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Wyndham gets bad press in today's STATE newspaper in SC

EZ Ed

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(Sorry to post this in its entirety, but I couldn't find a better way. I was in a hurry to get this in today.)

Timeshare complaints allege deceit, fraud that targets elderly consumers in SC and across country

By David Wren

dwren@thesunnews.comApril 5, 2014 Updated 12 hours ago
Facebook Twitter Google Plus Reddit E-mail Print

Carrie and Tony Mendoza say they were stuck with more than $18,000 in debt after they sold their timeshares back to Wyndham. The couple is at their home in the Little River community on Thursday.

BY JANET BLACKMON MORGAN — jblackmon@thesunnews.com
Most Popular Stories



NORTH MYRTLE BEACH — Timeshare tips

Things to consider if you are thinking about buying a timeshare:

• Ask yourself how likely are you to use a timeshare year after year? Are your vacation plans sometimes subject to last-minute changes? How much do you genuinely love the place where the vacation units are based? You’ll be responsible for the costs of your timeshare whether you use it or not.

• Don’t view this as an investment. Like new cars, timeshares tend to depreciate quickly – and they’re typically difficult to resell.

• Don’t finance. If you’re sure you want to pay for a timeshare, do so up front in cash. Most vacation developments will allow you to finance the purchase, but their interest rates are often high.

• Watch out for maintenance fees, which can cost $500 or more per year and can rise at rates that equal or exceed inflation. Find out whether your plan has a fee cap or an inflation-protection plan.

• Walk away if you feel pressured. Should you find yourself across from a high-pressure sales person, either leave or tell the salesman to back off.

• Ask a lot of questions, such as: What are the maintenance fees used for? Do I lose my points if I don’t use them? Can I bring pets?

• Ask for a copy of the property’s current maintenance budget, and find out what’s done to manage and repair the property. Definitely visit the resort and ask multiple owners about their experiences.

Source: Bankrate.com; NBC News

Tony and Carrie Mendoza walked into the Wyndham Vacation Resorts office here in September hoping to sell four timeshares they had purchased years ago back to the company that had sold them. They walked out of the office unknowingly owing more than $18,000 to a credit card and finance company they say they’d never heard of.

“Wyndham pulled the wool over our eyes,” said Carrie Mendoza, 80, whose 86-year-old husband, Tony, is a World War II veteran. “The people at Wyndham work with this stuff every day. They talk so fast and flip pages so fast that only they know what’s going on.”

Documents show the Mendozas signed up for a program called Pathway by Club Wyndham – promoted by the timeshare company as an easy way for owners to sell back their unwanted vacation plans and eliminate the monthly maintenance fees. The Mendozas say they do not remember signing the documents, but they do not dispute that the signatures are theirs.

Timeshare critics say in lawsuits filed in Florida, California and other states that the program and Wyndham’s sales techniques are deceptive and target elderly victims.

“Timeshare sales are commission driven; the sales people get 20 percent of the deal,” said Mike Finn, a Largo, Fla., lawyer whose firm specializes in timeshare lawsuits. “They [the Mendozas] went in there thinking they were going to get help, but the sales guys just saw them as meat on the table.”

Patrick Mumford, the Mendozas’ lawyer, is out of the office until later this month and unavailable for comment.

Alicia Dickson – a consumer affairs specialist in Wyndham’s legal department – did not respond to email and telephone requests for comment. Dickson reviewed the Mendozas’ documents after receiving a letter from Mumford asking the timeshare company to justify the $18,000 debt “or, otherwise, dismiss or waive [it].”

Dickson responded to Mumford by saying “we regret to hear of Mr. and Mrs. Mendoza’s concerns and apologize for any service challenges and inconveniences they may have encountered,” but the contract they signed binds them to the deal.

Lindsay Hodges, Wyndham’s corporate communications manager, told The Sun News on Friday that the company is “committed to providing a positive resolution for the Mendoza family.”

