September 26, 2019
Director Kraninger fails to provide monetary relief to consumers who are ripped off by predatory companies
Brown Demands Answers From CFPB On Why Funds Were Not Returned To Harmed Consumers
Director Kraninger fails to provide monetary relief to consumers who are ripped off by predatory companies
WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) – ranking member of the U.S. Senate
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs – is demanding
that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) Director Kathy Kraninger stop
protecting bad actors at the expense of harmed consumers. In his letter, Brown
criticized the CFPB enforcement actions under Director Kraninger that have
provided little and in some cases zero monetary relief for consumers. “This is a critical function of the Bureau—restitution
not only gets money back into the hands of victimized consumers, but also
ensures that companies that rip off consumers do not get to keep their
ill-gotten gains,” wrote Brown. In particular, Brown criticized a recent CFPB settlement that
allowed a debt collector that lied and threatened to arrest consumers to “to
keep nearly all of the money it collected for more than four years by lying,
threatening, and cheating consumers.”CFPB enforcement actions under Director Kraninger
represent a significant departure from past CFPB actions that returned nearly
$12 billion to consumers between 2011-2017. The full text of the letter is below and the PDF can
be found HERE
September 26, 2019 The Honorable Kathleen KraningerDirectorConsumer Financial Protection Bureau1700 G St. NWWashington, DC 20552 Dear Director Kraninger: I write regarding the Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau’s failure to provide monetary relief to harmed consumers under your and
Acting Director Mulvaney’s leadership.[2]
This is a critical function of the Bureau—restitution not only gets money back
into the hands of victimized consumers, but also ensures that companies that
rip off consumers do not get to keep their ill-gotten gains. During Director
Cordray’s tenure, the Bureau returned approximately $43 million a week in
restitution to harmed consumers. That figure plummeted to about $6.4 million a
week under Acting Director Mulvaney, and as of earlier this year, to $925,000 a
week since you became Director.[3] The Bureau’s failure to return funds to harmed consumers
began under Acting Director Mulvaney and has continued since you became
Director: ·
On December 6,
2018, the Bureau announced a consent order with State Farm Bank for violating
the Fair Credit Reporting Act and Consumer Financial Protection Act (CFPA) by
furnishing inaccurate information about consumers to credit reporting agencies
and obtaining consumer reports for an impermissible purpose.[4] Despite the actual harm or
substantial risk of harm to consumers,[5]
the Bureau did not require State Farm Bank to pay any civil penalties or
provide any restitution to harmed consumers.·
On January 19,
2019, the Bureau announced a consent order with Sterling Jewelers Inc. for
violating the Truth in Lending Act, Regulation Z, and the CFPA by opening store
credit-card accounts without consumers’ consent, enrolling consumers in payment
protection plans without their consent, and deceiving consumers about the
financing terms associated with the credit-card accounts.[6]
The Bureau required Sterling Jewelers to pay a $10 million fine, but did not
require the company to provide refunds of money consumers paid for the payment
protection plans or any other monetary relief to consumers.·
On January 25,
2019, the Bureau announced a consent order with Enova International Inc., an
online payday lender, for engaging in unfair acts or practices in violation of
the CFPA for withdrawing funds from consumers’ accounts without their
authorization.[7] The Bureau imposed a
$3.2 million civil penalty, but did not require Enova to pay back the funds
they had unlawfully withdrawn from consumers’ bank accounts.·
On February 1,
2019, the Bureau announced a stipulated final judgment with NDG Financial
Corporation and other defendants for running a payday lending enterprise that
engaged in unfair, deceptive, and abusive acts practices in violation of the
CFPA and the Credit Practices Rule.[8] The
Bureau’s Amended Complaint, filed under Director Cordray, sought “damages and
other monetary relief . . . to redress injury to consumers.”[9] The settlement, however, dropped the
requests for restitution and other relief for victimized consumers. The Bureau’s August 28, 2019 settlement with Asset
Recovery Associates, a debt collector, continues this pattern of protecting bad
actors instead of consumers. During its investigation, the Bureau found that
Asset Recovery Associates had violated the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act
and the CFPA by making false and deceptive statements to induce consumers to
make payments, including: “threatening to sue or arrest consumers even though
it did not intend to take such action, falsely representing to consumers that
company employees were attorneys, threatening to garnish consumers’ wages or
place liens on their homes even though it did not intend to so do, and representing
that consumers’ credit reports would be negatively affected if they did not
pay, even though Asset Recovery Associates does not report consumer debts to
credit-reporting agencies.”[10] In
the consent order, the Bureau found that Asset Recovery Associates had
“regularly” engaged in these practices “since at least January 1, 2015”[11]—in other words, Asset Recovery
Associate’s unlawful debt collection tactics were the rule, not the exception. Despite this finding, the Bureau decided to limit
restitution to only those consumers who affirmatively “complained about a false
threat or misrepresentation” by Asset Recovery Associates.[12] That is not and never has been the
standard for providing restitution to consumers. “Restitution ‘is a form
ancillary relief’ that a court can order ‘[i]n the absence of a proof of actual
damages.’”[13] The government’s
request for restitution must “reasonably approximate[] the defendant’s unjust
gains” or “the full amount lost by consumers.”[14] In debt collection cases by the
Bureau and the Federal Trade Commission, courts have ordered defendants to
refund to consumers the entire amount they collected through the
unlawful collection scheme.[15] For
example, in a prior Bureau case, the district court determined that the correct
amount of restitution was the $5,261,484, which represented the total amount
that the defendants had collected from consumers through their unlawful
debt-collection scheme.[16]Applying
this standard for restitution to Asset Recovery Associates, the Bureau should
have obtained restitution for all amounts Asset Recovery
Associates collected from consumers since January 1, 2015. There was no legal basis for the Bureau to shortchange
victimized consumers and limit restitution to just those consumers who
complained. The Bureau made a conscious decision to disregard all legal
precedent and allow Asset Recovery Associates to keep nearly all of the money
it collected for more than four years by lying, threatening, and cheating
consumers. This new approach to providing restitution to consumers under your
leadership is fundamentally at odds with the Bureau’s mission: it fails to
provide relief to victimized consumers, it allows bad actors to retain the
profits from their illegal conduct, and it is unfair to those debt collectors
who follow the law. In order to understand the basis for the Bureau’s
settlement with Asset Recovery Associates, please respond to the following
requests by October 11, 2019: 1.
