Consumer Law & Policy Blog

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Friday, October 04, 2013

Hensarling Blames Regulation for Great Recession

by Jeff Sovern

House Financial Services Committee Chair Jeb Hensarling is still blaming regulation for the Great Recession. He recently pened an op-ed for the American Banker, Regulation – Not Lack Thereof – Led U.S. into Financial Crisis. In it, he repeats the right wing's frequently-debunked claim that the Community Reinvestment Act caused lenders to make the loans that ultimately soured, despite the fact that most of the lenders making the loans that defaulted were not subject to that statute.   And he blames Fannie and Freddie, even though they were late to the subprime party.  Sigh.

Posted by Jeff Sovern on Friday, October 04, 2013 at 05:37 PM in Foreclosure Crisis | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Analysis of CFPB complaint database

In a recent analysis of complaints submitted to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau about financial services, the consulting firm Deloitte found that mortgage-related issues are the basis for most of the 94,000 complaints posted so far and that customer misunderstanding is often the problem.

The Washington Post has a short write-up of the findings and notes that, although "less-affluent people bore the brunt of subprime loans and the foreclosure wave that followed, which some banks still haven't made right," the Deloitte analysis "shows that people in wealthy neighborhoods complain a lot more about all aspects of the mortgage process, from brokers to servicers to underwriters." An interesting finding, but difficult to know what conclusion to draw from it.

Posted by Allison Zieve on Friday, October 04, 2013 at 02:09 PM | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Estimating the Value of Wikipedia

by Paul Alan Levy

A fun exercise by Jonathan Band estimates the value of Wikipedia  at tens of billions of dollars, with this punchline: "Wikipedia demonstrates that highly valuable content can be created by non-professionals [without the incentives provided] by the copyright system."

Posted by Paul Levy on Friday, October 04, 2013 at 11:57 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Thursday, October 03, 2013

Read Public Citizen's amicus brief in Third Circuit Carrera case

As Allison explained, the Third Circuit's recent Carrera decision puts consumer class actions in jeopardy, and so the plaintiff has sought hearing en banc. Public Citizen has now moved, with the parties' consent, to file this amicus brief.

Posted by Brian Wolfman on Thursday, October 03, 2013 at 05:15 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

The CFPB goes after another debt settlement services company (and lawyers too)

As the Blog of the Legal Times explains:

Continuing its crackdown on companies that provide debt settlement services, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau today announced that a payment processing company will pay $1.376 million to settle allegations that it collected illegal up-front fees from consumers. The CFPB said Tacoma, Wash.-based Meracord LLC helped debt-relief service providers including lawyers wrongly take millions in fees from more than 11,000 consumers who enrolled in payment programs to reduce or eliminate their debts.

Read the agency's complaint and press release.

Posted by Brian Wolfman on Thursday, October 03, 2013 at 05:10 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

“Federal Verification Company” Seeks to Shut Down Online Criticism

by Paul Alan Levy

A Tampa-area company called “Federal Verification Co.,” which operates under “dozens of names,” according to the author of this exposé on a local television station, has filed a defamation lawsuit against its online critics, and is using vague allegations about defamation on a number of sites as an excuse for a subpoena seeking to identify more than one hundred anonymous online critics, for example here and here. In a letter sent today, we have objected to the subpoena pending compliance with the widely-accepted Dendrite procedure.

We have no way of knowing whether this company’s critics have leveled valid applications, but our experience suggests that sleazy operators often assume that they can have a greater intimidating effect if they proceed against multiple critics.  The fact that the plaintiff scaled back its discovery demand to as few as five posts at the slightest pushback against its subpoena suggests that it was never serious about proving that most of the criticisms were actionable. 

I’ll be surprised if we hear from this company again.   Note that the company uses a number of different names, including GSA Applications, GSA 1000, GSA Processors, GSA Alliance, Federal Suppliers Guide, Government Awards Consulting, and a variety of others.  An unverified listing appears here.  Caveat emptor.

Posted by Paul Levy on Thursday, October 03, 2013 at 04:40 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Judge Rakoff Strikes Down New York's Credit-Card Surcharge Law

by Deepak Gupta

Back in June, I blogged about my firm's constitutional challenge to New York's credit-card surcharge law -- a law that aims to protect credit card company profits by preventing merchants from communicating the true cost of credit to consumers.  

