Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago biz that buys, resells diabetic strips hit with 2nd national warning

- BY STEPHANIE ZIMMERMANN, CONSUMER INVESTIGAT­IONS REPORTER szimmerman­n@suntimes.com | @SZReports

A Chicago company that buys and resells diabetic testing strips is the subject of a rare second national warning from the Better Business Bureau, which says the company hasn’t addressed a growing pile of consumer complaints.

The alert targets Surplus Diabetic Supplies LLC, which operates as CashNowOff­er.com and has a mailing address on the Northwest Side.

Consumers in 46 states have lodged 447 complaints against CashNowOff­er with the Better Business Bureau of Chicago & Northern Illinois, which has given the company its lowest rating — “F.”

In September, the Chicago SunTimes reported consumers were complainin­g CashNowOff­er didn’t pay as promised for their testing strips and that they couldn’t get answers when they complained.

The company’s Jonathan Avila told the Sun-Times then he was “working to get those complaints resolved.”

The Illinois attorney general’s office confirmed late Tuesday that it is investigat­ing complaints against the company.

The BBB says it communicat­ed with the business in January, March, September and October and each time CashNowOff­er promised to take care of the complaints, which company officials said originated under former owners.

But in the BBB’s warning Wednesday, it said: “To date, the business has addressed a small number of consumer complaints, but they have failed to remain consistent in alleviatin­g the pattern of consumer complaints or fully modify the ads they promised to address.”

“BBB continues to receive formal complaints, calls, emails and ‘Scam Tracker’ reports about the business.”

Steve Bernas, president of the Chicago BBB, said it’s unusual for a company to be the subject of a second national warning, but, “in this instance, it was deemed necessary.”

The private agency, which promotes ethical business practices, says most people who filed complaints said they weren’t paid and couldn’t get informatio­n from the company. Some said they were paid but the checks bounced.

Thirty million diabetics in the United States use about $4 billion in testing strips each year to monitor their blood sugar. Some use up to 12 strips a day.

That volume has given rise to a booming market for resellers who advertise online, on social media, even on roadside signs, offering cash for unused strips. A box of 50 strips that might cost $99 at a pharmacy is purchased, say, for $15 from a patient and resold for $35 — still a steep discount from the drugstore price.

It’s legal to resell unexpired strips, according to the federal Food and Drug Administra­tion, unless patients fraudulent­ly obtained them through Medicare or Medicaid just to sell them.

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