Some newer credit counselors gouging clients,
investigators find
March 25, 2004
By Marcy Gordon
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Raymond Schuck thought he was being
responsible when he went to Cambridge Credit Counseling
for help reducing $90,000 in credit card and bank debt.
Instead, the retired museum director said the monthly
payments he made never reached his creditors — and he
ended up filing for bankruptcy.
"My credit rating was completely ruined," the Lima,
Ohio, resident testified yesterday at a Senate hearing
looking into the credit counseling industry.
Credit counseling companies, which often advertise
heavily, portray themselves as offering a refuge for
consumers drowning in debt. But lawmakers, regulators
and consumer groups charge that some counseling agencies
trade on their nonprofit status to gouge customers,
serving more as an anchor plunging people deeper into
debt than as a life preserver.
Each year, an estimated 9 million Americans have some
contact with a credit counseling agency — often the last
stop before a bankruptcy filing.
A report prepared by the bipartisan staff of the Senate
Governmental Affairs Committee's investigative panel
found that consumer complaints are on the rise as new
companies come into the credit counseling business and
abuses proliferate. The investigators found a pattern of
abuse among some counseling agencies, especially new
entrants to the field.
"Clearly, something is wrong with the credit counseling
industry," said Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn., chairman of
the investigative subcommittee. "Our investigation has
revealed common patterns of improper conduct" by new
entrants.
The industry has changed significantly since its early
years in the 1960s when individuals struggling with debt
could go to a nonprofit credit counseling agency and get
free help, Coleman said before yesterday's hearing.
Only if their problems couldn't be solved through
budgeting and education, he said, would debtors be put
in a debt-management plan, where the counselor
negotiates a repayment plan with creditors.
"It was a good system," Coleman said.
But in recent years as consumer debt climbed, a new,
more aggressive breed of nonprofit counselor emerged.
More than 810 credit counseling groups applied for
nonprofit status in the past four years.
Audits of 50 credit counseling agencies by the Internal
Revenue Service "may very well" result in some of them
being stripped of their nonprofit tax exemptions or even
being referred for criminal investigation to the Justice
Department, IRS Commissioner Mark Everson testified to
the subcommittee.
And Thomas Leary, a member of the Federal Trade
Commission, said: "We remain concerned about deceptive
practices in the credit counseling industry."
Former employees of Cambridge Credit and AmeriDebt, who
also testified, told of having to use fake names,
"boiler room" sales operations and pressure on
commission-paid counselors to get consumers to pay stiff
upfront fees, with no counseling or debt education
provided.
Officials of the two companies disputed the accounts of
the former customers and employees. They said their
companies act responsibly and provide a valuable service
to consumers.
Chris Viale, chief operating officer of Cambridge
Credit, called the accounts "unfair and distorted
accusations."
"There is a popular notion that performance incentives
encourage counselors to act in their own best interests
rather than in the interests of consumers. This is not
true," Viale said.
As senators grilled the officials about industry
practices, the president of Debtworks, Andris Pukke,
asserted his Fifth Amendment privilege in refusing to
testify.
The for-profit Debtworks, Pukke and his brother are
among several parties named in a lawsuit filed by the
state of Missouri against AmeriDebt in September.
Debtworks was formed in 1999 when AmeriDebt spun off its
processing function for consumer debt plans and turned
it into a for-profit business owned and controlled by
Pukke, according to the Senate investigators.
With personal bankruptcies surging to record levels in
this country, there is a deep pool of customers for
credit counselors.
Credit counselors historically have been financed by
banks that issue credit cards but those contributions
have been declining, forcing counselors to charge fees.
Credit counseling works by putting consumers who cannot
afford to make all their payments into debt management
programs that allow them to consolidate their debts from
several credit cards, reduce their monthly payments and
lower their interest rates. Consumers agree to destroy
their credit cards, not take out new credit and make a
monthly payment to the counseling agency, which
distributes it to creditors.
But new entrants — rather than relying on contributions
to nonprofit counseling agencies from credit-card
companies or small fees paid by consumers — use a
different structure. They have nonprofit agencies that
generate "massive revenues" paid by consumers for a
for-profit affiliate for advertising, marketing and
executives' salaries, according to the Senate report.
AmeriDebt, based in Germantown, Md., has been sued by
the Federal Trade Commission, five states and consumers.
The FTC alleged that the company used deceptive
marketing to bilk hundreds of thousands of customers and
failed to educate people about how to get out of debt.
The regulators also alleged that AmeriDebt made
customers believe that an initial fee would be part of
their debt-reduction payments to creditors — but it
instead went to AmeriDebt.
The company has disputed the regulators' allegations. It
says it offers customers educational services, and that
the debt-reduction payments are "voluntary
contributions."
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