Earlier this year, I was burglarized; and then I filed a claim with State Farm insurance company. Instead of paying me as I expected, they are strongly challenging my claim. That is their right as defined in the fine print in all their insurance contracts. State Farm hired a lawyer to conduct a recording "hearing" with a court reporter, where they will soon question me to try to avoid paying off my claim. I think State Farm spent more on their lawyer than it would cost them to just pay off my claim!
Anyway, State Farm's lawyer requested many things from me, including my telephone records for any telephones I had including cell phones, for January and February 2016. I no longer have a cell phone by choice; however earlier this year, I had a Comcast phone line, and played with Verizon, ATT, and Cricket carriers. I went to all four phone company's websites, called all four companies and drove the main offices of Comcast, ATT, Verizon, and Cricket. All four companies told me they could not release to me my own records from earlier this year, and I would need a lawyer's subpoena to get them.
So, your telephone records (the phone numbers you call or that have called you, not the transcribed words of the spoken text), at phone companies, are not records (after a few months) that you can access. Only courts, the federal government, police and the FBI, or a lawyer can get your old phone records - not you!
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Mark Shapiro, judgment expert, judgment broker, judgment writer, and a smile chaser. http://www.JudgmentBuy.com
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