Settlement requires refunds for Washington residents who bought deed copies fromΒ Β βState Record Retrieval Boardβ
SPOKANE β The βState Record Retrieval Boardβ notice mailed to Washington residents last year directed them pay $87 to obtain a copy of their property deed, or face an $35 fee if they missed the tight deadline. At least 45 of the 5,000 Washington residents who received the notice dutifully sent checks. But the Washington Attorney Generalβs OfficeΒ says they were misledΒ β and are owed refunds.
βThe notices were deceptive junk mail designed to trick people into buying something they donβt need,β said Assistant Attorney General Jack Zurlini. βEven if there were a government agency named the βState Record Retrieval Boardβ β which there isnβt β it wouldnβt charge you $87 for a property deed.β
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The Olympia address on theΒ mailersΒ is just a UPS Store drop box -- the real sender is a California-based business thatβs spread similar notices across the nation. βState Record Retrieval Boardβ is owned by Neil L. Camenker and has anΒ "F" ratingΒ from the Better Business Bureau. After the Attorney Generalβs Office issued aΒ warningΒ about the mailers on its All Consuming blog in December 2010, a number of readers chimed in that they, too, received the deceptive mailers and were considering sending money.
The Attorney Generalβs Office took Camenker and his company to court and today announced aΒ settlementΒ that ensures the defendants wonβt be mailing any more solicitations in Washington that include misrepresentations or make consumers feel compelled to respond. Theyβll pay $3,915 in consumer refunds plus $1,085 to reimburse the state for attorneysβ fees and legal costs. The defendants also face $15,000 in civil penalties, should they fail to comply with the settlementβs restrictions on their business practices.
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The Attorney Generalβs Office notes that should you need a copy of your property deed for some reason, you can pick one up for about $10 from your county auditor.
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