“Providing world-class customer service is our top priority and we strive to do all that we can to deliver a great experience to our owners at every interaction,” Hodges said. “We regret that their situation did not reflect this.”

The Pathway program

Wyndham requires timeshare owners to purchase an additional 105,000 points – the “currency” owners use to pay for their vacation stays – to join the Pathway program. Once they are in the program, owners can ask Wyndham to buy back their timeshares. Wyndham is not obligated to buy the timeshares but, if the company chooses, it will purchase them for 20 percent of their stated value.

In the Mendozas’ case, Wyndham paid $13,779 for timeshares the couple had purchased since 1996 for more than $68,000.

To make them eligible for that buy-back, Wyndham signed the Mendozas up for a Visa credit card and a Bill Me Later credit account – with a 19.99 percent annual interest rate – to cover the $18,125 cost of joining the Pathway program.

The Mendozas said they had no idea they had signed up for those credit accounts until months later when they started getting bills in the mail.

“It was never our intention to buy any additional timeshares or anything else that would cost us more money,” Tony Mendoza said.

Carrie Mendoza said she would not have agreed to the buy-back program if she knew it came at such a steep price.

“Our travel days are over,” she said. “We need the re-sale money to allow us to purchase medications and to keep us going for as long as the good Lord lets us remain on this earth.”

Documents show the Mendozas did indeed sign up for the credit accounts and agreed to all of the terms of the Pathway program, including the purchase of additional points. But the couple says they were pressured into signing documents before they read or fully understood them.

“When they have a large stack of papers with the pages flipped back and the back page ready for our signature without us being able to read the pages before that ... and they encouraged us, saying, ‘Oh yeah, it’s OK, go ahead and just sign here,’ ” Carrie Mendoza said. “And very fast [they] flipped another page at us.”

The Mendozas say they did not get copies of all the documents they signed until their lawyer requested them months later.

Contracts hard to beat in court

Court documents show the Mendozas are not alone.

A lawsuit filed last year against Wyndham by a Wisconsin couple claims the timeshare company “trains its sales employees to arrange and procure loans through various credit cards and the Bill Me Later program without customers’ knowledge or consent.” Wyndham denies any wrongdoing in that lawsuit, which is pending.

A separate class-action lawsuit filed in California claims Wyndham deceived buyers into purchasing additional timeshare points through the Bill Me Later credit account “so that the charges would not be readily apparent.” The lead plaintiffs in that case, like the Mendozas, “were not aware of the purchase of additional points until they received their credit card statement,” according to the lawsuit.

Barbara Figari, the lawyer representing Wyndham customers in the class-action lawsuit, said in court documents that the timeshare company targeted her clients with deceptive and misleading sales pitches because of their age.

“The fraudulent practices and false representations were being targeted toward seniors,” Figari stated.

Wyndham has denied any wrongdoing in that case as well, and a judge ruled this year that Figari’s claims cannot be heard in court but must be resolved by an arbitrator, as stated by the contracts her clients signed.

Finn, the Florida lawyer, said it is usually futile to try to fight a timeshare contract on legal grounds.

“The contracts are damned hard to beat,” he said. “The timeshare attorneys figured out how to beat the system before they sold their first timeshare. Once you sign the contract, you’re usually stuck with that timeshare for the rest of your life.”

South Carolina consumers have five days to cancel a timeshare contract, and that cancellation has to be in writing and sent by certified mail with a return receipt. Once that time period expires, consumers have little recourse for cancelling a transaction due to buyer’s remorse.

The S.C. Department of Consumer Affairs, the state agency charged with protecting consumers’ rights, does not investigate timeshare complaints but forwards them to the state’s Real Estate Commission. The commission can’t adjudicate contractual disputes and is mostly limited to licensing violations.

Timeshare complaints are among the most common received by the commission, with 283 of them lodged in 2013, according to commission spokeswoman Lesia Kudelka. Of that amount, the commission declined to investigate 226 complaints due to a lack of jurisdiction or insufficient evidence to support a legal violation. None of the cases ended with a public disciplinary order against a timeshare company or sales agent.

