Photo of Paige Fitzgerald

Paige regularly advises financial services clients in navigating complex federal and state laws in an array of fields, including mortgage lending and servicing, consumer lending, auto finance, and tobacco. As a 10-year veteran of the Virginia Attorney General’s office, she also uses her regulatory expertise to counsel clients in the health care industry, with an emphasis on Medicaid reimbursement and compliance.

Law360 is reporting that another subprime auto lender, the Nevada-based Consumer Portfolio Services, Inc., has disclosed in an SEC filing that it received a civil investigative subpoena from the Department of Justice.  As we’ve previously reported, both federal and state regulators recently have increased their scrutiny of subprime auto lending.

This is not the first

On January 21, the U.S. Supreme Court held oral argument in Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs v. The Inclusive Communities Project, Inc., a case in which, as we previously reported here and here, the Petitioner has challenged the applicability of a so-called “disparate impact” theory of liability under the Fair Housing

A settlement between the New York Department of Financial Services and automotive lender Condor Capital Corp., as well as Condor’s owner, Stephen Barron, was approved this week by the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.  The settlement will result in total payments to the State and consumers of up to

By all accounts, 2014 was a particularly busy one for the Federal Trade Commission in taking enforcement actions in the automobile sales and financing industry.  The FTC’s last public action of 2014 in the auto finance and sales area involved a suburban Dallas dealer, charged with using deceptive ads to promote the sale and lease

As we previously reported here, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s settlement with DriveTime provides several warnings to financial services institutions regarding their fair credit reporting and fair debt collection compliance.  In a recent piece published in Law360, available here, Troutman Sanders attorneys Alan Wingfield, Paige Fitzgerald, and Nick Klaiber elaborated on their analysis

As we have been reporting since 2013, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s attacks on what it considers discriminatory and subjective dealer pricing of finance rates should be seen as nothing less than an outright attempt to reshape the auto finance industry.  These regulatory actions have continued in earnest through the present, as we’ve discussed

The lending arm of Honda Motor Co., America Honda Finance Corp., has just revealed in a recent public filing that the U.S. Department of Justice and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau have authorized an enforcement action against the company for violations of law arising out of its indirect lending practices.  Honda stated that the CFPB

Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi and the Federal Trade Commission filed two complaints against multiple companies operating “multi-million dollar schemes to sell tech support services to consumers nationwide,” according to a news release by the State Attorney General’s office.

According to Bondi and the FTC, the first complaint alleges that Inbound Call Experts LLC, Super

One of the most controversial and significant federal regulatory initiatives in consumer finance is the view of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau that credit discrimination can be proven by statistical disparities.

We previously reported here on the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to hear a disparate impact case in Texas Department of Housing & Community Affairs

An $8 million settlement announced November 19, 2014, between the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the nation’s largest “buy here pay here” auto dealer represents yet another warning coming out of Washington, D.C. that:

1. Compliance with the requirements of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) when businesses furnish credit information to consumer reporting