U.S. Justice Dept. Says Personal Finance App Misled Consumers

The company denies the charges, which include deceptively advertising cash advances, charging hidden fees, and more.

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The U.S. Justice Department has filed a complaint and announced a civil enforcement action against financial technology company Dave and its CEO Jason Wilk for alleged violations of federal law.

The Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission alleged the company lured users to its personal finance app by advertising cash advances of up to $500 that many never receive.

The complaint, filed by the Justice Department on Dec. 30, seeks unspecified amounts of consumer redress and monetary civil penalties from the defendants and a permanent injunction to prohibit them from engaging in future violations, the Justice Department said.

The government alleges that Dave misled consumers by deceptively advertising its cash advances, charging hidden fees, misrepresenting how Dave uses customers’ tips and charging recurring monthly fees without providing a simple mechanism to cancel them.

Dave says many of the claims are incorrect and it will defend itself. It is also rolling out a streamlined fee structure that was unveiled earlier to remove tips and “express fees,” which regulators allege it charged customers to get cash advances instantly.

New customers onboarded on or after Dec. 4 have been transitioned to this revised fee structure, Dave said on Tuesday, adding that existing customers are also shifting.

The complaint filed on Monday amends and replaces an earlier complaint that the FTC filed in November, which had named only Dave as a defendant and did not seek any civil penalties.

This article was provided by Reuters.

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