Law and regulation

  • A federal judge allowed a member to sue Pentagon FCU for breach of contract and discrimination after it canceled his Visa account, allegedly because his income dropped following a railroad injury.

    September 22
  • Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller announced that his office will file lawsuits against three credit repair companies he believes defrauded three consumers of more than $12,000.

    September 20
  • The Central Bank of Sri Lanka is soliciting public comment on guidelines it has drafted for mobile-payment systems, an official from the bank tells PaymentsSource.The bank’s director of payments and settlements is accepting comments through Oct. 18, according to the official. “Our aim is to ensure safety and effectiveness of mobile-payment schemes,” he says. Under the draft guidelines, the central bank will allow mobile payments in Sri Lanka only through licensed banks, registered finance companies and custodian account-based systems operated by nonbank service providers. Banks and financial institutions would be allowed to offer mobile-payments services to their accountholders, which would allow customers to operate their accounts via their mobile phone. Under the custodian account-based system, mobile operators may open e-money accounts for customers and issue e-money in exchange for actual money from customers, according to the guidelines.The central bank would allow mobile-payment services to be conducted only in Sri Lanka rupees and only for domestic transactions, and providers must route all foreign inward remittances to mobile accounts through the custodian banks and credit them in rupees. The draft rules also would require mobile-payments providers to report any suspicious transactions based on the guidelines of the central bank’s Financial Intelligence Unit. The draft also requires providers to use security measures to prevent criminal activity while using Near Field Communication-based mobile-payment systems.

    September 17
  • The State Bank of Vietnam reportedly has again denied a request by banks in that country to allow them to charge their own customers fees when using their ATMs to withdraw cash. They also failed to receive permission to increase the ATM surcharge fees they charge noncustomers.

    September 16
  • More than three-fourths of bank customers did not pay any debit card overdraft fees over a recent 12-month period, suggest survey data the American Bankers Association released Sept. 15.

    September 15
  • North Dakota Attorney General Wayne Stenehjem is warning residents to watch for people posing as collectors of payday loan debts. The scammers call individuals and threaten legal action unless payment is authorized from a bank account.

    September 14
  • A claims administrator for the Federal Trade Commission on Thursday began mailing more than 22,000 checks to consumers who were victims of a deceptive telemarketing operation called Remote Response.

    September 9
  • Some credit card issuers are using a “dirty trick” to get around the new Credit CARD Act by marketing small-business cards to consumers, according to U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.

    September 8
  • In a sign the federal government is continuing to recognize the value of prepaid debit cards, the U.S. Department of the Treasury in January plans to launch a pilot to test the delivery of tax refunds to card accounts held by financially underserved consumers.

    September 7
  • Andrew Kahr, a preternaturally intelligent and occasionally controversial architect of the credit card industry, has spent his career solving intricate problems for financial companies, often by finding loopholes in regulation.

    September 7
  • The pending overhaul of debit interchange regulations is widely expected to lead to cuts in banks' rewards programs, but it remains unclear how this could affect decoupled debit cards that have long promoted their lucrative rewards offers.

    September 3
  • After a brutal 21-hour legislative session ending in the early morning hours of June 25, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd thought regulatory reform was finally finished.

    September 1
  • Worldwide Asset Management, a debt-buying unit of West Asset Management, agreed to pay an $85,000 penalty and change its business practices as part of a settlement with Maryland regulators, the Maryland Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation said Thursday.

    August 27
  • New York Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo today announced criminal charges against an individual who allegedly ran a collection agency while incarcerated in federal prison on unrelated charges.

    August 25
  • After a brutal 21-hour legislative session ending in the early morning hours of June 25, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd thought regulatory reform was finally finished.

    August 24
  • New York collection attorneys Peter T. Roach & Associates P.C., a “Creditor’s Rights” firm in Syosset, N.Y., announced a victory for their client, mortgage lender HSBC Bank USA.

    August 23
  • One of the telemarketers responsible for millions of illegal auto warranty robocalls to consumers last year will pay approximately $2.3 million, give up his Mercedes and be barred from telemarketing, under a settlement with the Federal Trade Commission. The settlement concludes the FTC's case against the operation.

    August 23
  • New federal rules regulating fees and expiration dates for all gift cards went into effect Sunday, whether the cards are sold by a merchant, shopping center, credit union or bank.

    August 23
  • A debt collector based in Wayzata, Minn. who allegedly told a consumer "I will hunt you down like a dog" was ordered by the Minnesota Department of Commerce to cease operations in the state, according to a report by the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

    August 20
  • Arkansas Attorney General Dustin McDaniel sued a pair of companies and their owner last week for allegedly marketing illegal payday loans online to consumers in the state.

    August 18