Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca1-09-01416/USCOURTS-ca1-09-01416-0/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 890
Nature of Suit: Other Statutory Actions
Cause of Action: 

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The Hon. David H. Souter, Associate Justice (Ret.) of the *

Supreme Court of the United States, sitting by designation.

United States Court of Appeals

For the First Circuit

No. 09-1416

ANDREW ZIMMERMAN; KELLY ZIMMERMAN, On Behalf of Themselves and

All Others Similarly Situated,

Plaintiffs, Appellees,

v.

JOHN PUCCIO; RICHARD PUCCIO,

Defendants, Appellants,

CAMBRIDGE CREDIT COUNSELING CORP.; CAMBRIDGE/BRIGHTON BUDGET

PLANNING CORP.; DEBT RELIEF CLEARINGHOUSE, LTD.; CAMBRIDGE CREDIT

CORP.; CYPRESS ADVERTISING AND PROMOTIONS, INC.; BRIGHTON CREDIT

CORP.; BRIGHTON DEBT MANAGEMENT SERVICES, LTD.; BRIGHTON CREDIT

CORP. OF MASSACHUSETTS; CAMBRIDGE CONSUMER CREDIT INDEX, INC.;

SOUTHFORK ASSET MANAGEMENT CORP.; CAPITAL ONE BANK; CAPITAL ONE

CREDIT CARD SERVICES; CAPITAL ONE F.S.B.; CHASE MANHATTAN BANK

U.S.A.N.A.; JPMORGAN CHASE & CO.; PROVIDIAN BANCORP SERVICES; 

PROVIDIAN BANK; PROVIDIAN FINANCIAL CORPORATION; USAA FEDERAL

SAVINGS BANK; USAA SAVINGS BANK; FIRST CONSUMER CMC CORP.,

Defendants.

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 

FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

[Hon. Michael A. Ponsor, U.S. District Judge]

Before

 Lipez, Circuit Judge, 

Souter, Associate Justice,*

and Selya, Circuit Judge.

Charles P. Kindregan, with whom Nancy L. Perlman and Looney &

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Grossman LLP were on brief, for appellants.

David J. Vendler, with whom Richard H. Nakamura, Jr., Maureen

M. Home, Morris Polich & Purdy LLP, G. Oliver Koppell, John F.

Duane, Daniel F. Schreck, Law Offices of G. Oliver Koppell, Stephen

G. Hennessy, Gregory S. Duncan, Garrett Minor Smith, Michie Hamlett

Lowry Rasmussen & Twell, Joseph Seth Tusa, and Whalen & Tusa, P.C.,

were on brief, for appellees. 

July 27, 2010

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LIPEZ, Circuit Judge. Appellants John and Richard Puccio

appeal from the district court's grant of summary judgment to the

plaintiffs, Andrew and Kelly Zimmerman, on behalf of a class of

clients of Cambridge Credit Counseling Corporation ("Cambridge"),

one of the Puccios' business enterprises, pursuant to the Credit

Repair Organizations Act ("CROA"), 15 U.S.C. §§ 1679-1679j. CROA

was enacted by Congress in 1996 to protect the public from unfair

or deceptive advertising and business practices by credit repair

organizations. 

Although the district court entered summary judgment

against the Puccios and multiple corporate defendants for

violations of CROA, the corporate defendants have not appealed.

Instead, the Puccios appeal the judgment against them personally

for the violation of two provisions of CROA, the first making it

unlawful to "make or use any untrue or misleading representation of

the services of the credit repair organization," id. § 1679b(a)(3),

and the second making it unlawful to "engage . . . [in a] course of

business that constitutes or results in the commission of, or an

attempt to commit, a fraud or deception on any person in connection

with the offer or sale of the services of the credit repair

organization," id. § 1679b(a)(4). 

The Puccios argue that they do not fall within the ambit

of CROA because Cambridge, their credit counseling enterprise, does

not qualify as a "credit repair organization" as defined by the

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Act. They also argue that the district court erred in piercing the

corporate veil when it found them liable for violating Section

1679b(a)(4). Finally, in their primary argument directed at their

substantive liability under Section 1679b(a)(3), the Puccios argue

that the district court did not, in fact, find them liable under

the "misleading representation" provision, id. § 1679b(a)(3).

