Ad Astra Recovery Services, Inc. v. Heath et al
Filing
363
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER denying 344 Motion for Leave to File; granting in part and denying in part 268 Motion for Summary Judgment; denying 272 Motion for Summary Judgment; denying 276 Motion for Summary Judgment. See Order for details. Signed by District Judge John W. Broomes on 2/26/2021. (sz)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS
AD ASTRA RECOVERY SERVICES, INC.,
Plaintiff,
v.
Case No. 18-1145-JWB
JOHN CLIFFORD HEATH, ESQ., et al.,
Defendants.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This matter comes before the court on the following motions for summary judgment and
supporting memoranda: Defendants’ joint motion for summary judgment (Docs. 268, 269, 285,
286, 287, 310, 318, 334, 340); Defendant Fullman’s motion for summary judgment (Docs. 272,
273, 282, 306, 316, 338); and Defendant Jones’ motion for summary judgment (Docs. 276, 277,
308, 317, 337).1 The motions have been fully briefed and the court is prepared to rule. For the
reasons stated herein, the joint motions for summary judgment are DENIED IN PART AND
GRANTED IN PART. Fullman’s motion for summary judgment and Jones’ motion for summary
judgment are DENIED.
I.
Uncontroverted Facts and Statutory Background
The following statement of facts are taken from the parties’ submissions and the
stipulations in the pretrial order.2 Factual disputes about immaterial matters are not relevant to the
1
Plaintiff also moves for permission to file a surreply. (Doc. 344.) Plaintiff’s surreply addresses both the pending
summary judgment motions and Defendants’ Daubert reply brief regarding Plaintiff’s expert. With respect to the
current motions before the court, Plaintiff’s argument in the surreply raises issues that were already in the briefing and
do not need to be further expanded. With respect to the Daubert motion, Plaintiff argues that Defendants raised a new
argument and additional supporting documents in the reply brief. This court does not consider new arguments in a
reply brief. Therefore, Plaintiff’s motion is denied.
2
Although Defendants included a section of background with citations to the record, these statements were not
included in the factual statement and therefore are not included in this recitation. See D. Kan. R. 56.1(a).
1
determination before the court. Therefore, immaterial facts and factual averments that are not
supported by the record citations are omitted. Legal conclusions are also not proper facts.
Defendants also object to Plaintiff’s exhibits that are from other litigation, including deposition
excerpts and the pretrial order from another action, CBE Group v. Lexington Law Firm, Case No.
3:17-cv-02594-L (N.D. Tex.). With respect to the excerpts from Fed. R. Civ. P. 30(b)(6)
depositions in the CBE Group action, the court finds that these exhibits are admissible as they are
not hearsay. They are statements of an opposing party under Rule 801(d)(2)(A) and (D). Although
Defendants generally object to the court’s considerations of these deposition excerpts, they make
no argument as to any specific testimony. With respect to the stipulations in the pretrial order
governing the CBE Group case, those stipulations were agreed to for that action and Plaintiff
makes no showing that the stipulations are binding beyond that case. The court declines to
consider this exhibit on summary judgment.
Plaintiff Ad Astra is a debt collector and data furnisher. Plaintiff brings claims under the
Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. §§1962(c) and (d), and
a Kansas common law fraud claim. (Doc. 257-1.) As a debt collector, Plaintiff collects debts
primarily on behalf of one client, CURO Group Holdings Corp. (“CURO”). (Id. at 3.) Plaintiff is
subject to the provisions in the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”), Fair Debt Collection Practices
Act (“FDCPA”), and state laws applicable to debt collection. Defendant John C. Heath, Attorney
at Law, PC d/b/a Lexington Law Firm (“Lexington Law”) is a law firm that provides services to
its clients, including credit repair services. (Id.) Lexington Law’s principal place of business is in
North Salt Lake City, Utah. Lexington Law employs attorneys in house and it also engages law
firms in certain states to serve as “of counsel.” (Id.) John Heath is the Directing Attorney of
Lexington Law. Defendant Kevin Jones was previously employed by Lexington Law as the
2
Directing Attorney of Operations and Chief Compliance Officer (“CCO”). In the role of CCO,
Jones was responsible for the day to day operation of Lexington Law’s compliance program.
(Docs. 277 at 2; 308 at 5.) Jones implemented a compliance framework and investigated matters
raised by consumers. In the role as Directing Attorney of Operations, Jones hired in house
attorneys to work for Lexington Law and directly managed the full-time Lexington Law attorneys.
Defendant Adam Fullman is a principal at Fullman Law Firm and serves as of counsel to Lexington
Law’s clients in California. (Docs. 273 at 2, 306 at 5.) Defendant Jeffrey Johnson served as the
Co-CEO of Defendants PGX Holdings, Inc. (“PGX”), Progrexion Holdings, Inc., Progrexion
Teleservices, Inc. (“Teleservices”), Progrexion ASG, Inc., Progrexion Marketing, Inc., and
Progrexion IP, Inc. (collectively referred to as “the Progrexion entities”) prior to his retirement in
April 2020. (Doc. 257-1 at 3.) PGX and Progrexion Holdings are both holding companies. The
remaining Progrexion entity Defendants are subsidiaries of Progrexion Holdings. According to
Defendants, some of these Progrexion entities essentially provide services to Lexington Law as
vendors. (Doc. 334-5 at 80:19-24.) For example, ASG provides services to Lexington Law which
include paying its bills and managing its bank accounts. (Docs. 318 at 23; 334 at 5.)
Relevant to the issues in this case, the FCRA gives consumers the right to have negative
information on their credit reports, which are generated by Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion
(the “Bureaus”), referred to as “tradelines,” investigated for accuracy. A consumer may submit a
dispute by: (1) submitting it directly to the Bureau that generated the report with the negative
tradeline; (2) submit a dispute to the “reseller” of the negative tradeline; or (3) submit a direct
dispute to the data furnisher that provided the negative information.
See 15 U.S.C. §§
1681i(a)(1)(A), 1681s-2(a)(8). Upon receiving notice of a dispute, the person who provided the
negative information must conduct an investigation, review the information provided by the
3
consumer, and report the results of the investigation within 30 days. Id. § 1681s-2(a)(8)(E). The
investigation requirement does not apply to a dispute submitted by a credit repair organization
(“CRO”). Id. § 1681s-2(a)(8)(G). A dispute submitted by a CRO is considered a frivolous dispute.
Id. § 1681s-2(a)(8)(F); 12 C.F.R. § 1022.43(f). An investigation is also not required when “the
furnisher has a reasonable belief” that a CRO submitted or prepared the dispute for the consumer
or the dispute is submitted on a form supplied to a consumer by a CRO. 12 C.F.R. § 1022.43(b)(2).
The applicable statute defines a CRO as a
person who uses any instrumentality of interstate commerce or the mails to sell,
provide, or perform (or represent that such person can or will sell, provide, or
perform) any service, in return for the payment of money or other valuable
consideration, for the express or implied purpose of-(i) improving any consumer's credit record, credit history, or credit rating; or
(ii) providing advice or assistance to any consumer with regard to any activity or
service described in clause (i)…
15 U.S.C. § 1679a(3). Lexington Law is registered as a credit services organization in both Utah
and California under those states’ statutes regarding credit repair agencies, which are similar in
definition to the federal statute.3 (Doc. 318-13.) A brief history of the Credit Repair Organizations
Act (“CROA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1679, et seq., explains why Congress exempted CRO disputes from
the investigation requirement.
