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Court Enters Final Order in FTC Action Against
Florida Debt Collectors
A federal court has entered a final order against
a Florida debt collection agency, its principals,
and its attorney, settling a Federal Trade Commission
action that alleged that the defendants violated
the FTC Act and the Fair Debt Collection Practices
Act (FDCPA) while collecting consumers’ debts.
The FTC’s complaint alleged that the enterprise
used misleading dunning letters and abusive telephone
calls to falsely threaten that consumers would be
sued, their property seized, and their wages garnished
if they did not pay the money that the defendants
said they owed. The complaint alleged that the collectors
often shouted and used profanity and other abusive
language to carry out their collections.
The stipulated final order, among other things,
permanently bars the defendants from falsely representing
the character, amount, or legal status of a consumer’s
debt, that their collector is an attorney or represents
an attorney, or that if the consumer does not pay,
the defendants can or will file a lawsuit against
the consumer. It also prohibits them from violating
the FDCPA in any way, including by disclosing a
consumer’s debts to any third parties, using profanity
or other abusive language in collection calls, or
by continuing to attempt to collect a debt before
providing verification of the debt to consumers
who properly request such verification. The settlement
also requires the defendants to provide consumers
with a toll-free number and mailing address to file
complaints, promptly investigate each such complaint,
and take steps to cease, resolve, and cure any violations
of the court order or the FDCPA.
The defendants are Rawlins & Rivera, Inc. of
Florida, Rawlins & Rivera, Inc. of Georgia,
Ryan & Reed, Inc. of Florida, Ryan & Reed,
Inc. of Georgia, RRI, Inc., the corporations’ officers,
Janis Brust, Joe L. Hunt, Sr., Joe L. Hunt, Jr.,
and a Florida lawyer, Robert W. Bird, whose letterhead
was used for many of their collection letters. The
settlement contains a monetary judgment of $3.4
million, which represents the total amount the defendants
took in through their allegedly improper debt collection
activities. The settlement requires the defendants
to sell property and transfer the proceeds of the
sale to the FTC. The remainder of the $3.4 million
will be suspended based upon the defendants’ inability
to pay. |