Alternatively, if the district court did find them liable under

(a)(3), the Puccios argue (but only barely) that the district court

again erred in piercing the corporate veil.

After careful consideration, we affirm the district

court's grant of summary judgment for the plaintiffs. We conclude

that Cambridge was a "credit repair organization" within the

meaning of CROA. We also conclude that the district court

unambiguously held the Puccios liable for misleading

representations under Section 1679b(a)(3) of CROA, and we affirm

that finding of liability based on the court's piercing the

corporate veil analysis. We do not reach the Puccios' liability

under Section 1679b(a)(4), and their attendant arguments about the

summary judgment standard and corporate veil-piercing, because the

Puccios' liability under Section 1679b(a)(3) fully supports the

district court's grant of summary judgment.

I.

In this appeal from the district court's grant of summary

judgment for the plaintiffs, we must recite the material facts in

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the light most favorable to the party opposing summary judgment, in

this case, the defendants. Torres Vargas v. Santiago Cummings, 149

F.3d 29, 30 (1st Cir. 1998). Nonetheless, that requirement has

less significance here because we draw much of our recitation of

the facts from the plaintiffs' statement of material facts, which

forms part of the undisputed record on appeal. It is undisputed

because the district court deemed the plaintiffs' statement of

facts admitted in the absence of proper opposition by the

defendants pursuant to the District of Massachusetts Local Rule

56.1. Zimmerman v. Puccio, 529 F. Supp. 2d 254, 258 n.3 (D. Mass.

2008) ("It must be noted that Defendants failed properly to dispute

many of Plaintiffs' proffered facts. . . . In such instances, the

court has taken the Plaintiffs' account as true."). The rule

requires that a party's opposition to a motion for summary judgment

include a "concise statement of the material facts of record as to

which it is contended that there exists a genuine issue to be

tried, with page references to affidavits, depositions and other

documentation." D. Mass. Local R. 56.1. In the absence of such a

statement, "[m]aterial facts of record set forth in the statement

required to be served by the moving party will be deemed for

purposes of the motion to be admitted by opposing parties." Id.

We have reiterated the importance of such rules to the

district courts in preventing litigants from shifting the burden of

organizing evidence to the district court, and "we treat the

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 Due to the defendants' failure to respond to the plaintiffs' 1

requests for admissions for almost two years, a period well beyond

that required by rule, the district court also deemed them to have

admitted the facts in the plaintiffs' requests for admissions.

Zimmerman, 529 F. Supp. 2d at 271. Because we find that the

district court was well within its discretion to deem the

plaintiffs' statement of facts admitted, and that the facts therein

provide an ample basis for affirming the judgment, we need not rely

on - or reach the legal issues surrounding - the deemed requests

for admissions. To the extent that any fact put forward in the

deemed statement of facts relies for record support on the requests

for admissions, we do not treat that fact as admitted.

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district court's decision to apply [them] with deference."

Carreras v. Sajo, Garcia & Partners, 596 F.3d 25, 31 (1st Cir.

2010). In this case, the defendants' failure to provide any

citations whatsoever in their opposition statement leaves no doubt

as to their noncompliance. That the parties filed cross motions

for summary judgment does not affect either party's obligation to

comply with the local rule. See P.R. Am. Ins. Co. v. RiveraVázquez, 603 F.3d 125, 132 (1st Cir. 2010) ("A party cannot

circumvent the requirements imposed by an anti-ferret rule simply

by filing a cross-motion for summary judgment and expecting the

district court to do its homework."). The defendants offer no

other reason why we should revisit the district court's decision to

deem the facts in the plaintiffs' statement to be admitted and we

decline to do so.1

A. The Puccio Companies

1. Corporate Structure

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 For reference, we have created an Appendix listing the 2

entities, their acronyms, location and status.

 The order concluded that the two companies were acting in 3

violation of prohibitions in New York law on for-profit entities

conducting "budget planning" business and on conducting a "money

transmission business without an appropriate license." 