3
See Cal. Civ. Code § 1789.12 (“Credit services organization” means a person who, with respect to the extension of
credit by others, sells, provides, or performs, or represents that he or she can or will sell, provide or perform, any of
the following services, in return for the payment of money or other valuable consideration: (1) Improving a buyer's
credit record, history, or rating. (2) Obtaining a loan or other extension of credit for a buyer.” Utah Code Ann. § 1321-2 (3)(a)(“Credit services organization” means a person who represents that the person or an employee is a debt
professional or credit counselor, or, with respect to the extension of credit by others, sells, provides, or performs, or
represents that the person can or will sell, provide, or perform, in return for the payment of money or other valuable
consideration any of the following services:(i) improving a buyer's credit record, history, or rating; (ii) providing
advice, assistance, instruction, or instructional materials to a buyer with regard to Subsection (3)(a)(i); or (iii) debt
reduction or debt management plans.” Notably, under the Utah statute, an attorney is exempted from status as a credit
services organization if his or her services are incidental to his or her practice as an attorney. Id. § 13-21-2(3)(b).
4
Congress enacted the CROA to ensure that buyers of CROs’ services were provided with
information necessary to make an informed decision and to protect the public from unfair or
deceptive advertising. 15 U.S.C. § 1679(b). Congress was concerned with entities that were
leading consumers to believe that all adverse information in a consumer report could be deleted.
The legislative history explains that
[T]he “Credit Repair Organization Act,” addresses credit repair fraud. As
consumers have experienced problems with the consumer reporting industry, credit
repair organizations have emerged offering, for a fee, to help consumers eliminate
adverse information from consumer reports. While some of these organizations
may benefit consumers, the Committee is aware that a number of fraudulent credit
repair organizations have inappropriately led consumers to believe that adverse
information in consumer reports can be deleted or modified regardless of the
accuracy of the information.
S. Rep. 103–209, *7 (1993), 1993 WL 516162.
The House Report also explains that some CROs had marketed services to consumers and
led them to believe that adverse information can be deleted even if it is accurate and that their
practice was to “inundate[e] consumer reporting agencies with so many challenges to consumer
reports that the reinvestigation system breaks down, and the adverse, but accurate, information is
deleted.” H.R. Rep. No. 103–486, at 57 (1994), 1994 WL 164513. Plaintiff essentially alleges that
Lexington Law operates in this same manner.
Lexington Law, along with Progrexion Marketing, markets Lexington Law as a leading
credit repair law firm. (Doc. 310-47.) Consumers are referred to Lexington Law from Teleservices
by intake agents. These consumers may have originally been transferred to an intake agent with
Teleservices after calling one of the numerous “hot swap” partners that are affiliated with
Teleservices. (Doc. 310-5 at 121:7-25.) For example, a consumer might have initially called a
hot swap partner for a loan but was informed that he needed to repair his credit prior to receiving
a loan. (Doc. 318-16 at 3.) These hot swap partners are paid for referring clients to Lexington
5
Law. (Doc. 310-34 at 174-175.) Teleservices employs approximately 1,100 intake agents. (Docs.
318 at 21, 334 at 5.) During an intake call, Teleservices’ agents may offer consumers a free credit
repair consultation based on their credit situation. (Docs. 318 at 22, 334 at 5.) Teleservices’ agents
then provide the consumers with an engagement agreement for Lexington Law. Commissions are
earned by the referring agent after a consumer signs the engagement agreement. (Doc. 310-5 at
109:3-25.)
Lexington Law does not perform any services for a consumer client until the
engagement agreement is executed. According to Lexington Law, a consumer or a Lexington Law
employee can talk to an attorney by calling a hotline that is answered by an attorney during
business hours.
(Doc. 334-5 at 45:7-12, 147:10-19.)
If the consumer enrolls as a client,
Teleservices will start the dispute process. This process involves providing a consumer with the
option of disputing all negative items on his or her credit report or going through the report item
by item. (Docs. 318 at 22, 334 at 5.) The consumer can access his or her account on Case Valet,
which is a program for Lexington Law’s clients. In the “case valet, the consumer client chooses
how he or she wishes Lexington Law to challenge the negative items on his or her credit report.”
(Doc. 318-31 at 9.)
The engagement agreement, which is signed by Lexington Law’s consumer clients,
provides the following language that is applicable to this action:
You understand Communications sent by Lexington to Furnishers and Bureaus on
your behalf will be sent in your name, and will not be identified as being sent by
Lexington. Copies of written Communications will be provided to you upon
request.
***
You agree that Lexington may act as your non-exclusive agent and attorney in fact,
on your behalf, for the limited purposes of: . . .
(b) disputing, challenging, or investigating with Bureaus as applicable, at your
direction and within our professional judgment, inaccurate, unfairly reported,
incomplete, or unsubstantiated information on such disclosures and reports; . . .
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(d) investigating and/or verifying information provided by Furnishers to Bureaus;
and
(e) signing letters on your behalf and in your name.
(Doc. 269-5 at 9, 11.)
The consumer client engages Lexington Law’s services based on a tiered system.
Basically, the consumer clients pay a monthly fee which is dependent on the number of
communications - disputes - sent to the Bureaus and Furnishers, such as Plaintiff. (Id. at 3-6.) The
greater number of disputes, the higher the fee.
Since 2014 through the filing of Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint, Lexington Law sent
Plaintiff at least 595,117 letters on behalf of consumers. The letters originate under a patented
process, that patent for which is owned by Progrexion IP. This patent is licensed to Lexington
Law and is used to generate dispute letters from a bank of form letters. (Doc. 334 at 5.) The form
letters were previously drafted and approved by attorneys. (Doc. 334-5 at 182:12-16.) An
automated process typically determines which letters from the bank of form letters should be sent
out. (Id. at 182:21-23; Doc. 269-8 at 97:4-25.) In this automated process, the letters are selected
using the information in the Case Valet system. (Doc. 269-8 at 97:4-25.) Under Lexington Law’s
“challenge logic,” a paralegal is trained to challenge a different number of tradelines depending
on what level of service a consumer signed up for. The challenge logic also instructs the paralegal
to challenge only one-third of the negative items at a time in order to avoid “a frivolous response
from the credit bureaus.” (Doc. 318-29.) The dispute letters are not sent under Lexington Law’s
letterhead but sent with the return address reflecting the name of the consumer. The letters are
also signed in the name of the consumer and written in first person. (See id. at 183:16-23, Doc.
310-8) (“Negative credit reporting should be removed from my credit report because my identity
was stolen.”) For example, one letter states the following: “You must provide validation for
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account information sent to the three consumer reporting agencies for me, [F.K.] for suspect
account.” (Doc. 310-8 at 5.) Another example states: “With this letter, I request that Ad Astra
Recovery Servic [sic] formally substantiate consumer information Ad Astra Recovery Servic [sic]
reported to the major consumer reporting agencies for me, [T.B.], as regards the unvalidated
account...” (Id. at 13). The letters include different font and spelling errors. When Defendant
Jones complained to someone at Lexington back when he first was employed that the letters looked
unprofessional and questioned why the letterhead was not used, he was told that letterhead was
not used because the letters would be less likely to be reviewed by the creditors. (Doc. 308-2 at
43:12-14.)
Until a couple of years ago, the letters were overnighted from Lexington Law to the
consumer’s state of residence. (Doc. 310-43 at 90:3-18.) Then, they were placed in the regular
mail in the consumer’s state of residence. (Doc. 334-5 at 184:6-25.) The individual dispute letters
are not reviewed by an attorney or a paralegal prior to being sent out. (Docs. 318 at 25; 334 at 5.)
The consumer also does not review the letters prior to them being sent on his or her behalf. (Doc.
