"Phone cramming is a multibillion-dollar business for con artists
who sneak unauthorized charges onto unsuspecting customers' bills,
affecting everyone from residential users to small-business owners,
even nonprofit organizations and government agencies," Madigan said.
"The only way to put an end to this scam is by instituting a ban on
third-party charges on our phone bills." Cramming is a scheme
perpetrated by third-party vendors who use consumers' phone numbers
much like a credit card. They add charges to phone bills for bogus
products or services, such as identity theft protection, website
design or email service that consumers and businesses never asked
for or wanted -- and never used.
The legislation, which was sponsored in the House by Rep. Kelly
Burke and will be sponsored by Sen. David Koehler in the Senate,
would ban all billing by a third-party company other than for
limited, common-sense exceptions for legitimate services.
"I applaud my fellow lawmakers for their support today," Burke
said. "This legislation will better protect consumers from a scheme
that uses their phone numbers like a credit card and has cost them
millions of dollars in unauthorized charges."
Estimates indicate that telephone companies place at least 300
million third-party charges on their customers' bills each year.
According to a U.S. Senate Commerce Committee report, third-party
billing generates at least $2 billion annually.
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Phone cramming scams originally were perpetrated primarily
through telemarketers, especially before the Do Not Call registry
was established. More recently, however, the scam has flourished
online. Internet users report simply submitting their phone number,
among other personal information, for online prize drawings, surveys
or free recipes. Weeks or months later, consumers find charges on
their phone bills for unauthorized services.
To date, the attorney general's office has filed 30 lawsuits
against crammers, representing more than 200,000 Illinois businesses
and residences that were victim to these phone billing schemes.
Among the most glaring of 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.
Madigan has previously advocated for a nationwide ban on phone
bill cramming, testifying last July before the U.S. Senate Commerce
Committee and filing comments with the Federal Communications
Commission.
[Text from file received from the office
of
Illinois Attorney General Lisa
Madigan]
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