Madigan: AT&T, Sprint & T-Mobile to stop billing for cellphone
'cramming' charges
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[November 25, 2013]
CHICAGO — Last week Attorney
General Lisa Madigan joined with 44 other attorneys general to
announce that three of the nation's largest mobile phone carriers — AT&T Mobility, Sprint and T-Mobile
— will stop charging their
customers for premium text messages and effectively put an end to
practice of cellphone "cramming" that racks up unauthorized
third-party charges on mobile customers' accounts.
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The announcement is a breakthrough in the fight by Madigan and other
states to put a stop to cellphone cramming. Commercial premium short
messaging services, or PSMS, account for the majority of third-party
charges on cellphones and for the overwhelming majority of cramming
complaints reported to Madigan's office.
"This development is a major victory for consumers," Madigan
said. "Eliminating charges for premium texts will go a long way
toward preventing scammers from illegally profiting by sneaking
unauthorized charges onto our monthly cellphone bills."
Cramming happens when third-party vendors use people's phone
numbers much like a credit card. Vendors add charges to phone bills
for bogus products or services, such as celebrity gossip items,
horoscopes and joke-of-the-day offerings, which consumers and
businesses never requested — and never used. But because the charges
are unauthorized, consumers rarely, if ever, detect the scam,
allowing the scammer to illegally profit for months at a time.
Wireless cramming has become an emerging source of consumer
fraud, much like it did on landline phones before the practice was
banned in Illinois. In 2012, Madigan drafted and negotiated a law
that banned unauthorized charges on landline phones, making Illinois
only the second state in the nation to ban the practice on wired
phone lines. But as more people use cellphones as their primary
phones, scam artists are now migrating to wireless billing schemes,
prompting the need for stronger consumer protections.
The attorney general's office has filed 30 lawsuits against
crammers. Among the most glaring targets for these scams was cited
in Madigan's 2009 lawsuit against US Credit Find Inc., a Venice,
Calif.-based operation, which crammed a Springfield public library's
dial-a-story telephone line.
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Madigan has been an outspoken advocate for a nationwide ban on
phone bill cramming, having testified before the U.S. Senate
Commerce Committee on the matter and calling on the Federal Trade
Commission to address the growing problem of cellphone cramming as
the commission conducts a national examination of trends involving
unauthorized charges on mobile phone bills.
For more information on how to
protect against phone bill cramming or to report being scammed,
contact Attorney General Madigan's Consumer Fraud Hotlines:
[Text from file received from the office
of
Illinois Attorney General Lisa
Madigan]
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