It’s highly possible you’ve never heard of Expert Global Solutions,
but it’s the largest debt-collection operation in the world. It also is
the subject of a recent Federal Trade Commission complaint alleging that
the company and its subsidiaries violated federal law by harassing
consumers.
You may remember this list of 23 things that debt collectors are forbidden from doing.
According to the FTC, Expert Global — through subsidiaries ALW
Sourcing, NCO Financial Systems, and Transworld Systems — disregarded
that list and, among other alleged violations, called consumers multiple
times per day, even after being asked to stop, called early in the
morning or late at night, called consumers’ workplaces even when told
that the employers prohibited such calls, and left phone messages that
disclosed the debtor’s name, and the existence of the debt, to third
parties.
In addition to these allegations, the FTC claims that collectors for
Expert Global would continue collection efforts without verifying the
debt, even after consumers said they did not owe it.
The company will pay $3.2 million to settle these charges, the FTC’s
largest ever action against a third-party debt collector. Of course,
when you consider that Expert Global took in at least $1.2 billion last
year, the penalty is a pittance. To put it into real-world money, this
would be like assessing a $133 parking ticket to a person making $50,000
year; enough to make him grumble about it, but perhaps not enough to
stop him from doing it again.
There are of course non-financial stipulations to the settlement.
Expert Global must stop violating the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act
and the FTC Act by falsely representing that it will not call a number
to collect a debt, or by harassing, oppressing, or abusing a consumer
while attempting to collect a debt.
Starting one year after the settlement goes into effect, the company
must also record at least 75% of its debt collection calls and retain
the recordings for 90 days after they are made.
Additionally, if a consumer disputes the validity or the amount of an
alleged debt, Expert Global must either close the account and end
collection efforts, or suspend collection until it has conducted an
investigation and verified that its information about the debt is
accurate and complete.
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