716-512-6705
NY, US
marsha
marsha
2011-06-06 20:55:31
Unknown
Caller ID says Vaspian LLC Don't know them or who they are.Suspect debt colloector for my son in law
DontPayThesePigs
DontPayThesePigs
2011-06-06 20:55:31
Unknown
Scuzzy debt collectors.  They illegally collect old debt.  Ignore them.  Block them.  There is nothing they can do to you, and if they sue you, fight back, then SUE them for violations of the fair credit act.  It's a hoot--they hate it when you win!
NC
NC
2011-06-06 20:55:31
Unknown
Called and hung up when I answered.
TB
TB
2011-03-12 10:48:08
Debt Collector
Ilegal debt collecion practices. Cashnet usa is selling debt to this dmp compnay also known as vaspian. calling from several numbers in the 716 area code and also using 866 toll free numbers. also in partner with fraudulant collectors claiming to be acs recovery. Will lie and threaten to have court papers sent, have you arrested, call your house, cell and job. will try to get your personal info, will give out your personal info illegally to others, will use fictiious names, 18668608147 is one number used, 18008839067 is one number used , 7169237493 is used, 7169616161 is used. report this to your local authorities. do not give them your credit card info, social, bank info, western union etc. report this to the better business bureu, your attorney general, and to the federal trade commissions. there are ongoing investigations for this fraud. theywill have part of your personal info as they are buying up bad debt from cashnet usa and possibly others for pennies on the dollar and then have access to your personal info to use against you when they call. tell them you are requesting a hard copy legal proof in the mail for your debt and you wont pay them untiil you get it. record them if possible and inform them you are recoring them.
These guys are scum
These guys are scum
2010-12-31 17:18:27
Debt Collector
I get calls from these people all the time looking for some mexican person.  Ever since I got my phone number from sprint, I have been harassed repeatedly by this company for a debt belonging to someone else.  Even when I tell them this guy is not at this number, they still continue.  They don't respect anyones rights.  We should all come together and do a class action lawsuit against them.
DontPayThesePigs
DontPayThesePigs
2010-12-05 05:46:25
Debt Collector
Go to the website for these people, and read the note they made about blogs of this type.  These scumbags have the balls to claim that the information on these blogs is not reliable.  That's their problem--the information is EXCELLENT.  By working together, we can alert each other about the deceptive practices and BS.  Don't pay these people.  Look into a Panasonic phone system.  You can block 32 numbers.  Also, Comcast allows you to block 24 numbers. I got rid of these folks easily using Comcast.  Just don't pay them.  They will eventually violate the Fair Credit Act, and then you can sue them.  I have done that in the past, and it works.  These collectors hate these websites--it's fun to work against them!  Keep up the good work
Angie
Angie
2010-10-08 16:34:51
Unknown
Thank you SO MUCH providing all this helpful information on how to make a complaint against this agency.  Talk about harassment and unlawful tactic.  I have no outstanding debt, as many of you have also reported, so how the hell do these idiots even get our information.

Im making the complaint to the NY Attorney General and I will hire a lawyer if necessary because this is ridiculous.
lamet
lamet
2010-09-29 18:28:21
Unknown
REPORT ALL CONTACTS FROM THIS ILLEGAL DEBT COLLECTOR TO
NY ATTORNEY GENERAL

use this SPECIAL Link  www.NYDebtHelp.com
This special website was created by NY AG Andrew Cuomo specifically for reporting illegal debt collection practices.  HE?S CRACKING DOWN AND SHUTTING THEM DOWN!

