Consumer Law & Policy Blog

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Thursday, March 04, 2010

CL&P Roundup

by Deepak Gupta

It's been an eventful week in consumer law and policy in Washington so far.  Here are a few highlights:

  • Julie Brill 498  Senate confirms two new Federal Trade Commissioners -- Julie Brill and Edith Ramirez.  Brill worked on a wide range of consumer-protection issues in the Vermont AG's office for two decades and was more recently head of consumer-protection in the North Carolina AG's office. She is a very pro-consumer appointment, and gives Chairman Jon Leibowitz a 3-2 majority of Democratic appointees.
  • FDA launches broad crackdown on misleading food labels. The agency sent warning letters to 17 food companies, including major brands like Beech-Nut, Gerber, and Nestle.
  • CFPA fights heats up. As we've been discussing for the past week, the debate in Congress over creation of an independent Consumer Financial Protection Agency has intensified, with leading Democrats blasting the proposal to put the CFPA within the Fed--a proposal at odds with rationale for the legislation in the first place. Sen. Dodd has proposed a "Bureau of Financial Protection" within Treasury. Today, Dodd equivocated, calling for an "office" rather than an agency. ("A lot of attention is being paid to what address the new consumer watchdog will have," he said, "but the critical question is 'Will this office have the authority and independence it needs?'").
  • 716-siteLogo-KnowYourScore  New rules on FreeCreditReport.com and similar scams.  Using its authority under the Credit CARD Act of 2009, the FTC has issued new rules that don't ban the scams entirely, but require prominent disclosures letting people know that they can get the same information for free at annualcreditreport.com. The web rules go into effect on April, but companies have until September 1 to modify their dceptive TV ads. It's about time; I've known several otherwise saavy people who have fallen victim to this scam.
  • Court rejects Honda coupon settlement. Agreeing with objections filed by Public Citizen and 26 state AGs, a federal district court in California rejected a nationwide coupon settlement over claims that Honda misled its customers about the Civic Hybrid's fuel economy.

Posted by Public Citizen Litigation Group on Thursday, March 04, 2010 at 07:32 PM in CL&P Roundups | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)

Vision Media Tries to Escape Consequences of Its Frivolous Defamation Claims

by Paul Alan Levy

Home  I have blogged before about a suit brought by "Vision Media Television," against the consumer-complaint website 800Notes.com, for allowing the posting of messages that criticize Vision Media's misleading telemarketing claims. The messages reported that Vision Media cold-calls non-profit organizations with an offer to include them in a documentary series for "public television" hosted by Hugh Downs, using that line as hook to sign them up to pay about $25,000 to make a video spot that will be run as paid advertising on commercial television.  Readers of this blog will recall that Vision Media’s first response to my post about our summary-judgment motion was to seek a gag order.

We recently discovered, and have pointed out in our latest filing in the case, that Vision Media is just one of a series of different names used in a long-standing pattern of similar marketing claims. Jeff Cronin of the Center for Science in the Public Interest has stepped forward with an account of a disturbingly similar series of solicitations he has received for CSPI to get itself time on “public television.”  The calls have come from companies with different names over time, including WJMK, United Media, Vision Media and Great America HD, and have claimed association with different news broadcasting personalities, but all are located at the same address and use the same marketing materials and phone numbers. According to Cronin’s affidavit, the groups change their name (and the broadcast personality) when the adverse publicity gets too great, and the newest version of the operation — Great America HD — has just begun its solicitations, perhaps responding to the fact that the public is onto "Vision Media TV." 

Continue reading "Vision Media Tries to Escape Consequences of Its Frivolous Defamation Claims" »

Posted by Paul Levy on Thursday, March 04, 2010 at 06:46 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Comedy Central Invites Litigation Against Jon Stewart

Disregarding the doctrine of  fair use, Comedy Central has announced that it is ready to sue bloggers and web sites that used unauthorized clips from its shows, arguing that "if (websites) are making money on our copyrighted content, then that is a problem."

Inasmuch as Jon Stewart often uses clips from other broadcasts to make his comedic points, and doubtless makes scads of money from commercials aimed at his own viewers, it appears that Comedy Central is of the view that Stewart himself (and his network) are ripe for litigation.

Update:  Comedy Central says: never mind!

Posted by Paul Levy on Thursday, March 04, 2010 at 10:21 AM | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

SNL Ex-Presidents Urge Passage of CFPA Legislation


Will Ferrell, Fred Armisen, Chevy Chase, Dan Aykroyd, Dana Carvey and Darrell Hammond, the Saturday Night Live actors who have played every American president since Gerald Ford (aside from Ronald Reagan) have teamed up on a web video meant to push Congress across the financial regulatory reform finish line and pass a strong, independent Consumer Financial Protection Agency. Reagan is played by Jim Carrey and Michelle Obama by Maya Rudolph. The video is produced by Funny Or Die, which promises to release additional videos on the need for regulatory reform. Read more about the video here.

Posted by Public Citizen Litigation Group on Wednesday, March 03, 2010 at 02:09 PM | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)

Tuesday, March 02, 2010

New Financial Protection Agency Within the Fed?

The press is reporting this morning that Senators Dodd and Corker are trying to finish up negotiations on a bill that would place a Consumer Financial Protection Agency-type regulator within the Federal Reserve. Take a look, for instance, at this Washington Post story.

Posted by Brian Wolfman on Tuesday, March 02, 2010 at 07:12 AM | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

Monday, March 01, 2010

Do Safety and Soundness Justify Impairing the Independence of the CFPA?

by Jeff Sovern

The stated reason for housing the Consumer Financial Protection within the Department of the Treasury rather than operating it as an independent agency is the importance of safety and soundness regulation; the fear is that an independent CFPA might mandate conduct that would impair the safety and soundness of financial institutions.  Let me say first that safety and soundness regulation is important.  But having conceded that, I have several problems with the idea that safety and soundness concerns require the CFPA to be part of Treasury.

First, we have had safety and soundness regulations for longer than many of us have been alive.  Yet those rules did not prevent the financial crisis from occurring (or the savings and loan crisis, for that matter).  So safety and soundness regulations did not, in fact, produce safe and sound institutions.  Otherwise, Washington Mutual would still be with us, as would plenty of other institutions, and other lenders subject to safety and soundness regulations, like Citicorp, would not have needed a bailout.  The lesson here is that safety and soundness rules are not enough, by themselves, to produce safe and sound institutions.

Second, a pretty good argument can be made that if we had had adequate consumer protection, the loans on which consumers defaulted would never have been made, and we would not have had a financial crisis with its consequent bank closings and bailouts (my own attempt at that argument can be found here).  So consumer protection regulation contributes to safe and sound institutions.  Ironically, agencies ostensibly concerned with both safety and soundness and consumer protection, like the OCC, tilted too far towards safety and soundness, and not enough towards consumer protection, thereby producing less safe institutions.

Third, look who is arguing that the CFPA should be subordinated to safety and soundness concerns: banks--the entities that made the unsafe and unsound loans that brought down the economy.  So having done what they could to avoid safety and soundness rules--like using collateralized debt obligations to avoid reserve requirements, as detailed in Gillian Tett's book, Fool's Gold--banks have suddenly found religion.  How credible is the concern for safety and soundness from that source?  Could it be a pretext for opposing consumer protection legislation?

I would very much like to hear some examples of plausible consumer protection rules that an independent CFPA might actually adopt that would undermine the safety and soundness of financial institutions.  Because I'm not sure there are any.

Posted by Jeff Sovern on Monday, March 01, 2010 at 08:53 PM in Consumer Legislative Policy | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

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