310-25 at 60:24-61:4.) The consumer can request to review the letters and will be provided with
the template letter that was sent but not the letter with the electronic signature. (Doc. 334-5 at
133:10-24, 137:5-13.) Lexington Law also advises consumers that disputes cause creditors to go
through a costly investigation process and they will remove negative but accurate items from a
credit report when they get a dispute to avoid the cost. (Docs. 318 at 28;318-37 at 3.) Lexington
Law will also continue to dispute negative tradelines even after the information has been verified.
(Docs. 318 at 28; 310-43 at 111:6-13, 113:16-24.)
After receiving a letter like the ones at issue in this case, Plaintiff treats it as a “dispute”
coming from an individual consumer. Plaintiff then conducts an investigation and responds to the
8
letter. This takes approximately five to ten minutes, on average. (Doc. 286 at 436:7-10.) Plaintiff
also investigates disputes submitted by attorneys when the dispute reflects that it’s from an
attorney on behalf of a consumer. (Id. at 443:22-444:3.) In responding to these disputes, Plaintiff
spends a similar amount of time that it spends in responding to individual consumer disputes. (Id.
at 444:12-16.) Plaintiff’s policy, however, is to not investigate dispute letters sent “by a credit
repair organization (CRO) that identified themselves as a credit repair organization.” (Doc. 31011 at 440:15-24.) Plaintiff considers those disputes frivolous. Id. If a “letter is signed by an
attorney that happens to be a credit repair organization, it’s still considered an attorney dispute.”
(Id. at 446:7-10.) Also, if Plaintiff receives a letter on law firm letterhead, it treats those disputes
as an attorney dispute. (Doc. 287 at 106:4-7.)
Lexington Law also submits disputes electronically (“e-disputes”) through a web-based
platform called e-OSCAR. The disputes are submitted in a format called an Automated Consumer
Dispute Verification (“ACDV”). These e-disputes are sent directly to the credit bureaus. Although
the ACDV contains a code that signifies the type of e-dispute at issue, e.g. identity fraud, there is
no identifying information that informs Plaintiff if the e-dispute is from a consumer, CRO, or an
attorney. (Doc. 286 at 432:21-433:5.) Also, Lexington Law has contracts with the Bureaus which
contain provisions requiring the Bureaus to treat the electronic disputes as if they were submitted
directly by the consumers. (Doc. 318 at 26 (citing to the agreements); 340 at 7.) The credit bureaus
then send the ACDVs or e-disputes to the debt collector, such as Plaintiff, without identifying the
source of the dispute. (Doc. 269-6 at 430:22-24, 432:7-9.) Between 2014 and mid-2019,
Lexington Law sent at least 687,916 electronic disputes to the Bureaus concerning debts Plaintiff
was trying to collect. (Docs. 318 at 26, 334 at 7.) Because Plaintiff is unaware of who has initiated
the electronic dispute, Plaintiff investigates all disputes, including electronic disputes that may
9
have been initiated by a credit repair organization (“CRO”). (Doc. 269-6 at 429:22-432:13.)
Plaintiff then investigates and responds to the dispute in the same manner. (Id. at 433:3-5.)
Plaintiff also suspends collection efforts on that debt. (Id. at 427:18-24, 431:5-7.)
Plaintiff contends that Lexington Law discourages their consumer clients from going
through each negative item on their credit reports line-by-line and instead encourages the consumer
clients to dispute all negative items. Defendants dispute this contention and assert that the
consumer clients choose what items to dispute. Plaintiff further contends that Lexington Law does
not perform any investigation to determine the accuracy of a negative item on a consumer’s report.
(Doc. 310 at 20.) A review of the deposition testimony by Cody Johnson in the CBE case states
that Lexington Law communicates with the client to obtain information regarding the debts. (Doc.
310-43 at 62:1-6.) Lexington Law does not take any further action and relies on their clients’
representations.
Plaintiff has introduced evidence that Lexington Law encourages and assists its consumer
clients in disputing negative items even after the consumer has admitted that the negative items
are accurate. (Doc. 318 at 27; see, e.g., Doc. 318-36 at 7:21-25) (informing a client that she is
encouraged to pay her obligations that she actually owes but that the obligations would be
challenged either way). Lexington Law insists that it only attempts to validate negative tradelines
with respect to the disputes at issue in this case. (Doc. 334 at 7, 10.) Plaintiff has attached letters
as exhibits that seek more than validation, such as assertions that the account does not belong to
the consumer client due to identity theft. (See Doc. 310-8.) Moreover, the engagement agreement
and Lexington Law’s challenge logic suggests that they do challenge the debt of their consumer
clients. (Docs. 269-5; 318-29.)
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Plaintiff’s previous President, David Newman, testified that Plaintiff began noticing an
influx of dispute letters that increased gradually over time. (Doc. 269-9 at 34:7-18.) This resulted
in Plaintiff gradually hiring more staff to deal with the consumer dispute letters. (Id.) Newman
and others employed by Plaintiff tried to determine who was sending the dispute letters because
there were similar letters with similar fonts and they would sometimes arrive in full boxes. (Id. at
22:9-25.) Newman testified that they had narrowed the identity of the sender down to Lexington
Law about one year prior to filing this suit although the investigation had begun some time before
that. (Id.) During the investigation, Newman called Plaintiff’s attorney at that time to ask if
Plaintiff had to respond to the dispute letters because they believed that the letters were being sent
by a CRO. (Doc. 310-19 at 30:9-24.) Newman was advised that Plaintiff had to assume that it
was from a consumer because they were not 100 percent sure that they didn’t come from the
consumer. (Id.) In September 2017, Newman spoke with Heath and the chief financial officer of
Lexington Law. (Id. at 57:7-13, 236:14-16.) Newman was told that Lexington Law had a variety
of letters that they used and admitted that the consumers didn’t sign the letters. (Id. at 236:16-25;
237:2-6, 14-16.)
Plaintiff filed this suit against Defendants in May 2018. (Doc. 1.) The pretrial order in
this case identifies five claims that remain. (Doc. 257-1.) The first four claims allege violations
of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-1968.
RICO makes it “unlawful for any person employed by or associated with any enterprise engaged
in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce, to conduct or participate,
directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise's affairs through a pattern of racketeering
activity.” 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). Specifically, counts one and three alternatively allege violations
of § 1962(c) and assert that Defendants conducted and participated in the enterprise’s affairs
11
through a pattern of racketeering activity, namely mail and wire fraud. Counts one and three differ
in that they allege that the enterprise is comprised of certain Defendants. Counts two and four,
also pled alternatively based on the compilation of the enterprise, allege a RICO conspiracy.
Plaintiff has also alleged a claim of fraud under Kansas state law. The state law claim is only
asserted against Lexington Law, Progrexion Holdings, and Progrexion IP. Plaintiff asserts that it
has suffered more than $3 million in compensatory damages due to the statutory investigations
undertaken in responding to the dispute letters at issue and in pausing collections on the debt at
issue. (Doc. 257-1 at 37.)
Defendants now move for summary judgment on Plaintiff’s claims. With respect to counts
one and three, Defendants argue that Plaintiff has failed to establish racketeering activity in that
there is no evidence of fraud and that Defendants’ conduct did not cause Plaintiff’s loss.
Defendants Johnson and Fullman also move for summary judgment on the basis that there are
insufficient facts to create a genuine dispute regarding their role in the operation or management
of the RICO enterprise or alternate RICO enterprise. With respect to counts two and four,
Defendants argue that the conspiracy claims fail without an underlying RICO violation.
Defendants also move for summary judgment on the state law fraud claim on the basis that there
is no evidence of fraud, Plaintiff did not reasonably rely on the misrepresentations, and Plaintiff’s
damages were not caused by Defendants’ conduct.
II.