AS WELL AS YOUR STATE ATTORNEY GENERAL
Link to all State Attorney General Websites www.naag.org

http://www.consumerjustice.com/consumer/agencydetail.aspx?id=6296
P&B Capital Group, LLC  
461 Ellicott Street
Buffalo, New York, 14203


www.pandbcapitalgroup.com/


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Phone No.  888-569-9635  
Fax 716-891-5810  

  Bradley W. Spoor, Owner


1) Never assume they have a VALID DEBT OR LEGAL RIGHT TO COLLECT
 
2) Debt collectors MUST FOLLOW your STATE laws regarding licensing.  Check your Secretary of State for licensing requirements for ANY collection agency that contacts you

Debt Collectors DO NOT WANT YOU TO KNOW THIS INFORMATION!    
The INFORMED CONSUMER IS THE DEBT COLLECTORS WORST ENEMY!

THE CORRECT WAY TO HANDLE COLLECTION CALLS AND ILLEGAL TACTICS

READ DEALING WITH DEBT COLLECTORS, RECORDING CALLS AND STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS BY STATE

You can also post your questions here http://www.collectorsexposed.com/forum/   NEW URL!    

These links are to attorneys for those being scammed www.naca.net or http://www.consumerjustice.com/consumer/searchattorneys.aspx


Dealing with Debt Collectors
Http://www.budhibbs.com/First.htm    
    
Statute of Limitations by State ? always double check YOUR OWN STATE Government Website
http://www.budhibbs.com/statute_of_limitations.htm

Recording calls from Debt Collectors - always double check YOUR OWN STATE Government Website
http://www.budhibbs.com/record.htm


From Federal Trade Commission Website ? FAIR DEBT COLLECTION PRACTICES ACT
Debt Collection FAQs: A Guide for Consumers
If you?re behind in paying your bills, or a creditor?s records mistakenly make it appear that you are, a debt collector may be contacting you.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the nation?s consumer protection agency, enforces the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), which prohibits debt collectors from using abusive, unfair, or deceptive practices to collect from you.
Under the FDCPA, a debt collector is someone who regularly collects debts owed to others. This includes collection agencies, lawyers who collect debts on a regular basis, and companies that buy delinquent debts and then try to collect them.
Here are some questions and answers about your rights under the Act.

What types of debts are covered?
The Act covers personal, family, and household debts, including money you owe on a personal credit card account, an auto loan, a medical bill, and your mortgage. The FDCPA doesn?t cover debts you incurred to run a business.

Can a debt collector contact me any time or any place?
No. A debt collector may not contact you at inconvenient times or places, such as before 8 in the morning or after 9 at night, unless you agree to it. And collectors may not contact you at work if they?re told (orally or in writing) that you?re not allowed to get calls there.

How can I stop a debt collector from contacting me?
If a collector contacts you about a debt, you may want to talk to them at least once to see if you can resolve the matter ? even if you don?t think you owe the debt, can?t repay it immediately, or think that the collector is contacting you by mistake. If you decide after contacting the debt collector that you don?t want the collector to contact you again, tell the collector ? in writing ? to stop contacting you. Here?s how to do that:
Make a copy of your letter. Send the original by certified mail, and pay for a ?return receipt? so you?ll be able to document what the collector received. Once the collector receives your letter, they may not contact you again, with two exceptions: a collector can contact you to tell you there will be no further contact or to let you know that they or the creditor intend to take a specific action, like filing a lawsuit. Sending such a letter to a debt collector you owe money to does not get rid of the debt, but it should stop the contact. The creditor or the debt collector still can sue you to collect the debt.

Can a debt collector contact anyone else about my debt?
If an attorney is representing you about the debt, the debt collector must contact the attorney, rather than you. If you don?t have an attorney, a collector may contact other people ? but only to find out your address, your home phone number, and where you work. Collectors usually are prohibited from contacting third parties more than once. Other than to obtain this location information about you, a debt collector generally is not permitted to discuss your debt with anyone other than you, your spouse, or your attorney.

What does the debt collector have to tell me about the debt?
Every collector must send you a written ?validation notice? telling you how much money you owe within five days after they first contact you. This notice also must include the name of the creditor to whom you owe the money, and how to proceed if you don?t think you owe the money.

