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  • Report:  #127607

Complaint Review: Premier Premium Communications

Premier Premium Communications Ripoff fraudulent billing Eau Claire Michigan

  • Reported By:
    Eay Claire Michigan
  • Submitted:
    Sun, January 16, 2005
  • Updated:
    Tue, January 18, 2005
  • Premier Premium Communications
    P.O. Box 155579
    Fort Worth, Texas
    U.S.A.
  • Phone:
  • Category:

This outfit screwed up my computer, billed us $145.00 for something we did not agree to. Charges are on a date we were out of town. E-mailed them after reading other reports on rip off report, stated I would not pay and have not heard any response. Have now received phone bill from Tellis, USBI billing for $82.00 for calls to England. Am not going to pay that either.

So far I have complained to SBC Michigan, who were very helpful and directed me to the MI Public Service Commision who took dcown my complaint and I received a telephone response within a day and was given other agencies to file a complaint with.

Don't be a victim DO NOT PAY THESE BILLS!!

Melanie
Eau Claire, Michigan
U.S.A.

2 Updates & Rebuttals


Melanie

Eay Claire,
Michigan,
U.S.A.

Tellis phone charges removed from bill

#3Author of original report

Tue, January 18, 2005

Contacted my local phone co. SBC Michigan to have Tellis phone charges removed from my bill. Once I mentioned that I had filed complaint on Rip Off Report they were more than happy to remove all charges.


Paul

Anaheim,
California,
U.S.A.

A college kid living at home caused all this fraud

#3Consumer Suggestion

Mon, January 17, 2005

Thanks to all the heat from this site, and the thousands of complaints to the feds, America is rid of this fraud. Hopefully, for good! Read this news item I found on the web.


Bedford firm pulls plug amid complaints

A Bedford-based company linked to the purported hijacking of hundreds of computer modems has suspended operations and is undertaking a legal self-examination, its lawyer said yesterday.
Premier Premium Communications and several sister companies have been the target of hundreds of complaints from consumers who say they have received bills for Internet-related services and long-distance calls they never authorized.

Modem hijacking occurs when a dialer enters a computer via spyware, disconnects the modem from the owner's Internet service provider, then dials and links to a premium Internet service.

A review initiated by the New Hampshire Attorney General's Office has since been turned over to the U.S. Attorney in Concord. And the Better Business Bureau in New Hampshire has forwarded complaints it has received about Premier Premium to the Federal Trade Commission.

"The companies have suspended doing business, and we're undergoing a legal audit with them," said Jennifer Rood, a Manchester lawyer with Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer and Nelson, the company's attorney. The company sends out 15,000 invoices a week, according to a press release issued last month.

"The bills in the pipeline people who have complaints or disputes, those will be addressed," Rood said. "If they don't (have a dispute), the bills that are out there need to be paid."

Rood said the company has not heard from the U.S. Attorney's Office.

She confirmed that Michael Walczak is the principal of Premier Premium. Walczak is a 2000 graduate from Manchester West High School and uses his parent's Horizon Drive address in Bedford as his business address. He graduated from Daniel Webster College last year with a degree in information systems.

John Zahr, a class officer of the West 2000 class, said Walczak was a smart kid who took advanced-level classes.

"All I could really tell you, without trying to sound too harsh, was that he was perceived as your stereotypical high school 'nerd,' if you will," Zahr said in an e-mail message.

A request for an interview made through Walczak's father, a Manchester physician, was not answered. Rood said Walczak does not want to be interviewed.

Starting in November, computer users began notifying consumer protection agencies after receiving bills from Premier Premium and sister companies National One Telecom and One Web Direct.

The bills, often demanding payment of hundreds of dollars, represented entertainment fees charged by pay-per-view Web sites. The consumers were also billed by their long-distance carriers for connections to a telephone number in the United Kingdom.

Consumers posting complaints on ripoffreport.com said the unauthorized calls were often made when they were sleeping, away from home or when the computer was not in use. According to the Federal Trade Commission, a hijacked modem will dial numbers without user prompting, initiating the long-distance charge and the entertainment fee.

Some consumers said they reached Premier Premium after numerous attempts and credit was issued, especially when they threatened action such as reporting the company to the FTC.

In the press release, the company said it is owned by an investor group in New Hampshire and it sends out 15,000 invoices a week.

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