I have a case in Ohio where Stenger & Stenger is using an address for Citi that is non-existent. I regularly see Stenger & Stenger and Weltman, Weinberg & Reis use addresses for a Plaintiff that are not the corporate headquarters - they use a non-existent address, or a random branch location, and even one time literally used an address for a building that the city officially slated for demolition, etc. We all know that the Stenger-types are junk debt buyers and not actually representing the credit card company even tho they claim to. Can these address abnormalities be used against the 3rd party deb collecter claiming to represent the plaintiff - isn't it a false claim they are making - claiming to represent the credit card issuing company? Is this relevant to the case or am I lost in the weeds on something that doesn't matter?
The case is brought by the Creditor, not the debt collector. So, the violations would of the debt collector are brought against them in a seperate action of either a third party claim in the original case or Federal claim with you as a Plaintiff. I don't see the address having an impact to their claims against you or specific damages. Focus on the pleadings and their documents. ParkerGPT will ferret this all out for you. Good luck.
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