NEWS

Atlanta Based Telephone Company To Be Charged Over $9 Billion Dollars By FCC

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) plans to fine GPSPS, Inc., an Atlanta based  telephone company, $9,065,000 for allegedly switching consumers’ long distance telephone services without their authorization (“slamming”), billing customers for unauthorized charges (“cramming”), and submitting falsified evidence to government regulatory official as “proof” that consumers had authorized the company to switch their long distance providers.

“Consumers should not have to wrestle with multi-page phone bills loaded with bogus charges,” said Travis LeBlanc, Chief of the Enforcement Bureau.

He further added, “The FCC will hold companies accountable who prey on consumers by switching their telephone carriers and placing charges on their telephone bills without authorization.”

Atlanta Based Telephone CompanyAccording to fcc.gov, the Enforcement Bureau reviewed over 150 complaints against GPSPS that consumers filed with the Commission, the Federal Trade Commission, the Public Utility Commission of Texas, and the Better Business Bureau. Consumers complained that GPSPS switched their long distance service provider without their authorization even though they had never heard of or spoken to the company before discovering GPSPS’s charges on their telephone bills. In many cases, GPSPS refused to refund all of the unauthorized fees it allegedly charged consumers.

Instead, the company apparently misrepresented to consumers that they or someone in their household had authorized GPSPS’s service, and that GPSPS possessed an audio recording evidencing the authorization. The audio “verification” recordings GPSPS mentioned to consumers were fake.

Although GPSPS submitted these fabricated recordings to the Commission and state regulatory authorities as “proof” that the consumers authorized its service, consumers who listened to the recordings informed the Enforcement Bureau that the recordings were fabricated and adamantly denied that the voices on the recordings were their own.

The Commission charged GPSPS with willfully and repeatedly placing unauthorized charges on consumers’ local telephone bills, switching consumers’ preferred long distance carrier without verified authorization and submitting fabricated audio “verification” recordings in an effort to rules.

With today’s action, the Commission has now taken nearly 30 enforcement actions for cramming or slamming in the past five years. These actions have announced more than $90 million in penalties and are slated to return more than $200 million to consumers.

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