Monday, April 23, 2018

Collections Firm Agrees to $5 Million Settlement for Allegedly Failing to Disclose Recorded Calls

Debt collection firm Medicredit, Inc. has agreed to a preliminary settlement of $5 million to settle a class action lawsuit that was filed over allegations that they failed to disclose to consumers that calls were being recorded. Many states have call recording and disclosure regulations. As a best practice, businesses should always disclose when calls are being recorded, regardless of which state the calls are being made into. Read a copy of the settlement agreement here. Learn more about telemarketing rules and telemarketing compliance.

New Jersey Judge Rules in Defendant's Favor in TCPA Consent Case


In Nicole Rando v. Edible Arrangements International, Inc., a New Jersey judge has granted the defendant's motion to dismiss. Plaintiff Nicole Rando filed the class action lawsuit after she allegedly received unsolicited text messages from Edible Arrangements. Rando claimed that she continued to receive several messages after she had opted-out. The wording that she used to opt-out included: (1) "Take my contact info off please." (2) "I want to confirm that I have been removed off your contacts." (3) "I asked to be removed from this service a few times. Stop the messages." and (4) "Again I want to stop this service thank you." The automated instructions provided by Edible Arrangements indicated that the proper way to opt-out was to simply say "stop," which Rando never did. The judge held that because Rando had never appropriately opted-out, Edible Arrangements could not be held liable for the unsolicited texts. Although this is a favorable ruling for the industry, businesses should honor all opt-out requests, even if the wording isn't exactly as instructed. Read a copy of the judge's decision here. Contact a TCPA lawyer or telemarketing attorney if you are ever facing a similar TCPA case.

Man Fighting $120 Million FCC Fine 


Last June, the FCC filed a complaint against a man who allegedly made over 96 million illegal robocalls to consumers. The agency claims that at least 80,000 of those calls included spoofed caller ID information, a violation of the Truth in Caller ID Act. The defendant, Adrian Abramovich, appeared before the senate last week and argued that he is “not the kingpin that is alleged.” Read a Newsweek article about this case here. Learn more about telemarketing fines here.

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