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In the early 1990s, John Puccio controlled several

entities doing business in the arena of debt management. He 2

started Cambridge Credit Corp. ("CCC"), a New York corporation, in

1993. Later that year, he founded Brighton Credit Corp. ("BCC"),

also in New York. He served as president of both for-profit

corporations. The companies shared office space and employed

almost identical client contracts. 

After CCC and BCC were ordered to cease operating by the

New York Banking Department in 1996, John Puccio decided to move 3

his operations to Massachusetts and start a non-profit

organization. He and his brother Richard co-founded Cambridge,

which adopted the Service Agreements used previously by for-profits

BCC and CCC. It provided the same debt management service as did

those companies and employed their staff. As he had for BCC and

CCC, John Puccio served as president of the company. Richard

Puccio was Cambridge's Vice President and strategic planner. He

was also a board member of the company. In 1996, John Puccio filed

papers to register Cambridge as a nonprofit entity under

Massachusetts law and as a 26 U.S.C. § 501(c)(3) non-profit entity

under federal law.

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BC Mass changed its name to Brighton Debt Management 4

Services, Inc. in 2003. Still later, it changed its name to First

Consumers. BC Mass was jointly owned by John and Richard Puccio.

After the first name change, John Puccio became listed as the sole

shareholder and president of the company. Defendants conceded that

"the businesses were essentially the same from Brighton Credit of

Mass to Brighton DMS to First Consumers." For the purposes of this

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Shortly after the formation of Cambridge, John Puccio

arranged to have the new company purchase the "intangible assets"

of BCC and CCC for $14.1 million. Although the Intangible Asset

Sale Agreement purported to convey to Cambridge the goodwill in the

trademarks and copyrights of BCC and CCC, neither company had been

issued any trademarks or copyrights at the time of the purchase.

Moreover, the sale was concluded without negotiation and in the

absence of independent representation for Cambridge.

 Around the same time, John Puccio also founded

Cambridge/Brighton Budget Planning Corporation ("CBBPC") in New

York as a "credit counseling" agency and another "credit counseling

agency," Brighton Credit Management Corp. ("BCMC"), a Florida

entity. Both were controlled by John Puccio, who handled day-today operations and hiring and oversaw the general operations of the

businesses. They used service agreements virtually identical to

the Puccios' other concerns and advertised their affiliation with

each other and with Cambridge.

All three companies, Cambridge, CBBPC, and BCMC, got

"back office support" for their operations from yet another Puccio

entity, Brighton Credit Corp. of Massachusetts ("BC Mass"). BC 4

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opinion, we refer to all iterations of that entity as BC Mass. 

 As we discuss in greater detail later in this opinion, re- 5

aging accounts involves negotiating with creditors to re-label past

due accounts as current.

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Mass worked exclusively for the three Puccio companies. It did not

have clients of its own, but performed all mailing, correspondence,

ongoing customer services, and record-keeping services in

connection with the debt management service being sold by the other

Puccio companies. It also handled Cambridge's "Good Payer" program

and took care of all other matters related to client accounting,

including the central function of communicating with creditors in

order to achieve the re-aging of client accounts. If a client 5

called the phone number provided by Cambridge, a BC Mass employee

would answer.

John and Richard Puccio created and controlled several

additional companies. For example, Debt Relief Clearinghouse Ltd.,

was the marketing arm of the Puccio organization, while Cypress

Advertising and Promotions, Inc., placed advertisements for the

Puccio credit companies. All of the businesses shared employees

and office space, and the managers of one company supervised

employees of the others.

The Puccios treated their companies interchangeably.

They charged expenses for one company to the credit card of

another, while paying the bill with a check from yet another of the

corporations. At least one person who worked for CCC, Cambridge

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and BC Mass at different times directly received the bank

statements and paid the bills of one Puccio company while he was

not an employee of that company, but instead worked for a different

Puccio enterprise. While John Puccio was running Cambridge, the

company paid large sums of money to other Puccio-controlled

companies without consideration. For example, JRJ Associates,

Inc., a company owned by John and Richard Puccio, was paid at least

$150,000 by Cambridge. John and Richard Puccio also purchased

personal items with corporate funds. Personal charges from a

"gentleman's club" and for a yacht appeared on the Puccio

companies' corporate credit card bills. 

