.

Look at this utterly ignorant posting on his blog. What he claims is that Wisconsin consumer protection law does not make original creditors liable under Wisconsin's consumer protection law. Such a ludicrous statement might be true except for one little thing he forgot which is that the Wisconsin specifically mentions that printers of legal forms are not subject to the act. If indeed there were any other exceptions to the Wisconsin law they would have been specifically mentioned in exactly the same way that FDCPA specifically exempts original creditors from the federal law.

In what states are original creditors subject to the FDCPA?

The answer to that is none of them. The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), is a federal law and its writers exempted original creditors from its regulation.

So what about states that have their own version of the FDCPA?

Many do. However, federal law is the supreme law of the land and trumps state law whenever there is a conflict. This is clearly spelled out in the the supremecy clause of the constitution (Article VI).

That does not, however, preclude a state from creating laws that supplement, or afford greater protection to the public in its own constitution or statutes. The constitutional term for this is "concurrent powers".

States that have enacted consumer protection laws similar to the FDCPA have excersised their concurrent powers, however they cannot conflict with federal law. If you read the consumer protection laws of any of the 50 states (including the 23 advertised on CREDITWRENCH), none of them apply the FDCPA to original creditors. Though some will apply certain collection procedures to original creditors, absolutely none of them apply the entire FDCPA

As an example, Wisconsin is one of the states listed by CREDITWRENCH as applying the FDCPA to original creditors. I chose Wisconsin because its debt collection laws are fairly straight forward and brief. I will reference it here, and ask that you read it in its entirety. I defy you to find anywhere in Wisconsin statute that indicates the FDCPA applies to original creditors.

CREDITWRENCH indicating that 23 states apply the FDCPA to original creditors is false and misleading information.