Illinois
Related: About this forumIllinois Dealer Group Must Pay $10 Million For Adding Illegal Fees, Services To Customer Contracts
One Illinois Dealer Group Must Pay $10 Million For Adding Illegal Fees And Services To Customer Contracts
The dealers allegedly added on thousands of dollars in fees and services to purposely long sales contracts.
By Lawrence Hodge
Today 2:00PM
Dealer fees are the easiest way to scam customers out of their money. Sales contracts are often long, and most people dont actually read everything. The excitement of a new car has them just signing on the dotted line and looking for the keys. But charging those fees has caught up with some people, as CBS News reports that a dealer group based out of Illinois will have to pay $10 million to settle a case that alleged they were charging customers junk fees.
The dealer group, Napleton Automotive Group of Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois runs dealerships in multiple states. In March, the group was hit with a deceptive practices complaint by the FTC. The complaint accuses the dealer of adding everything from GAP insurance to paint protection to customers sales contracts without their knowledge:
A survey cited in the complaint showed that 83 percent of buyers from the dealerships were charged junk fees for add-ons without authorization or as a result of deception. One consumer cited in the complaint reported that the dealership located in Arlington Heights, Ill., charged him for nearly $4,000 in add-on fees after hed paid a similar amount in down payment.
How were they able to sneak these things in without customers knowing? Long service contracts and worn-out customers. After lengthy negotiations and customers declining whatever add-ons or services the dealer was trying to push and confirming pricing without the crap they tried to sell the dealers would sneak those very services back into the contracts. These contracts would run 60+ pages according to the FTC.
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There was this comment.
4/05/22 3:03pm
There was just an article on Friday about a Nissan dealer in Phoenix getting fined $500,000 for hiding add-ons.
https://legalnewsline.com/stories/511403753-arizona-secures-130-000-for-consumers-victimized-by-online-auto-sales-fraud (1)
That same dealer was fined $130,000 in 2018 for the exact same thing.
https://legalnewsline.com/stories/511403753-arizona-secures-130-000-for-consumers-victimized-by-online-auto-sales-fraud
So its probably a safe bet that in this case the cost of the settlement is worth it and, within a year or two, theyll be back up to the same tricks.
(1) Wrong link. He means something more like this:
https://ktar.com/story/4976659/2-valley-based-nissan-dealers-to-pay-405k-in-restitution-for-false-advertising/
Otto_Harper
(702 posts)I would stand up, put on my jacket, grab the contract and let them know that I was going to take it home and read it word by word. If I found it to be cool, I would return to complete the purchase. If I found it to be hinky I would file it with the State AG office and the FTC.
Tag! You're it.
ShazzieB
(18,645 posts)Freddie
(9,691 posts)No doubt the salesman knew how much I wanted it as he would not budge on the price. Then he came with the contract which added almost 1k to the $9499 price. Undercoating and such garbage. DH said we will pay nothing but the price of the car and the 6% PA sales tax. They backed down. But you have to be careful. That dealership calls and e-mails a couple times a year for future business. Will not go back there.
mitch96
(14,652 posts)Sorry to offend and that has been my experience..
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