The Puccios paid themselves salaries from their

corporations. In 2001 and 2003, they were each paid $624,000 by

Cambridge. John Puccio was paid $648,000 in 2004. His total

salary from his credit companies for the period from 1996 to 2004

was $30,987,572, while Richard Puccio's aggregate compensation was

$21,719,908.

2. Corporate Services

Cambridge, CBBPC and BCMC created individualized Debt

Management Plans ("Debt Plans") for clients. Customers were

charged an up front "Design Fee" for the development of the Debt

Plan equal to the amount of one monthly payment as well as a ten

percent monthly fee or twenty-five dollars, whichever was greater.

The plans would set a single monthly payment to be paid by the

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client to the particular Puccio enterprise servicing that client,

which would then be dispersed to the client's creditors. The

Puccio companies would also negotiate with a client's creditors for

better terms on their debt through interest rate reductions or

decreases in principal. They would also attempt to "re-age"

clients' accounts by convincing creditors who were owed late

payments to re-label the accounts as current. In exchange for reaging, the Puccio company would commit its customers to making

payments on the account for a set amount of time. 

The IRS form accompanying Cambridge's application for

501(c)(3) status, which was signed by John Puccio, stated that the

company's clients would enjoy "Improved Credit Rating." On its tax

returns in 2000, 2001 and 2003, Cambridge described the principal

objective of its Debt Management Program as including "improv[ing]

a consumer's credit rating over time by establishing a consistent

payment history." 

Cambridge, BCMC and CBBPC advertised their ability to

improve a client's credit. The three companies' promotional

materials made promises such as "we can help you . . . restore your

credit rating," and "[w]hen you join our debt management program,

we'll be able to help you reestablish your credit." The company

sent out a quarterly newsletter containing advice on how "to

rebuild your credit." Cambridge's website stated that "by taking

advantage of our Debt Management Program, we can help you . . . ReCase: 09-1416 Document: 00116091397 Page: 11 Date Filed: 07/27/2010 Entry ID: 5466029
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establish Your Credit." The website also had a feature called

"Cambridge Answer Man" to "help people understand the often

confusing world of credit." A customer who used this feature would

be able to click for answers to questions such as "How Can I

Rebuild My Credit?" The welcome package sent to clients after they

enrolled with Cambridge contained a section entitled "A Fresh

Start." The materials asserted, "that is exactly what you have

received by joining our program" and listed "an improved credit

profile" among the "life benefits" received by clients using

Cambridge's program.

The contract sent to clients contained disclaimers that

stated:

The CLIENT understands that CAMBRIDGE

makes no representation about any aspect of

the CLIENT'S credit rating. Creditors will

sometimes report participation in CAMBRIDGE's

program as a "consumer credit counseling" item

on your credit report. Persons with perfect

credit histories may have their credit record

adversely affected. CAMBRIDGE has no control

over reporting or interpretation, as it is

strictly a creditor and lender decision. The

CLIENT's credit rating is outside the scope of

this Agreement, however, at the CLIENT's

request, CAMBRIDGE will provide CLIENT with

credit references based upon CLIENT's payment

history with CAMBRIDGE.

. . .

CAMBRIDGE has not authorized any person

or other company to make representations on

its behalf concerning fees, credit, any

services to be performed by CAMBRIDGE or any

other matter. In the event you were referred

to CAMBRIDGE by another company, you

understand that the other company was not

authorized to make any representations about

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CAMBRIDGE or its services. You agree that all

the representations concerning fees, credit,

refinancing or any services to be performed by

CAMBRIDGE that were made by CAMBRIDGE or

relied upon by you when you signed this

Service Agreement are set forth in this

Agreement. . . . All the obligations of

CAMBRIDGE are set forth in this agreement. 

