CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU TAKES ACTION AGAINST NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
March 15, 2017

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Tel: (202) 435-7170

CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU TAKES ACTION AGAINST NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE FOR FLAWED MORTGAGE LOAN REPORTING
Bureau’s $1.75 Million Civil Penalty for Persistent and Substantial Reporting Errors is the CFPB’s Largest Penalty to Date for HMDA Violations

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) today ordered Nationstar Mortgage LLC to pay a $1.75 million civil penalty for violating the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) by consistently failing to report accurate data about mortgage transactions for 2012 through 2014. Today’s action is the largest HMDA civil penalty imposed by the Bureau to date, which stems from Nationstar’s market size, the substantial magnitude of its errors, and its history of previous violations. In fact, Nationstar had been on notice since 2011 of HMDA compliance problems. In addition to paying the civil penalty, Nationstar must take the necessary steps this time to improve its compliance management and prevent future violations.

“Financial institutions that violate the law repeatedly and substantially are not making serious enough efforts to report accurate information,” said CFPB Director Richard Cordray. “Today we are sending a strong reminder that HMDA serves important purposes for many stakeholders in the mortgage market, and those required to report this information must make more careful efforts to follow the law.”

Nationstar, a nationwide nonbank mortgage lender headquartered in Coppell, Texas, is a wholly owned subsidiary of Nationstar Mortgage Holdings Inc. With nearly 3 million customers, Nationstar Mortgage Holdings is a major participant in the mortgage servicing and origination markets. The company and its subsidiaries earn fees through servicing, origination, and other real estate-based services. According to 2014 data, Nationstar was the ninth-largest HMDA reporter by total mortgage originations, the sixth largest by applications received, and the 13th largest by money lent. From 2010 to 2014, Nationstar’s number of HMDA mortgage loans increased by nearly 900 percent.

The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1975 requires many mortgage lenders to collect and report data about their mortgage lending to appropriate federal agencies and make it available to the public. Federal regulators, enforcement agencies, community organizations, and state and local agencies can use the information to monitor whether financial institutions are serving housing needs in their communities. It also helps direct public-sector investment to attract private investment to areas where it is needed. And the data is used to help identify possibly discriminatory lending patterns, and compliance with the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, the Fair Housing Act, and the Community Reinvestment Act. Inaccurate HMDA data can make it difficult for the public and regulators to discover and stop discrimination in home mortgage lending or for public officials and lenders to tell whether a community’s credit needs are being met.

As part of its supervision of larger banks and nonbank mortgage lenders, the CFPB reviews the accuracy of HMDA data and the adequacy of HMDA compliance programs. In 2013, the CFPB issued a bulletin putting mortgage lenders on notice about the importance of submitting correct mortgage loan data. The CFPB has conducted HMDA reviews at dozens of bank and nonbank mortgage lenders, and has found that many lenders have adequate compliance systems and produce HMDA data with few errors.

However, in its supervision process, the CFPB found that Nationstar’s HMDA compliance systems were flawed, and generated mortgage lending data with significant, preventable errors. Nationstar also failed to maintain detailed HMDA data collection and validation procedures, and failed to implement adequate compliance procedures. It also produced discrepancies by failing to consistently define data among its various lines of business. Nationstar has a history of HMDA non-compliance. In 2011, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Division of Banks reached a settlement with Nationstar to address HMDA compliance deficiencies. The samples reviewed by the CFPB showed substantial error rates in three consecutive reporting years, even after that settlement was reached. In the samples reviewed, the CFPB found error rates of 13 percent in 2012, 33 percent in 2013, and 21 percent in 2014.

The CFPB’s Order requires Nationstar to:

  • Pay a $1.75 million penalty: Nationstar will pay a $1.75 million penalty to the CFPB’s Civil Penalty Fund.
  • Develop and implement an effective compliance management system: Nationstar will assess and undertake any necessary improvements to its HMDA compliance management system to prevent future violations. 
  • Fix HMDA reporting inaccuracies: Nationstar must review, correct, and make available its corrected HMDA data from 2012-14.

Since the CFPB’s examination, Nationstar has been taking further steps to improve its HMDA compliance management system and increase the accuracy of its HMDA reporting.

In 2015, the CFPB published a rule updating HMDA data collection and reporting. This rule will improve the quality and type of data that is collected and reported, and shed more light on consumers’ access to credit. Most of the rule’s provisions take effect on Jan. 1, 2018. The CFPB’s action against Nationstar relates to data for 2012-14, which was collected and reported under the rule that predates the CFPB.

The full text of the order is available at: http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/201703_cfpb_Nationstar-Mortgage-consent-order.pdf

The CFPB’s HMDA Bulletin can be found at: http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201310_cfpb_hmda_compliance-bulletin_fair-lending.pdf

The CFPB’s HMDA Resubmission Schedule and Guidelines can be found at: http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201310_cfpb_hmda_resubmission-guidelines_fair-lending.pdf

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The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is a 21st century agency that helps consumer finance markets work by making rules more effective, by consistently and fairly enforcing those rules, and by empowering consumers to take more control over their economic lives. For more information, visit consumerfinance.gov.

Prepared Remarks of Richard Cordray, Director, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau – LendIt USA Conference

 

 

 

 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
March 6, 2017

CONTACT:
Office of Communications
Tel: (202) 435-7170

Prepared Remarks of Richard Cordray
Director, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

LendIt USA Conference

New York, N.Y.
March 6, 2017

I am glad to be with you today to hear firsthand about the latest innovations in consumer financial services. These innovations seem to be generating considerable interest and optimism about the future. They are driving new services for consumers and transforming how they conduct their finances. At the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, we want to help channel these cutting-edge approaches in positive directions. Our goal is to put consumers first and provide them with more tools to take control of their financial lives. And we want you to share this vision as well.

As many of you know, the Consumer Bureau is the single federal agency with the sole mission of protecting consumers in the financial marketplace. This includes monitoring the rapid changes that new technologies are spurring in transactions, lending, underwriting, and money management, among other things. As we track how these changes evolve, we will be keeping consumers top of mind as this all plays out.

My remarks will focus on three broad areas of special interest to the Bureau. First, our Project Catalyst initiative is familiar to many of you, yet I will begin by describing the approach we take to encouraging consumer-friendly innovations in consumer finance. Second, we are carefully considering the issue of consumer control over their personal financial data. Third, we are looking into the benefits and risks of using unconventional sources of data to underwrite loans as a way to open access to credit for more consumers.

