Scamming 'Your Warranty Will Expire' Calls Lead to Lawsuits

Mon, May 11th 2009

Scamming 'Your Warranty Will Expire' Calls Lead to Lawsuits

Complaints Over Annoying Robocalls to State Lawsuits, Federal Investigation

Telemarketers who push shady automobile-service contracts with pestering recorded phone messages angered the wrong guy when they twice called the Indiana attorney general on his cell phone.

"By the time you start calling on the state's attorney general," Attorney General Greg Zoeller told reporters last week, "you've blasted out one too many."

LastTuesday, after receiving some 160 complaints from Indiana residents over several months, Zoeller announced a lawsuit against two companies and an individual that his office claims have blasted unsolicited recorded messages hawking automobile warranties, credit card offers and loans. The calls, he says, violate the state's Do Not Call laws and statutes that prohibit sales calls in the form of automated messages.

These so-called robocalls are not limited to Indiana. Across the country, people are complaining to state authorities, the Federal Trade Commission, which oversees the national Do Not Call registry, and the Better Business Bureau. Attorneys general in at least 30 states are investigating the calls.

On Sunday, Sen. Charles Schumer of New York said he wanted a federal investigation into the "robo-dialer harassment."

"Not only are these calls a nuisance, but they tie up land lines and can eat up a user's cell phone minutes, possibly leading to a higher cell phone bill due to overage charges," said Schumer, a Democrat.

"Thousands of people have called to complain, and more than 100,000 people have contacted the Better Business Bureau to find out if these calls are legitimate," said Alison Southwick, a spokeswoman for the bureau.

The calls, recipients say, are a nuisance. Hundreds of thousands of Americans are estimated to have received the calls, most of which offer car-service contracts by deceptively telling recipients that the warranty on their car is about to expire.

(To listen to samples of recorded calls click HERE and HERE.)

So ubiquitous are the calls that a Congressional sub-committee meeting on health care was interrupted in March with this message, overheard on a member's cell phone speaker: "This is the second notice that the factory warranty on your vehicle may have expired..."

But beyond just being annoying, the calls are sometimes a full-fledged scam. The companies often pose as car manufacturers and convince consumers to buy service contracts with so many loopholes that they are left in the lurch when their cars do break down, Southwick said.

"They're using deceptive sales tactics. The calls say your warranty is about to expire and people believe it's the manufacturer calling them. The companies use names like Dealer Services or Dealer Warranty Division to mislead people. The policies sometimes have so many caveats the consumers later find the contract did not really cover anything," Southwick said.

"There is both a deceptive nature of the solicitation and a false bill of goods," she said.

The calls are not just limited to home numbers, which many Americans have registered on Do Not Call lists, but to work extensions and cell phones too.

Katie Murphy, 25, says she regularly receives recorded calls alerting her that the "factory warranty on her vehicle is about to expire," even though she does not own a car.

The calls, she says, come both to her workplace, the New York City offices of the Ubuntu Education Fund, a South Africa-based charity, and to her mobile phone, which is registered in Connecticut.

"I've received two or three in the past two weeks. The office gets at least one weekly," she said.

"It's really annoying. It's just frustrating. I usually hang up," she said.

Investigators say determining who is behind the calls is difficult. Some companies use false names and mask their phone numbers so recipients can't call back.

The Indiana case, like a similar ongoing case brought against another company by the Missouri attorney general, are both civil cases.

Many of the companies behind the calls are believed to be based in Missouri.

No criminal fraud charges have been brought against any of these companies, according to the Federal Trade Commission.

"Indiana has fairly robust telephone privacy laws," said Molly Butters, spokeswoman for the Indiana attorney general. "Under the state's auto-dialer laws, recipients must opt in and consent to receiving prerecorded messages. We believe these companies also violated the law by calling people on the Do Not Call list."

The Indiana case prosecutes two companies, SVM Inc. based in California, Fortress Secured Inc., based in Nevada, and an individual named Mike Moneymaker, who according to the lawsuit lives in California.

A representative for SVM, who would not give his name, declined to comment, saying only, "We are unable to talk to you."

