Trial that Led to $83 Million Verdict Against Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC Because of Abusive Litigation
You: Portfolio Recovery Associates called me over and over again about a debt I did not owe.
You: I owed a debt on a credit card and Portfolio Recovery called me incessantly because I refused to talk to them.
You: How do I make PRA stop calling me?
There is a law that is supposed to protect people from abusive debt collection practices. It is called the FDCPA and is codified as 15 USC 1692.
I say supposed to, because there are judges, such as Lee P. Rudofsky in the Federal District Court of Eastern Arkansas who determine what is “abusive”, “invasive” or “outrageous” without letting a jury decide.
There are other judges, such as Joel P. Fahnestock, a circuit court judge in Missouri who allowed an FDCPA case to proceed to a jury trial over the issue of damages. Judge Fahnestock made the decision that Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC violated the FDCPA as a discovery sanction. The judge did not appreciate how PRA was evasive during the FDCPA litigation discovery.
If you have a potential FDCPA case against a debt buyer, and your experience is like mine, the majority of attorneys will advise you to take the $1,000 or $5,000 settlement offer proffered by the billion-dollar company.
I decided to take PRA on myself, pro se. I want a jury to decide what punitive damages should be charged to deter Portfolio Recovery from continuing conduct that I and the CFPB find abusive.
The Goliath company that has hundreds of in-house litigation employees and hires firms such as Rose Law, of Hillary Clinton fame, fights dirty. They lie in court.
My fight is getting easier as I collect documents from prior cases against the debt collector. Hopefully you come across this blog early in your proceedings and can be guided by the work of a few excellent attorneys who didn’t go along with the PRA program.
Here is the entire transcript of a trial for which an $83,000,000 verdict was awarded against Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC.
(PRA appealed, then reached a settlement before the appellate court made a decision.)
Spoliation and Cover-up by Portfolio Recovery Associates and Judge Lee P. Rudofsky
The jury is still out, so to speak, on the motivations for Trump appointed judge Lee P. Rudofsky to allow for Portfolio Recovery Associates to deem so much evidence in my case against them as “confidential”, and worse, to allow the evidence to be filed under seal. Turning the case into a Star Chamber is probably legal error. It definitely flies in the face of our Founding Father’s stated intent to give justice to all through a transparent legal system.
For fear of violating a court order, my report will lack my usual detail of the evidence. I feel comfortable telling you what is not in the sealed evidence.
Basic background: My claim is that the Goliath debt collector violated the FDCPA. Portfolio Recovery Associates,LLC is a wholly owned subsidiary of publicly traded PRA Group, Inc. I had no outstanding debt to them or the original creditor. PRA changed the balance on my account to zero, but only after I filed litigation against them. The FDCPA is a strict liability statute and I have a right to allow a jury to decide what the damages are. Instead of proceeding to trial, PRA filed a motion for summary judgment. The Court agreed to dismiss the majority of my claims based upon the evidence presented to the court, claiming no reasonable juror could find otherwise. Judge Rudofsky did allow me to proceed on one issue and a motion for reconsideration of the other issues, but did not allow me to discuss the evidence or lack of evidence openly with the public. This is concerning, since I showed the Federalist Society judge copies of similar evidence filed in other PRA cases.
I contend that some of the evidence is inconsistent and the company records have been altered.
Usually in a lawsuit, when one party starts shredding the evidence, the court will impose sanctions against them. But, up until recently, many courts opined that the spoliation must take place after litigation is filed. A wise appellate court justice in Massachusetts recently found how illogical this was and made the following order:
“Notice of docket entry received from Appeals Court Please take note that on January 30, 2023, the following entry was made on the docket of the above-referenced case: ORDER (RE #1): The plaintiffs JFF Cecilia LLC and Suffolk Construction Co., Inc. seek interlocutory review pursuant to G.L. c. 231, s. 118 (par. 1) of a January 6, 2023 order issued by a judge in the Business Litigation Session of the Suffolk Superior Court denying their motion for spoliation sanctions against the defendants Weiner Ventures LLC, and Stephen and Adam Weiner. As relief, the plaintiffs request that the single justice reverse the order or authorize the taking of an interlocutory appeal to a panel. ‘The doctrine of spoliation permits the imposition of sanctions and remedies where a litigant or its expert negligently or intentionally loses or destroys evidence that the litigant (or expert) knows or reasonably should know might be relevant to a possible action, even when the spoliation occurs before an action has been commenced.’ Scott v. Garfield, 454 Mass. 790, 798 (2009). Because the decision denying the motion notes the correct standard and also states that the ‘potential litigation must be probable . . . and not merely possible,’ and that the Weiners did not have an obligation to preserve evidence because ‘[a] reasonable person in the same position would, at that point, not think it very likely that they would be sued,’ I cannot tell if the judge applied the correct standard. Accordingly, the matter is remanded for the judge to determine if the defendants knew or reasonably should have known that evidence might have been relevant to a possible action. If the judge determines that the defendants spoliated evidence, they should then determine if it prejudiced the defendant. If so, they should determine if sanctions are appropriate. The order after remand is requested to be transmitted to this court within 30 days at MACClerkMatter@jud.state.ma.us. I also note that the plaintiffs request that they be permitted to present evidence of defendants’ alleged spoliation to the jury. I note that even where a judge denies a party’s motion for sanctions for spoliation, a plaintiff alleging spoliation is ‘free to argue that a trier of fact should hold the [defendant’s] failure to return [the documents] against the [defendant].’ Zaleskas v. Brigham & Women’s Hosp., 97 Mass. App. Ct. 55, 76 (2020). (Henry, J.) *Notice/attest/Salinger, J.”
Why have so many of the thousands of attorneys who have filed FDCPA cases against Portfolio Recovery Associates LLC and other junk debt buyers failed to question the practice of credit card companies and their successors of destroying the record before it is needed for litigation, even though there is a good probability that the documents will be needed?