In general, however, I will note two overarching principles that the Bureau seeks to uphold in all these areas. First, we believe in a level playing field for all providers of consumer financial products and services. Evenhanded oversight of all providers – whether they are large banks or fintech startups – is a basic rule of the road for effective regulation of the financial marketplace. Nobody gets a free pass to exploit regulatory arbitrage; everyone must be held to the same standards of compliance with the law. Second, we strongly urge all providers to make sure that consumer protections are built into emerging products and services, right from the start. Consumer protections and compliance should not be mere add-ons or afterthoughts; they must be essential elements of the business model, from beginning to end.

We all have a vested interest in fostering a marketplace where consumers can understand and access the kinds of responsible products they can rely on throughout their financial lives. And the information consumers need to make decisions about their economic opportunities must be accessible, accurate, and reliable. You are in position to play a large role in helping all American consumers achieve key components of this overarching vision.

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Let me offer an overview of efforts we are making to encourage innovations in the financial marketplace that will lead to products and services that are more accessible, more affordable, and more convenient for consumers. Our major initiative here is our Project Catalyst, which brings us face to face with many of you. It operates on the principle that markets work best when they are wide open to competition from new ideas. As Linus Pauling, who won two Nobel prizes, once said, “The best way to come up with a good idea is to come up with a lot of ideas.”

From early on, we have made it a priority to engage with financial innovators. We are regularly gleaning insights from industry pilot programs, devising policies to promote consumer-friendly innovation, and listening to the hopes and fears of the innovators themselves. Project Catalyst hosts an “Office Hours” program where we engage with startups, nonprofits, banks, and other financial companies. We are learning about what does and does not work for consumers and the potential challenges facing entrepreneurs and investors. If you want to learn more about our programs supporting financial innovation, please join us at a future Office Hours event.

Project Catalyst also conducts research pilot programs with companies both large and small to inform our understanding of emerging issues. To date, these include a pilot to encourage savings and a pilot to improve the effectiveness of early-intervention credit counseling, among others. We continue to receive and review new pilot ideas for consumer-friendly innovations or research questions, and we urge you to consider working with us in this way.

Project Catalyst is also devising new policies to foster innovations. Our Trial Disclosure Waiver Policy allows financial providers to develop new technologies and innovative approaches for designing and testing alternative consumer disclosures. We encourage you to consider working with us to test new disclosures that could promote greater transparency, improve consumer understanding, or reduce costs. Project Catalyst also administers our “no-action letter” policy, which is intended to help promote novel products that may not fit neatly within the existing regulatory structure, yet may yield significant consumer benefits. A no-action letter would state that Bureau staff does not intend to recommend any supervisory or enforcement action based on these particular innovations for a defined period. The purpose of the policy is to mitigate regulatory risk for products that promise substantial consumer benefit, where there is substantial uncertainty about how they may be viewed under existing law.

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Utilization of data in the financial marketplace is rapidly evolving. Many of these developments are changing and improving the way consumers manage money and direct their financial affairs, but they have not been without risk to consumers. So we want to understand how consumers and third parties are accessing and using that data, and how it fuels new innovations. We also are deeply interested in how consumers are exercising control over their personal financial data, including the data that is maintained by their financial institutions.

Many of these innovations rely on access to current information drawn from the assets, balances, and transactions in people’s financial accounts. These include savings and checking accounts and, for those who have them, investment, mortgage, credit card, auto loan, or student loan accounts. In each case, by helping them budget or obtain credit, the information recorded about them can be a valuable asset. Indeed, it may matter as much or more to their financial situations than the dollars they actually have in their accounts at any given time.

In November, we issued a Request for Information to inquire about the challenges consumers face in accessing, using, and securely sharing their financial records. We seek to identify whether barriers exist between consumers and the personal data that their financial providers maintain about them. And we want to hear solutions from stakeholders that can help address the risks and technological challenges posed by consumers who want to have ready access to this data and to share it electronically with third parties. We are keenly aware of the serious issues around privacy and security, for consumers and providers alike. One pressing issue is how to satisfy the demands of consumers without exposing the providers that maintain this data to undue costs and risks. Another pressing issue is how to prevent consumers from subjecting themselves to undue risks, including the possibility that their data could be misused.

Over the past few months, we have received about 70 comments from financial institutions, data aggregators, companies that use aggregated data, trade associations, consumer groups, and individuals. We are sifting through the comments, which are extensive and thoughtful. They present a wide range of ideas about how best to achieve the broad goals we have in mind.

Certain perspectives presented in the comments are not surprising. Banks and other financial companies raise concerns about consumer data security and offer solutions that may address those concerns. Aggregators and users of the data, by contrast, are recommending less fettered access and greater freedom to store and use the data that consumers permit them to collect. This would give them more flexibility to enhance their services and their business models. Almost everyone is offering justifications that their approach will better protect the interests of consumers. At stake is how consumers can control what data is shared, and whether security or other concerns should restrict how it is shared, with whom, how often, and for what purposes.

So there is much to digest, and we see the market moving quickly, with high stakes for all involved. Even as we speak, vigorous and spirited negotiations are underway throughout the industry that could shape the future of information access. We expect the interests of consumers to be at the forefront of these discussions. Yet we remain concerned about reports of some institutions that may be limiting or restricting access unduly.

For our part, the Consumer Bureau will continue to analyze these issues and closely follow developments. We will take action as needed to make sure that consumers can safely access and share information about their financial lives, that providers and aggregators act in accordance with their instructions, and that financial institutions have their legitimate interests appropriately protected. We recognize that data access makes it possible to realize the many benefits of competition and innovation. We will be drawing heavily on the technological expertise and insight of the various stakeholders, and we will test their arguments and explanations directly against one another. Above all, we will insist that the consumer is the focus, not the football, as this process unfolds. So we look forward to further productive engagement with all parties to find solutions that will put consumer interests first.

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I also want to update you on our latest actions to encourage the use of new types of data that can open up credit opportunities for more consumers. Computer-enabled data analysis, for example, has the potential to provide greater insights into the financial patterns of the underserved – their inflows and outflows, and the ways they manage the gaps. Thoughtful and responsible use of financial data about individuals could expand the credit available to underserved consumers. If it is possible to expand opportunity in this manner, it would benefit not only these consumers, but perhaps would buoy the economy in ways that benefit us all.

