Drew
Cleveland,#2UPDATE EX-employee responds
Wed, May 14, 2008
As a recent employee of NES I know that all collectors have alias that are chosen and documented by the company. If Mike Pierce was an alias the company could have easily unearthed the collector's real name. And if compliance said that what he did was wrong why wasn't he fired? Why is the supervisor I worked for still employed by NES? Bryan Howard using the alias Paul Stevens (he changes it every couple of months) has represented himself to debtors as a federal agent, state official, attorney, member of the legal department, etc. And he's not the only supervisor who does this. The owner and his sons are well aware that this is going on cause they walk the call room floor (in both buildings) constantly. Why in training does NES preach compliance with the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act but once you're on the call room floor tells you to forget it even exists? NES is a very arrogant company who thinks they are above the law. They need to be stopped!