• Huge Eurobank, rated 'Britain's worst,' now accused of gouging US consumers

    The accusations are as outrageous as they are plentiful:  Hundreds of “robocalls” --  in one case, 800 to a single person -- to collect auto loan debts;  illegal repossession of cars from active duty military deployed overseas;  late fees assessed three years after the fact and then compounded into $2,000 or $3,000 bills; harassing calls to friends, neighbors, co-workers -- even children -- on cell phones. And now, a flurry of lawsuits filed around the country, and lawyers fighting over potential clients.

    The defendant in the lawsuits is Europe’s largest bank, Banco Santander S.A., which is preparing to make a big push into U.S. retail banking. But many Americans already have been introduced to the Spanish financial powerhouse, a first encounter that many liken to a nightmare.

    Santander’s most visible presence in the U.S. market is the result of a buying spree begun in 2009, when the bank began purchasing billions of dollars in auto loans -- many of them subprime loans for used cars -- from Citibank, HSBC and a host of other banks. 

    But if the cascade of complaints and lawsuits are accurate, Santander Consumer USA has tried to immediately turn those receivables into lucrative assets by assessing massive penalty fees and repossessing cars under dubious circumstances.

    "They have a good business model if you are a crook," said lawyer Johnny Norris, who filed one of the first class-action cases against Santander Consumer USA, the Spanish bank's U.S. arm.  "It's a very lucrative but unlawful business plan. ... It's really terrible and we're trying to put a stop to it."

    Laurie W. Kight, vice president of communications for Santander Consumer USA, said the company would not consent to an interview for this story.

    "(Santander) declines to comment at this time," she said in an email.

    While the Internet has been awash in complaints about Santander’s debt-collection practices for months, legal proceedings are just now reaching a fever pitch.  Norris said he's filed more than 100 individual cases against Santander and he's considering hundreds more.  One of his clients was called more than 800 times by an automatic dialer, he said, alleging that the calls represent a violation of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act. If so, each call could net a penalty of $1,500 for plaintiffs.

    "Our cutoff is 100 calls" when the firm screens potential new clients for Santander lawsuits, he said.

    The class-action case, with seven lead plaintiffs, was filed in federal court in Alabama.

    One plaintiff, Leslie Haynes, purchased a used BWM in 2007 from a dealer in Birmingham, Ala., according to court documents. A year later, Santander collectors began peppering her with demanding calls. The lawsuit claims agents misled her about the balance of her loan, tried to trick her into making additional payments, then refused to stop calling her at work. Agents also repeatedly frequently called relatives, even harassing her sick stepfather and his live-caregiver in the months before he died, it alleges.  The court filing does not indicate whether Haynes had made all payments on time.

    Another plaintiff in that case, Victor Shortt, alleged that Santander agents repeatedly called his minor daughter's cell phone, ignoring pleas to stop. A third, Jacob Glassmoyer, said Santander officials called his parents' cell phones repeatedly, at a time when one of them was undergoing chemotherapy, according to the lawsuit.

    Norris said Santander routinely uses another tactic after acquiring a loan from another lender: It searches records for past slip-ups -- such as a payment that was late by a few days -- then assesses fees retroactively, sometimes years after the fact. By calculating the loan forward from that point, and "cascading" the fees, the firm sometimes claims clients owe thousands of dollars in late fees, and demands immediate payment or threatens repossession.

    Another class-action case, filed in a federal court in California, accuses Santander of ignoring the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, claiming the firm repossesses cars while active duty military are deployed overseas and refuses to lower interest rates to 6 percent, as required by law. The plaintiff in that case, Sgt. Charles Beard of Lemoore, Calif., serves in the U.S. Army National Guard, and was deployed abroad on Aug. 16, 2008. On Feb. 3, 2009, Santander repossessed his Kia Sportage, even after the bank was informed that a court order is necessary to repossess a deployed soldier’s car. 

    "One of defendants’ representatives told Mrs. Beard that she would go to jail for a stolen car if she did not turn in the vehicle," the lawsuit alleges. Santander also ignored complaints from Army legal assistance, and sold the repossessed auto at auction in March of that year, according to the lawsuit.

    The lawsuit claims such violations by Satandar of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act are routine.