Consumer advocates say the commission’s oversight of the timeshare industry is hampered by the fact that state law does not require individual sales agents to be licensed as long as their company is registered with the state. South Carolina is one of 12 states that do not require timeshare sales agents to obtain a license.

That leaves many consumers with a largely unsympathetic court system as their only hope.

“If you go in front of a judge and he asks, ‘Did you sign this contract?’ and you say, ‘Yes,’ you don’t stand a chance,” Finn said.

Mumford, the Mendozas’ lawyer, appears to agree in a March 21 memo he wrote about the Little River couple’s case.

“Unless Mr. and Mrs. Mendoza deny that the signatures contained thereon are theirs, the documents on their face appear to be very much in order,” Mumford states.

A little caution can save money

Finn has said one approach is not to pay the credit card or Bill Me Later bill. That’s because those finance companies have “recourse agreements” with Wyndham for most of the accounts opened to make timeshare purchases. Under those agreements, the finance companies perform minimal credit checks on consumers because Wyndham guarantees the payments.

“They’re not relying on an individual’s credit as to whether they should make the loan,” Finn said, referring to the finance companies. “They’re relying on that recourse agreement they have with Wyndham.”

Finn said he has been able to get companies such as Bill Me Later to cancel debts for more than 100 of his clients by sending a letter outlining what he says are the timeshare company’s deceptive sales practices.

“When Bill Me Later gets my letter, they take it to Wyndham and say, “Give us our money back,’ ” Finn said. “The best way to get their attention is to tell them my client is not going to pay you any more and you cannot contact them any more. I create a situation where they have to come to my table.”

Finn’s services aren’t cheap – he charges a flat rate of $5,000 for each case – but he said business is booming.

“I started focusing on timeshare cases three years ago, and I’ve been the busiest during those three years than at any other time during 43 years in practice,” he said.

Pam Bondi – the attorney general in Florida where many of the timeshare companies, including Wyndham, are headquartered – said a little patience and caution on the front end can save consumers thousands in timeshare and legal fees.

“The salesman may try to give you the impression that the papers have to be signed that same day,” Bondi said in a news release. “Remember that you always have the right to leave the sales office, and come back later. Read your contract to determine what cancellation rights you have after you have signed the papers. Before buying a timeshare, you should consider whether you will want to return to the same vacation spot each year. Remember that once you buy it, you may not be able to sell it due to a depressed resale market.”

It’s advice the Mendozas say they wish they had taken.

“They had a lot of places where we were told to initial or sign,” Carrie Mendoza said. “We trusted them, and that was our biggest mistake.”

Read more here: http://www.thestate.com/2014/04/05/3370785/timeshare-complaints-allege-deceit.html#storylink=cpy
 

lcml11

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(Sorry to post this in its entirety, but I couldn't find a better way. I was in a hurry to get this in today.)

Timeshare complaints allege deceit, fraud that targets elderly consumers in SC and across country

By David Wren

dwren@thesunnews.comApril 5, 2014 Updated 12 hours ago
Facebook Twitter Google Plus Reddit E-mail Print

Carrie and Tony Mendoza say they were stuck with more than $18,000 in debt after they sold their timeshares back to Wyndham. The couple is at their home in the Little River community on Thursday.

BY JANET BLACKMON MORGAN — jblackmon@thesunnews.com
Most Popular Stories



NORTH MYRTLE BEACH — Timeshare tips

Things to consider if you are thinking about buying a timeshare:

• Ask yourself how likely are you to use a timeshare year after year? Are your vacation plans sometimes subject to last-minute changes? How much do you genuinely love the place where the vacation units are based? You’ll be responsible for the costs of your timeshare whether you use it or not.

• Don’t view this as an investment. Like new cars, timeshares tend to depreciate quickly – and they’re typically difficult to resell.

• Don’t finance. If you’re sure you want to pay for a timeshare, do so up front in cash. Most vacation developments will allow you to finance the purchase, but their interest rates are often high.