Can a debt collector keep contacting me if I don?t think I owe any money?
If you send the debt collector a letter stating that you don?t owe any or all of the money, or asking for verification of the debt, that collector must stop contacting you. You have to send that letter within 30 days after you receive the validation notice. But a collector can begin contacting you again if it sends you written verification of the debt, like a copy of a bill for the amount you owe.

What practices are off limits for debt collectors?
Harassment. Debt collectors may not harass, oppress, or abuse you or any third parties they contact. For example, they may not:
    use threats of violence or harm;
    publish a list of names of people who refuse to pay their debts (but they can give this information to the credit reporting companies);
    use obscene or profane language; or
    repeatedly use the phone to annoy someone.

False statements. Debt collectors may not lie when they are trying to collect a debt. For example, they may not:
    falsely claim that they are attorneys or government representatives;
    falsely claim that you have committed a crime;
    falsely represent that they operate or work for a credit reporting company;
    misrepresent the amount you owe;
    indicate that papers they send you are legal forms if they aren?t; or
    indicate that papers they send to you aren?t legal forms if they are.

Debt collectors also are prohibited from saying that:
    you will be arrested if you don?t pay your debt;
    they?ll seize, garnish, attach, or sell your property or wages unless they are permitted by law to take the action and intend to do so; or
    legal action will be taken against you, if doing so would be illegal or if they don?t intend to take the action.

Debt collectors may not:
    give false credit information about you to anyone, including a credit reporting company;
    send you anything that looks like an official document from a court or government agency if it isn?t; or
    use a false company name.

Unfair practices. Debt collectors may not engage in unfair practices when they try to collect a debt. For example, they may not:
    try to collect any interest, fee, or other charge on top of the amount you owe unless the contract that created your debt ? or your state law ? allows the charge;
    deposit a post-dated check early;
    take or threaten to take your property unless it can be done legally; or
    contact you by postcard.

Can I control which debts my payments apply to?
Yes. If a debt collector is trying to collect more than one debt from you, the collector must apply any payment you make to the debt you select. Equally important, a debt collector may not apply a payment to a debt you don?t think you owe.

Can a debt collector garnish my bank account or my wages?
If you don?t pay a debt, a creditor or its debt collector generally can sue you to collect. If they win, the court will enter a judgment against you. The judgment states the amount of money you owe, and allows the creditor or collector to get a garnishment order against you, directing a third party, like your bank, to turn over funds from your account to pay the debt.
Wage garnishment happens when your employer withholds part of your compensation to pay your debts. Your wages usually can be garnished only as the result of a court order. Don?t ignore a lawsuit summons. If you do, you lose the opportunity to fight a wage garnishment.

Can federal benefits be garnished?
Many federal benefits are exempt from garnishment, including:
    Social Security Benefits
    Supplemental Security Income (SSI) Benefits
    Veterans? Benefits
    Civil Service and Federal Retirement and Disability Benefits
    Service Members? Pay
    Military Annuities and Survivors? Benefits
    Student Assistance
    Railroad Retirement Benefits
    Merchant Seamen Wages
    Longshoremen?s and Harbor Workers? Death and Disability Benefits
    Foreign Service Retirement and Disability Benefits
    Compensation for Injury, Death, or Detention of Employees of U.S. Contractors Outside the U.S.
    Federal Emergency Management Agency Federal Disaster Assistance
But federal benefits may be garnished under certain circumstances, including to pay delinquent taxes, alimony, child support, or student loans.

Do I have any recourse if I think a debt collector has violated the law?
You have the right to sue a collector in a state or federal court within one year from the date the law was violated. If you win, the judge can require the collector to pay you for any damages you can prove you suffered because of the illegal collection practices, like lost wages and medical bills. The judge can require the debt collector to pay you up to $1,000, even if you can?t prove that you suffered actual damages. You also can be reimbursed for your attorney?s fees and court costs. A group of people also may sue a debt collector as part of a class action lawsuit and recover money for damages up to $500,000, or one percent of the collector?s net worth, whichever amount is lower. Even if a debt collector violates the FDCPA in trying to collect a debt, the debt does not go away if you owe it.

