Los Angeles Times

Hertz’s history of theft claims

Car rental company has wrongly accused hundreds of clients, leading to arrests, court papers allege.

- By Steven Church Church writes for Bloomberg.

Hertz Corp., facing lawsuits from hundreds of car renters who say they were falsely arrested for auto theft, files thousands of related criminal complaints each year against customers, according to claims in newly released court documents.

In one four-year period, the company filed nearly 8,000 theft reports annually, advocates for the customers who allege they were falsely arrested said in a federal court filing Thursday in Wilmington, Del. The advocates cited internal data from Hertz that a judge ordered the company to release.

A breakdown of the theft reports isn’t public, so it’s not yet possible to know how many complaints were against customers and how many were for other types of theft. Under certain circumstan­ces, Hertz will tell police that a customer may have stolen a car. Many of those people turn out to have valid contracts and have been falsely arrested, according to the lawsuits.

Messages left for Hertz representa­tives weren’t immediatel­y returned. CBS, which hired lawyers to help get the documents unsealed, previously reported that Hertz said the “vast majority” of cases involve renters who were weeks or months overdue on returns and authoritie­s are brought in only after “exhaustive attempts” to reach a customer.

In a court hearing Wednesday, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Mary Walrath ordered the annual theft numbers to be made public, siding with advocates for 220 people suing Hertz who argued that more details about Hertz’s internal antitheft program should be public.

Court documents show that some of the customers who rented cars were jailed, some of them years after they rented and returned the cars. At least one allegedly was held at gunpoint just hours after paying for a rental.

“Hertz now admits that it reports thousands of its own customers for auto theft each year,” lawyers for the plaintiffs said in court papers. The problems are companywid­e and systemic, they allege.

The claims often involve long-term rentals, some set up directly by the customer, others through an auto insurance company, according to court documents.

Those who claim Hertz had them wrongly arrested have filed claims in Bankruptcy Court demanding to be paid like other creditors of the company. Walrath oversaw Hertz’s Chapter 11 reorganiza­tion, which ended last year with a plan to pay creditors in full.

 ?? David Goldman Associated Press ?? UNDER CERTAIN circumstan­ces, Hertz will tell police that a customer may have stolen a vehicle.
David Goldman Associated Press UNDER CERTAIN circumstan­ces, Hertz will tell police that a customer may have stolen a vehicle.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States