Identify the
number of consumers who meet the definition of “Affected Consumer,” and for
each, state the amount of restitution they will receive pursuant to the
Bureau’s consent order with Asset Recovery Associates. 2.
From January 1,
2015 through the effective date of the consent order (the period covered by the
consent order), identify the number of consumers from whom Asset Recovery
Associates:a.
Attempted to
collect a debt; orb.
Collected any
portion of debt. 3.
State the total
amount of funds that Asset Recovery Associates collected from consumers from
January 1, 2015 through the effective date of the consent order. 4.
Produce all
documents and communications referring or relating to the issue of restitution
in the Bureau’s settlement with Asset Recovery Associates, including all
memoranda (drafts or final), all drafts of the proposed consent order, and all
meeting minutes. 5.
Produce all
communications between the Bureau and Asset Recovery Associates or its
representatives referring or relating to the issue of restitution in the
Bureau’s settlement with Asset Recovery Associates. Thank you in advance for your response. Sincerely, __________________________________Sherrod BrownRanking
Member
###
[2] The
Consumer Financial Protection Act authorizes the Bureau to obtain “any
appropriate legal or equitable relief,” including restitution, disgorgement,
and payment of damages or other monetary relief. 12 U.S.C. § 5565(a).
[3] See Peterson,
Christopher. Dormant: The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s Law
Enforcement Program in Decline. Consumer Federation of America (Mar. 12, 2019),
available at https://consumerfed.org/reports/dormant-the-consumer-financial-protection-bureaus-law-enforcement-program-in-decline/.
[4] In the Matter of State Farm Bank, FSB,
File No. 2018-BCFP-0009 (Dec. 6, 2018), available at https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/bcfp_state-farm-bank_consent-order.pdf.
[5] State
Farm Bank furnished inaccurate information to the credit bureaus, which can
negatively affect consumers’ ability or the terms on which they can obtain
credit, insurance, or even a job. See, e.g., “CFPB Oversight
Uncovers And Corrects Credit Reporting Problems,” (Mar. 2, 2017) (“Inaccurate
information can lead to inaccurate reports and consumer and market harm.”), available
at https://www.consumerfinance.gov/about-us/newsroom/cfpb-oversight-uncovers-and-corrects-credit-reporting-problems/.
State Farm Bank also initiated credit inquiries in order to solicit consumers
for a loan, which can lower consumers’ credit scores. See, e.g.,
“What exactly happens when a mortgage lender checks my credit?”, available
at https://www.consumerfinance.gov/ask-cfpb/what-exactly-happens-when-a-mortgage-lender-checks-my-credit-en-2005/.
[6] CFPB
v. Sterling Jewelers Inc., Case No. 1:19-cv-00448 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 16, 2019),
available at https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/bcfp_sterling-jewelers_complaint.pdf.
[7] In the
Matter of Enova International, Inc., File No. 2019-BCFP-0003 (Jan. 25,
2019), available at https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/cfpb_enova-international_consent-order_2019-01.pdf.
[8] CFPB
v. NDG Financial Corp., Case No. 1:15-cv-05211 (S.D.N.Y. Feb. 4, 2019),
available at https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/cfpb_ndg-financial-corp_consent-order.pdf.
[9] CFPB
v. NDG Financial Corp., Case No. 1:15-cv-05211 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 11, 2015),
Amended Complaint ¶¶ 336-37 (DE 47), available at https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/cfpb_northway_amended-complaint_122015.pdf.
[10] See Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau Settles with Asset Recovery Associates news
release, Aug. 28, 2019, available at https://www.consumerfinance.gov/about-us/newsroom/bureau-settles-asset-recovery-associates/.
[11] In
the Matter of: Financial Credit Services, Inc., d/b/a Asset Recovery Associates,
File No. 2019-BCFP-009 (Aug. 28, 2019) at ¶¶ , available at https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/cfpb_asset-recovery-associates_consent-order_2019-08.pdf.
[12] Id.
¶ 3.a.
[13] CFPB
v. Gordon, 813 F.3d 1179, 1195 (9th Cir. 2016) (quoting FTC v. Gill,
265 F.3d 944, 958 (9th Cir. 2001)).
[14] Id.
(quoting FTC v. Commerce Planet Inc., 2016 WL 828326 (9th Cir. 2016))
(emphasis added).
[15] See
CFPB v. Universal Debt & Payment Solutions, LLC, 2019 WL 1295004,
*19 (N.D. Ga. Mar. 21, 2019); FTC v. Williams, Scott & Assocs., LLC,
679 F. App’x 836, 839-40 (11th Cir. 2017) (net revenue of unlawful debt-relief
scheme, not net profit, is the correct measure of “unjust gain” in FTC action).
[16] Universal
Debt, 2019 WL 1295004 at *19.
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