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Tru Tv's Operation Repo

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milk man

Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Ks.

Is what they do legal as far as entering onto property, opening garage doors, and shoving people around?

I don't even think the show is real. At the beginning of each episode they have a statement that they are showing reenactments. Can a repo company do things like lay hands on people to remove them from cars/trucks? Or is it just "good tee vee"?
 


justalayman

Senior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Ks.

Is what they do legal as far as entering onto property, opening garage doors, and shoving people around?

I don't even think the show is real. At the beginning of each episode they have a statement that they are showing reenactments. Can a repo company do things like lay hands on people to remove them from cars/trucks? Or is it just "good tee vee"?
I guess I am going to watch a few more episodes of the show. I don't remember seeing most of what you asked about.

and if the show is simply reenactments, everything they are doing would be legal since it is all a show and the actors do what they get paid to do.
 
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milk man

Member
I know actors just play roles.;)

I'm asking if someone repo-ing a car can come on private property, open doors, and use force to remove a person from a back of a truck.
 

justalayman

Senior Member
going onto private property? varies by state but a really quick look at California codes seemed to show that for there to be a trespass, the trespasser must have been given notice.

so, they would be allowed to walk onto an unfenced are that did not have a sign labeled "no trespassing".

entering the premises: doubtful if it is legal. They might get away with an open garage but definitely not a secured building. That is called breaking and entering.


as to getting physical with people: not unless they were defending themselves.
 

ErinGoBragh

Senior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Ks.

Is what they do legal as far as entering onto property, opening garage doors, and shoving people around?

I don't even think the show is real. At the beginning of each episode they have a statement that they are showing reenactments. Can a repo company do things like lay hands on people to remove them from cars/trucks? Or is it just "good tee vee"?
That show is fake, fake, FAKE. Much of what they do on there would get a real "repo man" arrested in real life.

It's all paid actors in improv situations on that particular show.
 

TigerD

Senior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Ks.

Is what they do legal as far as entering onto property, opening garage doors, and shoving people around?

I don't even think the show is real. At the beginning of each episode they have a statement that they are showing reenactments. Can a repo company do things like lay hands on people to remove them from cars/trucks? Or is it just "good tee vee"?
On a whim, I ran Lou and Matt through the California records for licensing of repossession agents. I could find no record of their ever having a license or EGA Recovery having a license.

It's good TV, but little more than that.

DC
 

mlane58

Senior Member
On a whim, I ran Lou and Matt through the California records for licensing of repossession agents. I could find no record of their ever having a license or EGA Recovery having a license.

It's good TV, but little more than that.

DC
The Agency is All Star Recovery and all but Matt were licensed at one time. The daughter and one other (not Sonja is licensed presently)
 

xylene

Senior Member
So, one time I was watching this fictional television show, which had a big disclaimer that the show was NOT REAL and I was wondering how people can get away with it? :rolleyes:

Let me know please.
 

justalayman

Senior Member
So is Dog the Bounty Hunter real? or fake?
based on what the all knowing Wikipedia states, it is most likely real. Dog even reported getting shot at by one guy they were chasing. The police initially were investigating, including arresting the guy for it, but have since dropped it. So, either it is real or he is filing false police reports in an effort to improve ratings.


It's a joke but I think it's real. Those idiots are going to get shot either buy a bail jumper or the cops due to the way the run around with those paintball guns. If I saw them in my neighborhood, I can tell you I would be on the phone to the police and pulling out the heavy artillery.

Due to Dog's conviction (I believe it was murder) he is not allowed to carry a real gun or a Taser so he carries paintball guns.
 

milk man

Member
So, one time I was watching this fictional television show, which had a big disclaimer that the show was NOT REAL and I was wondering how people can get away with it? :rolleyes:

Let me know please.

So I'm not as sharp as you.:rolleyes:

The disclaimer is not BIG. And does not say the show is not real. It says something to the affect of it being a re-enactment.

