Houston Chronicle

Debt collector settles

- By L.M. Sixel

A large Houston-based debt collector accused of using unscrupulo­us tactics to collect federal student loans and other debts will pay $700,000 to settle a civil lawsuit filed on behalf of the Federal Trade Commission.

GC Services agreed to the settlement the same day it was sued in Houston federal court by U.S. Attorney Kenneth Magidson over allegation­s that it violated federal laws governing debt collection practices, authoritie­s

said. GC Services, which neither admitted nor denied the allegation­s, declined to comment.

The lawsuit, which accused GC Services of hounding consumers who didn’t owe money and disclosing debts to third parties, is the latest case the FTC has brought on behalf of consumers who have filed complaints about debt collection efforts. The commission typically logs more complaints about debt collectors than any other category of consumer complaints, according to the agency’s most recent annual report.

Last year, the agency received 898,000 collection complaints, nearly twice as many as identity theft and a third of all consumer complaints filed with the FTC.

The surge of complaints comes as student loan debt is a growing segment of the collection business. More than 40 million consumers carry student loan debt, with an average balance of $29,000, the FTC said.

Companies like GC Services are hired by lenders to collect debts. GC Services clients include banks, telecommun­ication companies, utilities and government agencies, according to the lawsuit.

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