Standard
Summary judgment is appropriate if the moving party demonstrates that there is no genuine
dispute as to any material fact, and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R.
Civ. P. 56(a). A fact is “material” when it is essential to the claim, and the issues of fact are
“genuine” if the proffered evidence permits a reasonable jury to decide the issue in either party's
12
favor. Haynes v. Level 3 Commc'ns, 456 F.3d 1215, 1219 (10th Cir. 2006). The movant bears the
initial burden of proof and must show the lack of evidence on an essential element of the claim.
Thom v. Bristol—Myers Squibb Co., 353 F.3d 848, 851 (10th Cir. 2004) (citing Celotex Corp. v.
Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322–23 (1986)). The nonmovant must then bring forth specific facts
showing a genuine issue for trial. Garrison v. Gambro, Inc., 428 F.3d 933, 935 (10th Cir. 2005).
Conclusory allegations are not sufficient to create a dispute as to an issue of material fact. See
Hall v. Bellmon, 935 F.2d 1106, 1110 (10th Cir. 1991). The court views all evidence and
reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. LifeWise Master
Funding v. Telebank, 374 F.3d 917, 927 (10th Cir. 2004).
III.
Analysis
A. RICO Claim under § 1962(c)
To prove Plaintiff’s RICO claim, the following must be established: 1) Defendants violated
§ 1962; 2) Plaintiff suffered an injury; and 3) Defendants’ violation is the cause of the injury. Safe
Streets All. v. Hickenlooper, 859 F.3d 865, 881 (10th Cir. 2017). “Sufficiently establishing the
element of causation—both actual and proximate—is crucial to proving any violation of RICO.”
CGC Holding Co., LLC v. Broad & Cassel, 773 F.3d 1076, 1088 (10th Cir. 2014) (citing Bridge
v. Phoenix Bond & Indem. Co., 553 U.S. 639, 656–60 (2008)).
With respect to the first requirement, a violation of § 1962, Plaintiff must prove that each
Defendant “(1) conducted the affairs (2) of an enterprise (3) through a pattern (4) of racketeering
activity.” Hickenlooper, 859 F.3d at 882 (citation omitted). The pattern of racketeering activity
includes the commission of certain predicate acts, which are specified state or federal offences.
Ogles v. Sec. Benefit Life Ins. Co., 401 F. Supp.3d 1210, 1221 (D. Kan. 2019) (citing In re: EpiPen
13
(Epinephrine Injection, USP) Mktg., Sales Practices & Antitrust Litig., 336 F. Supp.3d 1256, 1322
(D. Kan. 2018)); see also 18 U.S.C. § 1961(1).
The word racketeering tends to evoke images of mobsters and organized criminals,
and true enough, RICO—at least initially—“was an aggressive initiative to
supplement old remedies and develop new methods for fighting crime.” Sedima,
S.P.R.L., 473 U.S. [at] 498; see also id. at 526, (Powell, J., dissenting) (observing
that “mobsters ... were the clearly intended target of” RICO). But the plain
language of RICO defines racketeering far more broadly in a way that allows the
statute to “reach both legitimate and illegitimate” businesses. Id. at 499 [] (internal
quotation marks omitted). Indeed, among many other qualifying acts, RICO defines
a racketeering activity as “any act which is indictable under” the federal statute
outlawing wire fraud—a crime that any modern business could commit. 18 U.S.C.
§ 1961(1)(B); see also 18 U.S.C. § 1343 (outlawing wire fraud).
CGC Holding Co., LLC, 974 F.3d at 1210–11.
Here, Plaintiff contends that Defendants predicate acts include mail and wire fraud, which
are included under RICO.4 Id. Defendants’ joint motion for summary judgment argues that
Plaintiff failed to establish a dispute of fact as to racketeering activity and that Plaintiff failed to
show causation. (Doc. 268.) Defendants Jones and Fullman separately moved for summary
judgment to argue that they did not direct the affairs of the enterprise. (Docs. 272, 276.) The other
elements of the RICO claims are not at issue. The court will first address the joint arguments
regarding the alleged racketeering activity.
To assert mail fraud, Plaintiff must establish “(1) the existence of a scheme or artifice to
defraud or obtain money or property by false pretenses, representations or promises, and (2) use
of the United States mails for the purpose of executing the scheme.” Ogles, 401 F. Supp.3d at
1221 (citation omitted). Wire fraud consists of the same first element but requires the use of the
wires for executing the scheme. Id.
A “scheme to defraud is conduct intended or reasonably
calculated to deceive persons of ordinary prudence or comprehension.” United States v. Welch,
4
In connection with counts 3 and 4, Plaintiff has also alleged that the Progrexion entities engaged in money laundering.
(Doc. 257-1 at 33-34.)
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327 F.3d 1081, 1106 (10th Cir. 2003). The common thread among mail and wire fraud is the
concept of fraud. Tal v. Hogan, 453 F.3d 1244, 1263 (10th Cir. 2006) (citation omitted). Fraud
based on false representations must be established by proving a material false representation. Id.
A scheme to defraud may also be proven by “deceitful concealment of material facts.” United
States v. Gallant, 537 F.3d 1202, 1228 (10th Cir. 2008). In the context of wire fraud, the Tenth
Circuit has held that a misleading omission can be actionable as fraud absent a duty to speak if it
is intended to induce a false belief and resulting action to the advantage of the misleader and the
disadvantage of the misled.” Id. (citing United States v. Cochran, 109 F.3d 660, 665 (10th Cir.
1997)).
Here, the pretrial order states that
Defendants devised a scheme and artifice to defraud, and obtain money or property
by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations and promises including
(among other things) misrepresenting the disputed items, the source, author, and
place of mailing of the dispute correspondence, concealing that such
correspondence was drafted by and sent from Defendants, and causing the U.S.
Postal Service mails and interstate wires to be used to transmit forged, disguised
communications in interstate commerce.
(Doc. 257-1 at 31.)
Based on the framing of Plaintiff’s claims in the pretrial order, the fraud includes two main
categories of fraud: 1) fraudulent misrepresentations regarding the negative tradelines at issue; and
2) fraudulent misrepresentations and concealment regarding the identity of the sender of the
dispute letters and the electronic disputes.5 Plaintiff asserts in its opposition memoranda that it has
put forth a dispute of fact as to both. Defendants argue that there is no evidence of fraudulent
misrepresentation regarding the tradelines and, with respect to the identity of the sender, that these
5
Plaintiff has also included several categories of fraud in the contentions’ section of the pretrial order. Although
Plaintiff’s response to the joint motion for summary judgment also relies on this conduct, Defendants did not move
for summary judgment on these contentions.
15
statements were not false - because they had the authority to send correspondence - and that they
were not fraudulently concealed - because they had no duty to disclose that they sent the dispute
letters. Defendants further argue that Plaintiff cannot show that the violation was the cause of
Plaintiff’s injury because Plaintiff would have taken the same actions even if it had known the
identity of the sender. Notably, although Defendants do not admit that Lexington Law is a CRO
under the federal statute, Defendants do not argue that Plaintiff was required to respond because
Lexington Law is not a CRO.
False Statements Regarding the Negative Tradelines
Plaintiff contends that Defendants encourage consumers to challenge all negative
tradelines even if those tradelines are accurate. In support of this contention, Plaintiff has cited to
call transcripts that several consumers had with various employees of Defendants. (Doc. 318 at
27.) For example, one consumer, T.B.6, chatted online with a paralegal for assistance on either
July 8 or August 7, 2018.7 (Doc. 318-33.) T.B. informed the paralegal that he did not know what
challenge action to select for his negative tradelines on case valet because “nothing applies.” (Id.
at 2.) T.B. stated that he didn’t know how this was all going to help him because everything is
“accurate,” which is what he “told them in the beginning,” and he was at least hoping to get the
items that he “settled with them” off of his report. (Id. at 3.) The paralegal begins reciting the
different selections from case valet, such as “not mine” or “never late.” (Id.) Although the
paralegal does not expressly tell T.B. to select a specific challenge for a negative tradeline, she
also does not address his statement that the debts are accurate but continues to inform him of the
different challenges that he can make. The exhibit then reflects that an item was challenged on
6
The court has used the consumer’s initials for privacy concerns.