My real questions are what a repo agent can and can't do. Like if someone that sets up camp in back of a pick up can be forcibly removed. Or can the repo agent hook up to a car and pull it out of the way of the repo target.

Thanks to all that have taken the time to answer my questions.
 

JustAPal00

Senior Member
Dog is a real bounty hunter. He was the guy who went to Mexico and brought back "Andrew Lestor?" the Max Factor heir. He was charged in Mexico with kidnapping because he just went down there with no permission and grabbed the guy and brought him back to the US. He ended up getting out of it.
 

wdw1955

Junior Member
Operation Repo is Illegal

The Misconception About Repossession. Several popular realty television shows depict creditor attempts to repossess collateral after a consumer defaults in repaying the loan. One example is Tru TV’s “Operation Repo” which stars thug like characters repossessing vehicles through coercion, violence and physical confrontation. These shows leave the public and consumers with the impression that a creditor may legally engage in virtually any type of activity, including the use of force and violence, to repossess its collateral.

The Law. The repossession attempts depicted in these televison programs are almost always illegal and would be illegal in virtually every state of the country. The law relating to creditor repossession is governed by Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code. A similar version of the law has been enacted in at least 49 of the United States (all states except Louisiana).

In Texas, the specific statute is Texas Business & Commerce Code §9.609. This statute provides that a creditor is entitled to use self-help repossession, but may only seize collateral without a court order if it can be accomplished without committing a breach of the peace. In other words, as a general rule, a creditor may repossess personal property (any property other than land) without filing a lawsuit or obtaining a court order authoring the repossession attempt. However, if the creditor chooses self help, the repossession attempt may only be pursued if it can be accomplished without breaching the peace.

“Breach of the Peace” Defined. Article 9 does not define “breach of the peace.“ The courts have been required to forge a workable definition. A recent Texas appellate court opinion, Chapa v. Traciers & Associates, 267 S.W.3d 386 (Tex.App.-Houston [14 Dist.] 2008), defined “breach of the peace” by relying on several prior cases decided in other states. For example:

● A “breach of the peace" as used in the Uniform Commercial Code, means conduct that incites or is likely to incite immediate public turbulence, or that leads to or is likely to lead to an immediate loss of public order and tranquility." Johnson v. Grossinger Motorcorp, Inc., 753 N.E.2d 431, 440 (Ill. 2001).

● A creditor attempting to repossess may not use force or violence, or commit any act naturally calculated to provide a breach of peace. Madden v. Deere Credit Servs., Inc., 598 So.2d 860 (Ala.1992).

● Although actual violence is not required to find “breach of the peace” a disturbance or violence must be reasonably likely, and not merely a remote possibility. Salisbury Livestock Co. v. Colo. Cent. Credit Union, 793 P.2d 470, 474 n. 3 (Wyo.1990).

● There is no breach of peace when vehicle is repossessed from a public street while the debtor is inside the house. Ash v. Peoples Bank of Greensboro, 500 So.2d 5, 6-7 (Ala.1986).

● In an attempted repossession of a car from a street, parking lot or unenclosed space, if repossession is verbally or otherwise contested at the time of and in the immediate vicinity of an attempted repossession, by the defaulting party or another person in control of the vehicle, the creditor must stop the repossession attempt. Census Fed. Credit Union v. Wann, 403 N.E.2d 348, 351-52 (Ind. Ct. App. 1980).

The Moral of the Story: Don’t always believe what you see on TV, even when it is presented as a reality televison. A creditor attempting to repossess a vehicle is relatively safe in repossessing a vehicle if it is done on a public street when there are no people present or likely to confront the repossession agent and complain about it. However, a creditor may not open or break though a door or fence located on private property in an attempt to repossess property. It is also a breach of the peace for a creditor to continue a repossession attempt once he is confronted by a protesting debtor during the repossession attempt. When confronted during a repossession attempt, the creditor must stop the repossession attempt and leave. Otherwise, the creditor is subject to a lawsuit for wrongful repossession.


Weber Law Firm, P.C.
 
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