FCC lowers boom on Sprint, Verizon on 'cramming'

Staff


CONCORD, N.H. - Attorney General Joseph A. Foster announced today that his Consumer Protection and Antitrust Bureau - along with the Attorneys General of the other 49 States and the District of Columbia,
the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and the Federal Communications Commission -
reached settlements with Sprint Corporation ("Sprint") and Cellco Partnership d/b/a Verizon
Wireless ("Verizon"), that include $158 million in payments, and that resolve allegations that
Sprint and Verizon placed charges for third-party services on consumers' mobile telephone bills
that were not authorized by the consumers, a practice known as "mobile cramming."

Consumers who have been "crammed" often have charges, typically $9.99 per month, for
"premium" text message subscription services (also known as "PSMS" subscriptions) such as
horoscopes, trivia, and sports scores that the consumers have never heard of or requested.
Sprint and Verizon are the third and fourth mobile telephone providers to enter into a nationwide
settlement to resolve allegations regarding cramming. Foster announced similar settlements with AT&T in October of 2014 ($105 million), and T-Mobile in December of 2014 ($90 million).

All four mobile carriers announced they would cease billing customers for commercial PSMS in the fall of 2013.
Under the terms of the settlements, Sprint will pay $68 million and Verizon will pay $90 million.
Of these amounts, Sprint and Verizon are required to provide $50 million and $70 million,
respectively, to consumers who were victims of cramming. Sprint and Verizon will each
distribute refunds to harmed consumers through redress programs that will be under the
supervision of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Sprint will also pay $12 million to the
Attorneys General and $6 million to the Federal Communications Commission. Verizon will
also pay $16 million to the Attorneys General and $4 million to the Federal Communications
Commission.
Consumers can submit claims under the redress programs by visiting
www.SprintRefundPSMS.com and/or www.CFPBSettlementVerizon.com. On those websites,
consumers can submit claims, find information about refund eligibility and how to obtain a
refund, and can request a free account summary that details PSMS purchases on their accounts.
Consumers who have questions about the redress programs can visit the program websites or call
the settlement administrators at: (877) 389-8787 (Sprint), and/or (888) 726-7063 (Verizon).
The settlements, like the settlements entered into by AT&T and T-Mobile in late 2014, require
Sprint and Verizon to stay out of the commercial PSMS business - the platform to which law
enforcement agencies attribute the lion's share of the mobile cramming problem.

Under each of the four settlements, the carriers, including Sprint and Verizon, must also take a number of steps designed to ensure that they only bill consumers for third-party charges that have been
authorized, including the following:
- The carriers must obtain consumers' express consent before billing consumers for third party
charges, and must ensure that consumers are only charged for services if the
consumers have been informed of all material terms and conditions of their payment;
- The carriers must give consumers an opportunity to obtain a full refund or credit when
they are billed for unauthorized third-party charges;
- The carriers must inform their customers when they sign up for services that their mobile
phone can be used to pay for third-party charges, and must inform consumers of how
those third-party charges can be blocked if the consumers do not want to use their phone
to pay for third-party products; and
- The carriers must present third-party charges in a dedicated section of consumers' mobile
phone bills, must clearly distinguish them from the carrier's own charges, and must
include in that same section information about the consumers' ability to block third-party
charges.
The State of New Hampshire will receive $324,630.35 for its participation in the Sprint and
Verizon settlements.
Any New Hampshire consumer with questions about this settlement, or other consumer
protection matters, can call the Attorney General's Consumer Information Line at 1-888-468-
4454 or file a complaint by visiting the Attorney General's website at
http://doj.nh.gov/index.htm.