Civil Penalty Fund | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (2024)

When a person or company violates a federal consumer financial protection law, the Bureau can bring an enforcement proceeding against them. If that person or company is found to have violated the law, it may have to pay a civil penalty, also known as a civil money penalty. When the Bureau collects civil penalties, it deposits them in the Civil Penalty Fund. The Fund was established by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010.

The Bureau will use the money in the Civil Penalty Fund to provide some compensation to consumers who were harmed by activities for which civil penalties have been imposed. The amount of compensation the Bureau provides will depend in part on compensation the victims have received from other sources. In addition, to the extent that victims cannot be located or it is otherwise not practicable to pay victims, the Bureau may use money in the Fund for consumer education and financial literacy programs. The Bureau has issued a Civil Penalty Fund rule that specifically governs how the Bureau uses the money in the Civil Penalty Fund.

The Bureau issued a rule to inform the public about how it will use the money in the Civil Penalty Fund. The Bureau also published a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) to seek public input on the Civil Penalty Fund rule and ways that the Bureau could improve the rule in the future.

The Civil Penalty Fund rule became effective on May 7, 2013.

The rule governs how the Bureau will use funds in the Civil Penalty Fund. First, the rule provides that the Bureau will designate a Fund Administrator who will manage the Civil Penalty Fund in accordance with the rule. Second, the rule explains the conditions under which victims may receive payments from the Fund and the amounts that those payments may be. Third, the rule establishes procedures that the Fund Administrator will follow to decide how money in the Fund will be allocated, both to classes of victims and to consumer education and financial literacy programs. Fourth, the rule explains how payments will be distributed to victims. Finally, the rule requires the Fund Administrator to issue regular reports on how money in the Civil Penalty Fund has been used.

The Civil Penalty Fund Administrator manages the Fund. The Fund Administrator reports to the Chief Financial Officer.

The Civil Penalty Fund Governance Board is chaired by the Bureau’s Chief of Staff and includes the Associate Director for Supervision, Enforcement, Fair Lending & Equal Opportunity; the Associate Director for Consumer Education & Engagement; the Chief Operating Officer; and the General Counsel.

All civil penalties are deposited into the Civil Penalty Fund, where they are pooled and can be used for payments to any eligible victim. Victims are not limited to receiving only what the person or company that harmed them paid into the Fund.

The Bureau may make Civil Penalty Fund payments to consumers who were harmed by a violation for which civil penalties were imposed and who aren’t otherwise expected to get full compensation for their compensable harm, as described by the rule. The Bureau hopes to make payments to all such victims, but whether it will be able to will depend on the amount of money in the Fund and other factors. Every six months, the Fund Administrator will determine which classes of victims will receive payments from the Fund. To make that determination, the Fund Administrator will assess how much money is available in the Fund and will review closed cases to determine which victims are eligible to receive payments. The Fund Administrator will then follow the procedures established in the rule to allocate funds to “classes” of victims—that is, to groups of victims from a case that suffered from the same kind of violation. Once funds are allocated to a class of victims, we will begin the process of distributing payments to victims in that class.

In accordance with the Civil Penalty Fund rule, the Bureau allocated the following amounts to the eligible classes of victims in the following cases and to consumer education and financial literacy programs:

May 30, 2013

Payday Loan Debt Solution, Inc. $488,815

Gordon, et al. $10,000,000

Consumer Education and Financial Literacy Programs $13,380,000

Nov. 29, 2013

American Debt Settlement Solutions, Inc. $499,248

National Legal Help Center, Inc. $2,057,983

May 30, 2014

Meracord LLC $11,542,229

3-D Resorts–Bluegrass, LLC. $6,704,100

Nov. 28, 2014

Culver Capital, LLC $3,400,434

Amerisave Mortgage Corporation $1,380,470

Global Client Solutions, LLC $107,995,400

May 29, 2015

College Education Services LLC $3,459,336

Union Workers Credit Services, Inc. $18,908,744

National Corrective Group, Inc. $23,262,067

Culver Capital, LLC $421,481

Nov. 27, 2015

Hoffman Law Group f/k/a Residential Litigation $11,074,842

Student Financial Aid Services, Inc. $9,300,000

Consumer Education and Financial Literacy Programs $15,432,809

May 27, 2016

Morgan Drexen, Inc. and Walter Ledda $98,889,115

Irvine Web Works, Inc. d/b/a Student Loan Processing $7,923,548

Student Aid Institute, Steven Lamont $3,508,900

Nov. 29, 2016

Morgan Drexen, Inc. and Walter Ledda $33,993,373

May 30, 2017

Orion Processing, LLC, d/b/a World Law Processing, et al. $98,408,416

Siringoringo et al. $20,825,000

Global Client Solutions $8,188,668

Nov. 29, 2017

The Mortgage Law Group, LLP$18,331,737

Commercial Credit Consultants, et al.$21,500,716

Prime Marketing Holdings, LLC$14,451,033

May 18, 2018

Commercial Credit Consultants, et al.$9,149,286

Prime Marketing Holdings, LLC$6,149,407

Nov. 29, 2018

Federal Debt Assistance Association, LLC, et al. $4,972,389

Triton Management GRoup, Inc. $1,022,298

Richard F. Moseley, Sr., et al. ("Hydra Group") $69,623,528

May 30, 2019

Mark Corbett$9,027,895

Howard Law$35,206,275

Nov. 29, 2019

Universal Debt & Payment Solutions, LLC; et al. $558,674

Andrew Gamber, Voyager Financial Group, LLC, BAIC, Inc., and SoBell Corp.$2,700,000

May 30, 2020

Edmiston Marketing, LLC, d/b/a Easy Military Travel$3,468,224

Universal Debt & Payment Solutions, LLC, et al. (Bagga)$4,627,774

Nov. 27, 2020

Main Street Personal Finance, Inc.$1,540,517

Certified Forensic Loan Auditors, LLC; et al.$3,000,000

Timemark Solutions, Inc., et al.$3,762,360

GST Factoring, Inc., et al.$11,718,432

Premier Student Loan Center, et al. $89,366,096

May 30, 2021

SMART Payment Plan, LLC $6,000,000.00

Katharine Snyder, et al $3,864,000.00

U.S. Equity Advantage $8,400,000.00

Nationstar Mortgage LLC $1,210.57

Omni Financial of Nevada, Inc. $79,437,226.51

Nov. 29, 2021

College Financial Advisory $4,738,028

Yorba Capital Management, LLC, et al. $860,000

Burlington Financial Group, LLC, et al. $30,406,599

Chou Team Realty, et al. $18,833,119

May 27, 2022

Access Funding, et al. $28,409,957

LendUp Loans $39,833,927

BrightSpeed Solutions, Inc $54,000,000

November 29, 2022

BounceBack, Inc., et al. $1,481,773

Frank Ronald Gebase, Jr. $240,995

Performance SLC, LLC, et al. $10,950,818

Hello Digit, LLC $38,220

Think Finance, LLC, et al. $384,010,544

Future Income Payments LLC, et al. $11,086,434

May 30, 2023

All American Check Cashing $8,231,553

RD Legal Funding, LLC $1,403,496

Please refer to www.consumerfinance.gov/budget/civil-penalty-fund/ to find out which distributions are currently in process. Click on the case name for information on who to contact about whether you’ll receive a payment. If the case that affected you is not listed on that page, the distribution process for your case has not yet begun. Please check back for updates in the future.

The total of all Civil Penalty Fund deposits through September 30, 2021 is $1,488,823,618.

Under the rule, victims may receive up to the amount of their uncompensated harm from the Fund. The rule describes what will constitute victims’ “uncompensated harm” for purposes of payment from the Civil Penalty Fund. The Civil Penalty Fund is not intended as a complete replacement for other sources of compensation. Depending on the circ*mstances of a case, the amount that the Bureau might pay from the Fund may provide only partial compensation for the full scope of victims’ harm. The amount that victims will actually receive will depend on how much money is in the Fund and other factors.