So last month we launched an initiative to learn more about issues raised by new technologies and new uses of data. In particular, we issued a Request for Information about the potential benefits and risks of using, applying, and analyzing unconventional sources of information to predict people’s creditworthiness. We want to know whether various types of this so-called “alternative data” can help more consumers build their credit histories and gain more access to credit.

Just what consumers are we talking about here? As a self-described “data-driven agency,” naturally the Consumer Bureau has dug into the data to gain a deeper understanding. After crunching the numbers, we estimate that 26 million Americans are “credit invisible,” meaning they have no credit history at all. Another 19 million people have credit histories that, under most models, are too limited or have been inactive for too long to generate a reliable credit score.

That means about 45 million adults nationwide fall into these two categories. For every one of them, managing the ways and means of their lives usually costs more, risks more, takes longer, and does less to build their financial futures than is true for most consumers. That is simply a tragedy in a modern economy and a modern financial system like ours, and we all need to think harder about what we can do to address it. Certain longstanding products, such as secured credit cards, can provide part of the answer and should be actively offered to these consumers.

As many of you are well aware, alternative data may draw from sources such as rent or utility payments, which in general have not been traditionally defined as “credit.” It may draw from electronic or other records of transactions, such as deposits, withdrawals, or account transfers. And it might include other personal information, such as the consumer’s occupation or educational attainment. Other forms of alternative data may spring from new sources that never existed before, such as the use of mobile phones or the Internet. By filling in more details of people’s financial lives, this information may paint a fuller and more accurate picture of their creditworthiness. So adding alternative data into the mix may make it possible to open up more affordable credit for millions of additional consumers.

Through a Request for Information issued last month, we are looking at the pros and cons of using the types of alternative data available today, and what the future may hold as technologies continue to evolve. We are looking at how this information is gathered and analyzed in the underwriting models now used by banks and other financial companies, including the fintech companies. And we are seeking to better understand how all of this is beginning to unfold.

Some of the main inquiries we posed are these. First, can the use of alternative data to create or augment individual credit scores increase access to credit for consumers by helping lenders better assess their creditworthiness? Second, will this lead to more complex lending decisions for both industry and consumers, and what risks would that pose? Third, how might the use of alternative data, new modes of analysis, and new technologies affect costs and services in making credit decisions? Certainly it could mean a faster application process, lower operating costs for lenders, and lower loan costs for borrowers, all of which could benefit consumers. Fourth, what forms of alternative data might be prone to errors, and how hard will it be for consumers to identify such errors and get them corrected? Finally, and quite significantly, how may the use of alternative data affect certain groups or behaviors in ways that might run afoul of the fair lending laws or create other risks for vulnerable consumers?

We are hearing from innovators who want to expand access to credit or offer credit at lower interest rates to borrowers whose credit scores may understate their ability and willingness to repay. And we see promise in some consumer-friendly innovations that bring new products to those who had been locked out or underserved by the banking system and existing credit models. These approaches also pose risks, and we want to know more about these risks and how they can be mitigated or minimized. On the whole, we are encouraged by the potential for alternative data underwriting to benefit the very consumers that the fair lending laws are designed to protect. So we welcome you all to the frank and wide-ranging discussion we have begun on this subject. We are eager to hear your experiences and perspectives, and we encourage you to reach out to us.

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We will continue to engage with you and others to work through these issues. As we want to make clear, everyone who provides consumers with financial products and services must adhere to the same standards and be held accountable under the law. So as we move forward, we will have one eye on protecting consumers and the other on encouraging innovations to improve their lives. As is always the case, the long-term interests of your businesses depend on delivering great value and customer service. In these ways, our goals intersect. So let us travel this course together, and consider how we can direct our paths toward a better world for many millions of American consumers. Thank you.

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The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is a 21st century agency that helps consumer finance markets work by making rules more effective, by consistently and fairly enforcing those rules, and by empowering consumers to take more control over their economic lives. For more information, visit consumerfinance.gov.

MLB Blogger Roberto Angotti Joins the Big Leagues with Team Italy in the 2017 World Baseball Classic

Having received Top 10 MLB.com Fan Website recognition for the past five years, MLB blogger Roberto Angotti has been selected by Federazione Italiana Baseball Softball (FIBS) to report on Team Italy in the 2017 World Baseball Classic. His articles are now exclusively available on the FIBS English language website (www.FIBS.it/en) and also on the Italian American Baseball Family website (www.IABF.it).

For frequent updates on Team Italy throughout the 2017 World Baseball Classic, visit the various social media sites for FIBS (facebook/twitter/instagram) and the Italian American Baseball Family (facebook/twitter/instagram).

Facing Latin American powerhouses Mexico, Venezuela and Puerto Rico, Team Italy is once again the underdog when the extremely competitive WBC Pool D action begins on March 9, 2017 at Estadio de Beisbol Charros de Jalisco in Guadalajara, Mexico. Prior to heading south of the border, Team Italy will play exhibition games against the Chicago Cubs on March 7th and the Oakland A’s on March 8th in Mesa, Arizona. During all games, social media followers are encouraged to interact with Team Italy by using the following hashtags: #wbc2017, #WBC, #Italia and #Italy.

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Narconon – Natural Drug & Alcohol Treatment Center in Ojai, California

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The New Year is here. Sad to say, it’s a time when the problems of addiction often “come home.” Families and friends are re-united over the holidays and problems that may have stayed hidden during the year become clear.

Through your work, you may know someone who has a drug or alcohol issue that needs to be addressed. If so, this message is timely.

Narconon Ojai, a Private, Luxury Rehab. Narconon is a worldwide network of uniquely effective addiction centers – there are facilities on every continent.

Narconon Ojai is an even more unique facility. It has been described as “the world’s most exclusive Narconon center.” We specialize in situations where a certain amount of privacy and higher–level executive attention is called for.

As you may know, many rehab programs have very low levels of effectiveness – it’s a real problem. This is another reason you might want to know more about our approach.

