For Minnesota residents dealing with CACH LLC on rent & lease debt
Learn FCRA-based strategies to remove inaccurate, unverifiable, and outdated collection accounts from your credit report. This guide applies the steps specifically to Minnesota's laws and CACH LLC's documented collection practices for rent & lease debt accounts. In Minnesota, the statute of limitations on rent & lease debt is 6 years and wage garnishment is limited to 25% of disposable earnings.
6 years
Minnesota Statute of Limitations
$3,200
Average Rent & Lease Debt
25% of disposable earnings
Garnishment Limit
CACH LLC has a documented record of FDCPA violations. If any of these occur during your Minnesota collection dispute, document them and file immediately.
Steps customized for Minnesota law, rent & lease debt rules, and CACH LLC's collection patterns.
Get free weekly reports from annualcreditreport.com (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion). Look for: collection accounts you don't recognize, wrong balances, accounts past 7 years (7.5 years from date of first delinquency), re-aged accounts.
Under FDCPA, demand the collector validate the debt. Under FCRA § 623, they must conduct a reasonable investigation when you dispute. If they can't substantiate it, they must stop reporting it.
File disputes simultaneously at equifax.com, experian.com, and transunion.com or by certified mail. Be specific: state the exact error, what the correct information should be, and attach supporting documents.
Bureaus must investigate within 30 days. If the collector can't verify the accuracy of their entry, the bureau must delete it. If the investigation finds errors, the entry must be corrected or deleted.
If inaccurate entries remain, file CFPB complaints against both the collector and the credit bureau. If willful violations exist, you can sue under FCRA for $100-$1,000 per violation plus actual damages.
These strategies apply to rent & lease debt specifically. Rent debt from unpaid rent, lease break fees, or security deposit disputes. State landlord-tenant law governs. Security deposit claims have strict return timelines.
Minnesota Collection Agency Act governs debt collection in Minnesota in addition to the federal FDCPA. To file a complaint: AG Consumer Protection.
Key Minnesota Protections:
In Minnesota, wage garnishment is capped at 25% of disposable earnings. The following income is protected: Social Security, Unemployment, Workers' comp, Pension, Public assistance. CACH LLC must first obtain a court judgment through proper legal process before any garnishment order can be issued.
The SOL for rent & lease debt in Minnesota is 6 years. Once expired, CACH LLC cannot win a court judgment even if the debt is real. You must raise the SOL as an affirmative defense in your Answer if sued — never ignore a lawsuit.
Minnesota Collection Agency Act applies in Minnesota alongside the federal FDCPA. Complaints can be filed with AG Consumer Protection. Collectors must be licensed
Send a certified validation letter within 30 days of first contact. Demand the original creditor name and full chain of assignment. CACH LLC must stop all collection activity until they validate. If they fail to validate, file complaints with the CFPB and AG Consumer Protection.
Generate legally precise dispute letters, cease-and-desist demands, and validation requests built for Minnesota's specific laws and CACH LLC's documented tactics. Starting at $9.99/month — cancel anytime.