A creepy way to improve your
credit
Once in a while, I literally copy word for word from an article I
have previously read in a newspaper. That is because for me to rewrite the
article in my own words would be a disservice to the author who actually wrote
the article in the splendid manner in which the author originally wrote
it. The author I am speaking about is
David Bruser of the Toronto Star. And now, his article and later my own
commentary.
A self-described
“real estate giant” and “true leader,” entrepreneur Sheldon Wolf runs
businesses that promise to repair the bad credit of cash-strapped Canadians.
“I wake up in the
morning ready to HELP people!” says the 48-year-old, luxury-car-driving Wolf,
who says his “handiwork” has assisted many people who had trouble getting
loans. “I guess when I think about it, I spend (the) majority of my day giving
back.”
Through NuLife and
Credit Slab and other companies he runs from a Calgary office, Wolf maintains
he has a client list exceeding 90,000 — clients he says he has helped get back
on the road to prosperity.
In an online
biography, Wolf says he has achieved “massive success.” His Facebook photos,
from the lights of Broadway to the Eiffel Tower to Montego Bay, show a smiling,
confident jetsetter. Cars of choice over the years include a Lamborghini.
A Star
investigation has found that what Wolf is mainly selling desperate Canadians
through his companies is high-interest debt with little transparency.
After seven
customers from across Canada said they were misled about the credit
score-boosting scheme and the thousands it costs, the Star found Wolf’s
companies’ sales tactics and oppressive contractual fine print are luring
vulnerable debtors further in the hole.
“I thought what I
was getting was a cash loan, but they were quite deceptive,” said customer
Charlton Budd of Calgary.
Wolf says his
customers are paying off a loan as a way to boost their credit score and get
back on their feet.
But the Star found
there is no advance of money to the customer’s bank account, just many payments
on a phantom loan at 30 per cent interest.
“It’s a loan,” Wolf
said. “Not all loans involve you getting money.”
Meanwhile, the
clients from Vancouver Island to New Brunswick — including a nursing student,
retiree and truck driver — told the Star they received no help or service, only
the high-interest loan and a cheap Android tablet that is part of the program.
Said Wolf in an
interview with the Star: “Our typical clients are people who had a hardship of
some sort and are back on their feet now and want to get their credit back to
where it was.”
“There are a lot of
fiscally illiterate people in this country,” he said, adding that he
periodically waives fees for customers, including veterans and those with
disabilities. “It’s an excellent program.”
Wolf is not running
the credit repair business for the profit, he told the Star.
“If you know me, I
don’t need the money.”
When the Star asked
questions about his revenue and personal assets, Wolf threatened to call
lawyers and police.
Wolf’s NuLife and
Credit Slab programs ask for a lot of money from their cash-strapped customers.
According to the
company’s websites, here’s how it works: For Credit Slab, it’s a $599 set-up
fee plus $49 every week for three years, then $1,500 cash back upon completion
of the program. That totals nearly $7,000.
For NuLife, the
customer pays a set-up fee of $499 and then makes $69 biweekly payments for 18
months. That totals nearly $3,200. NuLife does not include an identity-theft
protection service and other features advertised in the Credit Slab contract.
“We don’t want to
leave anyone behind,” Wolf said of the cheaper program. “We came up with
something that’s a little more economic.”
The Star found that
in some cases, Wolf did offer a discounted start-up membership fee.
A third-party
lender, SkyCap Financial, finances the program for NuLife and Credit Slab
customers. In other words, SkyCap gives money to Sheldon Wolf’s companies, and
then the customer pays SkyCap back in instalments and with interest.
In return, Wolf
says, the customer gets a range of credit repair services, including the
Android tablet and app to help manage, monitor and protect his or her credit.
And Wolf told the Star he has a credit lab staffed with experts who provide
“full comprehensive services” to “genuinely help.”
The problem is, as
the Star found during calls to a sales call centre and on the company websites,
customers were not told the full story nor, they say, were they delivered what
was promised.
Sales reps say the
NuLife system offers those with what one termed “rock-bottom” credit a fast fix
for a credit score laid low by setbacks such as bankruptcy or identity theft.
Worrell-Maloney
also viewed online video testimonials of Wolf’s system and “people were really
happy and excited that their credit had been repaired,” he recalled. “My
understanding (was) that I was going to get a loan, some money and I would pay
that back.”
Several weeks after
joining the program, Worrell-Maloney called and asked when his loan money would
arrive.
He was told there
was no loan. “They said, ‘What you’re paying off is a revolving trade line.’