• Watch out for maintenance fees, which can cost $500 or more per year and can rise at rates that equal or exceed inflation. Find out whether your plan has a fee cap or an inflation-protection plan.

• Walk away if you feel pressured. Should you find yourself across from a high-pressure sales person, either leave or tell the salesman to back off.

• Ask a lot of questions, such as: What are the maintenance fees used for? Do I lose my points if I don’t use them? Can I bring pets?

• Ask for a copy of the property’s current maintenance budget, and find out what’s done to manage and repair the property. Definitely visit the resort and ask multiple owners about their experiences.

Source: Bankrate.com; NBC News

Tony and Carrie Mendoza walked into the Wyndham Vacation Resorts office here in September hoping to sell four timeshares they had purchased years ago back to the company that had sold them. They walked out of the office unknowingly owing more than $18,000 to a credit card and finance company they say they’d never heard of.

“Wyndham pulled the wool over our eyes,” said Carrie Mendoza, 80, whose 86-year-old husband, Tony, is a World War II veteran. “The people at Wyndham work with this stuff every day. They talk so fast and flip pages so fast that only they know what’s going on.”

Documents show the Mendozas signed up for a program called Pathway by Club Wyndham – promoted by the timeshare company as an easy way for owners to sell back their unwanted vacation plans and eliminate the monthly maintenance fees. The Mendozas say they do not remember signing the documents, but they do not dispute that the signatures are theirs.

Timeshare critics say in lawsuits filed in Florida, California and other states that the program and Wyndham’s sales techniques are deceptive and target elderly victims.

“Timeshare sales are commission driven; the sales people get 20 percent of the deal,” said Mike Finn, a Largo, Fla., lawyer whose firm specializes in timeshare lawsuits. “They [the Mendozas] went in there thinking they were going to get help, but the sales guys just saw them as meat on the table.”

Patrick Mumford, the Mendozas’ lawyer, is out of the office until later this month and unavailable for comment.

Alicia Dickson – a consumer affairs specialist in Wyndham’s legal department – did not respond to email and telephone requests for comment. Dickson reviewed the Mendozas’ documents after receiving a letter from Mumford asking the timeshare company to justify the $18,000 debt “or, otherwise, dismiss or waive [it].”

Dickson responded to Mumford by saying “we regret to hear of Mr. and Mrs. Mendoza’s concerns and apologize for any service challenges and inconveniences they may have encountered,” but the contract they signed binds them to the deal.

Lindsay Hodges, Wyndham’s corporate communications manager, told The Sun News on Friday that the company is “committed to providing a positive resolution for the Mendoza family.”

“Providing world-class customer service is our top priority and we strive to do all that we can to deliver a great experience to our owners at every interaction,” Hodges said. “We regret that their situation did not reflect this.”

The Pathway program

Wyndham requires timeshare owners to purchase an additional 105,000 points – the “currency” owners use to pay for their vacation stays – to join the Pathway program. Once they are in the program, owners can ask Wyndham to buy back their timeshares. Wyndham is not obligated to buy the timeshares but, if the company chooses, it will purchase them for 20 percent of their stated value.

In the Mendozas’ case, Wyndham paid $13,779 for timeshares the couple had purchased since 1996 for more than $68,000.

To make them eligible for that buy-back, Wyndham signed the Mendozas up for a Visa credit card and a Bill Me Later credit account – with a 19.99 percent annual interest rate – to cover the $18,125 cost of joining the Pathway program.

The Mendozas said they had no idea they had signed up for those credit accounts until months later when they started getting bills in the mail.

“It was never our intention to buy any additional timeshares or anything else that would cost us more money,” Tony Mendoza said.

Carrie Mendoza said she would not have agreed to the buy-back program if she knew it came at such a steep price.

“Our travel days are over,” she said. “We need the re-sale money to allow us to purchase medications and to keep us going for as long as the good Lord lets us remain on this earth.”