Many who come to us have already been through various rehab programs in the past with no lasting results. The unique Narconon program offers unprecedented results and many of our “graduates” attribute our natural drug-free program to their new lives.

www.narcononojai.org

PRESS RELEASE: CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU EXPLORES IMPACT OF ALTERNATIVE DATA ON CREDIT ACCESS FOR CONSUMERS WHO ARE CREDIT INVISIBLE

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
February 16, 2017

CONTACT:
Office of Communications
Tel: (202) 435-7170

CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU EXPLORES IMPACT OF ALTERNATIVE DATA ON CREDIT ACCESS FOR CONSUMERS WHO ARE CREDIT INVISIBLE
CFPB Seeks Public Feedback on Benefits, Risks of Using Unconventional Sources to Extend Affordable Credit to Consumers Lacking Credit History

Washington, D.C. – The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau today launched an inquiry into ways to expand access to credit for consumers who are credit invisible or who lack enough credit history to obtain a credit score. Traditional credit history includes a borrower’s payment of debts such as mortgages, credit cards, and other loans. It is used by lenders to decide who can get credit and what it will cost. The Bureau is seeking public feedback on the benefits and risks of tapping alternative data sources such as bills for mobile phones and rent payments to make lending decisions about consumers whose lack of credit history might otherwise block opportunities.

“Alternative data from unconventional sources may help consumers who are stuck outside the system build a credit history to access mainstream credit sources,” said CFPB Director Richard Cordray. “We want to learn more about whether this non-traditional approach can offer opportunities to millions of Americans who are credit invisible and how to minimize any risks in how this information is used.”

The Bureau estimates that 26 million Americans are credit invisible, meaning they have no credit history with a nationwide consumer reporting agency. Another 19 million consumers have a credit history that has gone stale, or is insufficient to produce a credit score under most scoring models. A credit score is drawn from a consumer’s credit report. A credit report may reflect if payments are made on time, what debt a consumer owes, and whether they have a debt or bill in collection. Credit reports can also include records such as liens, judgments, and bankruptcies, which can provide insight into a consumer’s financial status and obligations.

Typically, a credit score predicts the likelihood the consumer will repay a debt as agreed. A mathematical formula – the scoring model – is used to create the credit score based on payment record, amount of debts, and other factors. Each has a certain weight, and a credit score is calculated from this formula. A higher score usually makes it easier for a borrower to qualify for a loan and may garner a better interest rate. Most credit scores range from 300-850. Different lenders may use different scoring models, so a consumer’s credit score can vary from lender to lender.

Without a sufficient credit history, consumers face barriers to accessing credit, or pay more for credit. This problem disproportionately impacts consumers who are Black or Hispanic, and people who live in low-income neighborhoods. It also impacts some recent immigrants, young people just getting started, or people who are recently widowed or divorced who don’t have enough credit history on their own. Underserved consumers often resort to high-cost loans that aren’t reported to credit reporting agencies, which may not help build a credit history.

For some consumers, the use of unconventional sources of information, called “alternative data,” may be a way to gain access to credit to build a credit history. Alternative data draws from sources such as bill payments for mobile phones and rent, and electronic transactions such as deposits, withdrawals or transfers. This information could show a track record of meeting obligations that may not turn up in a credit history. As a result, some who now cannot get reasonably priced credit may see more access or lower borrowing costs. The Bureau is also exploring risks posed by alternative data that is inconsistent, incomplete, incorrect, overgeneralized, or biased. Such flaws could adversely affect credit access for low-income and underserved populations, or others. The CFPB’s Request for Information seeks insights into the benefits and risks of alternative data and the techniques used to compile and analyze it. Specifically, Bureau will explore topics including:

  • Access to credit: The CFPB seeks information about whether using alternative data to create or augment a credit score could increase access to credit by helping lenders better assess consumer creditworthiness. For instance, a consumer without a scored credit history may still pay bills on time for utilities or mobile phones. This might reassure lenders that they are viable credit risk. Some lenders might not lend to a consumer with a credit score less than 620. However, they might do so if alternative data suggests they are less of a risk for defaulting on the loan. 
  • Complexity of the process: The CFPB is looking at whether the use of this information could make credit decisions more complex for both consumers and industry. This process includes lenders who must notify consumers about credit decisions and financial educators helping consumers grasp their credit standing. The Bureau is examining whether the added complexity makes it harder for consumers to understand and take control of their financial lives.
  • Impact on costs and service: The CFPB is looking into the impact of the use of alternative data, new ways to analyze it, and new technologies on costs and services in credit decisions. The Bureau is studying if this may help produce a faster application process, lower operating costs for lenders, and lower loan costs for borrowers.
  • Implications for privacy and security: The CFPB is looking into privacy and security issues in the use of alternative data that contains sensitive personal information. Consumers may not know that it has been collected and shared or how it will be used in the credit process. The Bureau will also explore whether some data are more prone to errors because of weaker or different standards than data traditionally used in credit decisions, and whether consumers can correct errors in this information. 
  • Impact on specific groups: The CFPB is looking into whether the use of alternative data could affect certain groups or behaviors in unpredictable ways. For example, members of the military may frequently move, which might give a false impression of personal instability that would affect whether they can get credit. The Bureau is also studying the impact on fair lending of using data that may be correlated to a person’s race, ethnicity, gender, or other attribute, and how such risks could be managed. 

The CFPB Request for Information can be found here: http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/20170214_cfpb_Alt-Data-RFI.pdf

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The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is a 21st century agency that helps consumer finance markets work by making rules more effective, by consistently and fairly enforcing those rules, and by empowering consumers to take more control over their economic lives. For more information, visit consumerfinance.gov.

PRESS RELEASE: Prepared Remarks of Richard Cordray, Director, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

CFPB logo

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
February 16, 2017

CONTACT:
Office of Communications
Tel: (202) 435-7170

Prepared Remarks of Richard Cordray

Director, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Alternative Data Field Hearing

Charleston, W.Va.

February 16, 2017

Thank you for joining us. I am glad to be in Charleston as we explore some new frontiers for consumer access to credit. As many of you know, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is the single federal agency with the sole mission of protecting consumers in the financial marketplace. We are working to ensure that consumers can gain access to financial products and services that are fair, transparent, and competitive. In this spirit, we continue to encourage consumer-friendly innovation, such as through our Project Catalyst. So today we are announcing a Request for Information about unconventional sources of information, new ways to analyze this data, and how new technologies can help in assessing people’s creditworthiness. We want to learn more about whether this kind of alternative data could open up greater access to credit for many Americans who are currently stranded outside the mainstream credit system. We also want to understand how market participants are, or could be, mitigating certain risks to consumers that may arise from these innovations.

