Title 15 › Chapter 41— CONSUMER CREDIT PROTECTION › Subchapter V— DEBT COLLECTION PRACTICES › § 1692p
Private companies that run pretrial diversion programs for people accused of writing bad checks are not treated as debt collectors under federal law if certain rules are met. A prosecutor in the area must set up the program and hire the private company under a contract. The company must work under the prosecutor’s direction, follow state criminal laws and the contract, and not make its own decisions about prosecuting crimes. The company may contact a person about joining the program only after the prosecutor finds probable cause of a bad-check offense and the person failed to pay after a lawful demand. The company must include a clear written notice at first contact saying the person can dispute the allegation, may report theft, forgery, or identity fraud to police, and that if the person says in writing within 30 days there is a dispute, the prosecutor (or an authorized employee) must decide whether there is probable cause before more restitution efforts continue. The company may only charge fees allowed by the contract. The rule does not cover six kinds of checks, including some payday/postdated checks, good-faith stop payments, bank adjustments, previously accepted partial payments, checks by people not legally competent or of age, or checks tied to illegal transactions. Definitions: “State or district attorney” = the chief local prosecutor; “check” = as defined in 12 U.S.C. 5002(6); “bad check violation” = the state crime for writing dishonored checks.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 1692p
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60