WASHINGTON—Following a lawsuit by the Federal Trade Commission, the operators of an alleged credit card debt relief scheme based in Tennessee have agreed to court orders that would permanently ban them from telemarketing and selling debt relief products or services.
Sean Austin, John Steven Huffman, John Preston Thompson, and their affiliated companies were charged by the FTC in November 2022 with taking tens of millions of dollars from people by falsely promising to eliminate or substantially reduce their credit card debt.
At the time, a federal court agreed to the FTC’s request to temporarily freeze the defendants’ assets and appoint a receiver over the businesses while the case took place.
The FTC’s complaint alleges that Austin, Huffman, and Thompson operated a network of companies incorporated in Tennessee, Nevada, New Mexico, and Wyoming that worked together as a common enterprise to support the defendants’ deceptive debt relief scheme. Their companies operated under multiple names such as ACRO Services, American Consumer Rights Organization, Consumer Protection Resources, Reliance Solutions, Thacker & Associates, and Tri Star Consumer Group, according to the government.
Terms of Settlement
The court orders, which were agreed to by Austin, Huffman, and Thompson to settle the case, include a number of requirements:
- Ban on debt relief. The defendants are permanently banned from advertising, selling, or assisting in any debt relief product or service
- Ban on telemarketing. The defendants are permanently banned from participating in telemarketing
- Prohibition against deceiving consumers.: The orders broadly enjoin the defendants from deceiving consumers about any other product or service they sell or market
- Surrender assets. The orders require the defendants to surrender certain property interests and assets contained in multiple bank accounts that will be used to provide any possible refunds to affected consumers
Monetary Judgement
The orders contain a total monetary judgment of $17,486,080, which is partially suspended upon the defendants’ surrender of assets and also based on their inability to pay the full amount. If the defendants are found to have lied to the FTC about their financial status, the full judgment would be immediately payable, the FTC said.
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