| The Federal Trade Commission
on Monday shut down National Consumer Council Inc., citing "misrepresentations
and omissions" by the Santa Ana nonprofit credit-repair firm and its for-profit
affiliates.
A notice on the locked door at
National Consumer's Deere Street office said a federal judge had appointed
a financial guardian to take over the firm and affiliates London Financial
Group, National Consumer Debt Council, Solidium, J.P. Landis and Financial
Rescue Services Inc.
The notice said the FTC, in an
April 23 lawsuit, "alleged that the companies violated the FTC Act by misrepresentations
and omissions and violated other regulations and laws." The notice also
said the state Department of Corporations, which regulates financial companies,
had issued a desist-and-refrain order against National Consumer.
An officer at the financial guardian,
Robb Evans & Associates of Sun Valley, said he was constrained from
commenting until the unsealing of the FTC lawsuit, a move expected to take
place today.
FTC officials didn't return calls.
Department of Corporations officials
said National Consumer and London Financial had operated without a required
California license. In all, more than 250 employees of various companies
were sent home Monday, said Virginia Jo Dunlap, a supervisor with the state
agency.
National Consumer bills itself
as an educational organization, advising debt-swamped clients to stop paying
creditors, a strategy designed to increase pressure on credit card companies
to settle. Instead, clients make payments to National Consumer affiliates,
which promise to negotiate with creditors after consumers' saved funds
total about 25% of what they owe.
Better Business Bureau of the
Southland President Bill Mitchell called National Consumer the largest
and most egregious of deceptive debt-relief operations. He said the company
collected high upfront fees but often left clients worse off than they
started, sometimes in bankruptcy protection -- a statement disputed by
a National Consumer spokeswoman.
"This company has settled over
40,000 credit card accounts for its customers and saved them over $100
million," said Nilou Salimpour, an outside publicist for the firm. National
Consumer's president, William Harvey, and lawyer, Michael Mallow, couldn't
be reached for comment.
Frances Townsend, 77, of Springfield,
Mo., said National Consumer's process worked for her after she wound up
in the hospital with a broken leg, making it impossible to keep up payments
on about $6,000 in credit card debt.
Townsend said she paid $1,500
into a trust account with Solidium, which turned the accumulated funds
over to London Financial, which negotiated a settlement of about 50 cents
on the dollar -- the saved $1,500 in a lump sum, plus Townsend's promise
to repay about that amount over time.
"They changed my life," Townsend
said. "I felt I was heading downhill into a dark hole. The relief gave
me back my self-esteem -- I feel better, sleep better, everything is better."
Mitchell said such stories were
the exception. National Consumer, according to the BBB, has generated more
than 70 complaints from across the nation to the bureau's local office
in Colton. The BBB says it has received many additional complaints about
affiliated firms including London Financial Group and Solidium.
Companies such as National Consumer
advise consumers even with good credit to stop paying credit card companies,
Mitchell said.
The clients, he added, often complain
that the debt-relief companies take their money and do little or nothing
in return, ruining their credit, triggering lawsuits and frequently driving
them into bankruptcy protection.
National Consumer "is the worst
in my opinion, mainly because of this nonprofit thing, which is just a
front and a conduit to funnel money to the for-profits," Mitchell said.
"It's the real 800-pound gorilla
in the industry. But there are lots and lots of people doing this."
In a pending Los Angeles County
Superior Court lawsuit, National Consumer accused the BBB of the Southland
of defamation, contending that Mitchell had a conflict of interest because
he served on the board of a competing credit-repair firm, Consumer Credit
Counseling Service, which operated under the name Springboard.
Mitchell said Springboard, unlike
National Consumer, didn't advise consumers to default on their debts. He
has resigned from its board.
National Consumer is the latest
firm targeted in an FTC sweep of companies the agency accuses of making
fraudulent promises to debt-laden consumers. In September 2002, the agency
moved against more than 30 consumer-credit consulting companies.
Copyright 2004 The Times Mirror
Company; Los Angeles Times
All Rights Reserved
Los Angeles Times
May 4, 2004 Tuesday
Home Edition
E. Scott Reckard, Times Staff
Writer
Source: http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-credit4may04,1,4517357.story |