The Scotsman

Nuisance call firm fined a record £400k in wake of complaints

- By JANE BRADLEY Consumer affairs correspond­ent

A firm which made almost 100 million nuisance calls has been given a record fine by the industry watchdog.

Keurboom Communicat­ions has been issued the Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office’s highest ever nuisance calls fine of £400,000 after more than 1,000 people complained about recorded – also known as automated – calls.

The calls, made over an 18 month period, related to a wide range of subjects includingr­oadtraffic­accidentcl­aims and PPI compensati­on. Some people received repeat calls, sometimes on the same day and during unsociable hours. The company also hid its identity, making it harder for people to complain.

The firm, which was only incorporat­ed with Companies House in 2014, has been placed in voluntary liquidatio­n since the ICO’S investigat­ion.

Steve Eckersley, head of enforcemen­t at the ICO said: “Keurboom showed scant regard for the rules, causing upset and distress to people unfortunat­e enough to be on the receiving end of one its 100 million calls.

“The unpreceden­ted scale of its campaign and Keurboom’s failure to co-operate with our investigat­ion has resulted in the largest fine issued by the Informatio­n Commission­er for nuisance calls.”

He added: “These calls have now stopped - as has Keurboom - but our work has not. We’ll continue to track down companies that blight people’s lives with nuisance calls, texts and emails.”

The Direct Marketing Associatio­n (DMA) called for custodial sentences to introduced as a punishment for the worst offenders found to be in breach of nuisance call laws.

Mike Lordan, director of external affairs at the DMA, said: “We applaud the work of the Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office in their work against rogue marketers who do nothing for consumers and give the legitimate industry a bad name. We hope that in the future rogue marketers will face the real threat of prison when abusing consumers in this way, which will be an effective deterrent.”

The ICO is working to recover the fine by working with the liquidator and insolvency practition­ers.

Keurboom, which lists Gregory Francis Rudd, from Cambridge, as its sole director, is exempt from filing full accounts under section 44 of the Companies Act relating to small companies.

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