This morning, U.S District Judge Jed Rakoff issued a fantastic 35-page opinion agreeing with our challenge in every respect and holding that the law violates the First Amendment and is void for vagueness. The opinion provides a detailed analysis of not only the constitutional arguments, but also the behavioral economics of no-surcharge rules and their regressive economic effect. The first few lines of the opinion provide a nice overview:

Alice in Wonderland has nothing on section 518 of the New York General Business Law. Under the most plausible interpretation of that section, if a vendor is willing to sell a product for $100 cash but charges $102 when the purchaser pays with a credit card, the vendor risks prosecution if it tells the purchaser that the vendor is adding a 2% surcharge because the credit card companies charge the vendor a 2% “swipe fee.” But if, instead, the vendor tells the purchaser that its regular price for the product is $102, but that it is willing to give the purchaser a $2 discount if the purchaser pays cash, compliance with section 518 is achieved. As discussed below, this virtually incomprehensible distinction between what a vendor can and cannot tell its customers offends the First Amendment and renders section 518 unconstitutional.

Here's the summary of the case that I posted here back in June.

Whenever consumers use credit cards, merchants pay swipe fees, which are typically passed along to all consumers in the form of higher prices. American consumers pay the highest swipe fees in the world—eight times those paid by Europeans. These fees, which amount to about $50 billion annually, are highly regressive: low-income and minority cash customers end up subsidizing high-income credit customers. Unfortunately, most consumers don't know about the fees. And even those who do typically can't do anything about them.

Merchants are, however, permitted to charge different prices to consumers who pay with credit versus cash, which would give consumers the option to choose a lower-cost payment method in exchange for lower prices. The credit-card lobby has long fought to stop merchants from being able to implement such dual pricing. Under state laws adopted at the industry's behest, the price difference must be described as a “discount” for cash, not a “surcharge” for credit—even though they're mathematically identical. In New York, a merchant who uses the wrong word could face criminal prosecution.

This morning, our firm (Gupta Beck) filed a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the New York state law forbidding merchants from imposing a “surcharge” on any customer who pays with a credit card. Along with the Friedman Law Group, we represent five New York merchants: a hair salon, an ice-cream parlor, a liquor store, a martial-arts academy, and an outdoor furniture store. The suit, filed in federal court in Manhattan, has been assigned to U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff.

Our principal claim is that New York’s law violates our clients' constitutional right to free speech and that the state is, in effect, seeking to enforce the credit-card industry’s preferred speech code. Merchants, we contend, should be able to use whatever words are most effective to inform their customers about the high cost of using credit cards, and consumers have a right to receive that communication.

Posted by Public Citizen Litigation Group on Thursday, October 03, 2013 at 12:41 PM in Consumer Litigation, Credit Cards, Free Speech, Intellectual Property & Consumer Issues | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

OT: Take Our Poll

by Jeff Sovern

Which happens first: a win by the NY Giants or Congress resolves the budget impasse?  Put your responses in the comments (Disclosure: though I am in New York, I am not a Giants fan).

Posted by Jeff Sovern on Thursday, October 03, 2013 at 11:25 AM | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

New York Times to White House: issue the backover rule

Great editorial in the Times today calling on the Obama Administration to stop obstructing the long-delayed rule to prevent backover injuries, i.e. injuries from cars backing into people the drivers can't see -- injuries that disproportionately befall young children. Representing a coalition of safety advocates and parents, we here at Public Citizen filed suit last week to require issuance of the rule.

Excoriating the Administration for the "inexcusable" delay, the Times concludes "the delays are political, not the result of procedural or technological problems" but rather "an administration ploy to avoid Republican charges of 'job killing' regulations, while placating the auto industry, which opposes the rule as too expensive."

Posted by Scott Michelman on Thursday, October 03, 2013 at 11:06 AM | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

Stark consequences of Supreme Court's holding on Medicaid expansion

When the Supreme Court upheld Obamacare's individual mandate last year in National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius, it was not a total victory for reform: because the Court held that the Act's Medicaid expansion imposed too coercive a spending condition on states, states were left with a choice whether or not to accept federal money and expand Medicaid to cover individuals up to 133% of the poverty line. The sad and predictable consequence of that latter holding is a large and persistent gap in health care coverage for poor people, as documented in this article in the New York Times, which notes that half the states have not accepted the Medicaid expansion.

 

Posted by Scott Michelman on Thursday, October 03, 2013 at 10:57 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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