    "Defendants have a policy of failing to verify, prior to undertaking voluntary repossession, whether the person whose vehicle is subject to repossession is serving on active duty," it claims. "Defendants routinely ignore service members’ rights under the SCRA and wrongfully repossess their cars without obtaining the requisite court orders."

    Used car loans might seem like a hard way for an international bank to make money, but they've actually proven to be more resilient and recession proof that other forms of lending -- particularly mortgage lending. Cars, at the moment, appear to be better collateral than homes and are much easier to turn into cash after a borrower defaults. That's part of the reason that Santander was the most profitable bank in the world outside of China last year, and has been on the acquisition trail since the financial meltdown.

    The Spanish bank is Germany's largest auto lender, and has enormous auto loan portfolios across Central and Eastern Europe, said Mauro Guillen, a Wharton Business School professor who wrote a book about Santander called "Building a Global Bank."

    "Auto loans are low margin, but high volume gives you a good return," he said. "It's a typical way for Santander to enter a market."

    It's also lucrative. Santander Consumer USA earned a tidy $455 million in 2010.

    "It's a cash cow for them," Guillen said. 

    Santander has big designs for U.S. retail banking. It completed the acquisition of Sovereign Bank, largely a regional lender based in the Northeast, in 2009.  It recently received approval to convert from a savings bank to a national bank, and plans to begin rebranding 747 Sovereign branches as Santander early next year.

    But as the bank brings its impressive balance sheet to the wider U.S. market, it apparently has also exported its reputation for mistreating consumers.  Last year, a flurry of news stories in the British press labeled Santander "Britain's worst bank,” after it registered more than 160,000 complaints from account holders in a recent 6-month period, by far the most of any bank. The complaints typically involved frustrations with fees and customer service.

    Santander usually receives the most consumer complaints in Spain, too, Guillen said.

    Santander's move into U.S. auto loans has been aggressive.  In November 2009, it acquired $1 billion in loan receivables from HSBC for $900 million. It raised the stakes much higher in June 2010, when it announced it purchased $3.2 billion in loans from CitiFinancial, and also agreed to service another $7.2 billion in auto loans still held by CitiFinancial.

    Combined with a series of acquisitions from smaller lenders, and the loans it inherited from Sovereign, and analysts estimate Santander's U.S. auto loan holdings at $17 billion.  

    The banks' preference is for high-interest, subprime auto loans, which were reliably lucrative before the financial collapse, Guillen said. 

    They still are, argued lawyer Norris, because of what he says are the bank’s illegal practices.

    "They are taking these subprime loans while the loan is still active.  They are piling that loan as high as they can with fees, making as much money from the borrower as they can," he said. "Then they repossess the car, and sell the car.  Maybe there's a difference between the outstanding loan amount and the price they get at auction, but guess what:  Santander didn't pay 100 cents on dollar for the loan. They bought the car at a discount to start with."

    The Internet is awash with complaints of unfairly repossessed cars and sudden demands for lump payments by Santander. Many focus on confusion around the transfer of the loan to the Spanish bank from the original lender.  Thomas Tupper of Irvine, Calif., purchased his car through Citibank, but when the loan was transferred to Santander in September 2010, he says he ended up with nothing but trouble. Automated direct payments were received by Santander, and credited to his account, but he was still reported late to the nation's credit bureaus and assessed late fees by the bank.  Then, when he sold his car, Santander cashed the payoff check but still reported him as late. That forced him to make extra payments on the loan, even after the loan was paid off. He's only received partial refunds of the overpayments. (For more on his trouble, click here)

    Donovan Rogers, 34, of Abeline, Kansas, said Santander repossessed his 2005 Dodge Durango this year after purchasing his loan from the original lender. Rogers said he wasn’t alerted to the bank change. He claims he continued to send payments on time via money order to his initial lender, but Santander would later tell him it never received the payments. He says was unaware of the problem until weeks before the car was repossessed in May. He says he received nearly 500 phone calls from the firm during that time, and was threatened with criminal charges. Even though the pickup was sold at auction in June, he said he still receives calls from Santander demanding payment.