In the cases connected to the collection of debt that are brought by the debt collectors, which vastly outnumber the cases against the debt collectors, the debt collector is tasked with producing enough documentation to verify the debt. Unfortunately judges like Lee P. Rudofsky hold the alleged debtor responsible for proving that the debt was either a clerical error or a fraudulent transaction, even though the old account level documentation was destroyed by the original creditor or its successors, and the statute of limitations for being sued on the debt has expired.
In my case, Portfolio Recovery took their destruction of evidence a step further. The records produced are not consistent. It is clear. A person of limited intelligence can look at one document and see that an event was documented and look at another document that covers the same time period and see that there is no indication of the same event.
Someone who has way too much time on their hands can look at my request for production of documents and see that certain documents requested were not produced on the open record. One of these is the company policy manuals. The public cannot look through my case file and learn what Portfolio Recovery Associates policies and procedures are. The public will not know from this case whether or not PRA representatives are required to log each time they make a phone call or not. The public will not know from this case whether or not PRA complies with 26 CFR section 1.6050P by issuing a 1099-C whenever it cancels debt, heeding the warning found in the IRS instructions, “Do not file Form 1099-C when fraudulent debt is canceled due to identity theft. Form 1099-C is to be used only for cancellations of debts for which the debtor actually incurred the underlying debt.”
PRA attorney from the firm of Troutman Sanders, LLP said in open court that PRA did not issue a 1099-C to me “in light of the litigation” but that should not be admissible as evidence because lawyers’ statements are not testimony. Because Judge Rudofsky hid most of the evidence from public scrutiny, when I report to the IRS, I can only tell them what happened to me, not what is in the record. That I did not receive a 1099-C ever in my life, but I had lawyers for Portfolio Recovery Associates LLC say there was a valid, not fraudulent debt and PRA waived it. Oh, and they waived it without including their largesse as part of a settlement.
Jury Awarded $82,000,000 Punitive Damages Against Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC. It Didn’t Stop Them.
Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC buys junk debt for pennies on the dollar, and then the army of attorneys file about 3,000 lawsuits per week against alleged debtors, knowing 90% won’t even go to court to protect themselves. PRA takes a default and starts garnishing bank accounts and wages. They even settled a claim by the attorney general of Massachusetts who said that the company took old folk’s pensions.
Some people might owe the alleged debts. It does not matter to PRA though whether the debt is a clerical error or the result of fraud. According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, hundreds of thousands of people fall victim to PRA’s impermissible collection of inauthentic debt each year.
Federal District Court Judge Lee P. Rudofsky is presiding over a case in the Eastern District of Arkansas in which I am plaintiff against Portfolio Recovery Associates. It is not looking too good for me. I know I should win. I have known since before discovery and two years of research that I should win. But Judge Rudofsky already dismissed the vast majority of my claims on a motion for summary judgment.
I recently was dismissed as a defendant in a case where the plaintiff’s attorney, judge and court reporter fabricated hearing dialogue. Portfolio Recovery recently agreed to pay $12M in restitution and $12M in a civil fine for violating the same statutes against hundreds of thousands of victims that I claim they violated against me. So, why not believe them more than he believes me?
All I am asking for is to present my case to a jury. Another PRA victim sued the company in 2015 and was awarded $82M in punitive damages on top of $250,000 in actual damages and $1,000 in statutory damages. PRA appealed. The case was remanded after settlement and before the appellate court issued an opinion based on the briefs.
You can scroll down to download the original version of the trial court order below. The footnotes were deleted or made part of the text body in this cut and pasted version. I added a few comments of my own in straight parenthesis or red.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF JACKSON COUNTY, MISSOURI
AT KANSAS CITY
PORTFOLIO RECOVERY
ASSOCIATES, LLC, A LIMITED
LIABILITY COMPANY,
Plaintiff/Counterclaim Defendant,
Case No. 1216-CV34184
v. Division 9
GUADALUPE MEJIA,
Defendant/Counterclaim Plaintiff.
JUDGMENT/ORDER
Pending before the Court is Counterclaim Defendant Portfolio Recovery Associates,
LLC’s (“Defendant’s”) Motion For Judgment Notwithstanding The Verdict, Or In The
Alternative, To Amend, Modify, And/Or Remit The Judgment. The Motion is denied.
Background
On October 31, 2014, this Court entered Judgment for the Plaintiff on her malicious
prosecution counterclaim and her Fair Debt Collections Practices Act (“FDCPA”) counterclaim
and ordered that trial proceed on damages only. On May 4, 2015, this case came before the
Court for trial on damages only. On May 11, 2015, the jury awarded Maria Guadalupe Mejia
Alcantara (“Plaintiff”) $250,000.00 in compensatory damages and $1,000.00 in statutory
damages on her FDCPA claim. The jury also awarded her $250.000.00 in compensatory damages on her malicious prosecution claim and found Portfolio liable for punitive damages.
After further deliberation, the jury awarded $82,009,549.00 in punitive damages.
Following trial, the Court entered Judgment in favor of Plaintiff and against Defendant
for punitive damages in the amount of $82,009,549.00, compensatory damages in the amount of
$250,000.00, statutory damages in the amount of $1,000.00. The Court further awarded Plaintiff
attorney’s fees and expenses as follows: (a) actual damages in the amount of $9,995.00 for the
attorney’s fees associated with the her defense; (b) attorney’s fees in the amount of $276,025.00
under the FDCPA; and (c) expenses in the amount of $33,222.97 under the FDCPA.
The pending motion was timely filed and contains numerous issues. The Motion is
denied, but the Court will specifically address the Defendant’s request for review of the jury’s
punitive damage award.