The exhibit reflects the date as 2018-08-07 but there is no indication if the “08” indicates the month or the day.
(Doc. 318-33.)
7
16
July 16 and 17, 2018 to TransUnion and Equifax. (Id. at 4-5.) The exhibit indicates that a
challenge was sent to Plaintiff on T.B’s debt. There are also two undated letters to T.B. indicating
that a “formal debt validation request” was sent to Plaintiff. (Id. at 6.)
Plaintiff has attached other exhibits referencing calls with Defendants’ employees. (See
Doc. 318 at 27-28.) These exhibits show that consumers have indicated that their debts are
accurate but Defendants’ employees encourage continuing to challenge these debts. Defendants
have attempted to dispute these factual contentions by stating that its clients have a right to a fair
and accurate report. Defendants also cite to five lines of deposition testimony stating that
Lexington Law only verifies tradelines. (Doc. 334 at 7.) Plaintiff, however, has attached an exhibit
that indicates that Lexington Law submitted a legal challenge to a debt in addition to seeking a
verification. (Doc. 318-33.) Moreover, Plaintiff has submitted dispute letters which show that
Lexington Law has sent disputes that challenge the debt instead of merely asking for verification.
(See Doc. 310-8) (“Negative credit reporting should be removed from my credit report because
my identity was stolen.”) Lexington Law’s engagement agreement also suggests that it will
challenge the accuracy of debt on behalf of the client.
At this stage, the court finds that there is a genuine dispute of material fact as to whether
Lexington Law made false statements regarding the accuracy of negative tradelines in the dispute
letters that were mass mailed to Plaintiff.
Misrepresentations and Concealment Regarding the Identity of the Sender in the
Mailed Dispute Letters
The bulk of Plaintiff’s claim involves the alleged misrepresentations and omissions
surrounding the dispute letters. It is undisputed that the letters, each of which appears to be signed
by a consumer and contains a return address of the consumer, were not written by those consumers,
17
were not signed by the consumers, and were not placed in the mails by the consumers. Rather, the
letters were generated by Lexington Law from a bank of forms. The letters were written in the
first person and appear as if they were coming directly from a consumer. The postmark also
reflects a mailing from the state identified on the return address although all of the letters originated
in Utah. None of the consumers verified the information in the letters and no one from Lexington
Law reviewed the letters prior to their being sent out.
Plaintiff argues that the letters, as a whole, contain affirmative false representations in that
the return address is false and Defendants concealed the fact that Lexington Law drafted the letters.
Plaintiff argues that this intentional concealment was done so that Plaintiff would have to respond
to the dispute under the applicable statute. This scheme to defraud was perpetrated using the mails
as Defendants sent out the letters - with these fraudulent misrepresentations and omissions - en
masse using the postal service. Plaintiff contends that this scheme resulted in a loss of millions of
dollars because Plaintiff was forced to investigate all of these disputes that it would not have
investigated had it known that these letters originated from Lexington Law. Defendants counter
that the statements are not false because Lexington Law’s relationship with its consumer clients
authorized Lexington Law to send letters on each consumer client’s behalf. Defendants further
assert that Lexington Law had no duty to disclose the fact that it was the entity drafting and mailing
out the dispute letters.
The parties spend a significant amount of time arguing the significance of Lexington Law’s
engagement agreement and other laws relating to whether Lexington Law had a duty to disclose
to Plaintiff that Lexington Law drafted and sent the dispute letters. In light of the Tenth Circuit’s
authority, however, a duty to disclose is not required in order to establish actionable fraud under
the mail and wire fraud statutes. Rather, nondisclosure, such as a misleading omission, can support
18
a claim of fraud if “it is intended to induce a false belief and resulting action to the advantage of
the misleader and the disadvantage of the misled.” Gallant, 537 F.3d at 1228.
Notably,
Defendants cite to United States v. Cochran, 109 F.3d 660, 665 (10th Cir. 1997), for the
proposition that “[w]hen an allegation of fraud is based upon nondisclosure, there can be no fraud
absent a duty to speak.” (Doc. 269 at 19.) The full sentence, however, states that “Mr. Cochran
bases his argument on the Supreme Court's holding in Chiarella v. United States, 445 U.S. 222,
235 ... (1980), that ‘[w]hen an allegation of fraud is based upon nondisclosure, there can be no
fraud absent a duty to speak.’” Id. The Tenth Circuit went on in Cochran to hold that, in the
context of certain transactions in a wire fraud prosecution, “a misleading omission[ ] is actionable
as fraud ... if it is intended to induce a false belief and resulting action to the advantage of the
misleader and the disadvantage of the misled.” Id. (citing Emery v. American General Finance,
Inc., 71 F.3d 1343, 1348 (7th Cir. 1995)).
In their reply brief, recognizing the Tenth Circuit’s holding in Gallant, Defendants argue
that Lexington Law’s actions in concealing the identity of the sender is not misleading, arguing
that there “is nothing misleading about sending letters in the client’s name where the client is the
source of the letter and the subject of the tradeline.” (Doc. 334 at 13.) Defendants then go on to
say that such an omission cannot constitute a federal crime. The issue is not whether the omission
itself is a federal crime but whether the omission was intended to induce a false belief, which
resulted in an advantage to the misleader and a disadvantage to the misled. Viewing the facts in a
light most favorable to Plaintiff, this omission was clearly intended to result in Plaintiff’s belief
that the letters were sent from consumers. Based on the facts, Defendants went to great lengths to
ensure that the identity of the sender would be difficult, if not impossible, to determine. This was
done by utilizing a bank of letters with thousands of different templates, different spellings, and
19
phrases, and by purposefully mailing these letters from the State that was identified in each letter’s
return address. The significance of the sender, as Defendants well know, is that Plaintiff must
investigate a dispute that is initiated by a consumer. See 15 U.S.C. § 1681s-2(a)(8). Failure to do
so can result in significant fines by the government. As Plaintiff pointed out, had it ignored this
duty, it could have resulted in fines of millions of dollars based on the 595,117 dispute letters it
received from Lexington Law. Under the FCRA, willful non-compliance fines range from $100$1,000 per violation. 15 U.S.C. § 1681n(a)(1)(A). A reasonable jury could conclude that
Lexington Law was counting on Plaintiff to treat these letters as those from a consumer and not
from a CRO as Plaintiff can ignore a letter from a CRO as frivolous.
Moreover, Defendants argument that the dispute letters do not contain false statements
because they had authority to send letters in the consumers’ names is not persuasive. Defendants
are relying on the engagement letters which did give authority to send correspondence in the
consumer’s name. In support of their argument, Defendants cite to several cases which stand for
the proposition that an agent may sign the principal’s name without indicating that this act was
done by an agent. (See Doc. 269 at 17-18.) None of those cases, however, state that such an act
is authorized when the document is never reviewed by the principal nor reviewed by the agent who
used a computer to generate the letter and signature.8 In CBE Group, Inc. v. Heath, No. 17-2594,
2020 WL 584620 (N.D. Texas Feb. 6, 2020)9, a case heavily cited by Defendants, the district court
8
See, e.g., Estate of Stephens, 28 Cal. 4th 665, 670, 49 P.3d 1093, 1095 (2002) (“Shirley immediately told Austin of
each step of the execution, notarization, forwarding of the deed to the County Recorder's office for recording, and
return of the deed to him after recording. At each of these steps Austin verbally acknowledged to Shirley that that was
what he wanted to happen and instructed her to proceed with the next step.”) In re Barber, 982 S.W.2d 364, 367 (Tex.
