andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2006-04-27 11:24 am
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Legal Telemarketers (#17 in a series of things which have really pissed me off)
I'm far too fucking polite with the horrifically amoral scum who phone me up to offer me things I would only want if I was so far down the food chain that pond scum looked like a shining role model to work towards.
In principle I think that no win, no fee legal arrangements are a good thing. They remove the inequity which meant that only the rich could afford legal representation, making it easier for those who have been legitimately harmed to obtain some kind of redress through the courts.
What isn't a good thing is legal companies phoning up people at random to ask them if they've had any kind of incident at work ove rthe past three years. And making it clear that it doesn't have to be anyone's responsibility, but that it could be as simple as a minor brush with another driver, or a slip at work. And then. when I say that no, I'm fine, offering me a £50 finders fee if I pass them along to anyone else who _has_ had any kind of incident in the last three years.
Offering your services to people in genuine need is one thing, asking people if they have a genuine problem is fine, but these scumbags were clearly looking for the kind of thing that could be settled out of court for a nice tidy sum, in order to avoid publicity.
Oh, and as I'm registered with the Telephone Preference Service they shouldn't have been phoning me in the first place - if I'd had my brain in gear I'd have written down the name of their company and reported them. The whole thing makes me feel slightly ill.
In principle I think that no win, no fee legal arrangements are a good thing. They remove the inequity which meant that only the rich could afford legal representation, making it easier for those who have been legitimately harmed to obtain some kind of redress through the courts.
What isn't a good thing is legal companies phoning up people at random to ask them if they've had any kind of incident at work ove rthe past three years. And making it clear that it doesn't have to be anyone's responsibility, but that it could be as simple as a minor brush with another driver, or a slip at work. And then. when I say that no, I'm fine, offering me a £50 finders fee if I pass them along to anyone else who _has_ had any kind of incident in the last three years.
Offering your services to people in genuine need is one thing, asking people if they have a genuine problem is fine, but these scumbags were clearly looking for the kind of thing that could be settled out of court for a nice tidy sum, in order to avoid publicity.
Oh, and as I'm registered with the Telephone Preference Service they shouldn't have been phoning me in the first place - if I'd had my brain in gear I'd have written down the name of their company and reported them. The whole thing makes me feel slightly ill.
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Surely if the legal system did not award damages in these kind of 'minor incident', 'shit happens' type of claims, then the market that the scumbags (and their clients) operate in would not exist? Or maybe it's not as simple as that and I am somehow missing something.
My only damages claim predated the wide availability of no-win no-fee, but I was very sure that I had at least a decent chance and the fees were not too steep. iwas willing to take that risk.
I have had to spend £200 on PI insurance for the very little skippering work that I do in case some dolt stubs their toe and decides to sue me...
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Of course, a decent legal aid system would do that too.
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Of course all this is in the small print, but these companies are targetting the most vulnerable of societies' members who are unlikely to read or comprehend the small print.
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The TPS exists thanks to the Privacy and Electronic Communications (EC Directive) Regulations 2003, which is a European directive which has duly been enforced with national legislation in each member state. It therefore should cover companies calling from within the EU. Of course it will not have any authority over companies calling from outwith the EU.
I wonder if it would have any authority to stop a third party (in say India) calling you on behalf of a British company?
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I seem to remember very similar wording in some extra on a computer game ages ago... I mostly remember the big beast thing that wanted a mountain dew!
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