The Court acknowledges the purpose of punitive damages is to serve the State’s interest
in punishment and deterrence, and that these interests cannot be served unless potential
defendants have fair notice, not only of the conduct that will subject them to punishment, but
also of the severity of the penalty that a State may impose. “The decision to punish a tortfeasor
through an award of punitive damages is an exercise of state power that must comply with the
Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and with
Article I, section 10, of the Missouri Constitution.” Mansfield v. Horner, 443 S.W.3d 627, 643
(Mo. Ct. App. 2014) (internal quotations and citations omitted).
Thus, the Court must review the punitive damage award to determine whether it is
“grossly excessive.” Id. Such analysis includes review of three guideposts: 1) the degree of
reprehensibility of a defendant’s conduct, 2) the ratio of the punitive award to the actual and
potential harm from the defendant’s wrongdoing, and 3) the criminal and regulatory sanctions for
comparable misconduct. BMW of North America v. Gore, 517 U.S. 559, 574-75 (1996).
[Such as the 2015 civil fine against PRA for $8,000,000 and the agreement to pay a civil fine of $12,000,000 made on March 23, 2023.]
Guidepost One
“The most important indicium of the reasonableness of a punitive damages award is the
degree of reprehensibility of the defendant’s conduct.” State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v.
Campbell, 538 U.S. 408, 419 (2003) (internal quotation and citation omitted). The Supreme
Court suggested several factors should be considered when determining reprehensibility of
conduct: “the harm caused was physical as opposed to economic; the tortious conduct evinced an
indifference to or a reckless disregard of the health or safety of others; the target of the conduct
had financial vulnerability; the conduct involved repeated actions or was an isolated incident;
and the harm was the result of intentional malice, trickery, or deceit, or mere accident.” Id. at 419
(citation omitted).
Here, although the potential harm to the Plaintiff may be considered economic, there was evidence Defendant’s conduct had a physical and health-related impact on this particular Plaintiff, her financial vulnerability was particularly concerning. Plaintiff, although working, was in financial distress. She spoke limited English. She did not understand the legal system and had no
financial ability to hire an attorney. She was afraid she would lose all she had worked for – her
home of twenty years, her family, and her freedom. And, throughout this litigation, Defendant
preyed upon those fears. Further, Defendant’s conduct “involved repeated actions” in many
respects.
From the beginning of the litigation, Defendant attempted to use the fact Plaintiff had no
social security number to intimidate her. Defendant represented to the Court and Plaintiff it
could not mount a defense to Plaintiff’s claims or dismiss its claim against her until her social security number was revealed.
[In my case, PRA is well aware that I have had biased judges make Draconian orders against me and that I dread fighting anymore of my own cases without an attorney to represent me.]
Eventually it was discovered an attorney had disclosed to Defendant, before Plaintiff filed her counterclaim, Plaintiff had no social security number. And at trial, evidence established Defendant resolved claims, in many instances, without disclosure of
a social security number.
[PRA demanded that I tell them the last four digits of my social security number before they would tell me what company was calling me.]
Defendant repeatedly was put on notice Plaintiff was not the correct person, but pressed
forward with the lawsuit against her anyway. To locate the debtor account holder, Defendant
relied on a Lexis Nexis search of a very common Hispanic name – the accuracy of which was
specifically disclaimed. Defendant was warned it should independently verify the information.
Defendant’s collection law firm, Gamache and Meyers, P.C., reviewed an Experian report that
did not verify Plaintiff’s address, and in fact, indicated a Kansas address.
The day after the collection suit was served on Plaintiff, she appeared at legal aid
distraught and crying. Suzanne Gladney, a practicing attorney for thirty-seven years, testified
she spoke to three people at Gamache and Meyers and told them they had the wrong person,
gave them identifying details about Plaintiff (she lived in Missouri, owned her home, never had a
credit card) and attempted to fax to the law firm Plaintiff’s passport, which the firm refused. She
told them Plaintiff did not have a social security number, and Gladney attempted to obtain the
fraud affidavit Defendant wanted filled out. In response, Defendant arrived in Court prepared to
seek a default judgment against Plaintiff.
[PRA and Judge Rudofsky faulted me for not filling out the fraud affidavit presented to me, as if filling it out would make one bit of difference.]
As the lawsuit progressed, Defendant obtained account documents showing credit card
payments were being made on the account from the Kansas address, as opposed to Plaintiff’s
address.
[The account documents in my case did not even show where any purchase was made. For the first eight months of litigation PRA claimed there were no statements at all. Then they claimed to find the “charge-off statement” but did not produce any statements that showed payments or purchases. It seems likely that PRA has those statements, and they would show that the charges were made by some other “Laura Lynn”, someone named “Laura Lyman” whom PRA named on one letter it addressed to me, or one of my less than honest exes. Like, if the charge was made at a brothel in Nevada while I was at a family function in Los Angeles, it was probably made by the fraudster Mike Pietrczak who wrote that his lawsuit against me was part of a fraudulent scheme.]
Plaintiff denied the debt in her Answer and responded, under oath, to interrogatories,
document requests, and requests for admissions (63 questions but ironically Defendant did not
request Plaintiff’s date of birth or social security number) providing even more personal
information establishing Plaintiff was not the debtor Defendant was seeking. But, Defendant
continued to pursue its suit.
At trial, Defendant admitted it maintained its lawsuit against Plaintiff, not merely to
collect the $1,137.14 credit card debt owed, but because she filed a counterclaim.
[PRA attorney James Trefil of Troutman Pepper said it zeroed out my balance “in light of” the lawsuit I filed.]
When Defendant did dismiss the case against Plaintiff, it did so “without prejudice” and threatened to
refile against her even though it had no reason to question her and the conclusive evidence she
was not the debtor.
[PRA said it waived the alleged debt against me, but, after seeing how partial Judge Rudofsky was to them, tried to intimidate me into confessing to the debt.]
Defendant testified through its attorneys and corporate representative that its business
model did not include independent investigation of an accused’s claim she did not owe the debt
at any point from purchase of the debt to litigation – even if legitimate concerns were raised. It
maintained it is the wrongly accused’s burden to dispute the debt, prove it is not theirs, and
provide to Defendant personal information.
