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DENVER -- Finding parking in downtown Denver can be a major headache. But for one driver, he not only found a parking spot -- he paid for it, and still received a ticket.

After months of trying to resolve the issue with the company and a final straw of receiving a letter from an attorney threatening debt collection, he and his wife contacted the FOX31 Problem Solvers.

Sonja Meyer said her husband had been in jury duty for a week, and on the last day, he had the parking routine down.

She said he paid $10 to ABM parking at 1901 Curtis St., placed the ticket, which expired at 6 a.m. the next day, on the dash, and went to the courthouse for jury duty. When he returned, he found an $80 ticket on the windshield.

“We have four children, one in college, and $80 is a lot of money,” Meyer said. “It goes a long way and I don’t want to waste $80.”

Meyer gathered the receipts, sent it off to ABM Parking’s complaints department and did not get a response. Then the family received another notice from ABM saying they still owe $80, so she tried sending the proof again, but once again did not get a response.

Then came the final straw. On Tuesday, the Meyers received a letter from ABM’s lawyer threatening to send the case to collections.

The Problem Solvers confirmed the documents, called ABM and after being transferred multiple times, were told to email the communications department.

After an email was sent, there was no response. The attorney who sent the letter also did not respond.

“When we started to have this problem, I began to think to myself how many other people are dealing with this,” Meyer said. “How many people are getting $80 tickets and in the end get the lawyer letter and just go ‘OK we can’t take care of that, let’s just pay for it?'"