Let us begin by reviewing how our mainstream credit system generally works. Until the rise of the modern credit reporting industry, many loans were made based on personal relationships of long standing that develop between creditors and their customers. Someone who knows all about your personal financial story – including your way of making a living, your accumulated wealth, your spending habits, and your family background – has an excellent vantage point for deciding whether it is a good risk to extend credit to you. Based on everything they know about you, they can size up your creditworthiness, including any collateral you may be able to post as security. Thus they can make a pretty careful determination as to whether they are likely to recover what they decide to lend you.

Although this framework still describes some fairly vigorous modes of local lending in this country, particularly at community banks or credit unions, we have also developed another credit framework. It uses automated underwriting systems and is built on extensive data about people’s credit histories and algorithms for analyzing that data. This newer approach reflects changes in our society, such as increased mobility and the growth of national banks and mono-line financial firms. These companies are not in the same position to know all the detailed history of local communities and individual customers at a personal level. This approach also reflects new technological capabilities that can mine mountains of data and determine mathematically which elements are most closely correlated with future performance. To get a loan under this more automated framework, a consumer typically needs a credit score.

An individual credit score is fashioned from the information contained in individual files that are managed by nationwide credit reporting companies. This is a product of the modern era, now greatly bolstered by computerized databases. Each file, known as a credit report, tells the story of a consumer’s credit history and current credit usage – at least what can be known from the information in the file. It records the size and type of loans made to the consumer, what is owed, how much credit is available, and whether prior debts were paid on time. It may list personal loans and car loans, credit card balances, student loans, and mortgages. It may also note unpaid bills in debt collection and list court judgments, liens, or bankruptcies. This credit history is then used to determine how likely consumers are to repay existing debts and to gauge the prospects for repayment of any new debts they may take on.

Some of the limitations of this system derive from historical and contingent circumstances. For example, consumers often try just as hard to meet their monthly rent payments as they do their monthly mortgage payments, but rent is often omitted from credit files, unlike a mortgage payment. This may be because rent is not typically viewed as “credit.”  Or it may be because mortgage loans are made by banks and financial companies that have mechanisms for keeping records of them, which results in more regular categories of reportable data. By contrast, rents are collected by millions of landlords scattered all over the country and data on those payments is not collected in any systematic way. To take another example, debt collectors often report data on the debts they are collecting – including debts arising from unpaid medical bills – but the billers themselves, such as medical providers, do not report such information. Credit files thus may include information about bills you failed to pay, but not about all the bills you did pay.

In automated underwriting systems – and even in many manual underwriting systems – decisions to grant credit and set interest rates on loans are based on credit scores to a large degree. These familiar three-digit scores are drawn from the information contained in individual credit files. As such, credit scores play a central role in the financial lives of American consumers. They can determine whether people will be granted credit at all, or the terms and conditions for doing so, including the interest rate. The availability of credit scores – and the accuracy and completeness of the underlying data – have thus become increasingly important to almost all Americans.

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Unfortunately, for many consumers with a limited or non-existent credit history, a credit score is out of reach. The Consumer Bureau has run the numbers and estimates that 26 million Americans are “credit invisible,” meaning they have no credit history at all. Under the most widely used scoring models, another 19 million people have credit histories that are too limited or have been inactive for too long to generate a credit score. Here in West Virginia, nearly 180,000 residents are “credit invisible.” And nearly 130,000 residents have too little credit history or histories that are too inactive to have a credit score. Add it up, and about one-in-five adults here in the Mountain State are hampered in their financial lives by the lack of a credit score. The same story can be told virtually anywhere in the country, since 45 million adults fall into this category nationwide.

People with little or no credit history, or who lack a credit score, have fewer opportunities to borrow money in order to build a future and any credit that is available usually costs more. That only deepens their economic vulnerability. Among them are those living in lower-income neighborhoods, young people just starting out in life, and many who are recently widowed or divorced and have not yet built sufficient credit history on their own. Many people without credit records or credit scores work hard and strive to pay their bills on time. They may live paycheck to paycheck, straining to make ends meet. They often are caught in a Catch-22, unable to get credit because they have not had credit before. They cannot seize meaningful opportunities, such as borrowing to start a business or buy a house.

For these consumers, the use of unconventional sources of information, called “alternative data,” may allow them to build a credit history and gain access to credit. Alternative data may draw from sources such as rent or utility payments. These obligations may not qualify under more traditional definitions of “credit” and as a result would not be factored into the credit decisioning process. Alternative data may also draw from electronic transactions such as deposits, withdrawals, or transfers from a checking account. And it can encompass the kinds of information that relationship lenders typically know as a matter of course, such as the consumer’s occupation, educational attainment, and various other personal accomplishments. New forms of alternative data may come from sources that never existed before, such as the way we use our mobile phones or the Internet. By filling in more details of a consumer’s financial life, this information may paint a broader and more accurate picture of their creditworthiness. Adding this kind of alternative data into the mix thus holds out the promise of opening up credit for millions of additional consumers.

Alternative data holds out further promise as well. Credit scores, by their very nature, are backward-looking indicators. Consumers who experience a financial hardship – such as the loss of a job or a large medical expense – may fall behind in making credit payments. This may tag them with a low credit score long after their financial situation has turned around. Alternative data may help lenders identify more precisely, from those who currently carry “subprime” credit scores, a substantial subset of consumers who are, in fact, good credit risks. These people should not be held back simply by their retrospective credit score.

The Request for Information we are issuing today looks into the pros and cons of the use of these unconventional sources of information. We are examining what data are already available for use today, and looking into what the future may hold as technologies evolve. We are seeking to study how these data are being gathered and analyzed in underwriting models now used by banks and other financial companies, including fintech companies. And we are seeking to better understand how these models and modeling techniques are evolving.

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This Request for Information focuses on four main issues. First, it looks at the potential risks and benefits for consumers of using this additional information to better assess their likelihood of repaying a loan. Second, it looks at how introducing new alternative data sources into the credit decisioning process might add to its complexity. Among other things, we want to find out if this will make credit decisions more difficult for people to understand and thus make it harder for them to control their financial lives. Third, the Request for Information looks at how the use and interpretation of these data may affect privacy and transparency. And finally, it looks at whether reliance on some types of alternative data could result in discrimination, whether inadvertent or otherwise, against certain consumers.

