Re: wescot credit services
If you're sure you owe nothing, then have no contact with them.
Presumably at some point if they do have a legitimate debt to enforce, at some point one of their letters is going to have to state what the debt is and in relation to who the original debt belonged to.
So for the moment, ignore them. Feel free also to return letters back to them unopened, with "not known at this address", because they'll have a return address on the back of the envelope, a quick Google search will tell you who that address belongs to, and well, it causes them more problems than it does you.
It could also be a statute barred debt which a lot of these DCA's buy up cheap in the hope they can get payments for to make money.
If you have access to your credit reference file, take a look at it and see if there is anything untoward on there that might give a clue as to what debt they are chasing, but for the moment, their letters are sufficiently vague that you should be equally as vague with them.
If you're sure you owe nothing, then have no contact with them.
Presumably at some point if they do have a legitimate debt to enforce, at some point one of their letters is going to have to state what the debt is and in relation to who the original debt belonged to.
So for the moment, ignore them. Feel free also to return letters back to them unopened, with "not known at this address", because they'll have a return address on the back of the envelope, a quick Google search will tell you who that address belongs to, and well, it causes them more problems than it does you.
It could also be a statute barred debt which a lot of these DCA's buy up cheap in the hope they can get payments for to make money.
If you have access to your credit reference file, take a look at it and see if there is anything untoward on there that might give a clue as to what debt they are chasing, but for the moment, their letters are sufficiently vague that you should be equally as vague with them.
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