[And Judge Rudofsky agrees with PRA.]
Defendant testified the fault for the present litigation was Plaintiff’s. Defendant made no apologies, testified its policies were sound, and no changes were anticipated.
[All the while, as in my case, PRA was negotiating with the CFPB to curtail its miscreant conduct.]
Throughout the case, Defendant demonstrated a disrespect for the law. Numerous
discovery abuses resulted in the Court sanctioning Defendant. Defendant argued at trial, had
Plaintiff merely filled out a “fraud affidavit,” the case could have been resolved.
[Pff.]
However, that fraud affidavit would have required Plaintiff to perjure herself, a fact communicated to
Defendant through Plaintiff’s counsel.
[PRA did not tell me anything about where or on what my alleged debt was incurred; they wanted me to swear under penalty of perjury who I suspected made the charge. I mean, come on guys, give me a little hint here.]
During trial, collection counsel testified about a manufactured letter, supposedly representative of a letter sent to Gladney, but containing an address different than the address provided by Gladney. Counsel acknowledged that the original should have been maintained but was “lost.”
[PRA has a bit of practice now. Since there was no Old Account Level Documentation on my account, PRA “found” a statement eight months after their investigation was supposedly “completed”.]
Evidence was presented establishing Plaintiff’s experience was not an isolated incident.
Brian Logan, an active member of the military, was harassed for years by the Defendant until he
complained to the Missouri Attorney General’s Office. He offered to fill out a fraud affidavit
and when he provided his address for that purpose, he received only bills and no fraud affidavit.
Defendant accused Logan’s wife of having an affair as an explanation for the existence of the
account.
Dr. Ronald Harstad and his wife were harassed and berated by Defendant even though
he disputed the debt in writing. His hiring of an attorney and filing of a counterclaim finally
ended the matter, and he did not have to fill out a fraud affidavit. Evidence showed Defendant
receives more complaints than any debt buyer in Missouri. And, at least 375 mistaken identity
claims have been raised against Defendant. These claims were the subject of discovery abuse litigation. The Court read an adverse
inference instruction because it was determined Defendant never did provide all the claims
discovery as ordered by the Court.
[Portfolio Recovery did not tell me who provided their phone service and Judge Rudofsky acted like their own notes would suffice as evidence of when and how many calls they made to me.]
Based on the evidence before it, the Court finds
Defendant’s conduct to be intentional and malicious.
Guidepost Two
In awarding punitive damages, “courts must ensure that the measure of punishment is
both reasonable and proportionate to the amount of harm to the plaintiff and to the general
damages recovered.” Campbell, 538 U.S. at 426. The Court has repeatedly rejected that the
difference between a reasonable and grossly excessive award can be determined by “a simple
mathematical formula, even one that compares actual and potential damages to the punitive
award.” Id. at 424-25 (internal quotation and citation omitted). And, while the Supreme Court
noted “[s]ingle-digit multipliers are more likely to comport with due process, while still
achieving the State’s goals of deterrence and retribution, than awards with ratios in range of 500
to 1,” id. at 425 (citation omitted), due process may still be satisfied by a higher ratio where “a
particularly egregious act has resulted in only a small amount of economic damages,” id.
(citation omitted), or “where the injury is hard to detect or the monetary value of noneconomic
harm might have been difficult to determine.” Gore, 517 U.S. at 582.
Where larger discrepancies between the size of the compensatory damages and punitive
damages have been allowed, the Court has relied on the idea that they must weigh the actual and
potential harm to the plaintiff the defendant’s conduct caused. See TXO Prod. v. Alliance Res.
Corp., 509 U.S. 443, 460 (1993) ($19,000 in actual damages and $10 million in punitive
damages, a 526-to-1 ratio, for slander of title); see also, Lynn v. TNT Logistics N. Am. Inc., 275
S.W.3d 304, 311-13 (Mo. Ct. App. 2008) (9 to 1 ratio applied by the trial court too low to punish
and deter a defendant; 75 to 1 ratio applied); Estate of Overbey v. Chad Franklin Nat’l Auto
Sales, 361 S.W.3d 364, 373 (Mo. 2012) (ratio of 111 to 1 upheld); Lewellen v. Franklin, 441
S.W.3d 136 (Mo. 2014) (double-digit ratio endorsed after considering defendant’s lack of
remorse, refusal to rectify reckless practices, and refusal to comply with discovery); Smith v.
New Plaza Pontiac Co., 677 S.W.2d 941 (Mo. Ct. App. 1984) ($400 in actual and $30,000 in
punitive damages, a 75-to-1 ratio, for making misrepresentations about the condition of a used
car); Kemp v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co., 393 F.3d 1354 (11th Cir. 2004) ($115 in compensatory
damages and $250,000 in punitive damages, a 2,172-to-1 ratio, for fraudulent billing practices);
Parrott v. Carr Chevrolet, Inc., 107 P.3d 473 (Or. 2001) ($11,496 in compensatory damages and
$1 million in punitive damages, an 86-to-1 ratio, for misrepresentations related to the sale of a
vehicle). Here, the Court finds the Defendant’s actions are particularly egregious. After review
of the jury’s awards and the evidence before the Court, the measure of punishment is both
reasonable and proportionate to the amount of harm and potential harm to the plaintiff and to the
general damages recovered.
Guidepost Three
“A reviewing court engaged in determining whether an award of punitive damages is
excessive should ‘accord ‘substantial deference’ to legislative judgments concerning appropriate
sanctions for the conduct at issue. ’” BMW of North America, Inc., 517 U.S. 559, 583 (1996)
(quoting Browning–Ferris Industries of Vt., Inc. v. Kelco Disposal, Inc., 492 U.S. 257, 301
(1989)) (O’Connor, J., opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part). There are no
comparable criminal penalties to be considered here.
