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  • Report:  #217126

Complaint Review: RJM Acquisitions Funding

RJM Acquisitions Funding, New Creditor of Fingerhut, I'm not a customer of them! Offers 40% off if you pay now... RIPOFF! Syosset New York

  • Reported By:
    Lonoke Arkansas
  • Submitted:
    Mon, October 23, 2006
  • Updated:
    Wed, April 04, 2007
  • RJM Acquisitions Funding
    575 Undrehill Blvd. Ste 224
    Syosset, New York
    U.S.A.
  • Phone:
    516-886-0026
  • Category:

I received a bill from RJM Acquisition Funding LLC form New York, claiming to have purchased my account from fingerhut... and that I owe them $383.52. But if I pay it nowthey will take 40% off and accept 230.11. If I cant pay the smaller amount, they are pleased to take only 19.97 per month until the balance due of 383.52 is paid. Both offers are valid throuh November 17. I received this notice on November 18. I have not ever had a Fingerhut account.

This rip off is aimed at the elderly and unconcerned who don't question their bills for accuracy. Some very old folks will lose money because they think they owe this... yes a lot of older folks I know have Fingerhut accounts.

This notice did not leave an email account or web address as most ligitimate buisnesses will do. I became suspcious and looked them up on the internet. Of course the very first thing that popped up was a ripoff report.
Now there are two.

Actually there are probably more... I hope so at least, and wish some news agency would air the ripoff so the elderly and low income people are not ripped off right before the holidays. These people are scum, and I hope they get thrown under a jail somewhere.

Coleen
Lonoke, Arkansas
U.S.A.

1 Updates & Rebuttals


F

Gladstone,
Missouri,
U.S.A.

Me, too...

#2Consumer Comment

Wed, April 04, 2007

I received just such a letter last fall (Oct 2006). I opened the unfamiliar envelope to discover such a scam from RJM Acquisitions Funding LLC, 575 Underhill Blvd. Suite 224, Syosset, NY 11791-3416, Fax # 516-714-1310, and a toll phone number. They were/are supposedly collecting on behalf of Fingerhut.

Yes, I did order some items through Fingerhut when I was in college, about 15 years ago. I think the bill was in the neighborhood of $79, which I paid immediately. This bogus company, RJM, suggested that I now owe them on this account approximately $972. They were so generous as to offer two payment options to settle the account for 60% at $58/mo, or 100% of that amount for $29/mo.

On the letter there was toll-free number and a file number. I'm sure that most people have the same impulse I did, which was to call and find out what this letter is all about. However, thankfully, I resisted that impulse, knowing that even if such a debt is not active or even mine, such a call may give them all of the leverage they need to activiate or assign it. Instead, I called the supposed original creditor--Fingerhut--to find out if/why they had transferred my ancient paid account to this out-of-the-blue "company".

At Fingerhut, I spoke to this hilariously uninformed and uninterested young woman who told me that the original account number was an "old" number and that all accounts were sold four years ago to a company called "CompuCredit Corporation." She did not have a phone number for them, but did have a fax number and an address in St. Cloud, MN.

So, there is an "old" Fingerhut and a "new" Fingerhut. (I don't like to engage in speculation, but perhaps "Old Fingerhut" was hurting financially, and decided to make some fast bucks by selling old account numbers, regardless of their payment status?)

I googled CompuCredit, and found out that they have been similarly reported as a scam company many times, as well as reported to the Better Business Bureau in New York state--and probably elsewhere. RJF started popping up in those complaints, as well.

I decided to write and complain to the National Consumers League, 1701 K Street, NW, Suite 1200, Washington, DC 20006, (o) 202-835-3323, (f) 202-835-0747. However, I got busy with my life, and writing them became part of a stack of things to do. Although my indignation was high, my concern was low: I don't owe this money and it is not on my credit report now, nor has it ever been.

Just the other day, I received a second letter from them, six months later. This time, they were so generous as to offer three payment options to settle the account for 50% at $40/mo, 70% at $20/mo, or 100% of that amount for $10/mo.

Now, since I didn't jump at the bit the first time, on the letter there is a large box, which draws attention to a toll-free number "For Payments or Inquiries Only" and a file number. This time, I had no impulse to call. Instead, I decided to re-activiate my research, and came upon this site.

My questions are plenty. Among them is: why, if RJF has had this supposed delinquent account information for four years, they are just now attempting to collect? Because it's a random scam, that's why.

I will maintain my personal policy of not even acknowledging RJF's letters to them--even to dispute their bogus claim. I will also maintain my personal policy of pulling my credit report randomly to make sure there are no mistakes on it. If I find RJF or CompuCredit anywhere on there, it will be a mistake that they will want to remedy as fast as possible. I will dispute it to the three credit bureaus. And this time, I will write to the NCL.

Strength in numbers, strength in knowledge...

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