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State of Illinois |
NEWS |
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| ROD R. BLAGOJEVICH – GOVERNOR LISA MADIGAN – ATTORNEY GENERAL DEAN MARTINEZ – SECRETARY, DEPT. OF FINANCIAL & PROFESSIONAL REGULATION |
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| For Immediate Release: July 6 , 2006 |
Contact: Abby Ottenhoff (Gov.) |
312-814-3158 |
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| Melissa Merz (AG) | 312-814-3118 | ||
Blagojevich Administration and Attorney General Madigan File Simultaneous Enforcement Actions against Payday Lender |
Americash Fined $190,000 and Ordered to Stop Issuing Illegal Loans |
CHICAGO – Americash Loans, LLC today became the target of the first simultaneous action taken by the Blagojevich Administration and Attorney General Lisa Madigan under the Payday Loan Reform Act (PLRA). In its order assessing a fine of $190,000 against the lender, the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (IDFPR) charged that Americash Loans issued loans that meet the legal definition of “payday loans,” but failed to comply with the terms of the PLRA, and ignored the required consumer protections. During a routine examination of Americash’s store, IDFPR found flagrant violations of the PLRA. As a result, the Department brought them to the attention of the Attorney General’s office. Today the Attorney General, working with IDFPR, filed a complaint seeking injunctive relief with the Circuit Court of Cook County to enjoin the firm from continued violations of the law. “Too many people who apply for short-term financial help find themselves in a devastating spiral of debt. We fought hard to pass strong payday loan restrictions in order to help consumers avoid that cycle. Any lender that does what Americash has done by sidestepping consumer protections is going to have to face severe consequences,” said Governor Rod R. Blagojevich. “My office is filing this lawsuit today because Americash's actions are a blatant violation of a new law meant to protect consumers from a cycle of debt," Madigan said. "The new law has many consumer protections which we will enforce vigorously." The PLRA, which Gov. Blagojevich signed into law last June, took effect last December, caps the fees that payday lenders can charge, limits the number of times a loan can be rolled over and allows customers an interest-free payback option. The law also creates special protections for military service personnel and their families. The Act defines a payday loan as any loan offered for a term of 120 days or less, that charges more than 36% APR, and allows the lender to access the borrower’s bank account, take a wage assignment or accept a post-dated check. The law allows IDFPR to issue fines of up to $10,000 for each violation; today, the Department has assessed the maximum fine allowed. Governor Blagojevich directed IDFPR to aggressively enforce the new PLRA when it took effect on December 6, 2005. He ordered that particular attention should be paid to lenders who may try to get around the new restrictions. The Department has stepped up its enforcement of all short term lenders since the PLRA took effect last year. In the order issued today, IDFPR charged Americash with violating the consumer protections created under the PLRA. During a regularly scheduled inspection of Americash’s loan offices in Springfield, IDFPR examiners found that the lender had issued 19 loans of less than 120 days that accepted a wage assignment as security for the loan and had interest rates of 521% -- 28 % higher than the rate allowed under the PLRA. “Governor Blagojevich made it very clear that we would aggressively enforce the consumer protections included in the PLRA. Americash has clearly violated the law, and in addition to changing its business practices, we hope this order sends a clear message to other Illinois consumer lenders attempting to evade the intent of the law,” said IDFPR Secretary Dean Martinez. In 2001, the State had tried to reign in the rapid increase in short-term payday loans through regulations implemented by the former Department of Financial Institutions. At that time, the average length of a payday loan was 14 to 28 days (one or two pay periods). The rule specifically applied to payday loans of up to 30 days. Within days of the rule taking effect, the payday lending industry responded by extending the length of the loan to 31 days or longer to circumvent a law that had tried to protect consumers. Currently, there are 1,476 payday or other short-term lenders in Illinois, a 12% increase from last year. According to industry figures from 2005, more than $8 billion in receivables is collected from Illinois borrowers. Illinois CILA lenders had net receivables of over $4.8 billion ($4,800,000,000) last year. |
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