Conclusion
The Court finds the harm to Plaintiff was the result of intentional malice and not mere
accident. This Defendant owns debt in all 50 states – 750,000 accounts in Missouri, 37,500 of
which are in litigation. It shows no remorse. It’s business model is irresponsible and preys
against the financially vulnerable. The Court does not intend to make any comment on the debt buying industry generally and is
limiting its analysis to the evidence presented in this case about this Defendant.
This Defendant does not respect the Court’s rules. And,
especially reprehensible is Defendant’s use and abuse of our court system to harm the Plaintiff.
Under the facts presented in this case, the Court cannot find that the jury’s punitive damage
award – equating to half of Defendant’s net profits for one year – is grossly excessive. The Court is not relying on the wealth of the Defendant to justify the award, but rather the reprehensibility of Defendant’s conduct.
It is hereby ORDERED Counterclaim Defendant Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC’s Motion For
Judgment Notwithstanding The Verdict, Or In The Alternative, To Amend, Modify, And/Or
Remit The Judgment is denied.
JOEL P. FAHNESTOCK, JUDGE
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
This is to certify that a copy of the foregoing was hand delivered/faxed/emailed/mailed and/or sent
through the eFiling system to the following on 4th day of November, 2015:
EDWARD J. MYERS, Attorney for Plaintiff, GAMACHE & MYERS PC, 1000 CAMERA AVE – STE
A, SAINT LOUIS, MO 63126, (314) 835-6604, EdwardMyers@GMCollects.com
GINA MARIE CHIALA, Attorney for Defendant, 1627 MAIN STREET, SUITE 900, KANSAS CITY,
MO 64108, (816) 531-2147, GinaChiala@jobsandfreedom.org
SUNMIN JEREMIAH HONG, Attorney for Plaintiff, 231 S BEMISTON AVE, SUITE 1111, ST LOUIS,
MO 63105,
DALE K IRWIN, Attorney for Defendant, SLOUGH CONNEALY IRWIN, & MADDEN LLC, 1627
MAIN STREET, SUITE 900, KANSAS CITY, MO 64108, (816) 531-2147, dirwin@scimlaw.com
JOSHUA C DICKINSON, Attorney for Plaintiff, 1000 WALNUT ST STE 1400, KANSAS CITY, MO
64106, (816) 474-3216, jdickinson@spencerfane.com
KERSTEN LEIGH HOLZHUETER, Attorney for Plaintiff, SPENCER FANE BRITT & BROWN LLP,
1000 WALNUT STREET, SUITE 1400, KANSAS CITY, MO 64106, (816) 474-3216,
FRED L SLOUGH, Attorney for 3rd Party, SLOUGH CONNEALY IRWIN & MADDEN, 1627 MAIN
SUITE 900, KANSAS CITY, MO 64108, (816) 531-2147, fslough@scimlaw.com
ELIZABETH C CARVER, Attorney for Plaintiff, BRYAN CAVE 3600, 211 N BROADWAY, ST
LOUIS, MO 63102-2733,
ROBERT M. THOMPSON, Attorney for Plaintiff, ONE KANSAS CITY PLACE, 1200 MAIN ST, STE
3800, KANSAS CITY, MO 64105, (816) 855-3233, rmthompson@bryancave.com
Law Clerk, Division 9
Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC Caught Again
This is a press release from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. I am suing PRA for violating the FDCPA on an alleged debt against me. Thus far, Cornell and Harvard educated Federal District Court Judge Lee P. Rudofsky has swallowed every lie told by PRA’s attorneys from Rose Law Firm and Troutman Pepper, hook line and sinker.
CFPB Orders Repeat Offender Portfolio Recovery Associates to Pay More Than $24 Million for Continued Illegal Debt Collection Practices and Consumer Reporting Violations
Debt collection giant filed lawsuits even when it lacked documentation about the debt
MAR 23, 2023
SHARE & PRINT
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) took action today against Portfolio Recovery Associates, one of the largest debt collectors in the nation, for violating a 2015 CFPB order and engaging in other violations of law. The CFPB filed a proposed order today that, if entered by the court, would require Portfolio Recovery Associates to pay more than $12 million to consumers harmed by its illegal debt collection practices, in addition to a $12 million penalty that would be deposited into the CFPB’s victims relief fund. Portfolio Recovery Associates violated the 2015 order by collecting on unsubstantiated debt, collecting on debt without providing required documentation and disclosures to consumers, suing or threatening legal action against consumers without offering or possessing required documentation, and suing to collect on debt outside the statute of limitations. Portfolio Recovery Associates also failed to properly investigate and resolve consumer disputes about the company’s credit reporting. Today’s action is one of many actions the CFPB has recently taken to hold repeat offenders accountable.
“After getting caught red-handed in 2015, Portfolio Recovery Associates continued violating the law through intimidation, deception, and illegal debt collection tactics and lawsuits,” said CFPB Director Rohit Chopra. “CFPB orders are not suggestions, and companies cannot ignore them simply because they are large or dominant in the market.”
Portfolio Recovery Associates is a wholly-owned subsidiary of publicly traded PRA Group (NASDAQ: PRAA), and is one of the largest debt collectors in the United States. The company’s principal headquarters is in Norfolk, Virginia. PRA Group reported net income of over $183 million in 2021.
In September 2015, the CFPB ordered Portfolio Recovery Associates to pay more than $27 million in consumer refunds and penalties for deceptive debt collection tactics. In that case, the CFPB found that Portfolio Recovery Associates collected on unsubstantiated debt, filed misleading affidavits in debt-collection actions, misrepresented that it intended to prove debts if consumers contested them, and misrepresented that the company had legally enforceable claims to debts outside of the applicable statutes of limitations.
The 2015 order required Portfolio Recovery Associates to adhere to provisions including prohibitions on:
- Collecting debts without a reasonable basis,
- Selling debt,
- Threatening or filing collection lawsuits without an intent to prove the debt,
- Filing false or misleading affidavits in debt-collection actions,
- Making false or misleading representations, and
- Collecting or suing on debt that was outside the statute of limitations.
