Business ProfileforVerizon Wireless
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The following describes a government action that has been resolved by either a settlement or a decision by a court or administrative agency. If the matter is being appealed, it will be noted below.
TRENTON – May 9, 2024- Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin and the Division of Consumer Affairs, together with 50 other attorneys general, announced a $10.25 million agreement with the nation’s largest cell phone companies to resolve an investigation into their allegedly misleading and confusing advertising and sales tactics.
Under the terms of the Assurance of Voluntary Compliance (AVC), AT&T, Verizon Wireless, and T-Mobile each agreed to change how they market, advertise, and sell wireless services to prospective customers.
The states allege that the wireless carriers’ advertisements, including those that appeared in print, television, and online, did not disclose or misrepresented material terms and conditions of their offers, in violation of their consumer protection laws. Under the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act, N.J.S.A. 56:8-2, “any commercial practice that is unconscionable or abusive, deception, fraud, false pretense, false promise, misrepresentation, or the knowing, concealment, suppression, or omission of any material fact” is an unlawful practice.
The AVCs address the common misleading advertising practices of the wireless carriers, including misrepresentations concerning:
(1) “unlimited” data advertisements, which failed to clearly and conspicuously disclose material limitations;
2) “free” phone offers, which failed to clearly and conspicuously disclose material conditions;
(3) monetary incentives to “switch” wireless networks, which failed to clearly and conspicuously disclose how the monetary incentives would be provided; and
(4) wireless carrier plan comparisons, which failed to disclose material differences.
Under the terms of the settlements, the companies are required to:
- disclose the material terms of an offer to pay, credit, or reimburse the consumer for switching carriers, including specifying the form in which the payment or reimbursement will be made and when;
- make all advertisements or representations to consumers truthful, accurate, and non-misleading;
- disclose any restrictions that may apply about the speed of unlimited data, and display those restrictions in such a way that they cannot be missed by the person viewing the advertisement, whether printed or online;
- refrain from representing, expressly or by implication, that the mobile data in a capped data plan is unlimited;
- specify all the terms and conditions that must be met for a customer to receive a “free” device, including any fees (such as activation or shipping and processing) and lease agreements;
- refrain from increasing the cost of purchasing or leasing a device for the purpose of recouping all or part of the cost of the “free” device or service;
- make clear that a lease agreement is not an agreement to purchase the device;
- disclose the comparisons that are being used to make a pricing or savings claim compared to other companies or services;
- train customer service representatives about these changes, including staff who meet with consumers as well as those who create advertising; and
- appoint a representative to handle consumer complaints.
The Wireless Companies deny they have engaged in any unlawful or otherwise inappropriate business practices. The Wireless Companies contend that their advertisements have always been truthful, accurate and non-misleading and provided clear and conspicuous disclosures regarding offers related to free or discounted products and services, offers to pay costs and fees to switch services, leasing wireless devices and unlimited data claims. However, the Wireless Companies have agreed to this Assurance with the Participating States so that this matter may be resolved amicably.
Verizon (which includes TracFone and Cellco Partnership) and T-Mobile (which merged with Sprint in 2020) will each pay a little more than $4 million, and AT&T (which includes Cricket Wireless) will pay about $2 million.
New Jersey’s share of the overall settlement is $202,337.40 ($95,038.80 from T-Mobile; $58,526.51 from Verizon; and $48,772.09 from AT&T) to be used for purposes that may include future consumer protection enforcement, consumer education, or compliance monitoring.
At-a-glance
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Business Details
This is a multi-location business.
- Location of This Business
- 1 Verizon Way, Basking Ridge, NJ 07920-1025
- BBB File Opened:
- 8/16/1994
- Years in Business:
- 40
- Business Started:
- 1/1/1984
- Business Incorporated:
- 1/1/1984
- Type of Entity:
- Corporation
- Alternate Business Name
- National Recovery Operation for Verizon Wireless
- National Recovery Department for Verizon Wirelessss
- Business Management
- Executive Relations
- Contact Information
Customer Contact
- Executive Relations
Customer Complaints
36,722 Customer Complaints
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10/29/2024
- Complaint Type:
- Order Issues
- Status:
- Resolved
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