Brown Clamps Down on Companies Luring Californians into Internet Scheme Promising Riches
Ventura — Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. and Ventura District Attorney Gregory D. Totten today clamped down on two companies — Imergent, Inc. and Stores On Line – that “falsely promised” customers that they could earn full-time income by selling merchandise over the Internet.
“These companies falsely promised customers that they could get rich by selling merchandise over the Internet,” Attorney General Brown said. “In reality, many customers were left in deep debt, paying high up-front costs, and never earning a dime from their websites. This agreement allows these customers to get back some of their losses.”
These two companies sell website-based “stores,” in packages of three or six websites, at a cost of between $2,700 and $6,000. They market their products at seminars, which they advertise through postcards and other mailings often sent to senior citizens with limited Internet experience. They often offer seminar attendees a meal and a free gift such as an MP3 player.
The companies made statements such as:
“Are you ready to claim YOUR share of eBay’s annual $3.2 Billion in revenue? By attending our FREE 90-minute ‘eBay Entrepreneur Training’ Conference you will learn how eBay PowerSellers run successful Internet businesses and how an elite few use additional strategies to boost revenues way beyond the average seller. Learn how nearly half-a-million people create full-time incomes using eBay!”
At the seminars, the companies make tantalizing claims regarding the massive profits that can be earned by consumers who purchase their product. Often, however, these profits are never realized and the customer is left in serious debt.
Brown’s action also requires the companies to:
- Pay $147,600 for full restitution to California consumers who have complained to the Attorney General’s Office, the Ventura County District Attorney, or directly with StoresOnLine.
- Pay $202,400 for restitution to California consumers who submit complaints within 90 days.
- Cancel all outstanding financing contracts for consumers who have complained.
- StoresOnLine will also send a letter to all California purchasers who have bought since January 1, 2008, offering them a 15-day period within which to cancel the transaction and receive a refund.
- Register with the state as a seller of Seller Assisted Marketing Plans
- Provide a 15-day right to cancel for purchasers over the age of 65
- Disclose clearly the circumstances under which StoreOnLine will charge consumers a web site hosting fee, and provide consumers the opportunity to opt out of hosting websites with Imergent, Inc. and Stores On Line.
- Provide the Attorney General’s Office with recordings of sales presentations and notify the Attorney General and Ventura County District Attorney’s Office when sales presentations take place in California, so they can be monitored.
These types of schemes are promoted on TV infomercials, on the Internet, by direct mail, at trade shows, at invitation-only seminars, and through ads that may appear in the classified sections of newspapers or magazines. The ads promise big earnings, and promise that no selling or other experience is necessary.
If you believe you are a victim and have not yet made a complaint to the Attorney General’s Office, you may be entitled to restitution if you submit a complaint within 90 days.
To submit a complaint with the Attorney General’s Office, please file a complaint online at www.ag.ca.gov/general.php or call the Public Inquiry Unit at 1-800-952-5225.
And another little tip for Craigslist.. if you see a post that you think “looks too good to be true,” flag the hell out of it. Every post on Craigslist, has a little Flag box in the upper right. Use it, it only helps everyone in the end fight these bastards. Thanks for posting Gene.
Good advice. On my ActiveRain version of this I’ve had two comments from people being saved and one mother who’s son lost 10,000. We’ve got to help clean this up.