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Updated on Author: Contributor: Sergei Lemberg

Called By Acquired Assets? Here’s What You Need to Know*


In 2014 the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau reported that it had received over 200,000 complaints against collection agencies the previous year. If you are being harassed by a debt collector, it’s important to understand that while collecting debts is legal, abuse is not.

Your Rights Under the FDCPA

The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), is a consumer protection law that regulates the way that debt collectors can communicate with consumers. Using methods like the following to pressure someone into paying a debt can get a collection agency shut down.

  • Using profane or obscene language
  • Leaving messages that do not identify them as debt collectors
  • Calling you at work after you’ve told them that your employer won’t let you take such calls
  • Refusing to prove that a debt is valid and they are authorized to collect it
  • Ignoring a formal cease communications request
  • Calling at all hours of the day and night

Called By Acquired Assets? Here's What You Need to Know*

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Company Profile: Acquired Assets

If you are being called by Acquired Assets, here is some additional information about the agency.

Acquired Assets is a collection agency in Rancho Dominguez, California. It was established in 2002, has eight employees, and is managed by Mark D. Slagle. The PACER website holds records confirming that consumers who believed that they were being harassed by Acquired Assets fought the company’s claims in court.

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Alleged Violations against Acquired Assets*

According to PACER, on or around mid-2010, Acquired Assets started calling a Georgia consumer to collect a debt. He complained that between June and July 2010, the company left at least nine pre-recorded messages for him requesting a callback, none of which identified it as a debt collector.

Feeling harassed by Acquired Assets, the consumer sued the company for allegedly:

  • Failing to identify itself a debt collector in all communications
  • Using false, deceptive, and misleading means to collect a debt

The matter was later settled.

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Hire a Consumer Lawyer

The phone numbers for this debt collection agency are:

If they appear on your caller ID when the phone rings, it means that you are being called by Acquired Assets. If they leave voice messages that do not identify them as debt collectors, hire a consumer lawyer and fie a claim against Acquired Assets. You could be awarded $1,000 per FDCA violation plus your attorney fees, so you have nothing to lose by taking a stand.

*Case taken from PACER (pacer.gov). File number is Case 1:10-cv-03696-HTW from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, Atlanta Division.

Disclaimer: The content of this article serves only to provide information and should not be constructed as legal advice. If you file a claim against Acquired Assets or any other third-party collection agency, you may not be entitled to any compensation.

About the author:

Contributor: Sergei Lemberg

Sergei Lemberg is a consumer rights attorney, practicing since 2006, whose practice focuses on consumer law, class actions and personal injury litigation. He is known for a United States Supreme Court case (Facebook v. Duguid) defending consumers from autodialers under the Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991 to send unsolicited text messages. He is also the author of Defanging Debt Collectors, a book that teaches consumers how to battle debt collectors and win.

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