Image this if you will, one day you receive your
statement in your mailbox and of course you do not assume anything out
of the ordinary because you only used the card one time last month,
which was to buy your niece a birthday present. No big deal you think,
this can be paid off in full, and so you take the statement and sit down
with your checkbook ready to send it off. You open your statement and
you find it full of purchases three to sears and many to places you have
never even been to and know you did not make. What do you do now?
Are you aware of your rights that you possess when a fraudulent purchase is made upon your credit card?
Here
we are going to talk about fraudulent charges, first of all, this means
charges that you, yourself did not make. The federal law has
implemented certain rights that will help you if there is ever an
instance of charges upon your card that were not made by you. This law,
called the Fair Credit Billing Act, limits the responsibility placed on
you for charges you were not aware of to only $50. If you find, when
opening your statement, that there are unauthorized charges on it, there
is a specific procedure you must follow in order to resolve the issue
right away.
The first thing that you should do is call the
company and explain to them that those charges are not yours and were
not made by you. The company will then give you a specific set of
instructions you should follow. Additionally, take some time out to look
over your other statements, ensure that there were no other
unauthorized charges made that you might have missed.
Typically,
the reporting credit card business will most probably ask you to sign a
statement confirming these charges were unauthorized. It is important
that you refrain from using this card while the charge dispute is in
process.
After the charges are resolved and removed from your
statement you should obtain a copy of your credit report, obtain one
from each major bureau to ensure that the particular credit card record
has been updated with them. The reason for this is because it is likely
that during the dispute these charges could have formed late payments
that might have been reported to the credit bureaus.
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