วันอาทิตย์ที่ 11 มกราคม พ.ศ. 2552

AmeriDebt

AmeriDebt Inc was the first credit counseling company to have a federal lawsuit filed against it. It was the FTC’s largest case involving deceptive credit counseling and debt management.
In November 2003, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) charged AmeriDebt, DebtWorks Inc and Andris Pukke, the founder of the two companies had deceived consumers with claims that AmeriDebt was a nonprofit organization and that it provided counseling services to consumers seeking to get out of debt. FTC claimed that AmeriDebt did not operate as a nonprofit organization as advertised. Instead it funneled profits to affiliated for-profit entities and individuals, including DebtWorks and Pukke. Without providing any counseling services, it simply enrolled every customer in a debt management plan. Although it claimed that no up front fees would be charged, AmeriDebt used the first payment made by the clients under the plan as its own fee. The FTC charged AmeriDebt with deceptive practices and also with violating the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act by failing to provide consumers with required privacy notices.
In June 2004, AmeriDebt filed for bankruptcy relief in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Maryland. The Bankruptcy court appointed a trustee to oversee AmeriDebt. In March 2005, AmeriDebt Inc and the FTC entered into a settlement. AmeriDebt agreed to shut its debt-management operations. The settlement requires AmeriDebt to transfer all current clients’ accounts to a third party and bars the company from participating in any aspect of the credit counseling business in the future. The settlement does not include the other defendants – the FTC’s case against Andris Pukke, DebtWorks, and the relief defendant, Mrs. Pukke, will continue.
AmeriDebt shut down its operations by transferring all existing plans to a third party. The bankruptcy trustee has already taken steps to transfer AmeriDebt’s existing plans to a reputable credit counseling agency.
In 2006, Andris Pukke agreed to return up to $35 million to consumers.
On September 9, 2008, the FTC started mailing 460,000 checks worth a total of about $20 million to consumers burned by AmeriDebt. Consumers won’t receive all the fees collected by AmeriDebt or its affiliated credit counseling agencies. The restitution disbursement signals the end of the AmeriDebt saga.

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