Stop Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc Harassment

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Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc harassment may involve repeated calls, unclear letters, or pressure to pay before you get proof. If you believe the contact feels excessive, misleading, or designed to rush you, it could indicate conduct that might violate the FDCPA and Regulation F, depending on the facts. Regulation F also includes a call-frequency presumption tied to a specific debt, so tracking call dates and counts matters.

If the caller will not identify the creditor, refuses an itemized breakdown, or pushes same-day payment before written validation, treat it as a verification issue first. Request validation in writing, ask for fees/interest itemization, and save voicemails and letters in case the pattern continues.

Table of Contents

  • Who Is the Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc?
  • Why Does the Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Contact You?
  • What Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc Harassment Can Look Like
  • Is the Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Breaking the Law?
  • Lawsuits Against Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc
  • Contact Information
  • How to Stop Collection Calls
  • What Proof to Request to Verify the Debt
  • What to Do If You Think This Is a Scam
  • What to Do If They Mention Legal Action
  • Get Help With Harassment
  • Success Stories
  • Common Questions About Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc

Who Is the Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc?

Who Is the Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc

Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc is an accounts receivable management and debt collection company that appears in public records as operating from Greenwood Village, Colorado (often listed as 5295 DTC Parkway, Greenwood Village, CO).

If you think you are dealing with this agency, treat the first contact as identity verification, not a payment decision. A mismatch in address, business name, or call-back details could indicate a wrong-party collection attempt or impersonation.

Why Does the Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Contact You?

The Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland may contact consumers when a creditor or servicer places an account for collection. Public litigation involving this agency includes student-debt collection letters and disputes about how amounts were stated or disclosed.

Common triggers include:

  • A past-due balance that was placed with a third-party collector
  • A balance where interest/fees or itemization was not clearly explained
  • A record mismatch (wrong person, old address, mixed identifiers)

If you do not recognize the account, do not “fill in the gaps” on a phone call. Ask for written details first.

What Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc Harassment Can Look Like

What Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc Harassment Can Look Like

Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc harassment is usually a pattern of pressure without documentation, not one call.

Examples that may be relevant:

Federal rules under Regulation F include a presumption tied to call frequency for a specific debt (the “7-in-7” concept). If you believe calls exceed those thresholds, it could indicate a compliance issue.

Is the Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Breaking the Law?

Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc harassment might violate federal law if the conduct is harassing, deceptive, unfair, or involves improper third-party disclosure, depending on what happened.

Key legal reference points:

  • FDCPA prohibits harassment, false/misleading statements, and unfair practices.
  • Regulation F (12 CFR Part 1006) adds modern rules, including call-frequency presumptions tied to a particular debt.
  • FTC guidance explains collectors generally cannot call before 8 a.m. or after 9 p.m., cannot threaten arrest, and cannot disclose your debt to others.

If you believe any of these occurred, document it and move communication into writing.

Lawsuits Against Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc

Litigation is not proof your situation is unlawful, but it can show the kinds of disputes that have been raised about Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc.

Example: Collection letters and third-party mail vendors

In Shields v. Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland, Inc., the court addressed Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA)-related allegations tied to collection letters and disclosure issues involving an outside mailing vendor (the case also discusses standing).

Example: FDCPA claims in federal court

A federal court memorandum in Beedle v. Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland, Inc. reflects FDCPA claims litigated against the agency.

Example: Putative class action pleadings (disclosure/letter issues)

Court materials in Kraus v. Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland, Inc. describe FDCPA allegations raised in a putative class action context.

If your letters resemble the issues raised in these cases (confusing balances, missing disclosures, third-party handling), that similarity could indicate you should request itemization and validation before paying.

Contact Information

Use verified identifiers to reduce impersonation risk. Public listings commonly show:

Item What to Verify Why It Matters
Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Phone Number (800) 270-9685 or (303) 488-2500 Matches public listings; reduces spoofing risk
Fax (public listing) (303) 706-1102 Supports identity verification
Address (public listing) 5295 DTC Parkway, Greenwood Village, CO Confirms the correct entity
Commonly reported outbound number 720-200-0326 (reported in consumer-law content) Outbound caller ID alone is not proof; spoofing is common

How to Stop Collection Calls

How to Stop Collection Calls

To reduce Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc harassment, do the following in order:

  1. Stop phone negotiations
    If you think the debt iss confusing, say: “Please send validation and itemization in writing.” Then end the call.
  2. Send a written request to limit contact
    Under the FDCPA, you can request that a collector stop contacting you or contact you only in certain ways. If you believe calls are excessive, this step may help.
  3. Track contact frequency and content
    Log dates, numbers, voicemail content, and whether they refused written proof. If you believe the “7-in-7” presumption is being exceeded, your log becomes evidence.

What Proof to Request to Verify the Debt

Your validation request should be short and specific. Ask for:

  • Creditor name (and current owner/servicer, if different)
  • Amount claimed with itemization (principal, interest, fees, credits)
  • Account identifiers (partial account number, placement/reference number)
  • Documentation tying the debt to you (address history, contract/billing basis)
  • Authority to collect (placement/assignment information)

If they cannot provide this, the claim may be incomplete, inaccurate, or not properly documented.

