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H&R BLOCK SUED FOR FRAUDULENT MARKETING OF IRAS
Tax Prep Service Failed to Properly Disclose Fees
Attorney General Eliot Spitzer today sued the nation’s largest tax
preparation company for fraudulent marketing of individual retirement
accounts (IRAs).
The suit alleges that the H&R Block Company steered hundreds of
thousands of its clients, including almost 30,000 New Yorkers, into IRAs
that were virtually guaranteed to lose money because of a combination of
hidden fees and low interest rates.
"The conduct described in today’s complaint is particularly appalling
because many of those hardest hit were working families who struggle to
save," Spitzer said. "Instead of providing these families with accurate
information that would have allowed them to make informed choices, H&R
Block steered them into retirement accounts that actually shrank over
time."
The Attorney General’s office began the investigation in 2005 after
receiving information from an H&R Block tax preparer.
Over the past four years, H&R Block opened more than half a million
"Express IRA" accounts for its tax preparation clients. Customers were
told that the IRA paid "great rates" and was "a better way to save," but
85 percent of the customers who opened the accounts paid the company
more in fees than they earned in interest. More than 150,000 H&R Block
customers closed their accounts, incurring additional undisclosed fees,
as well as nearly $6 million in tax penalties.
The civil complaint filed today in State Supreme Court in Manhattan
cites internal documents showing that H&R Block’s senior management knew
that many of its customers were losing money on their Express IRAs. For
example, in a 2002 email to Mark Ernst, the company CEO, a district
manager complained about the impact of these accounts on customers:
"I really don’t think maintenance fees should exceed the amount of
interest that we are paying on these accounts. Clients won’t be happy
seeing [their] investments decreasing ... ."
Mr. Ernst forwarded this email to the Express IRA product manager and
added his own comments:
"The attached note . . . reflects the general sense that I think exists
- that Express IRA is the right thing for our clients, but the product
is designed to nickel and dime clients to the point where our field
people [don’t] feel as good about the product as they should... ."
Some conscientious H&R Block employees (including the person who brought
the information to the Attorney General) actually refused to promote the
product to clients.
In 2003, an internal H&R Block report prepared by the Express IRA
product manager described the growing concerns of tax professionals
about the product in the following way:
"Top 4 reasons tax pros are not offering the product:
1. $15 setup fee – ‘it’s too steep for my clients’
2. $15 recontribution fee – ‘they’ve already paid once, why charge them
again?’
3. Low interest rate – ‘my client will never make up the fee’
4. $10 annual maint. fee – ‘my clients have to pay this in addition to
the $15 fee.’"
The company’s management took no action to address these concerns.
Instead, H&R Block continued to tout the Express IRA as a good way for
lower and moderate income people to save. The complaint alleges that the
company pushed the Express IRA in an effort to encourage repeat
customers for its tax preparation services and to maximize its fee
revenue.
Spitzer’s complaint describes the experience of several New York
customers:
– A 32-year-old Albany resident with a taxable income of $17,847 made a
one-time, minimum contribution of $300 to an Express IRA in 2002. Over
the past four years, the investment earned $10.29 in interest but
incurred a total of $45 in fees. The Albany resident’s investment lost
12 percent of its value and will continue to decline.
– A 68-year-old resident of Brooklyn with a taxable income of $25,421
made a one-time contribution of $300 to an Express IRA in 2004. The
individual was charged a $15 account opening fee, a $10 account
maintenance fee, and a $25 closing fee when the account was closed after
18 months. These fees dwarfed the interest earned on the account ($5.18)
and, as a result, the Brooklyn resident’s investment declined by 15
percent.
Advocates for lower-income consumers praised the lawsuit:
Sarah Ludwig, Director of the Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy
Project in New York, said: "Lower and middle- income New Yorkers
encounter a host of abuses at tax prep sites such as H&R Block. The
abuse that the Attorney General has uncovered in connection with the
Express IRA is particularly troubling. Working families are entitled to
know all the facts about a retirement product – both good and bad –
before they decide to invest. Our organization strongly encourages
people to get their taxes done at free tax prep sites, which will
prepare people's taxes professionally, with zero incentive to rip people
off."
Spitzer’s lawsuit specifically alleges that H&R Block, based in Kansas
City, failed to adequately disclose its fees to its customers, failed to
warn that the interest paid would not cover the fees in certain
instances, and misleadingly described the interest rates as "great" when
they were at times less than one percent annually. This misleading and
incomplete disclosure violated New York’s consumer fraud law and was a
breach of the company’s fiduciary duty to its clients. Relief sought
includes an injunction from further violations of New York law, damages
and civil penalties.
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