Let me start with access to credit. As I mentioned, a key question for the Consumer Bureau is how people without a credit score can begin building a credit history. We want to learn more about how we could promote the responsible use of alternative data, even as we continue to protect consumers’ interests. For instance, someone with no credit history might nonetheless be quite reliable in paying their cell phone bill or their rent on time. Or they may have a history of checking account deposits and have made good use of a debit card. This might make them a viable credit risk. We know that some lenders will not loan money to consumers with a credit score that is less than, say, 620. But they might do so if alternative data suggest that a particular consumer with such a score would be less likely to default on the loan.

This leads us to the second issue. Even as alternative data may shed more light on a consumer’s creditworthiness, the sheer volume of new data that may be streaming into the system could have other effects. On the one hand, new analytical methods based on unconventional information could produce a faster, less complicated application process, with lower operating costs for lenders and lower loan costs for borrowers. On the other hand, the accumulation of more and more alternative data could create a tangle of information that is harder for people to understand and unravel. The credit process can already be somewhat murky. So we want to learn whether folding in alternative data could complicate the decisions facing consumers. The harder it is for consumers to understand their credit record or whether they are likely to qualify for certain loans, the harder it will be for them to master their finances. This same complexity could also burden lenders who must explain adverse credit decisions to consumers. And it may bog down financial educators and counselors who are trying to help people understand their credit standing and take more control of their financial lives.

The third issue we are raising today concerns how alternative data is shared, by and to whom, and whether these interactions are safe and secure. We want to know whether this information is reliable and whether its use is transparent to consumers. Some consumers may not even know that the information was collected and shared, let alone how it may be used in the credit process. We are also exploring whether some information is more prone to errors because it was collected under weaker standards in place at the time. Another question is whether consumers can correct any mistakes that turn up. As part of our inquiry, we are looking into how the credit reporting laws may apply to these and other issues.

And finally, we are looking into how this information, even if entirely accurate, may be applied or interpreted. If the use and analysis of alternative data leads to certain consumers being needlessly penalized, we want to know that. For example, some newer underwriting algorithms use measures of residential stability. These measures may help predict creditworthiness and may identify consumers who make their rent payments on time.  Yet members of the military are required to move frequently as their duty stations change. As a result, this measure could hinder access to credit for servicemembers, even if they are, in fact, a good credit risk. Other data may be strongly correlated with characteristics such as race or gender, which could enable lenders to do indirectly what they are forbidden from doing directly: drawing conclusions about whether to make a loan based on a person’s race, gender, or other prohibited categories. Similarly, data tied to a consumer’s place on the economic ladder may hinder those trying to climb it. This may be especially true for those who are already struggling financially and facing a system that is full of obstacles. So we are looking into how fair lending laws might apply to these and other issues.

***

As we consider how the risks of alternative data may give rise to the potential for discrimination, I want to pause for a moment and make clear our intentions with this Request for Information. The fair lending laws are designed to promote equal access to credit for all Americans, without regard to race, sex, ethnic background, or a variety of other personal characteristics. The reason for these laws is to eliminate such credit discrimination in the financial marketplace. But if fair lending concerns cast a large enough shadow, they may prevent people from considering and using alternative data that might open up more credit for minority and underserved consumers. This could interfere with progress for the very people these laws are intended to protect.

Equal access to credit means even more if overall access to credit is expanded and not constrained by lingering uncertainty about how regulators intend to apply fair lending laws. So we have crafted this Request for Information to help us better understand whether and how such uncertainty may be hindering credit access for disadvantaged populations. We also want to learn more about how the Consumer Bureau might reduce that uncertainty while holding fast to the anti-discrimination principles that are the cornerstones of federal law. That would help market participants go about their business with more confidence that they can better assess the creditworthiness of particular consumers without running afoul of legal requirements. In short, we see alternative data as holding out the promise to benefit the very populations that may be most disadvantaged by excessive reliance on traditional credit reports and credit scores. And we are committed to having a full and frank discussion about how we can minimize the risks and maximize the potential benefits.

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With the Request for Information we are issuing today, the Consumer Bureau invites all who are interested in these developments to share their views on this rapidly evolving aspect of financial services. We strongly encourage affordable, responsible lending to more people who may already be deserving of the opportunities that credit can bring to their lives. At the same time, we want to make sure that all lenders are playing by the same rules. This evenhanded oversight both protects consumers and ensures a level playing field for the financial industry. And it applies to both big banks and small startups. We want to learn more about how the use of this data affects consumers and how it is being analyzed and interpreted. And we want to know whether it can help more of our neighbors gain control of their financial destinies, enjoy more options, and achieve their own vision of the American dream. Thank you.

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The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is a 21st century agency that helps consumer finance markets work by making rules more effective, by consistently and fairly enforcing those rules, and by empowering consumers to take more control over their economic lives. For more information, visit consumerfinance.gov.

zafutos cigar lounge

Cigar Auction Event @ Zafutos Cigar Lounge in Ontario, California

ATTENTION ALL SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA CIGAR SMOKERS:

For those unaware, David Latina, of the former Azucar Lounge in Corona, formerly of Zafutos Cigar Lounge in Ontario and presently with Havana Cigars in Phoenix Arizona, suffered a tragic freak accident late last year that resulted in paralysis and is on a long road to recovery.

Dave, a retired San Bernardino County Deputy Sheriff, businessman and all around amazing person, is our well-known Brother of the Leaf who has always been there in support of the Cigar Industry.

 

dave latina

 

Let’s SUPPORT HIM and his family by getting together NEXT FRIDAY – February, 17, 2017 @ 5 pm for a CIGAR AUCTION @ ZAFUTOS CIGAR LOUNGE in Ontario, Ca – to help him and his family with non-insurance supplemented expenses; specifically, specialized chair lift and such.

THE AUCTION: There will be a large variety of Premium Cigar (boxes) from various Cigar Manufacturers/Brands for you to bid on, as well as donated items from vendors and businesses for raffle.

This event is your opportunity to support Dave and his family, as well as GET INCREDIBLE DEALS ON CIGARS AND CIGAR ACCESSORIES.

THIS IS A CASH ONLY EVENT – please bring cash! (there is an ATM nearby).

Are you a BRAND OWNER or Cigar Industry professional? Please consider participating with a donation of any sort for raffle.

Are you a business owner of any sort? Please consider donating for the raffle as well.