Documents show the Mendozas did indeed sign up for the credit accounts and agreed to all of the terms of the Pathway program, including the purchase of additional points. But the couple says they were pressured into signing documents before they read or fully understood them.

“When they have a large stack of papers with the pages flipped back and the back page ready for our signature without us being able to read the pages before that ... and they encouraged us, saying, ‘Oh yeah, it’s OK, go ahead and just sign here,’ ” Carrie Mendoza said. “And very fast [they] flipped another page at us.”

The Mendozas say they did not get copies of all the documents they signed until their lawyer requested them months later.

Contracts hard to beat in court

Court documents show the Mendozas are not alone.

A lawsuit filed last year against Wyndham by a Wisconsin couple claims the timeshare company “trains its sales employees to arrange and procure loans through various credit cards and the Bill Me Later program without customers’ knowledge or consent.” Wyndham denies any wrongdoing in that lawsuit, which is pending.

A separate class-action lawsuit filed in California claims Wyndham deceived buyers into purchasing additional timeshare points through the Bill Me Later credit account “so that the charges would not be readily apparent.” The lead plaintiffs in that case, like the Mendozas, “were not aware of the purchase of additional points until they received their credit card statement,” according to the lawsuit.

Barbara Figari, the lawyer representing Wyndham customers in the class-action lawsuit, said in court documents that the timeshare company targeted her clients with deceptive and misleading sales pitches because of their age.

“The fraudulent practices and false representations were being targeted toward seniors,” Figari stated.

Wyndham has denied any wrongdoing in that case as well, and a judge ruled this year that Figari’s claims cannot be heard in court but must be resolved by an arbitrator, as stated by the contracts her clients signed.

Finn, the Florida lawyer, said it is usually futile to try to fight a timeshare contract on legal grounds.

“The contracts are damned hard to beat,” he said. “The timeshare attorneys figured out how to beat the system before they sold their first timeshare. Once you sign the contract, you’re usually stuck with that timeshare for the rest of your life.”

South Carolina consumers have five days to cancel a timeshare contract, and that cancellation has to be in writing and sent by certified mail with a return receipt. Once that time period expires, consumers have little recourse for cancelling a transaction due to buyer’s remorse.

The S.C. Department of Consumer Affairs, the state agency charged with protecting consumers’ rights, does not investigate timeshare complaints but forwards them to the state’s Real Estate Commission. The commission can’t adjudicate contractual disputes and is mostly limited to licensing violations.

Timeshare complaints are among the most common received by the commission, with 283 of them lodged in 2013, according to commission spokeswoman Lesia Kudelka. Of that amount, the commission declined to investigate 226 complaints due to a lack of jurisdiction or insufficient evidence to support a legal violation. None of the cases ended with a public disciplinary order against a timeshare company or sales agent.

Consumer advocates say the commission’s oversight of the timeshare industry is hampered by the fact that state law does not require individual sales agents to be licensed as long as their company is registered with the state. South Carolina is one of 12 states that do not require timeshare sales agents to obtain a license.

That leaves many consumers with a largely unsympathetic court system as their only hope.

“If you go in front of a judge and he asks, ‘Did you sign this contract?’ and you say, ‘Yes,’ you don’t stand a chance,” Finn said.

Mumford, the Mendozas’ lawyer, appears to agree in a March 21 memo he wrote about the Little River couple’s case.

“Unless Mr. and Mrs. Mendoza deny that the signatures contained thereon are theirs, the documents on their face appear to be very much in order,” Mumford states.

A little caution can save money

Finn has said one approach is not to pay the credit card or Bill Me Later bill. That’s because those finance companies have “recourse agreements” with Wyndham for most of the accounts opened to make timeshare purchases. Under those agreements, the finance companies perform minimal credit checks on consumers because Wyndham guarantees the payments.

“They’re not relying on an individual’s credit as to whether they should make the loan,” Finn said, referring to the finance companies. “They’re relying on that recourse agreement they have with Wyndham.”