1998) (finding that a judge’s rubber-stamped signature affixed by his clerk was acceptable because it was undisputed
that the judge directed her to place his stamp on the order). Elliott v. Mut. Life Ins. Co. of New York, 91 P.2d 746, 747
(Okla. 1939) (finding that letter was enforceable when agent wrote letter on behalf of principal and signed the
principal’s name after being directed to do the same).
9
An appeal in this matter is currently pending before the Fifth Circuit. Case No. 20-10166.
20
set aside the jury’s verdict finding that Lexington Law committed fraud by sending dispute letters
that purported to be from the consumer. In doing so, the district court cited to Attorney Grievance
Commission of Maryland v. Paul, 187 A.3d 625, 459 Md. 526 (2018). In Paul, the court concluded
that an attorney did not make any false statement or omission by signing a nondisclosure agreement
in the client’s name. Id. at 635-36. Significantly, prior to signing the document, the “[attorney]
and [client] discussed the relevant agreement, and [client] gave [attorney] his permission to sign
his name on the agreement because Burke was away on vacation.” CBE Grp., Inc., 2020 WL
584620, at *8 (quoting Paul, 187 A.3d at 636). Although there was no dispute that no one reviewed
the dispute letters at issue, the district court in CBE Group determined that Lexington Law’s
conduct did not amount to misrepresentation. Id. By contrast, in this case the court finds that the
lack of review of the dispute letters by the consumer or an attorney at Lexington Law with access
to the consumer’s file is significant. Although Lexington Law had authority to send a letter in the
consumer’s name, it is undisputed that these letters were not reviewed prior to being sent out.
Indeed, at some level the letters appear to be fabrications in the sense that they are form letters
selected by a computer algorithm, complete with spelling errors built in to add the appearance of
legitimacy, but otherwise rendered without review by any human to confirm that they are truthful
and accurate with respect to the consumer from whom they purport to originate. Lexington Law
has not established that its authority extended to sending form letters that were never reviewed for
accuracy. Moreover, given that they were form letters, it would be highly unlikely that all of the
statements in the letters were true for all 595,117 letters. See In re Disciplinary Action Against
McCray, 2008 ND 162, ¶ 21, 755 N.W.2d 835, 843 (N.D. Sept. 3, 2008) (“He was obviously aware
the form letters were not written or sent by [the client] and the information contained in them could
21
not possibly be true for 9,450 clients.”) The court finds that there is a fact issue as to whether
Lexington Law made false affirmative statements in the dispute letters.
Finally, with respect to this scheme to defraud, Defendants argue that it did not proximately
cause Plaintiff’s injuries because Plaintiff would have taken the same actions even if it had known
that Lexington Law was the sender of the 595,117 dispute letters. The court, however, declines to
view the evidence in the way that Defendants argue it should be viewed.
In opposition, Plaintiff asserts that the statements and omissions were material and that it
would not have responded to the 595,117 dispute letters had it known that Lexington Law sent
those letters. (Doc. 311 at 33-34.) This is because Lexington Law is a CRO and Plaintiff’s policy
is to not investigate disputes initiated by CROs. (Id. at 10-11.) In support of this, Plaintiff cites
to the testimony of its corporate representative Tracy Bengtson. Bengtson testified that “dispute
letters sent by a credit repair organization that identified themselves as a credit repair organization
are considered frivolous and do not merit a response, and that is Ad Astra’s policy.” (Doc. 318-5
at 440:20-25.) Bengtson then testified that Plaintiff responds to disputes from attorneys and those
disputes are treated as an attorney dispute and is routed to a different compliance officer. (Id. at
443:22-444:3.) Bengtson was then asked “if the letter is signed [by] an attorney that is a credit
repair organization, what does Ad Astra do in that circumstance?” (Id. at 446:3-5.) Bengtson
replied that Plaintiff would still consider that letter to be an attorney dispute. (Id. at 446:7-11.)
Defendants argue that this testimony is the death knell to Plaintiff’s claim because Plaintiff
cannot show that their actions, in concealing the identity and source of the letters, were the
proximate cause of Plaintiff’s injury because Plaintiff would have responded to all 595,117 dispute
letters had Lexington Law included its letterhead on the dispute letters. Defendants can present
this argument to the jury. The court cannot conclude on summary judgment that a response by a
22
corporate representative regarding what Plaintiff would do when faced with a single letter is the
same action Plaintiff would have taken with 595,117 letters given the substantial amount of time
and effort that Plaintiff had to expend in responding to all of these letters and the evidence that
Plaintiff expended time and energy trying to prove that these letters were coming from a CRO.
Given the evidence and the fact that Plaintiff does not have to respond or suspend debt
collection on disputes initiated by a CRO under the FCRA, the court finds that Plaintiff has shown
that there is a dispute of material fact as to whether Plaintiff’s damages, which include lost profits
from collections and other damages from the time spent responding to the dispute letters, were
caused by the alleged RICO violation. Therefore, Defendants’ motion for summary judgment
based on a failure to establish a genuine dispute of material fact as to whether Defendants engaged
in mail fraud is denied.
Misrepresentations in Electronic Disputes
Plaintiff has also asserted that Defendants engaged in a scheme to defraud in which they
made false representations in connection with the 687,916 electronic disputes sent to the Bureaus
by Lexington Law concerning debts Plaintiff was trying to collect from 2014 through mid-2019.
Defendants move for summary judgment on the basis that Plaintiff cannot establish that false
representations were made. The undisputed facts show that the Bureaus were aware that Lexington
Law submitted the disputes. In sending the electronic disputes to Plaintiff, the Bureaus do not
identify who submitted the electronic dispute. Therefore, Defendants argue that they have made
no affirmative misrepresentations in submitting the electronic disputes.
In response, Plaintiff argues that the evidence shows that Lexington Law deceived Plaintiff
by using the Bureaus as a conduit for their scheme. Plaintiff further argues that at least one Bureau,
TransUnion, contractually agreed not to disclose the source of the electronic dispute and that
23
Lexington Law misrepresented to the Bureaus that it was a reseller under the FCRA. Plaintiff also
asserts that Lexington Law disputed accurate information. First, with respect to the contractual
agreement not to disclose, this fact has no bearing on the allegations of fraud because the evidence
is that the Bureaus do not identify the identity of the person making the dispute in any event.
Second, with respect to a misrepresentation in the Bureau contracts regarding Lexington Law’s
status as a reseller, a reseller is a legal term under the FCRA. 15 U.S.C. § 1681a(u). To establish
a violation of wire fraud, the scheme must be based on a false statement of material fact. Tronsgard
v. FBL Fin. Grp., Inc., 312 F. Supp.3d 982, 993 (D. Kan. 2018). The representation that Lexington
Law is a reseller is a representation of law, not one of fact, and therefore it is not actionable in
fraud. Id. (holding that a misrepresentation that an employee is an independent contractor is not
actionable as it is not a statement of fact).
Plaintiff offers no facts regarding statements made by Lexington Law, or any other
Defendant, to the Bureaus that led to their designation of Lexington Law as a reseller in the
contractual agreements. Defendants argue that they are a reseller when they resell credit reports
to their consumer clients. As Plaintiff has made no effort to establish what false statements of fact
were made to the Bureaus regarding Lexington Law’s status as a reseller, Plaintiff has not
established fraud regarding Lexington Law’s reseller status. Therefore, to the extent Plaintiff’s
wire fraud claim is based on misrepresentations regarding Lexington Law’s status as a reseller and
its contracts with the Bureaus regarding the transmissions of e-disputes, Plaintiff has not
established a dispute of fact regarding a scheme to defraud.