Employees of BC Mass, who responded to phone calls from

Cambridge, BCMC and CBBPC's clients, were trained to speak about

the benefits of re-aging accounts. All employees were coached to

answer questions about how joining a Debt Plan might affect a

client's credit score. The sales scripts used by the Puccio

companies directed their employees to tell clients,

You're already behind with the bills so this

can only help your credit. By making your

payments on time to us we will be able to

bring your accounts back to a current status,

plus establish a credit reference to back you

up when you apply for future financing. 

Depending on how far behind a client was, the script instructed an

employee to tell the client, "[s]o long as you follow through with

the program it can only help not hurt." 

If a client inquired about settling his or her accounts,

the Puccio employee was directed to say, 

settlements can damage your credit almost as

much as a bankruptcy . . . Our program is

designed to get you out of debt and protect

your credit rating . . . Over the course of

the program your credit rating will improve,

making it easier to qualify for financing in

the future. 

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 Although the plaintiffs' filings indicate that their surname 6

is spelled "Zimmermann," we, like the district court, continue to

use the incorrect spelling for consistency among the multiple

opinions arising from this action. 

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If the client persisted, the script required that the employee

respond, 

Our program is designed to help you get out of

debt and improve your credit rating. You will

reestablish a good payment history and improve

your debt to income ratio. Over the course of

the program your credit rating will improve. 

Employees were directed to closely follow the scripts, and they

were evaluated on how well they adhered to them. Their

compensation, at least for a time, was linked to how many customers

they enrolled because they were paid a commission from the initial

fees paid by clients. At Cambridge, employees could earn bonuses

for high sales, while low sales volumes were penalized.

B. The Zimmermans6

Andrew and Kelly Zimmerman are a married couple. In late

2001, they learned about Cambridge through radio, television, and

internet advertisements. Attracted to the company's non-profit

status and hopeful that it could help the couple deal with their

debt, Andrew Zimmerman called Cambridge's toll-free number. He was

eventually faxed a five-page Service Agreement, which he signed.

The agreement provided that Cambridge would consolidate the

Zimmerman's monthly payments into a single payment, use its best

efforts to reduce the amount of the monthly payment and the

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 Under the Good Payer Program, Cambridge solicited payments 7

from its clients' creditors in exchange for Cambridge's services.

For every six month period during which a client made all payments

"on time and in the required amount," Cambridge would pay them a

"bonus" of fifty percent of any contributions obtained from the

client's creditors. The record does not disclose any further

details about this program.

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interest rates being paid to creditors, and pay the Zimmermans a

portion of creditor contributions obtained through Cambridge's

"Good Payer Program." 

7

When the Zimmermans returned the contract to Cambridge,

the company offered them a proposed Debt Plan with a monthly

payment of $798.00. The Zimmermans enrolled in the Debt Plan. In

return for its services, as described above, Cambridge charged a

"Design Fee" in the amount of one monthly payment and a monthly

payment processing fee of ten percent or twenty-five dollars,

whichever was greater.

Without their knowledge, once the Zimmermans enrolled in

the Debt Plan and paid the $798.00 Design Fee, their account was

transferred from Cambridge to BC Mass, a for-profit company. BC

Mass mailed the Zimmermans a welcome packet and proceeded to

administer their account by negotiating a reduction in the interest

rate on some of their debts, eliminating some of their late charges

and fees, and decreasing the minimum payments on some of their

accounts. The Zimmermans were never told that their account would

be handled by a for-profit back office company, or that this

company would be contacting their creditors and would have access

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 The additional defendants were Debt Relief Clearinghouse, 8

Ltd., Cypress Advertising and Promotions, Southfork Asset

Management Corp., and First Consumers Credit Management Corp.

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to personal information about them. To the contrary, the contract

the Zimmermans signed with Cambridge explicitly identified the

company as a "not-for-profit organization."

Approximately nine months after signing their contract

with Cambridge, the Zimmermans terminated the relationship in

September 2002. They filed for bankruptcy in late 2003. 

II.

