phone harassment

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curlyclt

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My ex-husband is entitled to reasonable phone calls (1 or 2 per day). He continually calls (5,6,7 times a day). I am trying to retrieve my phone bill to show the amount of calls from Time Warner in order to prove harrassment. I was told I would have to subpeona the company in order to receive them. How do I subpeona Time Warner Cable? Is there a way around this?
 
Has your husband asked them to remove him from their do not call list? If he has and they continue to call him, he needs to tell them that he will file a formal complaint with the FCC against the company. Make sure he asks for the employee's name and ID number as well as document the time and nature of the call.
 
Obviously, presutin did not understand your question. I'm not an attorney, but I do believe that you legally have the right to receive a copy of your bills as a customer. How do you know what you are being charged for each month without it? They may charge a small fees to send you copies, especially if they had already sent you copies in the past.
 
My ex-husband is entitled to reasonable phone calls (1 or 2 per day). He continually calls (5,6,7 times a day). I am trying to retrieve my phone bill to show the amount of calls from Time Warner in order to prove harrassment. I was told I would have to subpeona the company in order to receive them. How do I subpeona Time Warner Cable? Is there a way around this?
You say he is allowed "reasonable phone calls" ... is this pursuant to a custody and visitation order? Is he calling to speak to a child or children?

Most every state has a law against harassing phone calls. You can always speak to your local law enforcement agency and see what they have to say. You could also consider modifying the order to spell out the number of calls absent an emergency.

- Carl
 
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