To hear Harvey Duranseau tell it, a debt collection agency that was looking for his brother to repay a $300 debt hounded him so relentlessly over several months that it caused him to lose sleep, have health problems and start hearing phantom door knocks and strange voices at his home in Big Falls, Minn.
The calls were so maddening they even turned him from a docile 70-year-old with a bad ticker into an angry, foul-mouthed lout who screamed racist and sexist epithets at the debt collectors from Portfolio Recovery Associates (PRA), the firm hired to dun his brother, Thomas. He also claims one of the debt collectors called him the "N word" and told him to commit a sexual act.
"This bothers me very much as I am of the white race and do not engage in such behavior," he wrote in a complaint to the Minnesota Attorney General.
For that alleged slur, Duranseau would like some money, please. Lots of money.
The trial, being held this week in U.S. District Court in Minneapolis, features witnesses seemingly from central casting and dialogue that reads like a Coen brothers script. It will likely produce the most profanity-filled transcript ever seen in District Court because not only were calls to Duranseau recorded by PRA and played in court, but lawyers and witnesses read many of the filthy transcripts aloud, causing a few nervous giggles.
Duranseau's attorney, Matthew Gilbert, argued Monday that there were two rounds of attacks on his client through harassing phone calls. Initially, Gilbert said, Duranseau tried to be nice and explain to PRA that they had the wrong guy. He said Duranseau counted more than 200 calls during "round one," calls made to a workshop phone.
Duranseau said on the witness stand that he believes the company destroyed all early phone calls that would benefit his case.
When PRA agents started calling his phone in his living room, "Those calls caused me to react in a bad way," Duranseau said in court.