> Except there have already been consequences. There has already been a financial penalty applied and creditors sent to collect it. You are trying far too hard to make your original, wrong comment accurate, when it was a wrong conclusion based on an incomplete understanding of this story.
That is mentioned nowhere in TFA. In fact, TFA explicitly states that it would be fraud to report such debts to the credit bureaus. To wit:
> Once again — if KlearGear asserts falsely that someone accepted a contractual term, and asserts a debt based on that false statement, and reports that debt to credit agencies, that's fraud. It's not just a civil wrong, it's a crime.
(from TFA). Now you say:
> The subjects complained to the credit agencies and were essentially told to get lost (credit companies have no interest in playing conflict resolution agents, especially given that their bread is buttered by creditors).
Again, this tidbit appears nowhere in TFA. Reading through to the linked stories, it does appear there. That doesn't change the fact that the title is an incorrect summary of the linked article. The article is a legal analysis of the expected long-term consequences. Which again, states that there are unlikely to be any.
At least for the customer - it sounds like this company is well and truly screwed.
> They have a chance now simply by getting as much publicity as possible (and the outrage and attention which you specifically claim isn't necessary in your post), television networks and others acting on their behalf, however that doesn't make the reality of this bizarre and abusive situation from being real.
They would've been much better served by getting a lawyer to begin with, and letting the system work. The linked article is a pretty good indication that consumer attorneys dream of cases like these. Outrage and attention, while certainly good fodder for the portion of the public that loves to be outraged and pay a minute of attention to the cause-of-the-week, is ultimately an ineffective method of resolving messes like these.
The only resolution will come through boring legal work. Everything else is window dressing.
EDIT: this whole story is a pretty good affirmation of the fact that people who "can't afford a lawyer" usually can't afford not to have a lawyer.