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Gibby Haynes

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  1. I've now been sent a direct debit form for the correct debt with the amount I've paid deducted. Should I fill it in? I'll make sure there's only enough money in the account to cover the correct DD amount in case they try and up it. They could have taken my bank details from the cheque I sent so I won't be giving them something they don't already have. They could have scanned my signature from the cheque too, for nefarious purposes. Think they may have been chancing their arm with the letter for the debt that wasn't mine hoping I'd ring them. Just want to get rid of them.
  2. What brilliant points. If I requested the electronic record from RBS for the account number on the second letter I got they'd be in breach of the Data Protection Act because it's not my account. The debt that is mine (the first letter) was indeed from an overdraft. There were a lot of charges on it. Hasn't the deadline for claiming charges back passed? Do you have a credit agreement for a bank account? I regret now sending a payment as they didn't know for sure it was me and were just phishing? The fact that they then sent me someone else's debt proves they are unreasonable and unethical. They obviously buy bad debts in bulk then try and get them paid by whatever means possible and from whoever they can frighten with false threats. Kind of like a sales team getting leads and earning commission. How can I trust them to knock any payments off the right debt? I have written them one letter but I'm not going to phone them. I'm going to ignore the debt letter that isn't my account. I also check online banking everyday to make sure they haven't used the account details on my cheque to set up a bogus direct debit ( a' la Jeremy Clarkson ). There's no way I'd trust them with Debit Card details. If I wait until they send me another demand for the right debt which shows that the balance has been reduced by my payment should I pay again? Even if I paid it all off they could still try hound me as a soft touch for other people's debts (which I wouldn't pay, of course, but the letters are still depressing). I have also read elsewhere that a lot of these dubious companies use the £1 you send for a S.A.R as a payment on the debt, even it isn't yours, then say because you've made a payment you've admitted responsibility for the debt!
  3. I am concerned now that the money I have paid has even been deducted from the right debt.
  4. Years ago I had an account with a Royal Bank of Scotland and got into financial trouble. Various excessive charges, bad advice from Baines and Ernst and my own spending later: the account was closed and sent to the RBS recovery department. For at least four years I have had a standing order paying this debt at £10 a month and heard nothing. They have sold this debt to Regal Credit who have demanded the total amount. I have checked with RBS and the money I was paying was going into my old account but they've advised me to canccel the standing order to them and deal with Regal. I did not phone Regal after reading about them on this forum and their business practices. I sent an initial payment and an offer of subsequent payments in writing. I have now received a demand for a debt that is quite clearly belongs to someone else. Is this an attempt to get me to contact them by phone or something more sinister. Have I made a mistake in contacting them at all? A debt of £500 is mine but this is asking for over £1500 with a completely different reference number. Is this just a front for extortion?
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