They kept saying to me, ‘Please refer to your agreement.’ I started thinking:
Oh my God, what did I get myself into?”
He then read the
fine print and found it described a transaction that was different from what he
said was advertised.
His contract said
he owed more than $2,000 at 29 per cent interest over 18 months for a loan that
did not flow into his bank account but to Wolf’s company for services it says
it provides.
Worrell-Maloney
was, and still is, confused. So are six other frustrated customers of Wolf’s
credit repair companies. (Though nearly half of the customers interviewed by
the Star are from Ontario, it is not known how many of Wolf’s credit repair
systems are sold in the province.)
They all say they
were hooked by the online or phone pitch and signed up for something that was
not fully or properly explained.
“The websites,
they’re pretty flashy,” said Budd, an oil-patch ironworker from Calgary, Alta.,
and Credit Slab customer.
When he was
deciding whether to sign up, Budd also viewed the online video titled “Sheldon
Wolf Interview for CNN,” in which Wolf is introduced as a forensic credit
expert.
The interview was
actually produced by a Calgary-based public relations outfit that records
“friendly” interviews for a fee, and then posts them on news sites. Wolf’s
interview was posted to CNN iReport, a site that the news network hosts but
does not edit, fact-check or screen before posting.
Posing as a
potential customer, the Star called NuLife four times to try to pin down a
clear description of the program.
The story kept
changing. One sales rep said the company does give a loan and guaranteed a
credit boost after one year. Another said there is no loan but that the
customer gets a trade line registered in his name.
A third sales rep
revealed yet another version of the NuLife program when he emphasized that the
tablet is marked as a loan on the customer’s credit report and that the
biweekly loan payments of $69 over 18 months are “doing the heavy lifting” of
credit repair. “It looks like you’re paying off something,” the sales rep said.
When told about the
calls, Wolf said he was disappointed that his employees did not follow their
rigorous training. “It could be that they were new. We’re pretty strict.
The Star found Wolf has had a setback of his own. In
2012, he owed $1.4 million to the taxman, and Revenue Canada put a lien on his
spacious Calgary home, according to Alberta land title and federal court
documents. Wolf refused to answer questions about his debt and the lien, which
is still on the home.
When the house was sold to Wolf in 2009, it had an
indoor putting green.
Wolf also refused to answer other questions about
his profits and assets, calling the questions “wholly inappropriate.”
Online photos show Wolf rink-side for Calgary
Flames games at the Saddledome and on numerous trips — in one posting he
complained about the service at a luxury car rental service in Las Vegas. Those
who know him say he has driven an orange Lamborghini, which is shown on his
Facebook page. The Star recently spotted a black Range Rover and black Jaguar
at his home.
“Your behaviour seems somewhat rapacious,
stalker-like and harassing,” he told a reporter.
Dismissive of customers’ complaints to the Star, he
suggested the newspaper was out to create an “over-sensationalized s--- storm
based on false or misleading anecdotal testimony.”
“
You can be assured,” Wolf added, “that we will be
in contact with our lawyers and the police should you continue (to) cross my
lines.”
There were four major complaints from customers the
Star interviewed, including incomplete loan details, misused signature, no
service and “runarounds.”
Kishma Needham, 33, a Toronto nursing student and
single mother of three, said she called Credit Slab four times with questions
before signing up, and says she was never told about the third-party lender or
loan term.
Ironworker Charlton Budd said he signed up in 2013
and also was not told he was committing to a three-year loan at 29.99 per cent.
At the time he joined, the total cost of the Credit Slab program was less than
it is now.
Wolf told the Star that full program details are
spelled out in the contract, along with the interest rate which he said is
“prominently displayed” on the on-line application. “The agreement doesn’t just
sign itself,” he said.
Needham said she regrets not reading the contract
before signing, saying she believed the sales reps’ assurances.
Since the Star started investigating, the NuLife
website now has additional information, providing more transparency of the
loan. Wolf did not answer a question about when the changes were made.
Budd alleges that the Credit Slab website prompted
him to use his mouse to sign his name — what was described as a digital
signature — and later discovered this signature was imposed on a loan document
he never signed.
The Star went through the online NuLife application
process and confirmed the company takes a signature from the application form
and imposes it on loan documents.
The website’s fine print contains a link to a
sample loan document that indicates where the digital signature will be imposed
once the application is submitted.
The customers also said they received no service
from Wolf’s credit lab.
“It’s a kick in the ass every Friday when I see
(money) leaving because I’m paying into a service that is non-existent,” Budd
said.