YOU MAY CONTACT:

Zafutos Cigar Haven @ (909) 980-9943 and speak to staff there about the event or

contact me, Tommy Sevilla @ (951) 289-1710

tomsevilla@gmail.com

MONEY DONATIONS: If you feel it within your heart to DONATE via cash, check or credit card, please contact:

mweber@morganandfranz.com

Mary Jane Weber , owner of Morgan and Franz Insurance and close friend of Araceli and Dave Latina, is looking at setting up a trust account for this purpose.

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BLOG: Plumbing Companies

How to Start a Plumbing Business from Scratch

 

Starting a plumbing business has never been an easy thing to do. Apart from knowledge and skills, the business requires passion to grow and flourish. After registering your business, you need to obtain a plumbing business license.

Here are some of the best tips about starting a plumbing business successfully and profitably:

1. Develop a good reputation.

Undeniably, business competition is raging and establishing a highly reputable name in this business is vital for survival. Many small companies are having a difficult time competing with big companies which have already established a good name in this business.

Word of mouth is one of the best and cheapest promotional strategies a company can ever have. By offering great quality service to certain customers, it can bring some referrals which can increase your business’ profit. In most cases, by getting the loyalty of one influential customer, you can begin serving the whole community. When this happens, you become the community’s plumber.

Know who your loyal customers are and make sure to give them exemplary quality service always. Offer discounts and free services to avoid losing them. Perhaps you can give free plumbing inspections at least once a year to keep loyal customers.

2. Make your competitors as your friends.

In most cases, competition occurs, but it helps if you can make friends with your competitors. There are instances where you cannot render service to your clients. Instead of turning down the customer’s request, refer them to the nearest best plumbing business you know. You never know, the favor might be returned later on. Also, you never disappoint a client, which is good for the business.

3. Skills, knowledge, and expertise are necessary.

Just like any other business, starting a plumbing business requires a deep sense of knowledge and skills on how the services are rendered. It would always be best to start as an apprentice before starting a plumbing business. At the start of the business, you can start working in the business, and when it progresses, you can start working on the business.

4. Settle on your desired target market.

Know the people who can help your business grow. Make a list of potential contacts that will most likely need your service. Contact the local builders and realtors as they know people and places that require plumbing works.

5. Get the services of expert technicians.

The technician’s skills, abilities and knowledge should be assessed before their employment. Afterall, they will be done who would work directly with the clients. Therefore, they should possess the necessary skills and experience required to satisfy the client.

6. Make sure to apply for a fleet insurance.

Getting a fleet insurance is one of the best moves to take when running a fleet business. It helps in protecting the business against any financial difficulties brought about by some risks and perils.

 

For more info on the pros and cons of plumbing visit us at http://emergencyplumberlosangeles.net

Press Release: Prepared Remarks of Richard Cordray Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau | RD Legal Funding Enforcement Action Press Call

CFPB logo

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
February 7, 2017

CONTACT:
Office of Communications
Tel: (202) 435-7170

Prepared Remarks of Richard Cordray

Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau 

RD Legal Funding Enforcement Action Press Call

Washington, D.C.

February 7, 2017

Thank you for joining today’s call. It is my honor to be working alongside Attorney General Eric Schneiderman on this matter. He is one of the toughest and most effective advocates for consumers in the country and we thank him for that.

Today the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is joining forces with New York to sue RD Legal Funding, two related entities, and their owner. We allege that they scammed 9/11 heroes with cancer and other illnesses out of millions of dollars intended to cover their medical costs, lost income, and other critical needs. We also allege that RD Legal targeted National Football League concussion victims with brain injuries in the same manner. In both instances, the company lured vulnerable consumers into surrendering money due to them with lies about the terms of costly financial advances on settlement fund payouts.

Many of the police, firefighters, paramedics, and others who were first responders to the World Trade Center attack on September 11, 2001 suffer from cancers and other respiratory illnesses related to their exposure to dust and debris at the attack site. Many others suffer post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, and memory loss. Through the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act of 2010, Congress allocated billions of dollars to help these heroes with their needs, including mounting medical costs and lost income because of their inability to work.

The other victims named in our lawsuit are former NFL players who have been diagnosed with brain injuries and neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease, who were entitled to payments from a settlement in a class action lawsuit.

In today’s lawsuit, we allege that RD Legal, based in New Jersey, contacted these consumers after they were awarded their money but before they received it. It swooped in during that gap to offer a purported “deal” – an upfront payment of some of the money, to be paid back later when the consumer received the actual settlement.

We believe that through convoluted contracts, RD Legal misrepresented to consumers what they were being offered. It deceived consumers; interfered with their understanding of the terms, costs, and conditions of the transactions; and prevented them from meaningfully evaluating the offering. And what was offered was expensive. For example, one 9/11 first responder was awarded $65,000 from the Zadroga Fund. While she waited for her full payment, RD Legal advanced her $18,000. When her payment from the fund arrived six months later, she had to repay $33,000 to RD Legal, $15,000 more than she was advanced.

Another victim was duped out of even more money. He was a severely disabled 9/11 first responder who received $35,000 from RD Legal. When he received his check from the Zadroga Fund three months later, he owed RD Legal $63,633 – almost $30,000 more than the company had advanced to him.

We allege that one way RD Legal was able to trick consumers into its scam was by lying about the timelines involving the money. It claimed to consumers that it could “cut through red tape” to obtain their anticipated payments from claims administrators faster than would otherwise be possible. In fact, RD Legal had no authority or ability to change the timing of when any victim compensation or settlement payouts occurred.

The company also misrepresented to consumers when they would receive money from RD Legal. On its website, the company promised that consumers would receive the money within several days of entering into the contract, but some consumers did not receive money until several months after it was promised.

Finally, because we believe that RD Legal’s costly transactions were based on void contracts or that they violated interest rate caps in at least one key state – the State of New York – we allege that it was illegal for RD Legal to attempt to recover its money from the victims.

We look forward to proving all of this in court.

Along with RD Legal Funding, in our lawsuit we named two related entities – RD Legal Finance and RD Legal Funding Partners. We also named Roni Dersovitz, who is the founder and owner of all the entities; we allege that he substantially assisted RD Legal’s violations. Through this lawsuit, the CFPB and the New York Attorney General are seeking to end the defendants’ illegal practices, obtain relief for the victims, and impose penalties.