Finn said he has been able to get companies such as Bill Me Later to cancel debts for more than 100 of his clients by sending a letter outlining what he says are the timeshare company’s deceptive sales practices.

“When Bill Me Later gets my letter, they take it to Wyndham and say, “Give us our money back,’ ” Finn said. “The best way to get their attention is to tell them my client is not going to pay you any more and you cannot contact them any more. I create a situation where they have to come to my table.”

Finn’s services aren’t cheap – he charges a flat rate of $5,000 for each case – but he said business is booming.

“I started focusing on timeshare cases three years ago, and I’ve been the busiest during those three years than at any other time during 43 years in practice,” he said.

Pam Bondi – the attorney general in Florida where many of the timeshare companies, including Wyndham, are headquartered – said a little patience and caution on the front end can save consumers thousands in timeshare and legal fees.

“The salesman may try to give you the impression that the papers have to be signed that same day,” Bondi said in a news release. “Remember that you always have the right to leave the sales office, and come back later. Read your contract to determine what cancellation rights you have after you have signed the papers. Before buying a timeshare, you should consider whether you will want to return to the same vacation spot each year. Remember that once you buy it, you may not be able to sell it due to a depressed resale market.”

It’s advice the Mendozas say they wish they had taken.

“They had a lot of places where we were told to initial or sign,” Carrie Mendoza said. “We trusted them, and that was our biggest mistake.”

Read more here: http://www.thestate.com/2014/04/05/3370785/timeshare-complaints-allege-deceit.html#storylink=cpy

Interesting comments on the Pathways program. Not inconsistent to what I believe was a general thinking on TUG pertaining to the program.
 

tschwa2

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What I got out of the article was an indication of the fee charged by the Finn Law Group. $5000 flat fee plus the admission that if it goes to court and you said you signed the document and did not rescind, you are probably going to lose in court. He works by trying to get the finance company to pressure Wyndham to reverse the charges.
 

55plus

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Nothing new about this....
 

ronparise

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Nothing new about this....


I would add, Unfortunately, there is nothing new about this

There have been some discussion about the Finn Law Group before; questioning their legitimacy. It would seem that they are legitimate but $5000 to tell someone, just dont pay.

Damn, I can do that....and I have, just didnt get paid $5000
 

lcml11

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I would add, Unfortunately, there is nothing new about this

There have been some discussion about the Finn Law Group before; questioning their legitimacy. It would seem that they are legitimate but $5000 to tell someone, just dont pay.

Damn, I can do that....and I have, just didnt get paid $5000

Ya, but I bet you do not send the letter.
 

Rent_Share

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Another example on why their sales organization is rated F by the BBB
 

CO skier

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...

“Timeshare sales are commission driven; the sales people get 20 percent of the deal,” said Mike Finn, a Largo, Fla., lawyer whose firm specializes in timeshare lawsuits. “They [the Mendozas] went in there thinking they were going to get help, but the sales guys just saw them as meat on the table.”

...

Finn’s services aren’t cheap – he charges a flat rate of $5,000 for each case – but he said business is booming.

“I started focusing on timeshare cases three years ago, and I’ve been the busiest during those three years than at any other time during 43 years in practice,” he said.



There is a certain sad irony here. The quote could just as easily have read, "They [the Mendozas] went in there thinking they were going to get help, but the attorney Mike Finn just saw them as meat on the table.”
 

ronparise

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There is a certain sad irony here. The quote could just as easily have read, "They [the Mendozas] went in there thinking they were going to get help, but the attorney Mike Finn just saw them as meat on the table.”

I don't think they hired Finn. Their lawyer was out of town. Finn was just someone the reporter went to for a quote
 

CO skier

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I don't think they hired Finn. Their lawyer was out of town. Finn was just someone the reporter went to for a quote

I stand corrected. The quote could just as easily have read, "They [insert name of any timeshare buyer here] went in there thinking they were going to get help, but the attorney [insert name of their attorney here] just saw them as meat on the table.”

