MILTON I. SHADUR, Senior District Judge.
This Fair Debt Collection Practices Act ("Act") lawsuit has just been assigned to this Court's calendar under our District Court's random assignment system. This memorandum order will deal briefly with what appears to be a problematic aspect of the Complaint brought by plaintiff John Darrell Shaw ("Shaw").
According to Complaint ¶ 9, about a year ago Sulaiman Law Group, Ltd. ("Sulaiman") (which represents Shaw in the current lawsuit) wrote Lending Club Corporation ("Lending Club"), apprising it that Sulaiman represented Shaw and directing it to stop communicating with Shaw on the ground that the validity of the debt he assertedly owed to Lending Club was disputed. Just a few days more than a year later, according to Complaint ¶ 10, one of the two defendants named in this action — Velocity Investments LLC ("Velocity") — assertedly contracted with the other co-defendant, CKS Financial ("CKS"), to collect some $11,500 allegedly owed to Lending Club.
According to Complaint ¶ 11, CKS then wrote Shaw a couple days later to inform him of the purchase by Velocity of his account with Lending Club, which allegedly carried the past-due balance that had been listed with CKS, "for final resolve."
All of that is quite straightforward, but where this Court has a problem is in Complaint ¶ 26, which alleges that "CKS Financial knew Plaintiff was represented by Sulaiman Law Group, Ltd." That purely conclusory statement is wholly unsupported by any of the factual allegations that precede it and that have been summarized in the preceding paragraphs of this memorandum order.
It strikes this Court that to satisfy the "plausibility" requirement established by the