In today’s complaint, the CFPB charged Portfolio Recovery Associates with violating numerous requirements of the 2015 order during the five-year period the order was in effect and engaging in deceptive conduct in violation of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act and the Consumer Financial Protection Act, including:
- Making representations about unsubstantiated debts: Portfolio Recovery Associates made at least tens of thousands of representations about unsubstantiated, disputed debts, failing to review the required documentation to support the claim.
- Threatening consumers with potential legal actions and initiating debt collection lawsuits without offering or possessing required documentation: Portfolio Recovery Associates’ lawyers sent millions of form letters to consumers notifying them of potential legal action without offering to provide all required documents. Portfolio Recovery Associates also initiated thousands of legal actions against consumers when it lacked proper documentation about the debt.
- Misrepresenting that it would provide certain documents within thirty days: The form letter notifying consumers of potential legal action stated that, upon receipt of a written request from the consumer, Portfolio Recovery Associates would provide within 30 days of request the proof of documentation mentioned in the letter. On numerous occasions, Portfolio Recovery Associates failed to timely provide these documents after receiving a consumer’s written request for them. This impeded consumers’ ability to determine whether a debt was truly owed and how they should respond to allegations of outstanding debts.
- Collecting on time-barred debt without making required disclosures: On numerous occasions, Portfolio Recovery Associates did not provide the required disclosures to consumers when collecting on debts beyond the statute of limitations. When the company purchased debt, it estimated the statute of limitations that governed the debt, and in some cases that date was later than the actual statute of limitations.
- Suing to collect on time-barred debt: Portfolio Recovery Associates initiated at least dozens of lawsuits for debt that was too old to legally enforce. In doing so, Portfolio Recovery Associates falsely represented that those consumers had legally enforceable obligations to pay those debts when in fact they did not because the debt was outside the statute of limitations.
The CFPB also alleges that Portfolio Recovery Associates committed numerous violations of the Fair Credit Reporting Act and its implementing Regulation V, which include:
- Failing to inform consumers about investigation outcomes: On numerous occasions when Portfolio Recovery Associates determined that a consumer’s dispute was frivolous or irrelevant, it failed to timely inform the consumer about what information would be necessary for Portfolio Recovery Associates to investigate the dispute.
- Failing to timely resolve disputes: On at least tens of thousands of occasions, Portfolio Recovery Associates failed to resolve disputes within the required time.
- Conducting unreasonable investigations: On numerous occasions when a consumer alleged fraud or identify theft, Portfolio Recovery Associates did not conduct a sufficient investigation that considered all necessary information.
Enforcement Action
Under the CFPA, the CFPB has the authority to take action against institutions violating consumer financial laws, including engaging in unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts or practices. The CFPB alleges that Portfolio Recovery Associates violated the 2015 order, the CFPA’s prohibition on deceptive conduct, the FDCPA, FCRA, and Regulation V.
If entered by the court, the order would require Portfolio Recovery Associates to:
- Provide redress to consumers: Portfolio Recovery Associates would pay at least $12.18 million to consumers harmed by its illegal collection practices.
- Clean up its faulty operations: The order prohibits Portfolio Recovery Associates from collecting debts unless it has access to certain documents that meet its obligation to have a reasonable basis to believe it is collecting debts that consumers actually owe.
- Fix its failures to properly respond to consumers: The order requires Portfolio Recovery Associates to improve their response when consumers report that they do not owe a debt because of fraud or identity theft. And it ensures that Portfolio Recovery Associates adequately responds to consumer disputes in a timely manner about information Portfolio Recovery Associates has furnished to consumer reporting agencies.
- Pay $12 million in penalties: Portfolio Recovery Associates would pay a $12 million penalty to the CFPB, which would be deposited into the CFPB’s victims relief fund.
Read the 2015 order against Portfolio Recovery Associates.
In December, the CFPB proposed a new registry to help detect and deter repeat offenders like Portfolio Recovery Associates. The public can submit comments on the proposal until March 31, 2023.
If you or someone you know needs help dealing with a debt collector, the CFPB publishes resources on how to protect your legal rights and navigate your financial future.
Consumers can submit complaints about financial products or services by visiting the CFPB’s website or by calling (855) 411-CFPB (2372).
Employees of companies who they believe their company has violated federal consumer financial laws are encouraged to send information about what they know to whistleblower@cfpb.gov.###
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is a 21st century agency that helps consumer finance markets work by making rules more effective, by consistently and fairly enforcing those rules, and by empowering consumers to take more control over their economic lives. For more information, visit www.consumerfinance.gov.
Amicus Briefs Encouraged by Judge Rudofsky
A week got away from me without the time to cheer for Judge Lee P. Rudofsky and his fantastic idea. No really. This is not said sarcastically.
Unlike Judge Susan Kaye Weaver, Judge Rudofsky is not pure evil. He has some fine qualities. One is a brilliant mind.
He is so smart, in fact, that when he makes an error, I question whether he is playing dumb like a fox. How can someone so smart get it so wrong, unless the error is intentional?
He came out with an order on March 21, 2023 in which he gets it all right. See the entire order in the Judge’s words posted below.
Basically, this is an invitation to encourage attorneys to write amicus briefs for non-clients, pro-bono at the Federal District Court.
Amicus means “friend”. The Amicus Brief is not written by a litigant or the litigant’s attorney; it is written by a “friend of the court”. This is a practice that is common at the circuit courts and the Supreme Court, but it is done rarely at the district court.
The reason I am excited about this new tool for litigants is that most pro se litigants don’t have the money to hire an attorney and in all but limited kinds of civil cases, most attorneys will not work on contingency.
If the case involves an important issue, an attorney may agree to get involved for the one specific task of writing an amicus brief.
