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The order against Capital One last week differed from how the banking regulators act in several key ways.
July 23 -
Consumer bureau, working in conjunction with OCC, orders Capital One to pay $210 million for deceptive credit-card marketing practices.
July 18 -
A Los Angeles law firm offers to pay brokers for convincing homeowners to pay $5,000 "referral" fees and sue banks. Critics raise legal and regulatory questions.
May 24
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has taken its first civil action, suing and effectively stopping business at a Los Angeles law firm that charged homeowners for loan modifications that allegedly never happened.
The CFPB says that lawyer Chance Gordon, his law firm and two subsidiary companies preyed on financially distressed borrowers by promising to reduce their monthly mortgage payment in exchange for fees of $2,500 to $4,500. Then Gordon and his law firm provided "little, if any, meaningful assistance to modify homeowners' mortgage loans or prevent foreclosure," according to the
The court also
Gordon is the latest lawyer to come under scrutiny for offering debt-modification services, which regulators and consumer advocates say are often scams. The Federal Trade Commission has banned mortgage assistance relief companies — mortgage brokers, lead generators and affiliated marketing companies — from collecting "advance fees" from homeowners for debt-relief services. But some lawyers have appeared to get around the ban by charging customers "retainer fees" upfront while offering mortgage modification services.
This spring, the Litigation Compliance Law Center, another Los Angeles firm,
The CFPB joins several other regulators that are increasingly targeting lawyers for debt-relief scams. The State Bar of California alone has revoked the licenses of 18 lawyers since 2009 over charges related to loan modification wrongdoing. Meanwhile, the Federal Trade Commission has brought 36 actions against companies under the Mortgage Assistance Relief Services rule, which bans debt-relief firms from charging homeowners before they have received written offers for a loan modification that they deem acceptable from their lender or mortgage servicer.
Rulemaking authority under the Mars rule was transferred last July to the CFPB, which took a year to launch its first enforcement action.
Kent Markus, the CFPB's assistant director for enforcement, said in a statement that the Gordon Law Firm had been "unlawfully preying on vulnerable homeowners in multiple states," and that by taking action the CFPB can "prevent further harm to consumers and lawfully gather additional evidence and data as the case moves forward."
The agency's representatives would not comment on whether the CFPB plans future actions against other law firms.