However, as discussed earlier, Plaintiff has introduced evidence that Lexington Law
disputes negative tradelines even when the affected consumers admit that the tradelines are
accurate. Therefore, the court finds that there is a material dispute of fact as to whether Lexington
24
Law submitted e-disputes which were inaccurate. It will be Plaintiff’s burden to establish this
evidence at trial with respect to the e-disputes.
B. Individual Defendants
Defendants Adam Fullman and Kevin Jones move for summary judgment on the basis that
Plaintiff has not established that they operate and manage the Lexington Law enterprise. Plaintiffs
have asserted alternative allegations of the enterprise at issue. Count 1 alleges that the enterprise
is an association-in-fact enterprise consisting of Defendants Heath, Fullman, Jones, Johnson, the
Progrexion Entities, Lexington law, and certain non-defendants. (Doc. 257-1 at 31.) Count 2
alleges an alternative RICO enterprise which consists of only Lexington Law and alleges that the
remaining Defendants operated and managed the alternate enterprise’s affairs. (Id. at 32.) Plaintiff
further alleges that each Defendant is employed by or associated with the Enterprise and operates
and manages its affairs. (Id. at 31-32.)
As discussed, to establish a violation of § 1962(c), Plaintiff must show that each Defendant
conducted or participated, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of the enterprise’s affairs. A RICO
enterprise is “any individual, partnership, corporation, association, or other legal entity, and any
union or group of individuals associated in fact although not a legal entity.” 18 U.S.C. § 1961(4).
Plaintiff’s RICO claim in count 1 is based on an allegation of an “association-in-fact” enterprise.
An association-in-fact enterprise “must have at least three structural features: a purpose,
relationships among those associated with the enterprise, and longevity sufficient to permit these
associates to pursue the enterprise's purpose.” Boyle v. United States, 556 U.S. 938, 946 (2009).
Fullman and Jones argue that they did not conduct or participate in the conduct of the enterprise
or alternate enterprise.10
10
The difference in the alternative allegations concerns the members of the enterprise. Otherwise, the allegations
regarding the conduct is identical. Therefore, the court will proceed to refer to the enterprise throughout this order.
25
To prove its claim against Fullman and Jones, Plaintiff must show that each Defendant
“participated in the operation or management of the enterprise itself.” George v. Urban Settlement
Servs., 833 F.3d 1242, 1251 (10th Cir. 2016). Liability depends on these Defendants participating
in the conduct of the enterprise and not just their own affairs. In re: EpiPen, 336 F. Supp.3d at
1318 (quoting Cedric Kushner Promotions, Ltd. v. King, 533 U.S. 158, 163 (2001)). To meet the
operation and management test,
the defendant need not have primary responsibility for the enterprise's affairs, a
formal position in the enterprise, or significant control over or within an enterprise.
This test requires less. Instead, even lower rung participants in the enterprise who
are under the direction of upper management may be liable under RICO if they
have ‘some part’ in operating or managing the enterprise's affairs. Yet, allegations
that simply describe a defendant's conduct through its regular course of business,
goods and services that ultimately benefit the enterprise do not suffice to state a
RICO claim.
Id. (internal citations and quotations omitted).
Adam Fullman
The facts, both undisputed and those viewed in a light most favorable to Plaintiff, regarding
Fullman’s involvement with Lexington Law and the scheme to defraud create a dispute of material
fact as to whether he participated in the operation or management of the enterprise. Fullman is a
licensed California attorney who is of counsel to Lexington Law. In that role, he speaks to
Lexington Law clients who are located in California when those clients ask to speak with an
attorney. (Doc. 316-1 at 64:2-7.) Fullman is paid a monthly flat rate fee under the of counsel
agreement. Fullman is a principal of the Fullman Law Firm. He is not a partner, member, owner,
or employee of Lexington Law. (Doc. 282.) Fullman knows that Lexington Law gets its clients
from advertising but he is not involved in and does not participate in the marketing. (Doc. 316-1
at 52:10-19.) Fullman also knows that Progrexion helps with marketing and sales. (Id. at 78:1315.) Fullman believes that he met Jeffrey Johnson, Progrexion’s President, back in 2005. At that
26
time, he believed that Progrexion and Lexington Law officed next door because Johnson had
walked over to Lexington Law from his office. (Id. at 125:1-9.) Fullman has no knowledge
regarding the financial relationship between the Progrexion entities and Lexington Law. (Id. at
125:10-12.) Fullman considers both Heath and Kevin Jones friends and will have lunch with them
when he is in Utah.
Lexington Law’s profile lists Fullman as a directing attorney at Lexington Law California. (Docs. 306-10 at 11.) Fullman estimates that he and his firm receive more than 1,000
new clients a month under the of counsel agreement. Fullman is not involved with drafting or
sending the dispute letters at issue in this case. (Doc. 306 at 2, 10; 316-1 at 66:15-24.) Fullman
understands that the dispute letters are generated by Lexington Law based on forms and are
electronically signed on behalf of the clients. Fullman knows that this procedure has been used
since he began working with Lexington Law in 2005.
Under the of counsel agreement, Fullman is responsible for the majority of his overhead,
such as his office, staff, and equipment, although Lexington Law reimburses Fullman for operating
expenses related to his representation of Lexington Law clients, such as supplies and postage.
(Doc. 282 at 21.) Fullman’s duties include analyzing credit reports and information provided by
clients. Fullman will also draft letters on behalf of consumers. Fullman testified that he has drafted
letters under the Lexington Law name for landlords to show that the client has taken steps to
dispute an item on his or her credit report. (Doc. 316-1 at 96:2-24.) Fullman can review the
client’s file in Lexington Law’s computer system and make changes if necessary.
Fullman argues that Plaintiff has failed to introduce any evidence to support that he
conducted or participated in the affairs of the enterprise. According to the pretrial order, the
purpose of the enterprise is to “defraud debt collection agencies like Ad Astra by profiting from
27
‘credit repair’ services in a manner that is illegal and fraudulent.” (Doc. 257-1 at 32.) The question
is - did Fullman participate in or conduct those affairs or was he just engaging in his regular
business by providing of counsel services to Lexington Law? Fullman argues it’s the latter while
Plaintiff argues that his entire representation of Lexington Law’s clients was related to the scheme
to defraud. In support of his position, Fullman cites to Baumer v. Pachl, 8 F.3d 1341 (9th Cir.
1993). In that case, the outside attorney had sporadic involvement with the enterprise which
included the preparation of two letters in 1982, a partnership agreement, and assistance in the
bankruptcy proceeding, which involved another two letters. The court held that this was not
sufficient to find that he conducted or participated in the enterprise. Significantly, the enterprise
began several years before his involvement, his role was limited, and he never held a formal
position in the partnership. Id. at 1344-45. Although Fullman does not personally send out the
letters or review the same, neither does any other attorney at Lexington Law. Moreover, Fullman
has been of counsel for Lexington Law since 2005. In that role, he knows that the firm’s primary
role is credit repair services. He assists in that role by talking to hundreds of clients to advise them.
He also makes changes to their files, which is significant in that the electronic files are what trigger
the dispute letters.