Attorney Finn did get this correct:
Finn, the Florida lawyer, said it is usually futile to try to fight a timeshare contract on legal grounds.

“The contracts are damned hard to beat,” he said. “The timeshare attorneys figured out how to beat the system before they sold their first timeshare. Once you sign the contract, you’re usually stuck with that timeshare for the rest of your life.”

... so what is Finn charging $5000 for, if the contracts cannot be beat?


and just look what happened to this couple:

http://www.tugbbs.com/forums/showthread.php?t=206007
 

Rent_Share

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There you go Fred defending Wyndham as always, no matter how low they go
 

pedro47

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I liked the article because is was some information on this industry..
 

comicbookman

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As a member of the bar in Virginia, I would consider it unethical to charge $5,000 to send a couple of form letters and tell my clients don't pay. This is why I don't practice law anymore. Finn is scamming just as badly as Wyndham.
 

ronparise

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I stand corrected. The quote could just as easily have read, "They [insert name of any timeshare buyer here] went in there thinking they were going to get help, but the attorney [insert name of their attorney here] just saw them as meat on the table.”

Attorney Finn did get this correct:


... so what is Finn charging $5000 for, if the contracts cannot be beat?


and just look what happened to this couple:

http://www.tugbbs.com/forums/showthread.php?t=206007

I dont know what a fair price is when it comes to lawyers, but fair or not, put the money aside for a moment and he does provide a service

Finn is giving advice that if followed will force Wyndham to the table. Remember just not paying the 3rd party credit card company, doesn't negate the contract, Wyndham still has to take the deed back
 

ronparise

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As a member of the bar in Virginia, I would consider it unethical to charge $5,000 to send a couple of form letters and tell my clients don't pay. This is why I don't practice law anymore. Finn is scamming just as badly as Wyndham.

He is an ambulance chaser, no more and no less. He would earn a fee if he gets the job done without a hit to his clients credit (doubtful)
 

comicbookman

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He is an ambulance chaser, no more and no less. He would earn a fee if he gets the job done without a hit to his clients credit (doubtful)

If he can avoid a hit to the clients credit, then he is earning every penny. That would be an amazing result (and HIGHLY unlikely). Any halfway decent local attorney could do what he is doing, and the cost would probably be 1/10 of what he is charging. The strategy does require an attorney, but otherwise is form letters and very little attorney time.
 

uscav8r

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There you go Fred defending Wyndham as always, no matter how low they go


Hmmm... I thought his comment was an indictment of the lawyers' motives vice a tacit defense of Wyndham.


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cotraveller

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There you go Fred defending Wyndham as always, no matter how low they go

There was no defense of Wyndham here. Just a a statement of fact...Wyndham is tough to beat

Hmmm... I thought his comment was an indictment of the lawyers' motives vice a tacit defense of Wyndham.

Considering the source of the original flame above, I figured it was directed at me and I hadn't even posted in this thread! Go figure. :D
 

CO skier

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There was no defense of Wyndham here. Just a a statement of fact...Wyndham is tough to beat

My post had nothing to do with Wyndham, Westgate, or any of the other companies that use the standard, high-pressure timeshare sales model.



Hmmm... I thought his comment was an indictment of the lawyers' motives vice a tacit defense of Wyndham.

Well, at least someone understood the meaning of my post.
 

CO skier

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There you go Fred defending Wyndham as always, no matter how low they go
__________________

David


“Never argue with an idiot. They will only bring you down to their level and beat you with experience.” -George Carlin


Not Fred, but I am sure everyone appreciates the fair warning from George Carlin regarding the associated posts.
 

Carol C

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I saw the article in yesterday's MB paper, right there on the front page where it is sure to draw attention to boiler-room sales pressure...and just in time for folks on spring break in MB to be forewarned. I wonder how many people lucked out in MB by picking up yesterday's paper, reading that article and then learning about right to rescind. Wyndham coroporate ofc in NMB will get a stack of properly filed rescind letters by the end of this week, I predict. Good job by the Sun newspaper!
 
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