For example, I brought a pro se case against a debt buyer named Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC in the Eastern District of Arkansas. Judge Rudofsky is presiding.
One claim I made was that the debt collection activity was “outrageous”. Judge Rudofsky said no reasonable juror could agree with me and dismissed the claim at the motion for summary judgment stage. Had someone from the CFPB or Institute for Justice been able to submit a brief, it might have carried more weight for the argument that the legislature enacted the FDCPA to deter debt collectors from PRA’s exact conduct, and that PRA is a repeat offender that knows it is doing wrong. A licensed attorney should be able to present argument better than I can. And it always helps to have extra eyes on the case.
Though the decision on my case will not set precedence, it will be persuasive. Judges often rely on what another judge or even what he himself did previously to rule the same way again, even if it does not comport with statutory text written by the legislature. It seems like attorneys who represent plaintiffs in similar cases would want other plaintiffs to prevail, paving the way for more and grander awards.
Attorneys for Portfolio Recovery Associates Lie
When an attorney signs a court document or contributes to the advocacy of that document, the attorney is certifying that “the denials of factual contentions are warranted on the evidence or, if specifically so identified, are reasonably based on belief or a lack of information.” This is found in Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 11, and most state courts have a similar rule.
I am not an attorney, this is not legal advice, but what it means to me is that an attorney is not allowed to knowingly lie on court documents.
I filed a lawsuit against a debt collector named Portfolio Recovery Associates LLC because PRA called me hundreds of times from neighbor spoofing telephone numbers, wouldn’t say the company name or what it was about unless I agreed to a tape-recorded interrogation beforehand, and (not that it should matter), I did not owe the alleged debt they were calling about.
Attorneys for Portfolio Recovery, David Mitchell from Rose Law Firm in Arkansas, John “Jed” Komisin and James Trefil of Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders in Virginia responded by saying, among other lies, that I owed $2,297.63 when the calls were made and that PRA waived the debt “in light of” the litigation I filed.
This is preposterous on its face. Why would a debt collector waive a debt because someone filed a lawsuit and not use the waiver as a bargaining chip for a settlement? They wouldn’t.
Interestingly, a Trump appointed judge named Lee P. Rudofsky accepted the silly lie by PRA’s attorneys as true.
At the time the lawyers wrote and filed their lie, PRA had no documentation of the alleged debt. They did not even produce the alledged portfolio that allegedly had a single line item on a list of millions of debts. PRA could never find documentation of what or where a purchase was made with the credit card associated with the account. They could find no contract between me and the credit card company that they were willing to share. (That may be because the credit card agreement, if it existed, had an arbitration clause and PRA does not like to arbitrate against self-represented litigants.)
The first form letter PRA sent to me which showed a balance of zero had someone else’s name and account number on it. Supposedly there was a clerical error inputting data. Does anyone else see the irony? Attorneys are defending the legitimacy of an alleged debt and in the same breath, claiming there was a simple data entry error made on the account, where someone else’s data was swapped in for the data on my account.
Portfolio Recovery is notorious for trying to collect debts from portfolios they and their attorneys know are riddled with errors.
The CFPB has obtained multi-million-dollar settlements against PRA for the exact conduct. In fact, the debt they tried to collect from me was from one of the portfolios that resulted in a settlement in 2015. After this post was originally written, PRA settled with the CFPB for another $24 Million for allegations that PRA violated the 2015 consent agreement against hundreds of thousands of people.
The problem is plaintiff’s attorneys are not willing to take Fair Debt Collection Practices Act cases to trial. They encourage the victims to settle for a pittance. I am posting one settlement of a class action against PRA below. The 74 class members received about $135 each. The attorneys requested $25,000 for themselves as fees.
Until the debt collector is required to pay significant punitive damages for its conduct, it will not comply with the law and the attorneys will continue to lie in court, inflicting even more emotional distress on the victims. The 2015 settlement had a punitive element of $8,000,000. That did not stop PRA from repeat offending. The 2023 settlement had a $12,000,000 fine. But PRA still refuses to come clean on our case and let a jury decide what it is worth based on the facts.
My suggestion, if you are receiving calls where the caller says “this is John Smith calling for Your Name” and then asks you to verify your identity by answering questions like your birthdate and address, tape record the calls. The newly activated “Regulation F” requires debt collectors to abide by a verbal cease and desist request if their communication is verbal. Record your calls because PRA lies about how many times they called a person. Take screen shots of calls coming to your phone. Call the numbers back and record the message that tells you whose phone you are calling.
Document, document, document.
You may be able to file a suit on your own behalf by using an existing suit as a template. Otherwise, you can go to the CFPB and contribute to the next action the government agency takes against PRA. If you have solid evidence that the defense attorneys lied on their documents, you may be able to win a motion for sanctions according to Rule 11. A better option is reporting the unethical conduct to the State Committee on Professional conduct AKA the Bar.
Don’t let these guys bully you. Get loud.
Punctuation matters. Period. End of story.
If this conduct by Goliath debt buyer Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC and Trump appointed Judge Lee P. Rudofsky was not so evil, it would be humorous.
So, I’ll start with one of my dad’s favorite jokes.
He wrote words on a piece of paper exactly like this:
Sex Sex Sex
Worry Worry Worry
Then he told his audience to punctuate the words correctly.
You try.
Sex Sex Sex
Worry Worry Worry
Should I help you?
Sex. Sex. Sex
Worry Worry Worry
Speak the punctuation outloud.
Sex, period, Sex, period, sex, no period. Worry Worry Worry. lol
Seriously, the placement of a single period or comma can change the meaning of a sentence completely.
For example, there is a case Portfolio Recovery loves called Facebook, Inc. v Duguid. The U.S. Supreme Court decided that dialing systems like those used by Portfolio Recovery are not an “auto dialer” subjecting their obnoxious calls to the TCPA. The decision is 13 pages long, focused primarily on the placement of a comma in the Telephone Consumer Protection Act statute.