    “They've made my life a mess.  When I tell people my story, they are in awe,” Rogers said. “I thought I was alone until I found all these other stories online. I’m living a nightmare, but now I’ve seen stories of people with much worst nightmares than mine.”

    Accusations of unfair fees and repossessions don't figure into the lawsuits Santander is facing, however.  Lawyers are flocking to the cases because of potentially lucrative violations of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act and the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. Santander agents routinely fail to identify themselves, use obscenities, call people other than the actual debt holder and reveal to those people details about the debt, the lawsuits allege -- all direct violations of the latter law. The bank has also used automated dialing systems and prerecorded messages directed to cell phones without permission, the lawsuits allege, a violation of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act. Willful violations of that law offer a $1,500-per-phone-call bounty to the plaintiff.

    Missouri lawyer Gary Green, who is also readying a series of lawsuits against Santander, thinks that the bank many have just overlooked consumer law when it raced to expand its U.S. presence.

    "I think that they've stumbled in without doing research," he said. "And they figured the claimants would act like most claimants and not realize they had any rights.  They figured they could take advantage of these people thinking individually they would have no voice. And maybe they just didn't read the federal law."

    Even outside of consumer issues, Santander's reputation is not pristine. Alfredo Saenz, the bank's No. 2 executive, received a pardon last month from lame duck Socialist Party officials in Spain, sparing him from a previously imposed lifetime ban from working in banking. In 2009, he was convicted of making false criminal accusations in an attempt to recover a $5 million loan dating back to 1994. 

    The bank's CEO, Emilio Botin, and other relatives are the focus of a tax evasion inquiry by the Spanish government involving a secret Swiss bank account that dates to the days of the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s.

    Santander also operated a so-called "feeder" fund that essentially acted as a front to entice investors for disgraced Ponzi scheme operator Bernie Madoff; clients lost a staggering $3 billion.  The bank says it, too, was duped by Madoff, and has already paid $235 million to the fund set up by Madoff trustee Irving Picard. It has also offered nearly $2 billion worth of stock to victims to settle pending lawsuits.

    But Guillen, who wrote the book on Santander, thinks it might be unfair to single out Santander for alleged aggressive debt collection tactics.

    "What bank doesn't have a lot of complaints right now? I can't imagine (alleged illegal tactics) are a part of an explicit business plan," he said. "Are they doing this more than other banks? Banks are desperate for cash right now. I don't know if Santander stands out as being more aggressive than other banks."

    And despite the complaints and lawsuits, he predicted the bank will successfully expand into U.S. retail markets.

    "And I would predict other acquisitions for them," he said.

     

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  • Senate GOP blocks consumer agency nominee Cordray, but who's to blame?

    Jacquelyn Martin / AP file

    Richard Cordray.

    Will Americans believe President Barack Obama was fighting for their consumer rights by trying to force a vote on Consumer Financial Protection Bureau nominee Richard Cordray, or will they believe Senate Republicans were fighting to prevent creation of an unwieldy new government agency with unchecked powers?

    We're about to find out.

    Thursday morning brought congressional theatre that ended with the Senate effectively rejecting Obama's nominee to head the newly formed Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.  There was little mystery to the vote --  44 Republicans pledged in May to block his nomination, and only 41 were needed to spike it. The final tally was 53-45, with Republican Olympia Snowe  of Maine voting "present." Sen. Scott Brown of Massachusetts, facing the bureau's inventor Elizabeth Warren, was the lone dissenting GOP vote.

    The only mystery is, who will Americans blame now?


    Obama and Democrats spent the week campaigning for Cordray in several states where Republican Senators face re-election campaigns, including Maine and Nevada.  Senate Republican minority leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky responded by accusing Obama of playing politics.

    RELATED: Details of the vote from NBC's First Read

    “Now he’s suddenly making a push to confirm his nominee — because it fits into some picture he wants to paint about who the good guys and the bad guys are in Washington,” McConnell said on the Senate floor Tuesday. “... So once again he's going to use the Senate floor this week to stage a little political theater. He’s setting up a vote he knows will fail so he can show up afterward and say he’s shocked.”

    Speaking in Kansas on Tuesday, Obama argued that Republicans are simply being obstinate. 

