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News & Issues > Good News from the Do Not Call List
 

Good News from the Do Not Call List

Finally! Every time these people called me, I filed a complaint with the Do Not Call List. It is so gratifying to see some action on it. I'm sure other scams will follow, and this is only a minor speed bump to the telemarketers, but I'm happy to see this.

"FTC Hangs Up On “Rachel From Cardholder Services”
1 Nov 2012

For several years, American consumers have been receiving illegal and unwanted robocalls with a recorded message from “Rachel”, "Heather", most recently "Ann" or vaguely named “Cardholder Services.”

Finally today, the Federal Trade Commission announced it had pulled the plug on five companies behind these scammy robocalls: federal courts granted the agency’s request to temporarily halt five robocall operations that allegedly deceived consumers into paying hundreds or thousands of dollars by making phony claims that they could reduce credit card interest rates in return for an upfront fee.

The robocalls purport to have an “important message” regarding an opportunity to reduce high credit card interest rates, and consumers are urged to “press 1” to connect with a live representative, or “press 2” to discontinue getting such calls. Consumers who press 1 are connected to live telemarketers, who then pitch deceptive offers to have the credit card interest rates substantially reduced, sometimes to as low as 6.9 or even zero percent.

In some cases, according to the FTC, the telemarketers claim to be calling from the consumer’s credit card company. In other cases, they use “Cardholder Services” to suggest a relationship with a bank or credit card company. If the consumer expresses an interest in the rate reduction offer, the telemarketer sometimes conducts a purported “audit” to determine whether the consumer qualifies.

Consumers provide their financial and personal information, and are then put on hold while the “audit” is completed. According to the FTC, the “audit” typically is used only to determine whether consumers have enough credit available on their credit cards to pay the company’s fee.

After consumers have been “approved” for the program the telemarketer informs them that there is an up-front fee, typically ranging from several hundred dollars to nearly $3,000. To convince them to pay the fee, telemarketers often say that it will be more than offset by the money the consumer will save through the program. In some cases, the FTC alleges that consumers’ credit cards were charged even if they did not agree to pay for the service. In other cases, the defendants allegedly do not disclose a fee at all, or claim there will be no fee.

After consumers pay the up-front fee they typically find that the companies do little or nothing to lower their credit card interest rates. The only thing that some companies do, according to the FTC, is to initiate three-way calls with consumers’ credit card issuers and orally request a rate reduction, a request that consumers could make on their own and that invariably is denied.

The five complaints announced today were filed against the following companies and their principals:

1) Treasure Your Success
2) Ambrosia Web Design
3) A+ Financial Center
4) The Green Savers, and
5) Key One Solutions

posted on Nov 18, 2012 1:28 PM ()

Comments:

I just told my wife about this. She said she actually hung on for one of the calls, got "Rachel," and commenced to drill her with questions. After a short time, "Rachel" hung up on her and it was the last call we got from them.
comment by steve on Nov 21, 2012 12:47 PM ()
Once the election was over, the robo telemarketing calls have increased to several a day. I can't imagine what it'd be like if there wasn't a law against them.
reply by troutbend on Dec 15, 2012 2:12 PM ()
I got lots of calls from credit card services but since I pay my cards off
every month, I just hung up on them. Someone keeps calling me about
home invasions on seniors and I am having hell getting rid of them. They
want to sell us a security system. I am on the don't call list but these
people are persistent.
comment by elderjane on Nov 19, 2012 4:28 PM ()
I always tell those people I'm on the Do Not Call list, and they are breaking the law. Sometimes they will tell you that they will remove you from their call list, and once in awhile they do stop calling.
reply by traveltales on Nov 21, 2012 12:21 PM ()
Thanks for reminding me about the do not call list. I called them from one phone, but forgot to do it on the other.
comment by maggiemae on Nov 19, 2012 6:10 AM ()
You're welcome. I file several complaints a week.
reply by traveltales on Nov 21, 2012 12:25 PM ()
If you press 1 and START to tell them no more calls they hang up on you!!!
comment by greatmartin on Nov 18, 2012 2:45 PM ()
Many of those outfits pretend they have a way to remove your number from their list, but they don't.
reply by traveltales on Nov 21, 2012 12:27 PM ()
Happy to hear they got "Rachel." She called me a few times; I hung up.
comment by steve on Nov 18, 2012 2:20 PM ()
They called me daily for the past three years! I filed a complaint every single time.
reply by traveltales on Nov 21, 2012 12:29 PM ()
We receive these calls every few weeks. Since we have cards from two companies I just assumed they were from one of them, and that isn't illegal--for a company that a person does business with to call. I did find it strange that the call doesn't say which card, but I didn't give it any more thought than that. Naturally we hang up right away without hearing the pitch, but next time I'll listen; if there is a next time.
comment by jjoohhnn on Nov 18, 2012 1:45 PM ()
They make it sound like it has to do with your account, but if you get into it further, you discover they don't know anything about what you've got - they ask you for your card number. I hope you don't get any more of those calls, but I'm sure they have already moved on to some other scam excuse to call us.
reply by traveltales on Nov 21, 2012 12:32 PM ()

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