Legal Question in Consumer Law in New York
One year ago, I ordered home delivery of the New York Times. I was assured it was delivered in my area.
I have never received one single copy, yet I continue to be billed. The charges mount up (now over $500).
I have talked with "customer service" (front line and supervisors) several times w/o result. Each time I am told they will "get back to me" and never do.
What can I do to ensure they cancel the charges? I don't want it sent to collection. I would send a registered or certified letter, but am unsure whom to send it to. Obviously, not to customer service.
1 Answer from Attorneys
Send it to customer service. They may not do anything (incompetency reigns everywhere these days) but it will give you proof. Send a second cert letter to the CEO. Letters to CEOs often get addressed quickly. Before I was an attorney, I worked for the President's office of a large bank handling all the complaints he received regarding the Mutual Funds Division (they had a lot then). My boyfriend at the time did the same thing at the mutual fund company (that was how we met-great guy...should not have left him but I was a silly young lady then).
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