The legal library gives you easy access to the FTC’s case information and other official legal, policy, and guidance documents.
20192081: The Carlyle Group L.P.; Carlyle Holdings I L.P.
20192084: Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.; Jay Schreibman
20192089: GTCR Fund XII/B LP; Golden Gate Capital Opportunity Fund, L.P.
20192090: Mosaic Acquisition Corp.; Blackstone Capital Partners VI L.P.
20192098: Ranger JV Co., LLC; Caesars Entertainment Corporation
20191210: Blackstone Capital Partners VII L.P.; Freeman Decorating Co.
Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposed Collection; Comment Request (Consumer Product Warranty Rule)
20192018: Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated; Semma Therapeutics, Inc.
20192030: ICG Strategic Equity Fund III (Offshore) LP; ACON Equity Partners III, L.P.
1910003 Informal Interpretation
20191999: Aimbridge Group Holdings, LP; KIHR Holdings I, LLC
20192044: Alamo Group Inc.; Stellex Capital Partners LP
20192051: ANSYS, Inc.; John O. Hallquist
20192054: John O. Hallquist; ANSYS, Inc.
DTE Energy Company; Analysis of Agreement Containing Consent Orders To Aid Public Comment
Alliance Document Preparation (EZ Doc Preps)
The operators of a student loan debt relief scam have agreed to settle Federal Trade Commission charges that they bilked millions from consumers by falsely claiming to enroll consumers in loan forgiveness programs, for which they charged up to $1,000 in illegal upfront fees. The FTC alleged in its complaint that the defendants deceptively telemarketed their document preparation service by misrepresenting an affiliation with the Department of Education or consumers’ loan servicers, and that consumers who paid defendants an up-front fee were qualified for or approved to receive permanently reduced monthly payments or their student loans would be forgiven or discharged. On September 30, 2019, the FTC sent more than $5.4 million to nearly 40,000 people who lost money to the alleged scheme.