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stuartw1975

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Everything posted by stuartw1975

  1. Hi Leaves Do you want to drop me your email address via pm so we can have a proper discussion - wouldn't mind seeing where we are both up to with this, perhaps we can give each other some pointers, I can show you the complaint letters and responses i've had so far. Stuart
  2. Yup - £10,000 for a £50 book with mistakes in it about covers it.
  3. Kevlah I have published my own Computeach nightmare on another thread. Are you willing to name to dodgy salesman? PM it to me if you want as it might be the same person - might add a bit of weight to our claims.
  4. Leaves I am currently in the middle of a long complaint with computeach. I was missold a product - or more to the point what I was signing up for was pitched by a misleading and pushy salesman (His name was Darren Aspray who surprisingly no longer works there). Additionally, I believe the loan agreement which I unwittingly signed (the salesperson kept making reference to a sponsor who covered it when in fact the "sponsor" was Clydesdale Finance). It was for £4200 with a whopping 29% apr taking it to over £10,000. After several exchanges with computeach (and Clydesdale Finance who, to be fair, have been very accomodating) I am almost at the point where I am ready to "go legal". (I have also been chatting to a friend I know in the press who is taking an interest). I was in a vulnerable position at the time having just been made redundant, so I didn't really think this would be a standard loan (hence the reference to a sponsor) as I didn't think anyone would let me have ten grand when I was unemployed. I then thought back and remember the salesperson telling me to say that I am a "Customer Service Manager", which, in hindsight, should have started ringing alarm bells. Suffice to say, let me know how your'e doing, I think I am a bit further down the line in the process but I'll be interested to know how you get on. By the letter of the law, Comp are well within their rights to keep the money, but that doesn't make it right - and when you throw into the mix a pushy salesman and a potentially dodgy credit agreement then it makes it worth fighting. I had no hope of paying the £10,000 and I have no hope now although I am making goodwill payments on a debt management plan via the Consumer Credit Counselling service whilst this is resolved. To date I have recieved a £40 book which has several factual inconsistencies and it's costing me £10,000. That's not right is it?
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