With thanks to Righty.
If you are contacted by RLP or another Civil Recovery Company;
(a) never telephone, or DISCUSS with, or otherwise disclose anything to them unless you take legal advice.
(b) send them a full Subject Access Request under the Data Protection Act asking for any and all information they hold on you.
(c) respond to their letters, AFTER leaving it to the last moment of their deadlines, by saying something like the following:
Dear (signatory)
Thank you for your letter of xxx.
It appears you are non-compliant with civil procedure, in that you have failed to state a discernible case against me and you have failed to show me the documents on which you intend to rely. That is to say, your letter discloses no evidence and no case. Your letter also is not a Letter of Claim.
Until and unless you comply with civil procedure by providing a heading "Letter of Claim" AND disclose all the evidence on which you intend to rely AND disclose your legal case, as is required by civil procedure, I am not only unable to respond but quite unable to understand why you are making these demands.
Further, you make unlawful threats against me which as already explained fall outside of legal protection. I reserve my position as to whether I will pursue you, and/or your "client" (assuming it is true you act for them), in the criminal and civil jurisdictions.
Yours
xxxx
By relying on their non-compliance with civil procedure you should stop them dead.
They started it and so it's their legal obligation to put their case and stop "fishing", as the Courts call it. This should slow them down, force them into correspondence with you, and with a bit of luck wear them down a bit.
You should consider making a formal note of every time you deal with the matter, the time you spend on it, and what you did - a spreadsheet would be ideal.
If you are contacted by RLP or another Civil Recovery Company;
(a) never telephone, or DISCUSS with, or otherwise disclose anything to them unless you take legal advice.
(b) send them a full Subject Access Request under the Data Protection Act asking for any and all information they hold on you.
(c) respond to their letters, AFTER leaving it to the last moment of their deadlines, by saying something like the following:
Dear (signatory)
Thank you for your letter of xxx.
It appears you are non-compliant with civil procedure, in that you have failed to state a discernible case against me and you have failed to show me the documents on which you intend to rely. That is to say, your letter discloses no evidence and no case. Your letter also is not a Letter of Claim.
Until and unless you comply with civil procedure by providing a heading "Letter of Claim" AND disclose all the evidence on which you intend to rely AND disclose your legal case, as is required by civil procedure, I am not only unable to respond but quite unable to understand why you are making these demands.
Further, you make unlawful threats against me which as already explained fall outside of legal protection. I reserve my position as to whether I will pursue you, and/or your "client" (assuming it is true you act for them), in the criminal and civil jurisdictions.
Yours
xxxx
By relying on their non-compliance with civil procedure you should stop them dead.
They started it and so it's their legal obligation to put their case and stop "fishing", as the Courts call it. This should slow them down, force them into correspondence with you, and with a bit of luck wear them down a bit.
You should consider making a formal note of every time you deal with the matter, the time you spend on it, and what you did - a spreadsheet would be ideal.
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