This class action law suit originated in 2003, when the

Zimmermans filed a complaint against John and Richard Puccio (the

defendants), Cambridge Credit Counseling Corp., Cambridge/Brighton

Budget Planning Corp., Brighton Credit Management Corp., Cambridge

Credit Corp., Brighton Credit Corp., Brighton Debt Management

Services, Ltd., Brighton Credit Corp. of Massachusetts, and several

additional corporate defendants (the corporate defendants). The 8

Zimmermans' amended complaint charged the defendants with

violations of CROA, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1679-1679j, and with unfair or

deceptive acts or practices in violation of the Massachusetts

Consumer Protection Act, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A. 

The district court initially granted the defendants'

motion to dismiss the Zimmermans' federal claims, finding that, as

a non-profit entity, Cambridge was exempt from CROA. On appeal of

that judgment, we vacated the district court's dismissal of the

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 The district court's December 6, 2007 class certification 9

order defined the class as "[a]ll individuals who at any time after

November 3, 1998 through to the present paid, directly or

indirectly, any money or other valuable consideration to Brighton

Credit Corp. of Massachusetts, Brighton Debt Management Services,

Ltd., or First Consumers Credit Management Corp. for any service

related to the individual's Debt Management Plan."

 During the intervening time, defendant Cambridge settled 10

the action against it and was voluntarily dismissed. That

settlement did not release the Puccios or any remaining defendants.

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plaintiffs' federal claims. Zimmerman v. Cambridge Credit

Counseling Corp., 409 F.3d 473, 479 (1st Cir. 2005). We concluded

that the statutory exception to CROA liability for "any nonprofit

organization which is exempt from taxation under section 501(c)(3)"

of the Internal Revenue Code, 15 U.S.C. § 1679(a)(3)(B)(i), did not

apply to the defendants simply because they had registered as

section 501(c)(3) entities. Zimmerman, 409 F.3d at 475-77.

Instead, we held that in order to qualify for the statutory

exemption, an entity "must actually operate as a nonprofit

organization and be exempt from taxation under section 501(c)(3)."

Id. at 478 (emphasis in original).

In 2007, following our remand, the district court

certified a class consisting of consumers whose Debt Plans were

serviced by BC Mass, and a subclass consisting of "all individuals 9

who entered into a contract for a Debt Management Plan with

Cambridge . . . from November 3, 1998 through September 18, 2006."

After almost two years of discovery, the parties filed cross

motions for summary judgment. In January 2008, the district court 10

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granted summary judgment for the plaintiffs. The court found that

Cambridge, BCMC, CBBPC and BC Mass operated as Credit Repair

Organizations within the meaning of CROA because they "crossed the

boundary from credit counseling into credit repair with their

continued and insistent representations to consumers that their

services could only help improve clients' credit." Zimmerman, 529

F. Supp. 2d at 275. The court held that Cambridge was not exempt

under CROA's provision for nonprofit organizations because it did

not "in fact and as a matter of law, operate as a nonprofit." Id.

at 277. 

As credit repair organizations, Cambridge, BCMC, CBBPC

and BC Mass were obligated to comply with the specific statutory

requirements of CROA. The district court found that they had not

complied with any of CROA's requirements. Id. at 278.

Specifically, they did not provide consumers with a required

disclosure statement, did not include certain required items in

their service agreements, and did not give consumers a mandatory

separate cancellation form along with the service agreement. Id.

at 278-79. Additionally, they violated CROA by charging up-front

fees to consumers before they had fully performed the promised

services. Id. at 279.

Turning to the provisions of CROA directed not just at

credit repair organizations, but at "any person," the court found

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that the Puccios and the corporate defendants were liable for

"mak[ing] or us[ing] . . . misleading representation[s] of the

services of [a] credit repair organization" under 15 U.S.C. §

1679b(a)(3) and for "engag[ing] . . . [in a] course of business

that constitutes or results in . . . an attempt to commit [] a

fraud or deception on any person in connection with the offer or

sale of the services of the credit repair organization" under 15

U.S.C. § 1679b(a)(4). Id. at 279-80. Specifically, the court

found that the Puccio corporations misleadingly represented to

clients that they would be retaining the services of a not-forprofit when, in fact, their accounts were immediately transferred

to a for-profit corporation, id. at 279, and that such a

misrepresentation also qualified as "a fraud or deception," id. at

280. The court found that all of the corporate defendants and the

Puccios were liable for the activity of Cambridge, BCMC, CBBPC and

BC Mass under either of two theories: (a) because they engaged in

a deceptive "course of business" as prohibited under 15 U.S.C. §

1679b(a)(4); or (b) because the corporations served as the alter

egos of the Puccios such that they and the Puccios could be held

directly liable for Cambridge's actions by piercing the corporate

veil. Id. at 271-72.

