advertisement
Looking for something on the site? Search for it here! Also see Clark's Greatest Hits

Nov 20, 2009 -- Kangaroo court arbitrator shut down by Minnesota AG

Minnesota's Attorney General Lori Swanson has scored a major victory for consumers by banning one company that provided kangaroo court arbitration in credit card disputes from operating in that arena.

As part of your card-holder agreement, the banks that control most of the credit cards in the United States require any disputes to be settled in a forum where they pick the arbitrator and set the rules. This type of forum finds in favor of the banks 99.9996% of the time, according to a prior report. There's no way that could be a fair and impartial process.

Swanson's action was targeted against the National Arbitration Forum -- the country's largest administrator of credit card and consumer collections arbitrations.

"To consumers, the company said it was impartial," the attorney general said in a statement, "but behind the scenes, it worked alongside credit card companies to get them to put unfair arbitration clauses in the fine print of their contracts and to appoint the Forum as the arbitrator. Now the company is out of this business."

Throughout our nation's history, brave men and women have fought for our freedom and our branches of government. For the banksters to spit on their graves by not allowing you your day in court is an outrage.

There are, of course, other options that are more equitable than mandatory arbitration via a kangaroo court. Arizona is a leader in what's called alternative dispute resolution. This voluntary solution allows people to try to work out their problems with companies first -- with the understanding that going to court is possible if necessary.

Editors's note: This segment originally aired July 2009


Unfortunately, Clark won't be able to answer any questions submitted via commenting. If you have a question, please try posting it to our message boards.

Avg. rating: N/A

What others are saying

  • Land Of 10,000 Heros, or 1 in this case
    Leave it to Minnesota to be the first and only state to take this action, no surprise there. Although, too little too late for the thousands that have already been victims to this corrupt practice, better late than never I guess, but those that have already suffered should be able to have some type of recourse with this new law, but they don't.

    As for the alternative solution of working it out with the company one on one, I doubt I would even give a 50/50 on being able to even have this option on amounts greater than 1,000, maybe a 20/80 in your favor of you getting a balance reduced. The better the business economy is the less chance you'll have on being able to work out a fair deal. Most companies will wait you out, serve you into court and garnish your wages for the balance, interest, fees and all.
send to a friend  view as printer-friendly  RSS feeds
advertisement
advertisement
THIS WEEK'S POLL
advertisement