    "Nobody claims (Cordray's) not qualified,” he said in a speech about the economy. “But the Republicans in the Senate refuse to confirm him for the job; they refuse to let him do his job. Why? Does anybody here think that the problem that led to our financial crisis was too much oversight of mortgage lenders or debt collectors?”  

    Political considerations aren't far behind, however, as White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said Republicans who vote against Cordray will have to "to explain to their constituents why they did not support common sense reforms," according to the Wall Street Journal.

    As a practical matter, Thursday's cloture vote prevented Democrats from ending debate on the Cordray nomination, thus preventing an actual vote on his nomination.  It doesn't mean Cordray has no shot to run the agency, however.  The administration could still attempt a recess appointment, and some observers speculate that the Senate vote is merely a step along that path.

    Such a move could threaten the legitimacy of the entire agency, however, and would undoubtedly lead to accusations foul play from Republicans, and perhaps trigger litigation from banks the agency would try to regulate. 

    But without a director, the bureau is already hamstrung on a number of fronts. Many of the bureau's regulatory powers don't kick in until a director is named.  It can't supervise so-called non-bank banks, like payday lenders, for example.

    “The list of financial tricks and traps that consumers are forced to deal with keeps growing,” said Travis Plunkett, legislative director of the Consumer Federation of America, an advocacy group. “Fourteen months after Congress created the CFPB, the agency needs a permanent leader so it is not fighting financial abuses with one arm tied behind its back.”

    The nascent bureau has begun to take on some less controversial tasks during this start-up phase. Last week it announced results of a story of credit card complaints; this week it released a new, simplified model credit card agreement that cuts down verbiage from 5,000 to 1,100 words.

    Still, Republicans held firm, because they say the new consumer bureau would have too much power as currently constructed.  Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., the ranking Republican on the Senate Banking committee, went so far as to call it "a monster, as far as future regulation."

    Five Republican Senators, including moderate Susan Collins of Maine, attended a public event on Tuesday to reiterate their view that the bureau shouldn't fully open for business unless dramatic changes are made.

    “It is inconceivable that in this time of tight budgets that we would create a new agency that is completely unaccountable in terms of its budget,” Collins said.

     Among their demands: the bureau should be led by a commission, not an individual; it should be not have its own source of funding from the Federal Reserve; and it should be subject to Senate committee oversight.

    So far, Democrats haven't budged on any of those demands -- setting up a fight over public opinion that Obama didn't shy away from at his speech in Kansas,

    "Every day we go without a consumer watchdog is another day when a student, or a senior citizen, or a member of our armed forces … could be tricked into a loan that they can't afford -- something that happens all the time," he said. "And the fact is that financial institutions have plenty of lobbyists looking out for their interests. Consumers deserve to have someone whose job it is to look out for them. And I intend to make sure they do. And I want you to hear me, Kansas: I will veto any effort to delay or defund or dismantle the new rules that we put in place."

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  • Consumer: Trove of evidence didn't persuade credit bureau to fix error

    Thomas Tupper

    Tom Tupper and his young son, Josiah. Tupper says a mistake on his credit report cost him 48 points on his credit score and that credit bureau TransUnion ignored all the evidence he produced.

    A single error on your credit report can really hurt. It might drop your credit score 50 points, costing you an auto loan or pushing you into subprime mortgage status. It could cost a job if you're in the process of applying.  It could raise your auto insurance rates.  And, says consumer Tom Tupper, it's a direct insult to your integrity as a person.

    But worst of all: Sometimes it seems that no amount of hard evidence can persuade a credit bureau to fix such a costly mistake. At least, that's the story Tupper is telling. And he has plenty of evidence to back it up.

    Tupper's travails through credit bureau TransUnion's dispute resolution process sound like they sprang from a Joseph Heller novel; and the “Catch-22” he describes offers a glimpse at how bureaus apply justice the 20,000 times per day that consumers plead for help with a mistake on their credit report.

    "It is an insult to report something about me inaccurately. It’s not acceptable. … It’s a reflection of my integrity as a person,” Tupper said. ”I do take it personally.”


     TransUnion refused to answer questions about Tupper’s situation for this story.

    “To protect the privacy of consumers, TransUnion does not comment on individual cases,” said company spokesman Clifton O’Neal.

