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Law Enforcers Target "Top 10"
Online Scams;
Consumer Protection Cops From 9
Countries, 5 U.S. Agencies, And 23 States Tackle Internet Fraud
In a year-long law enforcement effort targeting the top 10
Internet scams, 5 U.S. agencies, consumer protection organizations from 9
countries and 23 states today announced 251 law enforcement actions against
online scammers in "Operation Top Ten Dot Cons." The top 10 scams were
culled from Consumer Sentinel, a database of more than 285,000 consumer
complaints established and maintained by the Federal Trade Commission and
accessible to more than 240 consumer protection agencies in the U.S. -
including every state attorney general - and Canadian and Australian law
enforcers. The FTC and the United Kingdom's Department of
Trade and Industry, and Office of Fair Trading today announced an
information sharing and coordination agreement to combat cross-border fraud.
The top 10 targeted scams were:
- Internet Auction Fraud
- Internet Service Provider Scams
- Internet Web Site Design/Promotions - Web Cramming
- Internet Information and Adult Services - Credit Card
Cramming
- Multi-level Marketing/Pyramid Scams
- Business Opportunities and Work-At-Home Scams
- Investment Schemes and Get-Rich-Quick Scams
- Travel/Vacation Fraud
- Telephone/Pay-Per-Call Solicitation Frauds (including
modem dialers and videotext)
- Health Care Frauds
"The Internet is revolutionizing the way we gather
information, shop and do business," said Jodie Bernstein, Director of the
FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection. "This collaboration with law
enforcement agencies, industry and consumers will create a climate where
e-commerce can be conducted with confidence. We want the dot con artists to
know that we're building a consumer protection coalition that spans the
globe. We aim to make the 'Net safe for consumers," she said.
Announcement of the international law enforcement effort
was made in conjunction with a meeting of the International Marketing
Supervision Network (IMSN), a group consisting of consumer protection
enforcement authorities from 29 countries. The IMSN facilitates practical
actions to prevent and redress deceptive marketing practices with an
international component. As the current IMSN president, the FTC is seeking
to increase the level of international coordination to protect consumers in
an increasingly global marketplace.
Participants in "Operation Top Ten Dot Cons" include
consumer protection agencies from Australia, Canada, Finland, Germany,
Ireland, New Zealand, Norway and the United Kingdom and the United States.
U.S. agencies include the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the
Department of Justice, the Federal Trade Commission, the Securities and
Exchange Commission and the United States Postal Inspection Service. Cases
were brought by the Attorneys General of Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Iowa,
Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Maryland, Michigan, Missouri,
North Carolina, New Jersey, Nevada, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee,
Texas, and Washington State. Consumer protection offices in West Virginia,
and Wisconsin also took action, as did the Louisiana Department of Justice,
the Oklahoma Department of Securities, and the Washington State Securities
Division,
Four FTC cases filed in U. S. District Court charge
defendants with operating Internet auction scams. The complaints allege that
the defendants advertised computer software and electronic consumer goods at
various e-auction sites, took cashier's checks or money orders in payment
but never delivered the goods. In three of those cases, the FTC has asked
for assets to be frozen for consumer redress. In all of the cases, the FTC
is seeking a permanent injunction on acts that violate the FTC Act and the
Mail and Telephone Order Merchandise Rule.
In a unique FTC Internet cramming case announced today,
defendants mailed $3.50 "rebate" checks to consumers. When consumers cashed
the check, they were unwittingly agreeing to allow the defendants to be
their Internet Service Provider, and the defendants started placing monthly
charges on their telephone bills. The defendants made it nearly impossible
to cancel future monthly charges and receive refunds. Stipulated permanent
injunctions bar the billing behavior in the future and the amount of
consumer redress is now being calculated.
A variation on cramming involves "Web cramming" - billing
consumers for a Website page they didn't even know they had. Targeting small
businesses and not-for-profit organizations, the scammers call and offer a
"free" Web page, then start billing phone bills without authorization. Five
settlements with defendants charged with Web cramming bar the practices. A
sixth defendant will also pay more than $3 million in consumer redress.
In three other matters, complaints were filed in U.S.
District Court charging the operators of adult-oriented Web sites and their
principals with cramming - billing consumers credit cards or phone bills for
services they did not order or authorize. The FTC has asked the courts to
shut down the adult sites and freeze the assets of two, pending trial. The
agency will seek permanent injunctions and will seek to provide redress to
thousands of consumers who have been billed without authorization.
The FTC announced the filing of one complaint targeting a
work-at-home medical billing scam that allegedly made deceptive earnings
claims on the Internet and in print ads to promote its $369 package of
"training, software and clients." The agency asked the court to stop the
deceptive practices, appoint a receiver and freeze the defendants' assets,
pending trial.
Two other FTC cases announced today involve Web site
operators who illegally promised quick riches with little risk to consumers
who would sign up for their day trading programs and products. The companies
have agreed to settle Federal Trade Commission charges that their claims
were deceptive in violation of federal law. The settlements require
substantiation for any future earnings claims; bar misrepresentations about
day trading risks; and require conspicuous disclosure of the high-risk
nature of day trading and bar the deceptive use of testimonials.
This year, the participants in this law enforcement effort
have brought 251 cases, including 77 by the SEC, and a total of 54 FTC
cases, including the 18 cases announced today - one of which remains under
seal.
As part of the ongoing Internet law enforcement
initiative, the FTC has trained more than 700 law enforcement and consumer
protection officials from 20 different countries, including 17 federal
agencies, 25 state governments and 14 Canadian consumer protection offices
in online investigation and law enforcement techniques in locations ranging
from Anchorage, Alaska to Paris, France.
A list of the FTC cases announced
today is attached.
If so please email it to
scams@internetsafelist.com
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