The Signal

Corporatio­ns run amok

- Bryan CAFORIO Bryan Caforio is a candidate for California’s 25th Congressio­nal District and a consumer rights attorney who lives in Santa Clarita.

Have you ever had your bank or credit card company wrongly charge you a $15 overdraft fee and then ignore your complaints to customer service for a refund? If so, what did do you do? You used to have three options: (1) hire a lawyer on your own to represent you, which would cost much more than your bank stole from you; (2) join together with other people your bank also cheated and bring a class action lawsuit; or (3) realize the deck is stacked against you, leave a bad review on Yelp, and kiss your $15 goodbye.

Realistica­lly, the only way to get that money back was to join with other people who were taken advantage of and bring a class action lawsuit against the corporatio­n. Unfortunat­ely, extreme Republican­s in Congress, including our own Representa­tive Steve Knight, voted to take that option away from consumers, essentiall­y allowing the biggest banks to steal money from each and every one of us whenever they choose.

As a consumer rights attorney, I’ve seen countless cases in which banks, insurance companies, and corporatio­ns try to steal from the consumers they’re supposed to serve because they know career corporate politician­s in Washington wrote the rules to let them take advantage of us.

Bankers know how to game the system. Banks don’t usually steal $15 million from one person at a time because that multi-millionair­e would hire a top lawyer to get her money back. More commonly, banks do something like overcharge one million different customers by $15. And those banks know it just doesn’t make sense for each person to spend the time and money suing a bank to recover the $15 on their own. So, after Republican­s in Congress voted to take away the right of people to join together to sue the bank in a class action, where does that leave us? With the bank walking away with the $15 million it stole, and all of us consumers a little lighter in the wallet.

This scenario unfortunat­ely isn’t just a hypothetic­al. Recently we’ve been overrun with stories of financial institutio­ns out of control: from Wells Fargo creating millions of fake accounts, to the Equifax hack exposing 143 million Americans to potential identify theft, and let’s not forget all the bogus foreclosur­es during the financial collapse right here in the 25th District.

It’s time to finally say enough is enough. We need our representa­tives to start working for us, not the big banks who line corporate politician­s’ pockets with huge campaign contributi­ons. In Congress, I will work tirelessly to rewrite these rules and unrig this stacked system. It’s long past time our representa­tives stand up to banks and corporatio­ns, rather than continuing to let them steal from us without consequenc­e.

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