The drama continues!
About a month ago, 2 sheriffs (in Pennsylvania) arrived to levy items with a writ of execution.
If you read this thread, you'll see my side of the fiasco. Needless to say, the officers were not the most professional sorts I could have encountered.
Here's the newest issue:
One of the sheriffs found a box for my old digital camera. He told his colleague to put it in the levy. I told him it was broken, he said he didn't care, and it appeared on the list as "good" condition; in fact, everything was in "good" condition despite me informing them of their various malfunctions and imperfections. They did not seize the property (nor took pictures) and instead told me I'd have to produce it after the sheriff's sale. (Why would anyone would bid on something without seeing it? So confusing.)
I just opened the digital camera box. It's empty! The sheriff never looked inside to verify what was in it. I cannot find the camera, which means it was either lost in my last move, I donated it somewhere, or tossed it because it was broken. My last move was 3 years ago, so I have no clue where it could be.
Based on my (bad) experience with the sheriffs of my county, I don't know what to do. Will they believe me when I tell them the camera wasn't in the box? Will I be basically accusing these officers of professional malfeasance because they didn't properly evaluate the property (which really frightens me because I am scared of them re-appearing at the door)?
Anyone have something similar happen? Any suggestions on what to do about this?
(I am trying to get the lawyers representing the loan agency to agree to monthly payments before the sheriff's sale, but I have little faith in their sense of fairness at this point. I am positive they know my financial situation and are simply using the writs and the sheriff's office out of spite.)
About a month ago, 2 sheriffs (in Pennsylvania) arrived to levy items with a writ of execution.
If you read this thread, you'll see my side of the fiasco. Needless to say, the officers were not the most professional sorts I could have encountered.
Here's the newest issue:
One of the sheriffs found a box for my old digital camera. He told his colleague to put it in the levy. I told him it was broken, he said he didn't care, and it appeared on the list as "good" condition; in fact, everything was in "good" condition despite me informing them of their various malfunctions and imperfections. They did not seize the property (nor took pictures) and instead told me I'd have to produce it after the sheriff's sale. (Why would anyone would bid on something without seeing it? So confusing.)
I just opened the digital camera box. It's empty! The sheriff never looked inside to verify what was in it. I cannot find the camera, which means it was either lost in my last move, I donated it somewhere, or tossed it because it was broken. My last move was 3 years ago, so I have no clue where it could be.
Based on my (bad) experience with the sheriffs of my county, I don't know what to do. Will they believe me when I tell them the camera wasn't in the box? Will I be basically accusing these officers of professional malfeasance because they didn't properly evaluate the property (which really frightens me because I am scared of them re-appearing at the door)?
Anyone have something similar happen? Any suggestions on what to do about this?
(I am trying to get the lawyers representing the loan agency to agree to monthly payments before the sheriff's sale, but I have little faith in their sense of fairness at this point. I am positive they know my financial situation and are simply using the writs and the sheriff's office out of spite.)
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