ABC News.com was unable to locate Mike Moneymaker, who is identified by three other aliases in the lawsuit. Fortress Secured is reportedly no longer in business and is run by Moneymaker.

Moneymaker and Fortress Secured are both also named in a cease-and-desist order filed by the North Dakota attorney general. Moneymaker is listed under an additional alias in that case.

In addition to the states taking legal action, Verizon, one of the country's largest telecommunications company, has also sued the telemarketers. In April, Verizon settled with one company for $50,000.

The Federal Trade Commission says it receives several hundred complaints a month about the calls, but could not comment on them specifically because they are under investigation.

Michael Tankersley, an attorney for the FTC, said the companies take multiple steps to cover their tracks, making them difficult to track down.

"There are a number of things that make it difficult to prosecute these cases. It appears to be not any one entity behind the calls, but a large number of separate entities that have campaigns that are similar. That makes it frustrating for consumers and difficult to trace calls," he said.

Tankersley said under federal law the companies are required to identify themselves. Many companies, he said, use technology that masks or changes the number from where the calls are being placed when they appear on caller ID, which is also a violation of federal law.

Simply having your name on the federal Do Not Call registry, Tankersley said, was not enough to ensure you would not receive calls. States each have their own registries that consumers should add their names to as well, he said.

Furthermore, companies with which consumers have a previous relationship  even something as incidental as signing up for a company-run sweepstakes  are legally permitted to contact consumers whose names are on no-call lists.

A new federal law that kicks in Sept. 1 will prohibit the use of prerecorded calls for marketing campaigns.


Link to open new window with story in its original context
Bookmark this page:           Send to a Friend





Recent Comments...

Melissa - Thu, May 27th 2010 Rating: -1
Someone who claims to be affiliated with BestBuy has been calling me 4 or 5 times a day for the past 30 days or so with pre-recorded message that my 2 year old desktop PC's warranty is about to expire and I need to buy a new one. So, it's not just vehicles.
Ken Merced - Sat, Aug 15th 2009 Rating: -1
Iam also a victim of thse outrageous callsand woud like to become a part of the movement to stop these annoying companies. You can contact me at kmerced@hotmail.com
Discuss this news article:
Your Name or Nickname*
This will appear as the author of the comment.
Your Comments on News Article*
Anti-spam Code*
Validation Code
Reload image

We have to check that you are not a computer.
 



This is a community built reverse phone directory project - get involved!

There are No Memberships, SignUp Fees or any other charges on this site. We are a community that is solely supported by our generous advertisers. Please support them and help keep CallWiki.com alive.

"Wow - so easy to help stop telemarketers. I've been entering the numbers of everyone who calls me!" - Jason T.

"Totally cool reverse phone lookup! Love the ability to enter info harassing calls." - Steven J.

"I don't know if anyone else is using the site like this, but I use it as a personal reference. I plug in all my contacts and then I can look up their phone numbers online." - Jeremy P.

 


Free Reverse Lookup by Area Code

201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 224 225 226 228 229 231 234 239 240 242 246 248 250 251 252 253 254 256 260 262 264 267 268 269 270 276 281 284 289 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 323 325 330 331 334 336 337 339 340 345 347 351 352 360 361 364 385 386 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 423 424 425 432 434 435 438 440 441 442 443 447 450 464 469 473 475 478 479 480 484 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 530 540 541 551 559 561 562 563 567 570 571 573 574 575 580 581 585 586 587 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 623 626 630 631 636 641 646 647 650 651 657 660 661 662 664 670 678 681 682 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 724 727 731 732 734 740 747 754 757 758 760 762 763 765 767 769 770 772 773 774 775 778 779 780 781 785 786 787 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 809 810 812 813 814 815 816 817 818 819 828 829 830 831 832 843 845 847 848 849 850 856 857 858 859 860 862 863 864 865 866 867 868 869 870 872 876 877 878 888 901 902 903 904 905 906 907 908 909 910 912 913 914 915 916 917 918 919 920 925 928 931 936 937 938 939 940 941 947 949 951 952 954 956 959 970 971 972 973 978 979 980 985 989

Free Reverse Lookup:
Enter as 10 digit phone number: xxx-xxx-xxxx
News
Resources
Videos