Sued for millions in unpaid interest
Julie Wilson
August 5, 2013
August 5, 2013
Carlos Slim, named the world’s wealthiest man for
four consecutive years, is the mastermind entrepreneur behind the U.S.
government assistance program Assurance Wireless, also known as the
Lifeline Assistance program.
Seeing is believing … http://www.infowars.com/wealthy-mexican-capitalist-profiting-off-obama-phone-sued-for-millions-in-unpaid-interest/
According to the program’s website,
around eight million people are currently subscribed to and are
receiving complimentary phones supplied to them by the following
providers: Safelink Wireless, Assurance Wireless, Q Link Wireless, Care
Wireless and Reach Out Wireless.
The affluent Mexican capitalist, who has an estimated net worth of $73 billion,
is the owner of the Mexican telecommunication company América Móvil,
which provides mobile service to 17 Latin American countries and is
headquartered in Mexico City.
TracFone,
a subsidiary of América Móvil, is the provider of what’s widely become
known as the “Obama phone,” which went viral after a Cleveland woman crashed a Romney campaign voicing
her support for the man who helped her obtain a complimentary
government cellphone. The Obama lady, Michelle Dowery, also appeared on
the Alex Jones Show last January.
The
Obama phone, an effective tool that helped the candidate gain leverage
in the 2012 election, is a TracFone product stemming from the government
program Lifeline, which generated a whopping $452 million last year.
Currently,
TracFone is the largest recipient of funding for the Lifeline
Assistance Program that began under the Reagan administration nearly 30
years ago. The company expanded under the George W. Bush administration,
transitioning from providing landlines to wireless programs including
broadband service, to low-income families.
The
Lifeline program is overseen by the Federal Communications Commission
(FCC), generating its funding by tacking on mandatory fees to consumers’
cell phone bills.
In a July Politico report the
spokesman and federal lobbyist for the Miami-based TracFone, Jose
Fuentes, said he’s had enough of the criticism over the government
funded program.
“A
lot of this misinformation was generated by Washington lawmakers
themselves. And a few members have picked up on this issue and made it a
political one to score points back in their districts,” said Fuentes.
While
the program’s website claims subscribers are required to meet certain
qualifications including being the recipient of at least one government
assistance program, outrage ran rampant after innumerable accounts
surfaced revealing thousands received free cell phones who failed to
meet the program’s criteria.
The latest example was uncovered in a recent report by the Examiner when
middle-to-upper-income National Review reporter applied for the
Lifeline program eight times and received three free phones.
National
Review reporter Jillian Kay Melchior said that “just about anywhere
low-income residents can sign up for food stamps, there’s a vendor
selling his stash of Obama free phones.”
Louisiana
Sen. David Vitter (R-LA) has become one of the program’s most
boisterous critics calling the program “out-of-control” and a
“fraud-ridden entitlement program that spoils what should be a
worthwhile helping hand.”
On May 7, Sen. Vitter proposed legislation that
would “prohibit universal support of commercial mobile service through
the Lifeline program,” the bill has been referred to the committee.
Vitter
told Politico in an email that “TracFone is upset because I’m fighting
to end this program, which would also end their corporate welfare.”
TracFone
makes approximately $10 per month per customer earning nearly $450
million a year in federal support payments. The company stands to profit
even more under the roll out of Lifeline’s newly offered broadband
service.
An April Bloomberg report cites
additional program critic Arkansas Rep. Tim Griffin as saying, “It’s
not fair that people save and work and pay for phones from whatever
funds they have, and other people get them for free.”
“It’s not fair the biggest beneficiary of this is Carlos Slim, the billionaire owner of TracFone,” said Griffin.
Fuentes
says it doesn’t matter who owns the company, and tells Griffin that he
“needs to focus on finding jobs,” and not on a valuable program.
The
program has increasingly gained negative attention after its profits
exploded from earning $772 million in 2008 to over $2.2 billion last
year.
Following
public outrage, the FCC moved to “trim” the program last year, vowing
to ensure that applicants would no longer be able to receive multiple
phones.
In
January, Sprint told the FCC that they were unable to verify
eligibility for 44 percent of its Lifeline subscribers, while AT&T
said they dropped 47 percent of its subscribers after they also failed
to verify eligibility.
In
a recent twist, a California public utility regulator has ordered
TracFone Wireless to pay $24.4 million in unpaid fees and interest.
According to the StarTribune,
the Consumer Protection and Safety Division said the company failed to
collect “user fees from 2004-12, or pay surcharges for public programs,
like the Deaf and Disabled Telecommunications Program, from 2000-12.”
The company has 30 days to appeal the decision.
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