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| Student Loan Consolidation Center, San Diego |
Question:
Is this a legit organization? My
wife has received a dunning call
and a notice from Student
Loan
Consolidation
Center,
9477 Naples Street, San Diego 92121
regarding student
loan
accounts. In fact she attended
college under her maiden name over
30 years ago. Her father paid
cash for her education. I have advised
my wife to get her free copies of
credit reports. If someone
has posted educational loans to
her credit profile, I want her to
get copies of the loan
notes and an affidavit of forgery
which will be sent to Student
Loan
Consolidation
Center,
and to the Registrar of the college
supposedly attended. If there are
no educational loans posted to her
credit profile, Student
Loan
Consolidation
Center
should get redacted copies of those
reports. Any further ideas at this
time?
Answer:
The organization appears legit, now
you need to know if the loan is. Goal
Financial has a Student Loan Consolidation
Center at the address you list. Their
website is http://www.goalfinancial.net
Phone is 866-681-4291. There is a
mention of them in the webpages of
finaid.org, a highly reliable source
of aid info, which says that Goal
is now the tenth largest holder of
education loans I would start by calling
the loan company to ask why they think
she owes something, and to obtain
full details of the underlying documents
and colleges allegedly attended. It
may not be the case here, but often
parents simply hand the college student
papers to be signed and the student
never realizes she has a loan.
I think that when one's interests
may have been compromised, it is better
that all further communications should
be in hard copy for the record.
A call from a
business organization has thanked
my wife for her patronage, although
she has not done business with them
nor visited their location. We now
have an address, and the person with
the same name apparently has an unpublished
telephone number there. There is reason
to suppose, from a telephone listing
and a Web search, that there may be
a daughter who attended a well-regarded
liberal arts college.
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