Text Spammers Settle FTC Charges

A group of marketers agreed to settle Federal Trade Commission charges that they took part in a scheme that bombarded consumers with tens of millions of spam text messages that lured consumers with phony gift card offers, and then directed recipients to deceptive websites.

The Chicago-based defendants in the case, operating through two companies called CPA Tank Inc. and Eagle Web Assets Inc., are the latest to settle FTC charges as a result of the agency’s crackdown on deceptive affiliate marketing on the Internet.

The FTC charged in its complaint that CPA and Eagle paid affiliates to send out the spam text messages promoting supposedly “free” merchandise, such as $1,000 gift cards for Walmart and Best Buy.

“Sending illegal text messages will get you in hot water with the FTC,” said Jessica Rich, director of the Federal Trade Commission’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “You can’t avoid responsibility by hiring a third-party to send them for you.”

People who clicked on the links in the text message did not receive the promised items, the FTC charged.

Instead, they were taken to websites that requested they provide personal information and sign up for numerous additional offers – often involving other purchases or paid subscriptions.

Earlier this month, the operators behind one of these websites agreed to pay $2.5 million to settle FTC charges. Another website operator was sued by the FTC in July 2013. In addition, the FTC sued a number of affiliates responsible for many of the underlying text messages in a sweep of enforcement cases in March 2013.

The FTC alleged the defendants’ deceptive and unfair practices violated the FTC Act. The final order against CPA Tank, Eagle Web Assets, and their respective principals, Vito Glazers and Ryan Eagle, prohibits them from making misrepresentations in marketing any good or service, including misrepresentations that a product or service is "free" or without cost or obligation.

It also requires defendants, if they offer products or services in the future, to disclose all material terms and conditions of such offers, and prohibits them from making, or initiating the transmission of, unauthorized or unsolicited commercial electronic text messages to mobile telephones or other wireless devices.

The settlement imposes a $200,000 judgment against the defendants, most of which is suspended, due to their inability to pay. It requires them to turn over $30,000 in cash plus the proceeds from the sale of Glazers’ 2007 Bentley automobile and Eagle’s 2006 Range Rover.

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