What should I do if a debt collector sues me?
If a debt collector files a lawsuit against you to collect a debt, respond to the lawsuit, either personally or through your lawyer, by the date specified in the court papers to preserve your rights.

Where do I report a debt collector for an alleged violation?
Report any problems you have with a debt collector to your state Attorney General?s office (www.naag.org) and the Federal Trade Commission (www.ftc.gov). Many states have their own debt collection laws that are different from the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. Your Attorney General?s office can help you determine your rights under your state?s law.

For More Information
To learn more about debt collection and other credit-related issues, visit www.ftc.gov/credit and MyMoney.gov, the U.S. government?s portal to financial education.
The FTC works for the consumer to prevent fraudulent, deceptive, and unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide information to help consumers spot, stop, and avoid them. To file a complaint or to get free information on consumer issues, visit ftc.gov or call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. The FTC enters consumer complaints into the Consumer Sentinel Network, a secure online database and investigative tool used by hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad
February 2009

File complaints with

Federal Trade Commission  https://www.ftccomplaintassistant.gov/FTC_Wizard.aspx?Lang=en

Your State Attorney General
State Attorney General is every state they have offices

Link to all State Attorney General Websites www.naag.org

If you or they are located in NY ? use this SPECIAL Link  www.NYDebtHelp.com
This special website was created by NY AG Andrew Cuomo specifically for reporting illegal debt collection practices.  HE?S CRACKING DOWN AND SHUTTING THEM DOWN!
    
Also report your calls and contacts with debt collectors at http://www.budhibbs.com/index.html  If the company is listed under agencies ? report there. If not on the list YET, click on Watchlist! and add to the list.   You can also post here http://www.collectorsexposed.com/forum2/index.php?board=2.0




Time-Barred Debts
http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/edu/pubs/consumer/alerts/alt144.shtm

There?s no doubt about it: you are responsible for your debts. If you fall behind in paying your creditors ? or if you dispute the legitimacy of a debt ? a debt collector may contact you.

?Time-barred? debts are debts so old they are beyond the point at which a creditor or debt collector may sue you to collect. State law varies as to when a creditor or debt collector may no longer sue to collect: in most states, the statute of limitations period on debts is between 3 and 10 years; in some states, the period is longer. Check with your State Attorney General?s Office to determine when a debt is considered time-barred in your state. You can find contact information for your State Attorney General at www.naag.org.

Federal law imposes limitations on how debt collectors can collect debts, including time-barred debts. Under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), a ?debt collector? generally is any person or organization that regularly collects debts owed to others. The term includes lawyers who collect debts for others on a regular basis, but it does not include creditors collecting their own debts.

The FDCPA prohibits debt collectors from engaging in any unfair, deceptive, or abusive practices while collecting debts. It does not erase any legitimate debt that you owe. To learn more about your rights under the FDCPA, click on www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/credit/fdc.htm.
Collecting Time-Barred Debts

Most courts that have addressed the issue have ruled that the FDCPA does not prohibit debt collectors from trying to collect time-barred debts, as long as they do not sue or threaten to sue you for the debt. If a debt collector sues you to collect a time-barred debt, you can have the suit dismissed by letting the court or judge know the debt is, indeed, time-barred.

Whether a time-barred debt ? or any debt for that matter ? can appear on your credit report depends on how long the debt has been delinquent: debts that have been delinquent more than seven years cannot appear on your credit report, with certain exceptions. In addition, a debt collector may not try to collect a debt that has been discharged in bankruptcy, no matter when it was incurred. To learn more about credit reporting, click on www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/credit/fcra.htm.
Contact with Collectors

Can a debt collector continue to contact you about a time-barred debt you don?t think you owe? According to the law, if you send the debt collector a letter stating that you do not owe some or all of the money within 30 days after you receive written notice of a debt, the collector must stop trying to collect until you?ve been given written verification of the debt, like a copy of the bill for the amount you supposedly owe. The collector can renew collection activities once you?ve gotten proof of the debt.

