Originally Posted by TheCleaner
That's your opinion the way you think it should be, the fact is that there is nothing in the FCRA or anywhere else criminalizing the dispute of information accurate or not, if you know better please direct me to that piece of legislature.
FCRA 611 lays out how the CRA is to handle cases of disputed accuracy, meaning if you dispute something as not being accurate that is how they are to handle it. Why would you dispute something that is accurate and you know to be accurate? If you know it is accurate and you dispute it saying it is inaccurate, that is wrong and could be punishable if the CRA could prove it and took the time. At any rate, it is unethical to dispute something as inaccurate when you know that it is accurate. Does that have to be written out in big, bright, bold letters?
A FA (Fraud Alert if I got the meaning right) only takes 42 cents in a stamp, the cost of the paper, envelope and about 7 days for the CRA to delete, is something voluntary not a punishment from the big brother.
I have seen people dealing with trying to have FA removed for months now. It isn't that simple.
You should dispute wahtever you want, it is not a crime is your right, then is up to the creditor to show records if they want to be paid.
I think you are confusing disputing with the CRA with asking the CA for DV.
Every CRA screw up in a different way for instance Equifax, if you have a charge off account 6 years old and the bank report the status as CO the credit score algorithm interpret it as a brand new charge off one month old killing your score, it is intentional from Equifax a way to give the banks and collector the power to unfarlly harm the credit even when it is against the intention of the law.
Every month the account goes charged off, they are well within their rights to report it as a charge off
So don't lecture us, you have no idea of what you are talking about or maybe you have other interests I don't know and I don't need to know. Just be aware that I will be here everytime you try to confuse reality with your wishes.
Carl.-