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Senior Alert
Marketer of “Free Credit Reports” Settles FTC
Charges
They automatically charged consumers $79.95 per month
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If you responded to this message, you
probably got burned. |
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FREE! FREE! FREE! Get Your FREE Credit Report
Online in Seconds!!!!
Click here to get a FREE copy of your online Credit Report
Instantly!
And that’s not all. . . along with your INSTANT credit report,
we’ll give you 30 FREE days of the Credit Check Monitoring
Service at no obligation. |
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Aug. 15, 2005 – One of the companies that
deceptively marketed “free credit reports” has settled charges by the
Federal Trade Commission and agreed to repay consumers and give up
$950,000 in ill-gotten gains. They did not adequately disclose to
consumers they would automatically be signed up for a credit report
monitoring service and charged $79.95 if they didn’t cancel within 30
days - a violation of federal law.
According to the FTC complaint, the defendant -
Consumerinfo.com, Inc., doing business as Experian Consumer Direct -
drove consumers to their www.freecreditreport.com and
www.consumerinfo.com Web sites with radio, television, e-mail and
Internet ads that promised free credit reports and a bonus – free trials
of a credit-monitoring service.
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Only One Official Free Credit Report
Website |
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An
amendment to the Fair Credit Reporting Act requires each of the
nationwide consumer reporting companies – Equifax, Experian, and
TransUnion – to provide you with a free copy of your credit
report, at your request, once every 12 months. (This rule goes
into effect for people living in the Eastern states and the
District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and all U.S. territories on
September 1, 2005; the rule is already in effect for all other
Americans.) The three companies have set up one central website,
toll-free telephone number, and mailing address through which
you can order your free credit report. The Federal Trade
Commission (FTC), the nation’s consumer protection agency, wants
you to know that, if you want to order your free annual credit
report online, there is only one authorized website:annualcreditreport.com. |
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Consumers were required to provide detailed
personal information and a valid credit card account number to get their
credit report. They were assured that, “Your card will not be charged
during the free trial period. However, valid credit card information is
required to establish your account.”
According to the FTC’s complaint, Consumerinfo’s
advertising and Web sites failed to explain adequately that after the
free trial period for the credit monitoring service expired, consumers
automatically would be charged a $79.95 annual membership, unless they
notified the defendant within 30 days to cancel the service.
Consumerinfo billed the credit cards that it had
told consumers were “required only to establish your account,” and, in
some cases, automatically renewed memberships by re-billing consumers
without notice. The FTC charged that the defendant’s failure to
adequately disclose the automatic billing and to get consumers’ consent
to bill their accounts violated federal law.
The complaint also alleges that Consumerinfo misled
consumers about their association with the annual free credit report
program for which U.S. consumers are eligible by federal law. A federal
law enacted in December 2003, gives consumers the right to get one free
credit report every 12 months from each of the three national consumer
reporting companies. This program began in western states on December 1,
2004, and will cover all U.S. consumers by September 1, 2005. Consumers
can get their free reports by phone, mail, or at one authorized Web
site, www.annualcreditreport.com. The FTC complaint alleges that
Consumerinfo deceptively advertised and promoted its “free reports” at
its “freecreditreport.com” Web site, without disclosing that it was not
associated with the official annual free credit report program.
“Consumers paid the price for ordering free credit
reports from freecreditreport.com,” said Lydia Parnes, Director of the
FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “It’s unfair and deceptive to
promise consumers something for free and then trick them into paying for
products they didn’t want in the first place.”
“Consumers also need to be alert about impostor
sites – sites that misspell annualcreditreport.com or use sound alike
names, but don’t link to the authorized site. We are sending letters to
operators of more than 130 impostor sites to inform them that we know
they are out there and that attempts to mislead consumers are illegal,”
she said.
The settlement is designed to assure that the
defendant’s negative-option or “free” offers do not contain
misrepresentations, and that they disclose all terms and conditions of
the offers. The settlement establishes specific disclosure requirements
in promotions for the defendant’s “free credit report” offer. Among
other things, the defendant must clearly tell consumers that they will
be charged unless they cancel within the trial period, and that the
offer is not related to the free credit report program mandated by
Congress.
The settlement requires redress for consumers who
enrolled in Consumerinfo’s credit monitoring program between 2000 and
2003, canceled the monitoring service and received a partial refund or
filed a complaint about the charges for the service. Consumers who
qualify for a refund should receive a notice from Consumerinfo by email
or first class mail within the next few months. The FTC staff has
released answers to frequently asked questions available at
www.ftc.gov/freereports to help Consumerinfo customers determine if
they’re eligible for a refund. It also has established an information
hotline for consumers to call for information on refunds. The phone
number is (202) 326-3457.
In addition to the redress program, the settlement
requires the defendant to pay $950,000 in ill-gotten gains to the
Commission. The money may be used to provide consumer education.
The settlement also contains record-keeping and
bookkeeping provisions to allow the FTC to monitor compliance with the
order.
The FTC has published two consumer brochures: “Want
a Free Annual Credit Report? The Only Official Website is
annualcreditreport.com” warns consumers about imposter sites; “Your
Access to Free Credit Reports,” educates consumers about their right to
a free copy of their credit reports, and discusses other consumer rights
under the Fair Credit Reporting Act and the FACT Act. Both publications
are available in English and Spanish at
www.ftc.gov/freereports.
The Commission vote to authorize staff to file the complaint and
stipulated final order was 3-0-1, with Chairman Deborah Platt Majoras
recused. They were filed in the U.S. District Court for the Central
District of California, in Santa Ana.
The complaint named Consumerinfo.com., Inc., doing
business as Experian Consumer Direct, Qspace, Inc., and Iplace Inc.
Consumerinfo.com is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Experian North America,
which is also the parent company of Experian Information Services, one
of the three national credit reporting companies.
This case was brought with the invaluable
assistance of the office of California Attorney General, Bill Lockyer.
The agency also wishes to acknowledge the Electronic Privacy Information
Center, which filed a complaint about Consumerinfo.com with the
Commission, and the World Privacy Forum for reports it submitted to the
agency on imposter sites.
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