District Court enters preliminary injunction against effectively shutting down the CFPB

Some remarkable statements in the opinion (this is all I have time for now):. Judge Jackson wrote of the CFPB’s employee testifying for the agency: “He had the demeanor of an abused wife brought to court by her husband to drop the charges.” “The testimony and the contemporaneous documents suggest that those last minute communications […]

DOJ launches anti-regulatory task force

DOJ has announced the launch of an “Anticompetitive Regulations Task Force to advocate for the elimination of anticompetitive state and federal laws and regulations that undermine free market competition and harm consumers, workers, and businesses,” lead by the DOJ Antitrust Division. The task force is asking members of the public to submit comments as to […]

Are TROs appealable?

In light of the Trump litigation, that’s a hot, nerdy topic. Read “Appealing Temporary Restraining Orders” by Tyler Lindley, Wesley White, and Morgan Bronson of BYU Law School. Here’s the abstract: Temporary restraining orders (TROs) are a powerful injunctive tool for district courts to maintain control over a case by directly controlling the parties’ out-of-court […]

Congress carries on with votes to stamp out consumer protections

U.S. senators are on their way to approve of big banks burdening constituents with excessive overdraft fees. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau recently issued a rule to limit overdraft fees charged by the largest banks to $5. But in a late-night move yesterday, the Senate voted to advance a Congressional Review Act resolution that would […]

House Financial Services Committee CFPB Hearing; Frotman’s on fire

Here. Oral openers by the industry witnesses call for the CFPB to become a bipartisan commission without noting that Trump has fired the Democratic FTC commissioners, so that bipartisan really means one party. Meanwhile, former CFPB General Counsel Seth Frotman’s oral opening statement was terrific. His written testimony is here. Here’s an excerpt (footnotes omitted): […]

Seventh Circuit Pulls Back Standing for Failure to Note Credit Dispute

In 2022, in Ewing v. Med-1 Solutions, LLC, the Seventh Circuit held that a consumer is harmed by a credit report’s failure to note that a given debt is dispute–finding that it impacted the consumer’s creditworthiness and impacted their reputation, and thus that a consumer has standing to pursue a claim based on a debt […]