     But Tupper is eager to share his version of events.

    Tupper, an avid credit monitoring user, says he spotted an error in his TransUnion report in October indicating that he was 30 days late on a car loan payment in September 2010. He looked up his TransUnion credit score, and found it had plummeted by 48 points. Days later, when the mistake spread to Equifax and Experian, his scores from those firms fell too, but not as sharply.

     The 43-year-old Irvine, Calif. software engineer keeps copious records -- he has copies of every monthly statement from his car loan -- and he was sure he'd never been late. But the September 2010 blemish was even more curious because he was being reported late by Santander Consumer USA, a loan-servicing company that had taken over the loan from Citibank that month. He also sold the car a soon after, and had copies of the payoff check from the dealership that was deposited to pay off the loan. Finally, he even made an extra payment to Santander after he traded in the car, just to make sure there was no late payment.

    Fast-forward to October of this year, when Tupper looked at his credit report and discovered that Santander was reporting him as a deadbeat. His blood boiled.

    He immediately went online and filled out the TransUnion dispute form. He heard back four days later, when his request for a correction was denied and TransUnion affirmed the late payment.  Furious, he sent a second dispute form to TransUnion, this time in snail mail, along with a folder piled high with documentation.  Tupper shared the file with msnbc.com. Here's a sample of what he included:

    *A letter from Citi Financial and Santander making it clear that Santander USA only began servicing the account as of 9/6/2010. That meant Santander couldn't report him as 30 days late in September 2010.

    *Santander's first monthly account statement to him, showing his payment was received and credited on Sept. 17, 2010, and that his account was up to date.

    *A copy of the loan payoff check, including routing and transit numbers indicating it was cashed.

    *Loan payoff notes from both Citibank and Santander.

    Tupper heard nothing for weeks, so he called TransUnion on Nov. 15.  The response he received was straightforward:

    "They said, 'Here's the deal. We've just completed our investigation, and we're not going to change it.'" Tupper said.  "And the operator said that since I'd disputed it twice, any other dispute I tried would be seen as frivolous and would be ignored."

    When Tupper pressed for a reason, he said the operator was rude, but eventually told him that there was no way for TransUnion agents to verify his documents as authentic. She didn't offer him any way to make the documents believable to the firm

    "I kind of went ballistic," he said.  "I said, 'If you think about that, how can anyone prove anything to you?' "

    Similar complaints have dogged the credit reporting agencies and their dispute process for at least a decade. By law, the agencies are supposed to give consumers a chance to make their case when lenders place blemishes on their credit reports. But in practice, consumer lawyers argue, credit reporting agencies often ignore evidence supplied by consumers and simply ask lenders -- called furnishers, in credit bureau language -- to "verify" the debt. It's the equivalent of asking, "Did you say this?" When furnishers confirm they did, that's often the end of the case.

    Depositions taken from former employees in cases filed against the credit bureaus paint a frantic picture of dispute resolution, which often occurs in off-shore call centers. According to SmartMoney magazine, one TransUnion official said that workers were expected to complete up to 22 cases an hour. An Equifax worker estimated she was allotted four minutes per dispute.  There isn’t time for much more than a simple yes or no question to the lender.

    "It is really quite appalling when you really think about it," Tupper said. “When I gave that proof to TU and demanded they remove the incorrect entry, they basically ignored me and sided with the data furnisher... So here is the rub: What's to stop anyone from reporting anything derogatory about you to a (credit bureau)?"

    The credit bureaus, as a group, often argue that their system is overwhelmed with fraudulent disputes by shady credit repair agencies and consumers trying to game the system.  And they argue that many errors are corrected.  A 2005 report by Congress' General Accountability Office found that 69 percent of surveyed consumers who had disputed items on their credit report said they'd been removed.  That report also cited testimony from the Consumer Data Industry Association indicating these results for consumer disputes: data had been deleted in 27 percent of the disputed cases, but verified and left on the person’s report in 46 percent of the cases.

    Mountains of consumer complaints found online suggest Tupper's case is not unusual, however.

