A
Monthly Review of Issues Affecting Commercial Telemarketing by Copilevitz & Canter,
LLC, Attorneys at Law
August, 2001
ARKANSAS FACIAL CHALLENGE
The Eighth Circuit issued its opinion upholding the "no-rebuttal" law
in the face of our constitutional challenge. All was not lost,
however, as the Court made three-key rulings in our favor. First,
the Court held that the law did regulate speech and was subject
to First Amendment scrutiny. The Arkansas Attorney General had
argued that the law was unrelated to speech. Second, the Court
held that a telemarketer does not have to disconnect when a consumer
gives an ambiguous response. A telemarketer is entitled to ask
additional questions and present additional information in the
face of such ambiguity. Third, the Court held that the Attorney
General was not correct in its interpretation that the "no-rebuttal" law
extended beyond the particular conversation during which the consumer
said "no." The Attorney General had argued that the telemarketer
could not then redial that consumer in the future. The Court held
that the law applied only to that conversation and had no effect
on future activity of the telemarketer. We are appealing the ruling.
ALABAMA
Alabama has taken a position that it will not sell its "do-not-call" list
to businesses which are not required to register as telemarketers
under the Alabama law. As you may recall, Kentucky took this same
position which basically meant that no business buys Kentucky's
list. I will keep you posted regarding whether Alabama changes
its interpretation.
CALIFORNIA
The California Assembly is still considering a bill which would
regulate the use of prerecorded messages in telemarketing. Please
contact me if you would like to discuss this bill.
DELAWARE
The Delaware Senate is considering a bill which would prohibit
licensed cemeteries from engaging in telemarketing. Not to beat
the dead horse, but content-based restrictions on speech like
this are clearly unconstitutional.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
The District of Columbia has enacted a telemarketer registration
requirement. The law requires that telemarketers post a $50,000
bond prior to telemarketing in the District and it incorporates
most of the anti-fraud provisions of the Telemarketing Sales
Rule. The law does not contain an exemption for telemarketing
service bureaus which have been in business for a certain period
of time and provide most of their services to otherwise exempt
entities, although the law does contain most of the other standard
exemptions found in other states' telemarketing laws.
GEORGIA
The Governor of Georgia has signed an Executive Order authorizing
the Attorney General to investigate a fraudulent telemarketing
operation which sold magazines in an Atlanta suburb. It is alleged
that the operation purposely targeted the elderly and made sales
through fraudulent representations.
ILLINOIS
The Illinois Attorney General has filed suit in Federal Court against
a company which allegedly charged a $299 fee plus $5 a month
to obtain an unsecured credit card with a credit limit of $3,000.
The card could only be used to purchase merchandise from a specific
merchant's catalogue.
NEW YORK
The New York Attorney General has accused three Canadian companies
of charging consumers between $150 and $200 for credit cards
where no credit card was provided but instead delivered a list
of creditors that consumers could contact directly to apply for
cards.
A bill has been proposed in the New York General Assembly to make
a $1.2 million appropriation to pay for the New York "do-not-call" list.
NORTH CAROLINA
A bill has been proposed in the North Carolina Senate which would
require insurance businesses in this State to comply with the
federal privacy provisions of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act.
PENNSYLVANIA
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania has settled slamming allegations
with a major long distance carrier. Allegations included switching
without consent and consumers being enticed into switching carriers
based on offers of free airline tickets.
TENNESSEE
The State of Tennessee has taken an aggressive stance regarding
which businesses must purchase the Tennessee "do-not-call" list.
Recently, a regulator has stated to me that both the business
hiring a telephone service bureau and the service bureau had
to purchase the list even if the business placed calls only through
that service bureau. This redundancy is troubling.
TEXAS
The Texas Department of Insurance has proposed regulations regulating
insurance businesses in the State and requiring that they comply
with the privacy provisions of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act.
UTAH
The Utah Department of Commerce has proposed
a rule which would require applicants seeking to register as commercial
telemarketers to provide telephone numbers used and a description
of goods or services which are being sold in the telephone solicitation.
WISCONSIN
The Wisconsin General Assembly is considering a bill which would
expand the state's privacy protection law. The bill has several
telemarketing provisions added to it including prohibiting the
use of an automatic telephone dialing system in such a way that
two or more telephone lines are engaged simultaneously; prohibiting
the blocking of caller i.d.; and transferring enforcement of
the state's autodialer law to the Department of Consumer Protection.
Further, the bill allows residential telephone subscribers to
notify telecommunications carriers to add them to a "do-not-call" list
administered by the telephone company. Although the "do-not-call" list
provision is problematic, the prohibition on using a device so
that more than two lines are occupied at the same time is potentially
the most dangerous. It could be read to prohibit all use of predictive
dialers because it does not specify if the lines regulated are
inbound or outbound. This legislation has been proposed in a
different form in the past and should not be allowed to be passed
in this form, either.
The authors make
every attempt to provide current, accurate information, but Telemarketing
ConnectionS® is not intended to be a substitute for legal counsel,
and readers should not use it in lieu of obtaining knowledgeable
legal, or other professional, counsel expert in the field of commercial
telemarketing law. References in Telemarketing ConnectionS® do
not constitute endorsement by Copilevitz & Canter, L.L.C. or
Telemarketing ConnectionS®. August 1, 2001, Copilevitz & Canter,
L.L.C.