Fullman also cites to BancOklahoma Mortg. Corp. v. Capital Title Co., 194 F.3d 1089,
1102 (10th Cir. 1999), in support of his position. In that case, the court stated that a review of the
record, almost 50 volumes, did not show any support for a finding that outside title companies
managed a RICO enterprise. Although the plaintiff had claimed that the title companies failed to
correct misrepresentations, made misrepresentations to the homeowners, failed to make certain
disclosures, and other allegations, the record simply did not support these claims. Id. The title
companies simply provided their regular title services to the entities that comprised the enterprise.
28
Id. Again, although Fullman does not draft the dispute letters at issue, he represents the Lexington
Law California clients. He is paid by Lexington Law to do so and he is actively involved in the
clients’ representation, which includes making changes to their files. Fullman has represented
thousands of clients on behalf of Lexington Law over the years.
The court finds that Plaintiff has shown a dispute of material fact as to whether Fullman
had some part in directing or participating in the operation of the enterprise. See CGC Holding
Co., LLC, 974 F.3d at 1211 (finding sufficient evidence that a defendant was liable when she
received money generated by the activities’ of the co-conspirators and she drafted letters in the
early days of the scheme); VNA Plus, Inc. v. Apria Healthcare Grp., Inc., 29 F. Supp. 2d 1253,
1259 (D. Kan. 1998) (finding that a defendant involved in the day to day operations by controlling
the billing services and practices of the enterprise was at the center of the enterprise).
Fullman’s motion for summary judgment is therefore denied.
Kevin Jones
The facts, both undisputed and those viewed in a light most favorable to Plaintiff, regarding
Jones’ employment by Lexington Law and the scheme to defraud create a dispute of material fact
as to whether he participated in the operation or management of the enterprise. Jones began
employment with Lexington Law as an associate attorney. Prior to the allegations in this case,
Jones had a small ownership interest in Lexington Law but he never received a percentage of
revenue. (Doc. 317 at 2.) He was also involved in the training of paralegals when he was an
associate attorney. At that time, prior to 2012, Jones would have trained Progrexion’s marketing
staff. (Doc. 277-2 at 37:2-16.) In 2012, he was named the Director of Attorney Operations and,
in 2015, he also took on the role of COO. His primary job was the day to day operation of
Lexington Law’s Compliance Program. He created the compliance management system to handle
29
complaints and he also created a process called CARE, which is the Client Attorney Rapid
Escalation. (Doc. 277-2 at 51:18-52:19.) As part of his duties, he supervised the in house attorneys
and participated in the hiring of attorneys. Jones does not have access to information regarding
Lexington Law’s revenue. (Doc. 317 at 2.) Jones’ employment agreement required him to oversee
the day-to-day operation of the firm when Heath was absent.
Jones testified that he was not involved in drafting or revising the dispute letters. (Doc.
277-2 at 160:8-14.) Jones did know that the letters are drafted with a computer program. Jones
previously expressed criticism over the letters because he would receive complaints from the
clients regarding the letters. Jones thought the letters seemed unprofessional because the dispute
letters were not on firm letterhead. (Doc. 308-2 at 100:13-18.) Jones was told that letterhead was
not used because the letters would be less likely to be reviewed by the creditors. (Id. at 43:12-14.)
During his time at Lexington Law, Jones was not involved with the writing of any policies with
respect to the communication with creditors or the Bureaus. (Doc. 277-2 at 238:4-9.) Jones also
testified that Lexington Law relied on the client’s representations regarding their debt. Jones was
aware of Progrexion’s business relationship with Lexington Law but he had never seen the
servicing agreements between Lexington Law and the Progrexion entities. (Id. at 207:4-7.) Jones
testified that in his experience at Lexington Law, Heath did what Progrexion asked him to do, and
everything regarding marketing decisions was run through Progrexion. (Doc. 308 at 47:23-25,
139:24-25.) Jones separated from Lexington Law in 2019. He received a severance package when
he separated.
Jones argues that Plaintiff has failed to identify any specific facts that he directed the affairs
of the enterprise. The only authority in support of his motion is BancOklahoma. (Doc. 277 at 6.)11
11
Jones cited additional authority in his reply brief. (Doc. 337.) The authority cited therein is not persuasive to the
court as it concerned outside parties and not those employed at the center of the enterprise. (Id. at 6-7.)
30
This authority is not persuasive for the reasons discussed herein. Jones is not an outside party as
in BancOklahoma. Jones was an integral part of Lexington Law for a significant number of years.
He was involved in training paralegals, hiring attorneys, supervising those attorneys, and handled
the firm’s compliance issues. Moreover, Jones was the second person in authority at Lexington
Law and was to oversee it in Heath’s absence. The court finds that Plaintiff has established a
dispute as to whether Jones had “some part in directing” the affairs of the enterprise. Reves, 507
U.S. at 179; VNA Plus, Inc., 29 F. Supp. 2d at 1259.
Jones’ motion for summary judgment is denied.
C. RICO Conspiracy
Defendants also moved for summary judgment on Plaintiff’s claims of RICO conspiracy.
Defendants argued that a conspiracy claim cannot survive absent an underlying RICO violation.
Defendants’ argument is accurate; however, the court has determined that the RICO substantive
claims must proceed to trial. Therefore, Defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the RICO
conspiracy claims is denied.
D. State Law Fraud Claim
Defendants move for summary judgment on Plaintiff’s state law fraud claim. This claim
is based on the same facts as the RICO claims. Therefore, for the reasons stated in this order, the
court finds that there is a material dispute of fact as to whether Defendants made fraudulent
representations. Defendants further argue that Plaintiff did not reasonably rely on the false
representations and omissions because Plaintiff delayed its investigation into trying to determine
where the letters were coming from. (Doc. 269 at 25-27.) Plaintiff, however, argues that the
evidence supports that the dispute letters gradually increased and that it only learned the extent of
the scheme prior to the initiation of the suit. (Doc. 310 at 14.) The court finds that the question
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of whether Plaintiff reasonably relied on the representations in the dispute letters is in dispute and
this question must be resolved by a jury.
Defendants also assert that Plaintiff has not shown that its damages were caused by
Defendants because Plaintiff would have taken the same actions had it known that the letters were
from Lexington law. The court determined that this issue is also for the jury for the reasons
discussed herein.
E. Collection Damages
Defendants argue that Plaintiff’s collection damages were caused by its own business
decisions and not by Defendants’ conduct. Under the FDCPA, a debt collector must cease
collection activity if a consumer disputes the validity of the debt within 30 days of the consumer’s
receipt of an initial communication from that debt collector. 15 U.S.C. § 1692g(a)-(b). Defendants
argue that Plaintiff has not established that the dispute letters were sent within that 30-day window
and, therefore, Plaintiff was not required to halt collection. Plaintiff’s business practice is to halt
collections on debts anytime a consumer challenges a debt. Plaintiff asserts that this is done in
good faith and so that Plaintiff is not subjected to liability for collecting an inaccurate amount.
(Doc. 318 at 40.)
The court finds that this issue is also one for the jury. Defendants are free to argue that
they did not cause these damages if the jury determines that Plaintiff has otherwise proven its
case.12
IV.
Conclusion
12
The court notes that Defendants have filed an objection to Plaintiff’s expert regarding these damages. (Doc. 264).
The court need not resolve this issue in order to rule on the present summary judgment motions. However, the court
has not yet determined whether the evidence regarding these damages is admissible based on the arguments raised by
Defendants.
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Defendants’ joint motion for summary judgment (Doc. 268) is GRANTED IN PART and
DENIED IN PART. Fullman’s motion for summary judgment (Doc. 272) and Jones’ motion for
summary judgment (Doc. 276) are DENIED. Plaintiff’s motion to file a surreply (Doc. 344) is
DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED. Dated this 26th day of February 2021.
__s/ John W. Broomes__________
JOHN W. BROOMES
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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