    "If I come at you with evidence, it seems to me that as an organization you ought to err on the side of caution, rather than side with the lender,” Tupper said. “... In simple terms, TransUnion has effectively taken the stance that there is no level of documentation that a consumer can maintain which they will accept as legitimate proof that they have wronged the consumer. If a consumer's banking records, along with the very account statements provided to the consumer by a lender, other banking transit documents, and payoff documents are not considered as adequately evidentiary by TransUnion in an accuracy dispute, then what hope does any consumer have of ever protecting themselves from victimization?"

    Tupper's story, however, has a happy ending.  He exercised a relatively new consumer right granted by Congress in 2005, but not implemented until last year that lets consumers dispute credit report blemishes directly with the furnisher after a failed dispute with a credit bureau.  Tupper sent his powerful packet of evidence to Santander via e-mail in late November, and followed up with a flurry of phone calls.  Santander quickly changed the way it was reporting Tupper's account to "paid as agreed," and within 48 hours, his credit report was clean again. His credit score returned to normal soon after.

    "For me, it was more infuriating than anything else because it was so wrong," Tupper said. "I wonder how many consumers in my position simply give up, and live with seven years of inaccurate credit scoring because they simply haven't got the means to fight back....  These agencies wield tremendous power in the lives of consumers, and unfortunately they are frequently difficult to hold accountable for wronging consumers.”

    RED TAPE WRESTLING TIPS

    If you feel you have an error on your credit report, it's important to file a dispute right away. There are  plenty of guides for doing so online; start with the Federal Trade Commission's instructions.

    The ability to dispute a report directly with a furnisher is an important new right for consumers. Here are tips on how to begin that process.

    And if all else fails, look for a consumer attorney with experience fighting Fair Credit Reporting Act cases at the National Association of Consumer Advocates website.

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  • Consumer agency shares top beefs against credit card issuers

    Untitled Document
    Top 10 credit card complaints
    Here's what consumers groused about in complaints filed with the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau:
    Rank
    Issue
    Complaints
    % of total
    1. Billing disputes
    681
    13.4%
    2. APR or interest rate
    556
    11.0%
    3. Identity Theft / Fraud / Embezzlement
    546
    10.8%
    4. Other 454 8.9%
    454
    8.9%
    5. Closing / Cancelling account
    242
    4.8%
    6. Credit card payment / Debt protection
    224
    4.4%
    7. Other Fee
    224
    4.4%
    8. Billing statement
    209
    4.1%
    9. Collection practices
    201
    4.0%
    10. Credit reporting
    197
    3.9%
    SOURCE: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
    msnbc.com

    Given a chance to complain, credit card consumers jumped at the opportunity. 

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau opened for business earlier this year, and its first actions were to solicit consumer complaints about credit cards and set up a system for resolving disputes.  In three months ending Oct. 21, cardholders filed more than 5,000 complaints and requests for help.

    An interim report issued this week offers insight into the bank practices that most bug consumers:  Billing disputes, collection practices, and debt protection sales pitches. Surprisingly, late fees did not crack the top 10.  

    Mysterious fine print is a common thread through many of the complaints.

    "The biggest thing we see is consumer confusion," said bureau spokeswoman Jennifer Howard.  "Customers and credit card issuers aren't always on same page when it comes to understanding the terms of the deal."


    According to the report, account holders struggle to understand both terms of their contracts and details of additional offers like debt protection.  There's a "mismatch between consumer expectations and the way the product functions," the report says.

    A big part of the bureau's mandate is to act as an express route for resolution of consumer issues. Of the 5,000-odd complaints submitted, 4,254 were forwarded to the bank involved; banks said they'd resolved 3,151 of those. Consumers disagreed about that satisfaction rate, with only 2,238 agreeing that their dispute had been solved. Another 500 said their complaints were pending.

    The text of the complaints is not public, but the bureau is working on a method for providing "public reports" that will include "certain aspects of credit card complaint data."

    Meanwhile, the bureau will soon begin accepting complaints about other financial products, such as mortgages and home equity loans.

    “When consumers contact us, we get a snapshot of how the consumer finance markets are working,” said Raj Date, a special adviser to the secretary of the Treasury for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. "We will continue to work with consumers, credit card companies, government agencies, and others to improve consumer education and ensure CFPB’s regulation, supervision, and enforcement efforts are effective.”

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