Madigan files suit against payday lender for selling short-term loan
designed to evade state reforms
Attorney
general alleges All Credit Lenders' payday loans trap borrowers in cycle
of debt
Send a link to a friend
[March 24, 2014]
CHICAGO — Attorney General Lisa
Madigan filed suit last week against a Chicago area payday lender
for designing and selling a new emerging short-term loan intended to
thwart important protections in Illinois law against predatory
payday lending and to trap borrowers in an inescapable cycle of
debt.
|
Madigan filed the lawsuit in Cook County Circuit Court against CMK
Investments Inc., which operates as All Credit Lenders, selling
small consumer loans and lines of credit. All Credit Lenders is
based in Elgin but operates storefronts across Illinois, Wisconsin
and South Carolina.
Madigan alleges that All Credit Lenders is evading the state's 36
percent interest-rate cap by offering a short-term loan product that
acts like a revolving line of credit but offers none of the
protections of a credit card. The lender allegedly offers these
credit card-like products with advertised interest rates of 18-24
percent. Madigan alleges the company thwarts the state interest-rate
cap by tacking on bogus "required account protection fees." When the
extra fees are factored into the total cost of the short-term loan,
the interest rates soar to 375-500-plus percent, according to
Madigan's lawsuit.
After a borrower takes out the short-term loan, All Credit
Lenders allegedly provides a payment schedule and instructs the
borrower to make minimum payments, which consumers who filed
complaints with Madigan's office believed was a timeline to pay off
the full debt.
Madigan's lawsuit alleges that none of the minimum payment goes
to paying down the principal of the loan. Instead, the minimum
payments only cover the extra fees, which are charged to consumers
on a biweekly basis.
"This new loan product is one of the most abusive attempts to
evade the reform laws we have seen," Madigan said. "This company
provides consumers repayment schedules where not one penny of their
payment goes toward paying down the principal balance, making it
impossible to pay off their loan."
[to top of second column] |
The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation
assisted Madigan's office with its investigation.
"We were pleased to be able to help the attorney general
prosecute this lender," said Manuel Flores, acting secretary of
Financial and Professional Regulation. "It is important that we
protect every consumer from unscrupulous lenders."
Madigan's lawsuit is the first action her office has taken under
the new federal Dodd-Frank Act. It also alleges violations of the
Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practice Act. The
lawsuit seeks to ban the company from selling lines of credit and
revolving credit in Illinois, provides restitution to all consumers
affected, and assesses penalties for violating the law.
Assistant Attorneys General Sarah Poulimas and Vaishali Rao are
handling the case for Madigan's Consumer Fraud Bureau.
[Text from file received from the office of
Illinois Attorney General Lisa
Madigan]
|