“When interpreting a statute, a qualifying phrase separated from antecedents by a comma is evidence that the qualifier is supposed to apply to all the antecedents instead of only to the immediately preceding one.” Facebook, Inc. v. Duguid, 209 L. Ed. 2d 272, 141 S. Ct. 1163 (2021)
If you don’t fear death by boredom, read this entire paragraph: “(a) This case turns on whether the clause ‘using a random or sequential number generator’ in § 227(a)(1)(A) modifies both of the two verbs that precede it (‘store’ and ‘produce’), as Facebook contends, or only the closest one (‘produce’), as maintained by Duguid. The most natural reading of the text and other aspects of § 227(a)(1)(A) confirm Facebook’s view. First, in an ordinary case, the ‘series-qualifier canon’ instructs that a modifier at the end of a series of nouns or verbs applies to the entire series. Here, that canon indicates that the modifying phrase ‘using a random or sequential number generator’ qualifies both antecedent verbs, ‘store’ and ‘produce.’ Second, the modifying phrase immediately follows a concise, integrated clause (‘store or produce telephone numbers to be called’), which uses the word ‘or’ to connect two verbs that share a common direct object (‘telephone numbers to be called’). Given this structure, it would be odd to apply the modifier to just one part of the cohesive clause. Third, the comma in § 227(a)(1)(A) separating the modifying phrase from the antecedents suggests that the qualifier applies to all of the antecedents, instead of just the nearest one. Pp. 1168 – 1170.” Ok, WAKE UP!
Judge Rudofsky created a “fact” in my litigation against Portfolio Recovery Associates by claiming that I admitted to owing a debt to PRA. He based that “fact” in major part on a sentence he claimed I wrote.
“I am a consumer in respect to any debt incurred by me on
a credit card issued by Capital One Bank (USA) in or about 2001.” – see footnote 463 on the consolidated order granting PRA’s motion for summary judgment.
The actual sentence I wrote: “I am a consumer in respect to any debt incurred by me on a credit card issued by Capital One Bank (USA) in or about 2001, as I used any credit card to purchase household items, food and other consumer items.”
I could have said “I am a consumer in respect to any debt incurred by me on a credit card issued by Capital One Bank (USA) in or about 2001, as I had not borrowed money for business prior to 2013 when PRA allegedly bought the alleged debt.” Still, Judge Rudofsky would still truncate the sentence without indicating the clause removed.
I explained this in a later document, my opposition to PRA’s supplemental motion for summary judgment. I accidentally attributed the misquotation to the defendant instead of the judge. It is so difficult to remember who said something when the judge is creating arguments for a favored litigant.
Yesterday, PRA filed an opposition to my motion for reconsideration or alternatively to compel production of the credit card agreement that was necessary to create an obligation to pay. PRA admitted there is no record of an agreement, written or oral.
Unbelievable as it may seem, PRA repeated Judge Rudofsky’s misquotation of the sentence. But, like a child who looks around furtively and then interjects another lie to try to cover-up for its previous lie, PRA added two characters around the period. “[.]” Here is PRA’s version of the sentence:
“I am a consumer in respect to any debt incurred by me on a credit card issued by Capital One Bank (USA) in or about 2001[.]”
OOOOhhh… Lawyers James Trefil of Troutman Pepper and David Mitchell of Rose Law Firm were trying to not lie. The straight parentheses mean something was changed. They changed the comma to a period. But a person filing documents is subject to Rule 11, that they reasonably believe what they write is accurate. The change PRA made by straight parentheses is not accurate.
For instance, if quoting case law that says “Facebook, inc. is right” the filer writes “[Duguid] is right”, the filer has made a statement he knows is false. Otherwise, lawyers would riddle their points and authorities with straight parentheses that change the meaning of the caselaw completely. Don’t like caselaw? Just change “shall” to “[may]”.
Clever, clever children.
If you had a period after the last “sex”, you might not need the worry, worry, worry, either.
Looking for Plaintiffs Against Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC to Inform the CFPB
My most recent settlement proposal to Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC is posted below.
I would like to discuss any unethical litigation practices PRA’s team of attorneys used against you in response to your complaint of violations of the Federal Debt Collection Practices Act, AKA FDCPA, and Regulation F.
The Debt Buyers excuse for lying in court seems to be that litigation where the debt collector is defendant is not subject to the same rules of honest conduct and fair dealing as in litigation where Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC is suing you.
Leave a comment or email your opinion to me. Thank you.
February 15, 2023
Dear Counsel,
I am bringing my settlement offer back to $1,000,000.
First, there was a recent award of damages based on abusive litigation practices similar to yours and your client’s. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hfboMCsDcno
Second, I have researched Hashimoto’s Disease. I have a wonderful team of health care professionals, and as with law, I am allowed to take an active roll in my healthcare.
I have not retested a thyroid panel for several months, but I am confident my numbers are returning toward an acceptable range.
My digestion is improving. My energy level is improving. My ability to concentrate is improving. My mood is improving. My new mantra is “work, don’t worry.” It is easier to do my legal work now that I can sit up for extended periods and my immune and autoimmune systems are not so out of whack.
After the stay is lifted and any appeal that may be required, I will move the court to allow me to introduce expert testimony about Hashimoto’s and the impact of stressful litigation on it. PRA already agreed that it changed my alleged balance to zero only after I filed a lawsuit. It is clear that the gaslighting was not going to stop otherwise. PRA even realleged a debt and invented completely unsubstantiated gambling losses for me during litigation.
I have not gone to the CFPB yet because they say a person can only file one complaint. I believe that when the CFPB investigates, they will agree with my contention and uncover evidence that PRA lied about not calling me in the months leading up to November 14, 2020. They will see that, as they suspected, PRA did not follow the 2015 consent order. And they will agree that PRA’s conduct within litigation as a defendant is also in violation of the FDCPA and regulation F.
Sincerely,
Laura Hammett