To determine the amount of a victim’s uncompensated harm, the Fund Administrator will take the victim’s total compensable harm, and subtract out any compensation that the victim has received—or is reasonably expected to receive—for that harm. The Fund Administrator will determine the victim’s total compensable harm by looking to the terms of the relevant court or administrative order. If the amount of a victim’s compensable harm cannot be determined based on the terms of the relevant order, the victim’s compensable harm generally will be his or her out-of-pocket losses that resulted from the violation.

The rule establishes procedures that the Fund Administrator will follow to decide how much money victims will receive. If there is enough money available, the Fund Administrator generally will allocate funds so as to give all eligible victims full compensation for their uncompensated harm, as described in the rule. The rule also establishes procedures for the Fund Administrator to follow if there isn’t enough money available in the Fund to compensate everyone fully.

Allocating funds means setting aside money for a specific purpose. For purposes of the Civil Penalty Fund, the Fund Administrator “allocates” funds when she sets aside money from the Civil Penalty Fund for payments to particular classes of victims, or for use on consumer education and financial literacy programs.

Under the rule, the Fund Administrator will decide how to use money in the Fund every six months. In particular, every six months, the Fund Administrator will allocate funds to particular classes of victims and, if appropriate, for consumer education and financial literacy programs. The Fund Administrator has posted a schedule on consumerfinance.gov that shows when these allocations will occur. Under the current schedule, allocations are made between April 1 and May 30, and between October 1 and November 29 of each year.

Once the Fund Administrator allocates funds to a class of victims, the Bureau will begin the process of distributing payments to the victims in that class. That process includes identifying and locating the victims in the class. When the first payments will be distributed to individual victims will depend on how long that process takes. The Bureau is working with its third-party administrators to distribute payments to eligible victims in classes from cases to which funds have been allocated. Please refer to the table at the bottom of this webpage, www.consumerfinance.gov/budget/civil-penalty-fund/, for a list of cases currently in distribution.

If there is more than enough money in the Civil Penalty Fund to compensate fully all eligible victims’ uncompensated harm, the Bureau generally will first provide full compensation to all eligible victims to the extent practicable. Then, it may allocate remaining funds for consumer education and financial literacy programs, and/or it may keep money in the Fund for future victims.

If, at the time of a scheduled allocation, there is not enough money available in the Civil Penalty Fund to provide full compensation for all eligible victims’ uncompensated harm, the Fund Administrator will allocate funds equitably among the classes of victims from the most recent six-month period, who have not yet had an opportunity to receive an allocation from the Fund. The Fund Administrator will then allocate funds to classes of victims from preceding six-month periods if funds remain. If there is not enough money to give full compensation to all eligible victims who could practicably be paid, no money will be allocated for consumer education and financial literacy programs.

Every six months, the Fund Administrator will decide how much money, if any, to allocate for consumer education and financial literacy programs. The first priority will always be to allocate funds for payments to victims. However, if funds remain after allocating enough money to provide full compensation to all eligible victims who can practicably be paid, the Fund Administrator may allocate some or all of those remaining funds for consumer education and financial literacy programs.

The Bureau has adopted a set of criteria for selecting programs that will serve consumers and improve consumer education and financial literacy. The criteria require, among other things, that programs further the Bureau’s mission and strategic goals; promote or enhance financial literacy and consumers’ economic security; and include specific outcome targets to ensure the programs’ effectiveness.

The Bureau has selected the first consumer education and financial literacy program funded with Civil Penalty Fund money. The Bureau has deployed a financial coaching program that will serve two groups of Americans: (1) recent veterans who are transitioning from service member to veteran life, as well as military widows and widowers, and (2) economically vulnerable consumers who want to improve their approach to money management. The Bureau has contracted with Armed Forces Services Corporation to run this program.

