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Financial Services Law Insights and Observations

CFPB Files Suit Against Student Financial Aid Company

CFPB Student Lending Enforcement

Consumer Finance

On October 29, the CFPB filed a complaint in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California against a California-based student financial aid operation and its owner (Defendants). According to the complaint, the Defendants represented that by paying a fee and sending in an application, consumers were applying for financial aid or the Defendants would apply for aid on behalf the students. The CFPB alleges, however, that consumers did not receive the promised services in exchange for their payment and that the Defendants collected more than $4 million from at least 76,000 consumers from January 2011 through the filing of the complaint. The CFPB alleges that the Defendants violated the CFPA by (i) deceiving students to pay for services that the Defendants did not actually provide; (ii) using letterhead that falsely indicated affiliation with the government and university financial aid offices; and (iii) pressuring students to enroll in the program and pay a fee by creating false deadlines and making deceptive statements about the consequences of missing the deadlines. The CFPB also alleges that the Defendants failed to provide privacy notices to consumers as required by Regulation P. The complaint seeks a civil money penalty, restitution to harmed consumers, and a prohibition against future violations.