As we regularly emphasize, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is the nation’s first federal agency whose sole focus is to protect consumers in the financial marketplace nationwide. The premise at the heart of our mission is that consumers deserve to be treated fairly and they should have someone who will stand on their side when that does not happen. Through fair rules, consistent oversight, appropriate law enforcement, and broad-based consumer engagement, we are working to restore people’s trust in consumer financial markets and protect them against the kind of illegal conduct described in today’s suit. We are always pleased to partner in our efforts with law enforcement officials from around the country, and are glad to do so again here today. Thank you.

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The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is a 21st century agency that helps consumer finance markets work by making rules more effective, by consistently and fairly enforcing those rules, and by empowering consumers to take more control over their economic lives. For more information, visit consumerfinance.gov.

Press Release: New Lawsuit Regarding 9/11 Heroes and NFL Players

CFPB logo

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
February 7, 2017

CONTACT:
Office of Communications
Tel: (202) 435-7170

CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU AND NEW YORK ATTORNEY GENERAL SUE RD LEGAL FOR SCAMMING 9/11 HEROES OUT OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN COMPENSATION FUNDS
CFPB and NY Also Accuse Company of Deceiving National Football League Concussion Victims

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the New York Attorney General filed a lawsuit against RD Legal Funding, LLC, two related entities, and Roni Dersovitz, the companies’ founder and owner, for allegedly scamming 9/11 heroes out of money intended to cover medical costs, lost income, and other critical needs. RD Legal also allegedly conned National Football League (NFL) concussion victims. The CFPB and New York Attorney General allege that the illegal scheme deceived 9/11 first responders with cancer and other illnesses and football players with brain injuries out of millions of dollars by luring them into costly advances on settlement payouts with lies about the terms of the deals. In the suit filed in federal court, the CFPB and the New York Attorney General seek to put an end to the company’s illegal practices, obtain relief for the victims, and impose penalties.

“It is unconscionable that RD Legal scammed 9/11 heroes and NFL concussion victims out of millions of dollars,” said CFPB Director Richard Cordray. “We allege that this company and its owner lined their pockets with funds intended to cover medical care and other critical expenses for people who are sick and sidelined. Our lawsuit seeks to end this illegal scheme and get money back to those entitled to receive it.”

“The alleged actions by RD Legal – scamming 9/11 heroes and former NFL players struggling with severe injuries—are simply shameful. RD Legal used deceptive tactics to charge unlawfully high interest rates for advances on settlement and compensation funds, allowing them to profit off the backs of these unsuspecting individuals,” said New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman. “My office will do all it can to end the fraudulent practices employed by RD Legal, recoup the illegal amounts charged by this company – and make these victims whole again.”

RD Legal, based in Cresskill, N.J., is a company that offers advances to consumers entitled to payouts from victim compensation funds or lawsuit settlements. The company targeted fund awardees including police, firefighters, paramedics, and others who were first responders to the World Trade Center attack on September 11, 2001. Many of these first responders suffer from cancers and other respiratory illnesses related to their exposure to dust and debris at the attack site, post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, and memory loss. They were awarded money from the Zadroga Fund, established by Congress to assist with needs including mounting medical costs and lost income because of their inability to work. RD Legal also targeted former NFL players who have been diagnosed with neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease and were entitled to payments from the settlement in a class action lawsuit.

The CFPB and the New York Attorney General allege that RD Legal contacted these consumers after they were awarded their money but before they received most of it. RD Legal then swooped in with a “deal,” offering the victims an upfront payment of some of the money they had not yet received which would be paid back when they received the balance of the payout. Through confusing contracts, RD Legal misrepresented to consumers their obligation to repay these expensive transactions, often collecting from the consumer more than twice what RD Legal had advanced months earlier. Today’s lawsuit alleges that RD Legal’s illegal actions cost victims, many of whom suffered long-term physical or cognitive harm, millions of dollars.

The CFPB and the New York Attorney General allege that the defendants violated several laws, including the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act’s prohibition on deceptive and abusive acts and practices. Specifically, the CFPB and New York Attorney General allege that RD Legal:

  • Lured consumers into costly payouts by lying about the terms of the deal:Through convoluted contracts, RD Legal misrepresented to consumers what they were being offered. These misrepresentations deceived consumers, interfered with their understanding of the terms, costs, and conditions of the transactions, and prevented them from meaningfully evaluating what was being offered. The products were expensive. For example, one consumer was awarded $65,000 from the Zadroga Fund. While she waited for her payment from the fund, RD advanced her $18,000. When her award payment from the fund arrived six months later, she had to repay $33,000 to RD Legal – so she paid $15,000 to RD above and beyond the money RD Legal advanced to her.
  • Lied about speeding up the processing of consumers’ claims: RD Legal lied to consumers by claiming that it could “cut through red tape” to obtain their anticipated payments from claims administrators faster than would otherwise be possible. In fact, RD Legal had no authority or ability to change when victim compensation or settlement payouts occurred.
  • Deceived consumers about when they would receive the money from RD Legal: RD Legal misrepresented to consumers when they would receive money from the company. On its website, the company promised that consumers would receive the money within several days of entering into the contract, but some consumers did not receive money until months after it was promised.
  • Illegally collected money from consumers: When consumers received their payouts from their actual settlement funds, RD Legal attempted to recover its money from the victims. But the complaint alleges that the costly transactions are not valid and enforceable or they are void under New York law because they violated the state interest rate cap. As a result, no payment is due and RD Legal had no right to collect.

The New York Attorney General also alleges additional violations of New York state law in the complaint.

Named in today’s lawsuit are RD Legal Funding LLC, RD Legal Finance LLC, RD Legal Funding Partners LP, and Roni Dersovitz. The lawsuit alleges that Dersovitz is the founder and owner of all the entities, and that he substantially assisted RD Legal’s violations. Through the lawsuit, the CFPB and the New York Attorney General are seeking to put an end to the company’s illegal practices, obtain relief for the victims, and impose penalties.

The complaint is not a finding or ruling that the defendants have actually violated the law.

The CFPB and New York Attorney General’s complaint can be found at: http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/201702_cfpb_RD-Legal-complaint.pdf

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The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is a 21st century agency that helps consumer finance markets work by making rules more effective, by consistently and fairly enforcing those rules, and by empowering consumers to take more control over their economic lives. For more information, visit consumerfinance.gov.