The problem of robo-signing mortgage related documents has received a great deal of attention in both the courts and the press. A similar problem, possibly affecting many more individuals, may exist in the debt collection industry. Peter Holland of University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law has written, “The One Hundred Billion Dollar Problem in Small Claims Court: Robo-Signing and Lack of Proof in Debt Buyer Cases,” published in 6 J. Bus. & Tech. L. 259 (2011)
Here is the abstract:
Recent years have seen the rise of a new industry which has clogged the dockets of small claims courts throughout the country. It is known as the "debt buyer" industry. Members of this $100 billion per year industry exist for no reason other than to purchase consumer debt that others have already deemed uncollectable, and then try to succeed in collecting where others have failed. Debt buyers pay pennies on the dollar for this charged off debt, and then seek to collect, through hundreds of thousands of lawsuits, the full face value of the debt. The emergence and vitality of this industry presents several legal, ethical and economic issues which merit exploration, study and scholarly debate.
This article focuses on the problem of robo-signing and the lack of proof in debt buyer cases. Although this problem has received limited attention from the media and from regulators, there is a paucity of legal scholarship about debt buyers in general, and this problem in particular. This article demonstrates that robo-signing and fraud are rampant in this industry, and that the debt buyers who pursue these claims often lack proof necessary to show that they own the debt, and often lack proof even that a debt was ever owed in the first place. The fact that this lack of proof has led to consumers being sued twice on the same debt demonstrates the due process concerns which are implicated when courts enter judgments against consumers based on robo-signing and insufficient proof.
This article calls on courts to hold plaintiffs in debt buyer cases to the same standards required of other litigants. Courts must require a demonstration of personal knowledge of the matter at issue before any affidavit is accepted, before any person testifies, and before any documents are admitted into evidence.


there are some reports that says robo-signing may be even more prevalent in the debt collection industry than it is in the mortgage industry. As was recently reported, one of the country's largest debt buyers has taken consumers to court based on affidavits signed by an employee who had died in 1995. Although the debt collection agency subsequently said that the affidavits were supplied from the company from which they'd purchased the debt, the problem seems rampant. debt collection
Posted by: debt collection | Wednesday, November 23, 2011 at 02:52 AM