What to Do If You Think This Is a Scam

What to Do If You Think This Is a Scam

Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Scam concerns are common because impersonators use real company names.

Treat it as high risk if the caller:

The FTC specifically warns about fake and abusive debt collectors and explains common scam tactics.

What to Do If They Mention Legal Action

A real lawsuit usually comes with court paperwork, a caption, a case number, and a response deadline.

If the caller uses legal terms but will not provide written details, respond once:
“Send the account details and legal status in writing. I will review and respond after verification.”

If you receive actual court papers, do not ignore them. Missing a deadline can lead to a default judgment.

Get Help With Harassment

Get Help With Harassment

If you believe Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc harassment has crossed the line, legal support may help you document the pattern, demand proof correctly, and stop improper contact. A consumer protection attorney can also evaluate whether the conduct may be actionable under the FDCPA, Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) , or FCRA, depending on the facts, including call frequency, third-party disclosure, or inaccurate credit reporting.

Consumer Rights Law Firm PLLC
133 Main Street, Second Floor, North Andover, MA 01845
Phone: +1 877-700-5790
Email: help@consumerlawfirmcenter.com

If you think the debt is wrong or the pressure is escalating, contacting counsel early could prevent avoidable mistakes and preserve evidence.

Success Stories

“For weeks, my phone wouldn’t stop buzzing with calls from a debt collection agency. They were aggressive, rude, and even called my workplace. I was embarrassed and stressed out every single day. A coworker told me about Consumer Rights Law Firm, and I decided to give them a try. The moment I spoke with them, I felt relieved—they understood exactly what I was going through. They gathered all the details, handled the collectors directly, and the harassment ended almost overnight. I can finally answer my phone without anxiety.”

“I didn’t realize how much constant debt collection calls were affecting my mental health until they stopped. CRLF took my case seriously from day one, explained my legal options in plain English, and handled all the communication with the collectors. In less than a week, my phone went silent. The peace and quiet felt like a huge weight off my shoulders. They’re professional, compassionate, and genuinely care about helping people.”

“The collection agency calling me wouldn’t take ‘stop calling’ for an answer. I tried blocking their number, but they just used new ones. I felt trapped until I reached out to Consumer Rights Law Firm. Their team worked quickly, documented every call, and sent a strong legal message that made the harassment end immediately. I’m so grateful to them for restoring my privacy and peace of mind. If you’re dealing with the same problem, CRLF is the best solution.”

Common Questions About Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc

What is the Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland?

Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland is a third-party debt collection company publicly listed with operations associated with Greenwood Village, Colorado.

Why am I getting calls from the Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc?

They may be trying to collect an alleged debt placed with them by a creditor or servicer. If you do not recognize the account, request written validation before paying.

What is Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc harassment?

It typically means repeated contact, urgency without documentation, or confusing account details. If you believe the pattern is excessive, it could indicate an FDCPA or Regulation F issue.

What is the Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Phone Number?

Public listings commonly show (800) 270-9685 and (303) 488-2500. Always verify using a letter you received, not caller ID alone.

Is the Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland a scam?

The company appears in public records as a real collector, but impersonation scams are common. If you think it could be spoofed, follow FTC scam guidance and demand written validation.

How do I stop calls safely?

Let calls go to voicemail, request validation in writing, and send a written request to limit contact. Keep a log if you believe the contact frequency is excessive.

Can they call me before 8 a.m. or after 9 p.m.?

Generally no. FTC guidance explains collectors cannot call at those times absent circumstances suggesting you agreed or it is not inconvenient.

Can they talk to my employer or family about the debt?

Collectors generally cannot disclose your debt to unauthorized third parties. If you believe disclosure happened, that might violate the FDCPA depending on what was shared.

Were there lawsuits against the Professional Bureau of Collections of Maryland Inc?

Yes. Published matters include Shields (letters and third-party mail vendor allegations) and other Fair Debt Collection Practices Act litigation such as Beedle and Kraus.

How can Consumer Rights Law Firm PLLC help?

They can review your letters and call logs, help you request validation, and evaluate whether the conduct may be actionable under FDCPA/TCPA/Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) depending on the facts.

Attorney Derek DePetrillo

Attorney Derek DePetrillo graduated from the Massachusetts School of Law in 2007 and was admitted to practice law in the State of Massachusetts in 2007. Mr. DePetrillo is also licensed in many federal jurisdictions across the United States.

Mr. DePetrillo has been assisting consumers with consumer protection since 2010. Mr. DePetrillo’s main area of practice is under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, and the Fair Credit Reporting Act. Mr. DePetrillo has filed countless lawsuits and arbitration claims against debt collectors and banks. Mr. DePetrillo fights for the little people who have had their rights violated and need a helping hand to guide them through the stressful times of debt collection.