
Payday lender ACE Cash Express fined $10 million
By Charlene Crowell NNPA Columnist
For the second time in as many years, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has fined a major payday lender. On July 10, Director Richard Cordray announced that one of the nationâs largest payday lenders, ACE Cash Express, will pay $10 million in restitution and penalties for directing its employees to âcreate a sense of urgencyâ when contacting delinquent borrowers. This abusive tactic was used to perpetuate the payday loan debt trap.
CFPB has ordered ACE Cash Express to provide consumers with five million dollars in refunds and the same amount in penalties for its violations. The firm operates in 36 states and in the District of Columbia with 1,500 storefronts, 5,000 associates and online loans.
âWe believe that ACEâs aggressive tactics were part of a culture of coercion aimed at pressuring payday borrowers into debt traps,â said Cordray. âOur investigation uncovered a graphic in ACEâs training manual that lays out a step-by-step loan and collection process that can ensnare consumers in a cycle of debt. When borrowers could not pay back their loans, ACE would subject them to illegal debt collection threats and harassment.â
Commenting on CFPBâs actions, Mike Calhoun, president of the Center for Responsible Lending(CRL) said, âThis enforcement action also confirms what our research found long ago: payday lenders depend on keeping vulnerable consumers trapped in an endless cycle of debt of 300-400 percent interest loans. . . .Itâs real, itâs abusive and itâs time to stop.â
CRL research shows that payday loans drain $3.4 billion a year from consumers. Further, CRL has long held that the payday industry preys on customers who cannot repay their loans.
Now, with CFPB releasing an item from ACE Cash Expressâ training manual, that contention is proven to be true. The ACE graphic shows how the business model intends to create a debt cycle that becomes increasingly difficult to break and urges its associates to be aggressive.
Across the country, the South has the highest concentration of payday loan stores and accounts for 60 percent of total payday lending fees. Missouri is the only state outside of the South with a comparable concentration of payday stores.
Last year, another large payday lender, the Fort Worth-based Cash America International, faced similar enforcement actions when CFPB ordered it to pay five million in fines for robo-signing court documents submitted in debt collection lawsuits. Cash America also paid $14 million to consumers through one of its more than 900 locations throughout the United States, Mexico and the United Kingdom.
On the same day that the CFPBâs enforcement action occurred, another key payday- related development occurred.
Missouri Gov. âJayâ Nixon vetoed a bill that purported to be payday reform. In part, Gov. Nixonâs veto letter states, âallowing payday lenders to charge 912.5 percent for a 14-day loan is not true reform. . . Supporters point to the prohibition of loan rollovers; but missing from the legislation is anything to address the unfortunately all-too-common situation where someone living paycheck-to-paycheck is offered multiple loans by multiple lenders at the same time or is encouraged to take out back-to-back loans from the same lender. . . .This bill cannot be called meaningful reform and does not receive my approval.â
Speaking in support of Gov. Nixonâs veto, Pastor Lloyd Fields of Kansas
