April 16, 2024 Breaking News, Latest News, and Videos

TV Company Pays More than $145,000 to Consumers:

Santa Monica City Attorney’s Office has just concluded a settlement agreement that includes refunds totaling more than $145,000 to nearly 100 former customers of TV Authority, a Santa Monica-based online electronics dealer that went out of business in 2007.

The customers from all over the world have claimed that they paid, sometimes thousands of dollars, for plasma TVs and other high-end electronics, but never received them. The City’s investigation revealed that TV Authority developed problems meeting a high volume of orders in 2006, but continued to take payments long after, resulting in dozens of consumers who lost their money.

The case marks Santa Monica’s largest-ever recovery in a consumer protection prosecution.

In November 2007, the City’s Consumer Protection Unit filed 14 criminal charges against the former owners of TV Authority.  The unit first learned of the problem in late 2006, when several former customers complained that they had paid for TVs but nothing was shipped to them.

The defendants were charged with violating a California law that makes it a crime for online and telephonic sellers to take payment but not ship the goods or provide a refund within 30 days.

 “This law is a valuable tool for prosecutors and consumers when internet sales go bad,” said Deputy City Attorney Eda Suh, who prosecuted the case.  “It holds business accountable to deliver the goods or give a refund, Suh said.”

The business owners had claimed that they were working to provide refunds to all customers, but this job was never completed.

In January 2008 the court ordered TV Authority to shut down all advertisement on the Internet and to post a notice informing the public that it was being investigated by the City. This led to increased compalints to the Consumer Protection Unit.

The breakthrough in the case came in March 2008 when prosecutors obtained a copy of TV Authority’s complete customer database, through an agreement with one of the former owners.  Based on that data, the City’s consumer specialist Paula Rockenstein wrote to the more than 5,000 former customers. Rockenstein eventually learned that nearly one hundred people still had not received their TVs or refunds – in the amount of nearly $150,000.

Under the agreement, the criminal charges against the owners were dismissed in exchange for full refunds to all known customers who still had not received TVs or refunds.“We are pleased that the business owners were willing to cooperate and do the right thing,” said Suh.  “In these uncertain economic times, each dollar returned is sure to help.”

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