Outbreak of DirecTV Porn Charges Hits Philadelphia

By Truman Lewis
ConsumerAffairs.Com

April 4, 2006

http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2006/04/directv_porn_bills.html


A story that never really goes away is DirecTV's odd habit of billing 
customers for "adult" movies they insist they did not order or watch. The 
latest outbreak of bogus bills occurred in Philadelphia, where it was 
exposed by WPVI-TV's consumer reporter, Nydia Han.

Han reported receiving complaints from more than a dozen consumers hit with 
collection notices. Oddly, many of the consumers were teachers at a charter 
school in Chester, a Philadelphia suburb. They compared notes and found 
they shared a similar experience.

Their complaints are similar to those ConsumerAffairs.Com has received for 
years -- like Elaine of Jackson, Ga., who in 2001 was charged for almost 
$500 of pornographic movies. "They were charged for times we were not home, 
or watching regular tv news. I have researched several complaint sites and 
have found many customers with the same problem, always porn movies. We did 
not order these movies," Elaine insisted.

What's interesting about the Chester complaints is that only one of the 
teachers is a DirecTV subscriber. All the rest are being charged for 
watching adult movies without even having a DirecTV subscription.

It turns out that the Philadelphia address for some of the fraudulent 
accounts doesn't even exist. A former independent DirecTV dealer activated 
the account and apparently at least 10 other bogus contracts, Han reported. 
At Village Charter School, the initial bills were sent to addresses in 
Fayetteville, North Carolina. And the majority of the addresses Han checked 
there were also non-existent.

The consumers say Direct TV kept referring them back to the collection 
agencies, leaving them guessing how they got scammed and whether they're 
still vulnerable.

One theory is that rogue employees at some DirecTV subcontractors are 
setting up bogus accounts for the commission. Consumer advocates say 
DirecTV needs to secure its signup system.

"Their absolute responsibility is to go back and check all the orders from 
the area where the fraud occurred and confirm them," ConsumerAffairs.Com 
president Jim Hood said in Han's broadcast report.

Presently, to open a new account, the customer must provide an address, 
phone number, social security number, and credit card number. The card 
doesn't have to be yours. DirecTV checks your credit report but apparently 
does not make sure the address on it matches the service and billing address.

DirecTV says it is "evaluating" new identity verification tools, Han 
reported. In the case of the Philadelphia consumers, DirecTV says it has 
removed the charges from its system and is trying to help the consumers 
repair their credit.

But the Philadelphia incidents are not isolated examples Nydia Han's report 
aired on WPVI-TV on March 23. The very next day, we heard from Kevin of 
Newark, Delaware, who had seen the WPVI-TV report.

"I'm a victim of a similar situation -- back in 2003 I purchased DirectTV 
and everything was fine til I got my second bill. I opened up the bill and 
the bill stated I owed $708. I immediately contacted customer service about 
this bill and they informed me that I was ordering pornography movies," 
said Kevin, who was later told he owed a total of $1,008. He is still 
trying to repair the damage to his credit.

Nor are they the latest examples. On April 1, we heard from Kelly of 
Thousand Oaks, California.

"We have been charged more than $500 for movies we did not order. ... I 
also got the same response from customer service: 'You must not know what 
is going on in your home.'"


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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