You can stop debt collectors from contacting you about any debt, regardless of whether you owe it, by writing a letter telling them to stop contacting you. Once the collector gets your letter, it may not contact you again ? except to say there will be no further contact or to let you know that the collector or creditor intends to take some specific action. Sending a letter doesn?t absolve you of the debt if you actually owe it; the debt collector or creditor still could sue you for the debt.
Future Collection Efforts

The best way to protect yourself from future collection on any disputed or partially settled debt is to get a form or letter from the creditor or collector that releases you from further obligation. To make sure the release is valid, you may want to consult an attorney. If you believe that a debt collector violated the law, you have the right to sue in a state or federal court within a year from the date the law was violated. If you win, you may recover money for the damages you suffered, plus an additional amount up to $1,000. You also may recover court costs and attorney?s fees. You also may want to report any problems you have with a debt collector to your State Attorney General and to the Federal Trade Commission.

The FTC works to prevent fraudulent, deceptive and unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide information to help consumers spot, stop and avoid them. To file a complaint or get free information on consumer issues, visit ftc.gov or call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. Watch a new video, How to File a Complaint, at ftc.gov/video to learn more. The FTC enters consumer complaints into the Consumer Sentinel Network, a secure online database and investigative tool used by hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.
October 2004
Anonymous
Anonymous
2010-09-29 17:56:23
Unknown
Called my cell phone this morning and asked for my fiance. When I asked if I could take a message the lady said No and hung up. He HAD a debt, but it has been paid off for months now. I'm glad I found this site.
George
George
2010-08-16 19:45:40
Debt Collector
Calling from P&B Capital using Caspian LLC phone service. Ironically,Caspian is in bankruptcy and their service is being used by the P&B scum.
Upset
Upset
2010-06-09 17:27:57
Unknown
Called my job and when asked for a number to call back they hang up!!!
Foxy
Foxy
2010-02-24 13:32:20
Unknown
called at 8:25 no one there when I answered
Larry
Larry
2010-02-04 21:16:57
Debt Collector
Repeatedly calls and hangs up without talking.
ann
ann
2010-02-04 01:44:40
Debt Collector
Same as most of the posts here...I have no outstanding 'late' debts or any that would warrant any type of 'late' notice, even. This "co" called my home three times today. I was not home and looked them up here. Glad I don't have voice mail.
cat
cat
2010-02-03 21:59:24
Debt Collector
same here... real jerks...
OHIO
OHIO
2009-10-28 17:18:41
Debt Collector
IT'S CALLED P & B CAPITAL GROUP
DEBT COLLECTOR AND THEY TRY ALL KINDS OF METHODS TO COLLECT ON OLD AND PAID OFF DEBTS!
Leave Me Alone
Leave Me Alone
2009-10-27 19:19:38
Unknown
Received call at 7:14 a.m.  Hung up when answering machine picked up.  I have no outstanding debt.
callee
callee
2009-10-26 15:32:36
Unknown
called at 8:30 am.  appeared to debt collector.  I have no delinqent or outstanding debts.
I Hate Phones
I Hate Phones
2009-10-12 18:32:36
Unknown
Calles & hen answering machine picked up, they hung up.
Me
Me
2009-09-28 20:37:10
Unknown
Happened to me too. Hung up when I answered
b
b
2009-09-03 14:49:23
Unknown
got a call today from them, pretty sure debt collector
Q
Q
2009-07-09 14:20:54
Debt Collector
Scumbacg C&B capital.
Old debt collectors. Ignore them.
David
David
2009-06-26 14:22:45
Debt Collector
Dedt Collector C&B Capital
Kit
Kit
2009-05-22 14:17:12
Unknown
Called house phone at 8:30 a.m.
1-202-664-0013 1-321-250-9567 1-678-606-5519
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