NewCardDude
06-15-2004, 03:47 PM
RALEIGH, N.C. -- Satellite TV customers who were denied rebates will get another chance to collect their money.
The state attorney general won a judgment against Prime TV of Moore County, which failed to pay thousands of customers who were promised cash back.
"This company lured customers with a rebate, then threw every roadblock in the way when consumers tried to claim their money," Attorney General Roy Cooper said. "We're going to make sure that consumers now get the rebates they deserve."
The legal action announced Tuesday resolves charges by Cooper that Prime TV of Southern Pines and its owners, David and Annette Hagen, failed to pay rebates for installation costs owed to many consumers who signed up for satellite television service with the company.
Former Prime TV employees told WRAL months ago they were trained to stall and mislead consumers seeking rebates.
Prime TV, which stopped selling DirecTV systems, must now contact customers and offer rebates again. The company was also ordered to pay the state $50,000.
Under terms of a consent judgment issued late Monday by Wake County Superior Court Judge Donald Stephens, Prime TV must send a letter approved by Cooper's office to all consumers whose rebate claim was rejected on or after Jan. 1, 2002.
The letters, which the company must send within 52 days, will give Prime TV customers 90 days to file for a rebate again using a simplified rebate form. Eligible customers should expect to receive a letter soon. Prime TV then has 30 days to mail a rebate check to each customer who returns the form.
If Prime TV denies any claims, the company must explain why to the attorney general's office, which has the final say on whether or not a consumer is eligible for the rebate. If Prime TV fails to pay any eligible rebate claim, then the Hagens are responsible for the costs of providing those rebates.
In addition, Prime TV, the Hagens and any affiliated company are barred from offering rebates to customers for three years. They may advertise a rebate offered by a separate company,such as DirecTV, but only if that company administers and pays for the rebates in full and only if they first notify Cooper's office.
Prime TV and its owners are permanently barred from misleading North Carolina consumers or from misrepresenting any warranty they provide. They must also send refunds to any consumer who has complained about the three-year protection plan purchased from the company.
"My office worked hard to try to make Prime TV comply with the rebate promises it made to consumers," Cooper said. "Now, we're holding the company and its owners responsible for making good on those promises."
http://www.wral.com/news/3420340/detail.html
The state attorney general won a judgment against Prime TV of Moore County, which failed to pay thousands of customers who were promised cash back.
"This company lured customers with a rebate, then threw every roadblock in the way when consumers tried to claim their money," Attorney General Roy Cooper said. "We're going to make sure that consumers now get the rebates they deserve."
The legal action announced Tuesday resolves charges by Cooper that Prime TV of Southern Pines and its owners, David and Annette Hagen, failed to pay rebates for installation costs owed to many consumers who signed up for satellite television service with the company.
Former Prime TV employees told WRAL months ago they were trained to stall and mislead consumers seeking rebates.
Prime TV, which stopped selling DirecTV systems, must now contact customers and offer rebates again. The company was also ordered to pay the state $50,000.
Under terms of a consent judgment issued late Monday by Wake County Superior Court Judge Donald Stephens, Prime TV must send a letter approved by Cooper's office to all consumers whose rebate claim was rejected on or after Jan. 1, 2002.
The letters, which the company must send within 52 days, will give Prime TV customers 90 days to file for a rebate again using a simplified rebate form. Eligible customers should expect to receive a letter soon. Prime TV then has 30 days to mail a rebate check to each customer who returns the form.
If Prime TV denies any claims, the company must explain why to the attorney general's office, which has the final say on whether or not a consumer is eligible for the rebate. If Prime TV fails to pay any eligible rebate claim, then the Hagens are responsible for the costs of providing those rebates.
In addition, Prime TV, the Hagens and any affiliated company are barred from offering rebates to customers for three years. They may advertise a rebate offered by a separate company,such as DirecTV, but only if that company administers and pays for the rebates in full and only if they first notify Cooper's office.
Prime TV and its owners are permanently barred from misleading North Carolina consumers or from misrepresenting any warranty they provide. They must also send refunds to any consumer who has complained about the three-year protection plan purchased from the company.
"My office worked hard to try to make Prime TV comply with the rebate promises it made to consumers," Cooper said. "Now, we're holding the company and its owners responsible for making good on those promises."
http://www.wral.com/news/3420340/detail.html