close this bookAn inside look at debt collection by Jim Heath
source ref: ebook.htm
View the documentMetadata
View the documentIntroduction
View the documentChapter 1:What happens to the innocent?
View the documentChapter 2:How to avoid problems - cheaply
View the documentChapter 3:Simple ways to collect a debt yourself
View the documentChapter 4:Getting rougher: the counsel of experience
View the documentChapter 5:Using a lawyer
View the documentChapter 6:DIY law: taking the wolf by the ear
View the documentChapter 7:Turning the screw: how to enforce a court order
View the documentChapter 8:Using a private investigator
View the documentChapter 9:Using a debt collection agency
View the documentChapter 10:The dreaded section 364
View the documentChapter 11:What Next?
View the documentChapter 12:Thanks to...
View the documentChapter 13:Some legal terms that come up a lot

Expanding the text here will generate a large amount of data for your browser to display

Chapter 12:Thanks to...

Thanks to...

SOME OF the most valuable parts of this book are there because many professional people gave me their time. Lawyers, debt collectors, a magistrate, private investigators, a credit-reference association, and sheriffs. Many of them gave me long interviews, and they all read the manuscript. (In one case, twice!) Thanks to you all, whether I'm allowed to name you or not.

My visible thanks to:

Mr Kevin Allen, Members Services Executive, Credit Reference Association of Australia (CRAA) Ltd

Mr Paul Cooney, W. J. Lawrence & Co. Pty. Ltd.

Mr Maurice Kerrigan, Licensed Private Detective

Of course these people aren't responsible for what I have said. Many of the opinions and suggestions are my own. Errors are also mine, if there are any (but note my disclaimer in the front).