“No help. No service,” said Needham, who lives with
her three children in a two-bedroom apartment on Jane St. “I never had anyone
call, saying you need to do this or that to repair your credit. I don’t know
what this service is about.”
Wolf told the Star that customers have to take his
program seriously. “It’s like a gym membership. You still have to go to the gym
and work out.”
Needham, who was on social assistance at the time
she signed up, said she was told by a sales rep that she could cancel her
Credit Slab membership after one year. When she tried to cancel, she said she
was told by another company official that the sales rep was mistaken and that
Needham was locked in for two more years.
Wolf, in his responses to the Star, said Needham
never told the company she thought the contract was for just one year.
A review of a NuLife and Credit Slab contract shows
fees, penalties and restrictions that allow Wolf and the lender to maximize
their take from the customer and quell possible complaints.
Wolf said the contract language is standard and
meant to protect his companies from the minority of customers who do not keep
up their end of the deal.
The contract, which also refers to the pre-interest
cost of the program as “membership fees,” includes the following clauses:
“Under no
circumstances will there be any refunds of any membership fees paid,” and the
company will not reply to any such requests.
The
company makes no guarantee the program will repair a customer’s credit or that
the loan information will even be posted to the customer’s credit profile.
The
company can modify the contract at any time without the customer’s consent.
Any
customer lawsuit must be filed within six months of the company’s alleged
wrongdoing or “be forever barred.”
In the portion of the contract dealing with the
third party lender, SkyCap Financial, a clause stipulates that if the customer
makes a legal claim against SkyCap over its right to enforce the contract, the
customer must also pay SkyCap’s legal defence fees.
Charlton Budd recently saw that fine print in
action when he emailed Wolf and the lender to request copies of emails,
contracts and other information in his file.
In his emails, sent in January, Budd said he was
duped, is paying for a non-existent service and will contact the authorities
about the “fraudulent activities.”
Wolf responded, saying: “Quite frankly I will
caution you to refrain from making further slanderous statements. Your file
will be sent off to our legal department.”
A representative from the lender — another
financing firm run by the same man who runs SkyCap — told Budd in an email that
“Any and all erroneous, derogatory remarks . . . will be vigorously defended by
the legal representative . . . with all costs and fees charged to the
claimant.”
Debt counsellor Campbell said: “That seems
unreasonable … I have never heard of a company trying to shut down a customer’s
expressed concerns.”
In late February, after Budd wrote a further letter
of complaint to Wolf, Wolf emailed him back, saying his company was willing to
“help you with your personal credit matters on a pro-bono basis.”
SkyCap’s president Jeremy Wilson told the Star his
company has never billed such legal costs to a customer.
He said Wolf is “very good at what he does” and has
a lot of satisfied clients who are now able to access mortgages and car loans
on better terms than previously possible.
“We regularly waive fees, we regularly change
payment dates (and) defer payments” to help clients succeed in the program,
Wilson added.
Wolf echoed that point. “It doesn’t make sense to
put someone on the program and have them go off the tracks,” he said. “It makes
our program look like a failure.”
Meanwhile, two of Wolf’s customers told the Star
they continue making regular payments because they fear the unpaid loan
instalments will be reported and their credit scores dropped.
“Poor people are just getting the crap kicked out
of them by this guy,” Budd said of Wolf. “There were times when I could not
afford to eat and yet that (money) had to go in there just so it wouldn’t screw
my credit.”
At a 29.99 per cent interest rate, for a loan that
I had never seen for a service that does
absolutely nothing, that’s crazy, man.”
My own thoughts about this
scam
There ae many different ways that people who have bad credit ratings can
improve their ratings. One of the ways is to put your own money into a credit
card and use the card and pay off the monthly payments. You will then establish
for the record that you are paying the debt on time. Eventually, the credit card company will let you have your card with
their money behind it.
You can also go to a credit counselling firm and they will supervise
your payments towards your debts and when your debts are paid off, a report
from the credit counselling service will go a long way into improving your
ratings in the credit bureaus
When I was the collection manager of a large collection agency in
Toronto, one of our clients was a large Canadian bank. After we collected the money owing to the bank, the bank would ask us if the debtors paid
off their debts promptly each month. If they did, the bank would give them
another credit card.
With respect to Wolf and his scam, he shouldn’t be called Wolf. He
should be called Pig. Watch out for these pigs like the one written in this
article. They are all over the place. My mother told me and your mothers
probably told you that when something offered to you sounds too good to
believe, it probably is a scam.
No comments:
Post a Comment