President Musk and King Donald continue to promote fraud and abuse by letting corporate criminals off the hook
Consumer advocates slammed the Trump
administration for dropping various enforcement actions against companies
accused of activities that include ripping off savings account holders,
illegally collecting on student loans, and engaging in an unlawful mortgage
broker kickback scheme.Pawel Kuczynski
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's notices of voluntary dismissal came as the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs held a hearing for Jonathan McKernan, President Donald Trump's pick to lead the CFPB—which Accountable.US executive director Tony Carrk has called "a gift to big banks and special interests."
While the former Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation board
member awaits confirmation from the GOP-controlled Senate, Trump and Russell
Vought, the CFPB's temporary leader, have wasted no time trying to gut the agency and undo the work of its former
director, Rohit Chopra, who
oversaw cases against the following companies:
- Capital One,
accused of cheating millions of banking customers out of more than $2
billion in interest;
- Heights Finance,
accused of loan-churning practices that harvested hundreds of millions of
dollars in costs and fees;
- Pennsylvania Higher
Education Assistance Agency (PHEAA), accused of collecting
on student loans discharged in bankruptcy and sending false information to
credit reporting companies;
- Rocket Homes,
accused of providing incentives to real estate agents and brokers who
steered homebuyers toward its loans; and
- Vanderbilt Mortgage &
Finance, accused of trapping people in risky loans for
manufactured homes.
Court paperwork "in the Rocket Homes case notes that the 'Consumer Financial Protection Bureau dismisses this action, with prejudice, against all defendants,'" according toThe Associated Press. "Dismissing a case without prejudice means that it cannot be refiled. Similar wording was used in the dismissals of the CFPB's Capital One and Vanderbilt Mortgage suits."
Those decisions came after the CFPB last week dropped a case
against SoLo Funds, which the agency accused of misleading borrowers about loan
costs. Vought had then teased further action, saying on social media Sunday that
"shockingly, the CFPB tried to destroy this company, SoLo, which incurred
millions in legal fees and had to lay off 30% of its workforce. It was wrong
and we dismissed the case. More to come but the weaponization of 'consumer
protection' must end."
Meanwhile, critics like Christine Chen Zinner, consumer
policy counsel at Americans for Financial Reform, are framing the CFPB's
dismissals as a betrayal of the agency's mission.
"The old CFPB stood ready to protect consumers and
wrestle back the ill-gotten gains of big banks like Capital One," Chen
Zinner said Thursday.
"With this decision, the Trump-appointed leadership is letting Capital One
steal $2 billion from its depositors, another example of this administration
standing up for Wall Street at the expense of everyday people who deserve the
CFPB's protection."
Erin Witte, director of consumer protection at the Consumer
Federation of America, also released a
statement focused on the bank case.
"The CFPB was created to be a watchdog for big banks,
not a lapdog, and dismissing this case is a gift to Capital One," said
Witte. "$2 billion is a drop in the bucket for Capital One–less than half
a percent of its total assets—but returning this money would make a huge
difference to the hardworking Americans who trusted Capital One to safeguard
their savings and were kept in the dark about how to earn more."
Witte also described the full list of dismissals as
"unprecedented," and toldReuters,
"We're getting a very strong message here that if you're a bank, if you're
a student loan servicer, and you're violating the law, the CFPB is not only not
going to pursue you, they're going to let you out of your case scot-free."
Accountable.US highlighted that
"the news stands in stark and alarming contrast to McKernan's remarks... to
senators, promising to review all existing CFPB lawsuits before making any
decisions around dropping litigation."
Student Borrower Protection Center executive director Mike
Pierce said in a
statement about the PHEAA case that "Russ Vought and Donald
Trump sided with a lawless and corrupt student loan company at
the expense of borrowers across the country—another sign that powerful
financial interests are driving the capture and demolition of the federal
consumer watchdog."
"This is a slap in the face to students, student loan
borrowers, and working people everywhere," Pierce continued. "PHEAA
lied to some of the poorest and most vulnerable Americans, then illegally
hounded them for debt that they did not owe, all to make a buck. And today,
cowardly political sycophants backed down on the federal government’s only
effort to hold PHEAA accountable."
"Of course, like all fascist toadies, Russ Vought will
rightly be forgotten by history and sink into well-deserved irrelevance. But
until then, law enforcement at every level of government must rush in to fill
the void left by a federal consumer protection agency that now stands only to
serve billionaires and big corporations," he added. "Remember: these
people prey on those in need because they are motivated only by the desire to
exercise power, and they are motivated to do so because they are cowards. It is
everyone's job to remind Vought and his cronies of their powers' limits, and to
remind the world of their cowardice."
Lauren Saunders, associate director of the National Consumer
Law Center, also directed some
blame at billionaire Elon Musk, the head of Trump's
so-called Department of Government Efficiency, which
is leading the administration's efforts to slash the federal workforce and
spending.
"The Trump administration and Elon Musk are showing us
exactly what it means not to have ordinary people protected by a strong
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau—they are dismissing enforcement cases that
sought to return billions to working families harmed by corporations accused of
egregious conduct that violated the law," said Saunders. "On top of
the stop-work order and firing of CFPB workers doing their jobs, this sends a
dangerous message to corporate America that financial fraud and abuse will go unchecked.
We must preserve a strong, independent, and functional CFPB to stand up to
corporate bullies."
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), a former
bankruptcy professor, is the mastermind behind the CFPB. She is also the
ranking member of the panel which McKernan appeared before on Thursday. The
American Prospect executive editor David Dayen reported that
the senator informed the nominee about the dismissals during the hearing.
"Literally while you've been sitting here and you've been talking about the importance of following the law, we get the news that the CFPB is dropping lawsuits against companies that are cheating American families, or alleged to be cheating American families," Warren said. "It seems to me the timing of that announcement is designed to embarrass you and to show exactly who is in charge of this agency right now: Elon Musk and his little band of hackers.