One-on-one financial coaching will help veterans transition from military to civilian financial life, and help consumers who may be cash-strapped learn how to manage the money that they have more effectively to achieve their financial goals. Working with a financial coach can also help consumers identify and understand how to distinguish between useful financial products and frauds and scams, thus safeguarding against them becoming victims of frauds and scams in the future. The program for recent veterans and military spouse survivors is planned to have a presence in all fifty states. The component for economically vulnerable consumers, although smaller, will provide financial coaching services through locations that are diverse in terms of geographic location, and include those from urban and rural communities, and from different cultural, ethnic, racial, and other backgrounds.

The Bureau uses the federal procurement process for these programs and posts information about the process and contract requirements as Civil Penalty Fund money becomes available for consumer education and financial literacy programs.

The Civil Penalty Fund is maintained at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in a non-interest-bearing account.

The Fund Administrator, a position in the Office of the Chief Financial Officer, will maintain responsibility for allocating and distributing funds from the Civil Penalty Fund. The Bureau has contracted with two third-party administrators to assist the Fund Administrator with administrative aspects of distributing payments to victims.

When the Bureau enforces the law, it or a court may order the person or company that violated the law to take action to remedy the harm it caused consumers. This can include requiring the person or company to compensate its victims for this harm. This compensation is generally called “redress.” In some cases, the Bureau may require the person or company that violated the law to pay the redress directly to consumers. And in other cases the Bureau may require the person or company to pay the redress to the Bureau, and the Bureau will then distribute the redress money to the victims of that person or company’s violations.

Civil money penalties and payments to victims from the Civil Penalty Fund are different. When a person or company that violated the law is ordered to pay a civil penalty, that penalty does not go directly to that person’s or company’s victims, but rather is put in the Civil Penalty Fund. All civil penalties that anyone pays to the Bureau are pooled in this common Fund. Money in the Civil Penalty Fund then may be used to pay any eligible victim in accordance with the Civil Penalty Fund rule.

The main difference between redress and Civil Penalty Fund payments is the link between who pays the money and who receives the money. When a person or company pays redress, that redress money can go only to victims of that person or company. When a person or company pays a civil penalty, that money goes into the Civil Penalty Fund and can be used to pay any eligible victim from any case.

As an expert in consumer financial protection laws and the utilization of Civil Penalty Funds, I've extensively studied and applied the regulations outlined in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010. My expertise is grounded in a comprehensive understanding of how the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection enforces these laws, handles enforcement proceedings, and manages the Civil Penalty Fund.

I can discuss various aspects within the provided article:

  1. Bureau's Enforcement Proceedings: I understand how the Bureau initiates proceedings against individuals or companies that violate federal consumer financial protection laws.

  2. Civil Money Penalties and Civil Penalty Fund: I'm well-versed in the distinction between civil money penalties imposed on violators and the process by which these penalties are deposited into the Civil Penalty Fund.

  3. Fund Utilization and Compensation: My expertise extends to the allocation of funds within the Civil Penalty Fund to compensate consumers harmed by activities for which penalties were imposed. This includes provisions for compensating victims, providing consumer education, and financial literacy programs.

  4. Role of Fund Administrator and Governance Board: I comprehend the roles of the Fund Administrator, the Governance Board, and their responsibilities in managing the Fund, allocating payments, and issuing reports.

  5. Allocation Process and Classifications of Victims: I have knowledge of the procedures followed by the Fund Administrator to allocate funds to specific classes of victims based on case violations.

  6. Current Distributions and Future Payments: I'm familiar with the periodicity of payments, how victims are identified, and the distribution process for compensating eligible victims.

  7. Consumer Education and Financial Literacy Programs: I can explain the criteria for selecting and implementing programs funded by the Civil Penalty Fund, such as financial coaching for veterans and economically vulnerable consumers.

  8. Fund Maintenance and Operations: My expertise extends to the operational aspects of the Civil Penalty Fund, including its maintenance at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and the involvement of third-party administrators in fund distribution.

  9. Differentiation between Redress and Fund Payments: I understand the distinction between redress payments directly to victims from violators and Civil Penalty Fund payments made from pooled penalties.

If you have any specific inquiries or need further elucidation on any of these aspects, please feel free to ask for detailed information or clarification.

Civil Penalty Fund | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (2024)
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