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  • Report:  #100573

Complaint Review: AOL - Dulles Virginia

Reported By:
- Lake Almanor, California,
Submitted:
Updated:

AOL
22000 AOL Way Dulles, Virginia, U.S.A.
Web:
N/A
Tell us has your experience with this business or person been good? What's this?
My name is Gudrun and I am 77 years old. I cancelled my subscription to AOL by phone in March of 2003 when I needed to move into my daughter's home because of increasing disability after several operations. After numerous months I saw that my Chase VISA card was again billed by AOL in the summer of 2003. I called Chase and they removed the charges.

In December of 2003 AOL again billed me for service I neither was subscribed to nor did I receive. I contested the charge to AOL and Chase through certified mail. The charge was temporarily removed by Chase but appeared again in April of 2004. I never received any correspondence from AOL although I have signatures from 2 of it's representatives that my certified letters were received.

In addition to sending certified letters to AOL I've tried to call their customer representatives. The hold time on the phone would be 45-60 minutes plus then the phone would go dead after apparently hanging up on me. After several tries I realized that I had no other recourse than clear my name and credit through the courts. I honestly believe that AOL is simply making the cancellation process so difficult that a consumer has to pay the bill for them to go away even if the bill was never incurred.

I researched the law and found that the applicable law was the Fair Credit Billing Act. After a many hours of research I filed against both AOL and Chase in Federal Court; United States District Court for the Northern District of California, 'Fair Credit Billing Act Part D Section 1666'. After filing my complaint (2) attorney's for AOL called and apologized profusely for the billing mistake, however, then filed their Answer to the Complaint denying any wrongdoing.

I also have a third party credit report stating that I am overdue paying this bill although the date is clearly within the legal dispute date (the law prohibits any creditor from notifying any third party credit agencies of disputed charges within the 60 day dispute period - the AOL charges were the only fees on my Chase card since I had paid the card off 100% long before this billing fiasco began). See www.aolbillingscandal.com for details of this lawsuit.

Gudrun

Gudrun

Lake Almanor, California
U.S.A.


1 Updates & Rebuttals

Melissa

Foley,
Alabama,
U.S.A.
Getting Ripped by AOL

#2Consumer Comment

Wed, July 28, 2004

I too was ripped off by AOL. I believe the only way they make any money at all is to rip hard working people off. Some how, I had three accounts in my name, all being charged for at seperate time. They even were able to charge my Target Card. I have cancelled, cancelled, and cancelled. My concern is not that I had so many accounts because that was probably my own fault, but the concern in lies how they can just charge a credit or debit card with no authorization and without even sending a bill. And a little FYI for some of you out there. Did you know that every time they charge you on your debit card or credit card they also charge you a fee to do it, even though you never recieve a bill or are notified of this process. Some people are able to get their money back and some are not, but those who do still get there money back minus the fee. A law has to be broken here. If not a new law needs to be made because I seriously believe this is an internet scan. Most people don't call AOL to sign up, i believe most of them use that stupid CD that I wish to never see again.

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