Lawsuit alleges that Dick Edwards Auto Plaza scammed soldiers
By Nadia Pflaum in News
Thu., Jul. 30 2009 @ 9:01AM
The five plaintiffs weren't informed that they were paying extra for optional features that weren't actually on their cars, like leather, high-end stereo systems, anti-theft systems, upgraded wheels, and power sun roofs and seats, the lawsuit states.
The practice, which is called "over booking" or "power booking," isn't uncommon in the car business, according to attorney Michael Shultz of Kaup & Shultz, a law firm based in Lawrence, Kansas.
Each of the plaintiffs bought their cars through a program known as MILES, which stands for Military Installment Loan and Educational Services, operated out of Lexington, Kentucky, by a private L.L.C. called Dealers' Financial Services (DFS).
According to the lawsuit, "DFS states that military personnel face serious issues when purchasing an automobile" because service members are often too young to have built up much credit history, have a limited income and no stable address, making it harder to obtain a loan. The MILES program purports to make car purchasing easier for servicemen and women by providing lending while prompting the buyers to purchase warranty services and liability car insurance. DFS pays fees to dealerships for every car sold through the MILES program.
But Shultz contends that his clients, most of whom had decent credit scores, were misled by the Auto Plaza regarding their ability to finance vehicles. Through the MILES program, they ended up paying interest on their car loans averaging 17.95 percent. The amount of credit extended to them included the price of the phantom options.
"As a result," the lawsuit states, "the Auto Plaza sold cars at prices that were substantially higher than comparable cars sold by other car dealerships in the Junction City-Manhattan area."
DFS completed an audit of 91 cars sold through the Auto Plaza between January 1, 2007 and April 23, 2007. Of the 48 cars for which information was available, DFS found that 46 of them were over booked. In those instances, the soldiers overpaid between several hundred dollars to as much as two thousand dollars for phantom options. The Auto Plaza's gain of $56,000 benefited Richard Edwards, the dealership's owner and principal stock holder, and his sales manager, Lloyd Richard Roberts, the suit alleges.
Shultz tells The Pitch that he suspects there are many more potential victims of the Auto Plaza's over booking, but because many are now deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan, they're hard to contact. Fort Riley's JAG office sent out letters and e-mails to everyone on Shultz's list of potential victims, but "the list is only for a four month period in 2007" -- i.e. the scope of DFS's audit -- "and we believe that the over booking had been going on for a lot longer than four months," Shultz says.
The defendants have yet to file a response to the suit. Shultz hopes to try the case in front of a jury in Kansas City, Kansas.



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