In March 2009, the district court entered its final

judgment against the Puccios, awarding damages to the plaintiffs,

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 The district court also entered judgment against the 11

corporate defendants. They have not appealed that judgment.

 Although the certified class covered all individuals who 12

paid money to Puccio corporations "through to the present," the

plaintiffs agreed to limit the amount of damages to money paid

through December 31, 2004, an amount that was specifically admitted

by the defendants in their response to the plaintiffs' statement of

uncontested facts. The plaintiffs stipulated that all class

members, including those who paid money after December 31, 2004,

would be included in the distribution of funds to the class, but

that "it is clear that the amount of the overall judgment will be

so high already that not all of it will be collectable."

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on behalf of the certified class, in the amount of $256,527,000.11

The court made its award under CROA's compensatory damages

provision which provides that "[a]ny person who fails to comply

with any provision of this subchapter with respect to any other

person shall be liable to such other person in an amount equal to

the sum of . . . [t]he greater of . . . (A) the amount of any

actual damage . . . or (B) any amount paid by the person to the

credit repair organization." 15 U.S.C. § 1679g(a). The court's

$256.5 million award represented the amount paid by the class

plaintiffs to the defendants through December 31, 2004.12

John and Richard Puccio now appeal from the district

court's grant of summary judgment. They contend, as a threshold

matter, that the district court erred in granting summary judgment

because Cambridge is not a credit repair organization within the

meaning of CROA. The Puccios further argue that even if Cambridge

is a credit repair organization under CROA, there were disputed

issues of fact that should have precluded the award of summary

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 The Puccios do not specifically contest the damages award. 13

-21-

judgment on the fraud claim under Section 1679b(a)(4) of CROA.

Their challenge to liability under Section 1679b(a)(3) is less

straightforward. Primarily, the Puccios insist that the district

court made no findings of liability under (a)(3). Secondarily,

they argue that even if the district court did find them liable

under (a)(3), the finding rests on the same flawed veil-piercing

analysis that the district court used in finding them personally

liable under (a)(4).13

III.

The plaintiffs' claims under CROA present several pure

questions of law, including issues of statutory interpretation.

Our review of the district court's conclusions on those issues is

de novo. Chiang v. Verizon New England, Inc., 595 F.3d 26, 34 (1st

Cir. 2010). 

We also review de novo the district court's entry of

summary judgment. Cianbro Corp. v. George H. Dean, Inc., 596 F.3d

10, 14 (1st Cir. 2010). Summary judgment is appropriate when the

moving party demonstrates that there is no genuine issue of

material fact, and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of

law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c); Scottsdale Ins. Co. v. Torres, 561

F.3d 74, 77 (1st Cir. 2009). A material fact is one that would

affect the outcome of the suit, while a genuine issue is one for

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which the evidence would permit a reasonable jury to return a

verdict for the nonmoving party. Cianbro, 596 F.3d at 14.

Unlike a typical case in which a defendant moves for

summary judgment, in this case the plaintiffs prevailed at summary

judgment on claims for which they, as plaintiffs, would bear the

burden of proof at trial. The plaintiffs "cannot attain summary

judgment unless the evidence that [they] provide[] . . . is

conclusive." Torres Vargas, 149 F.3d at 35.

IV.

CROA was enacted in 1996 for two express purposes: first,

to "protect the public from unfair or deceptive advertising and

business practices by credit repair organizations," and second, to

"ensure that prospective buyers of the services of credit repair

organizations are provided with the information necessary to make

an informed decision regarding the purchase of such services." 15

U.S.C. § 1679(b). Congress passed CROA, which became effective on

April 1, 1997, in response to mounting evidence that unscrupulous

individuals were making their fortunes by leading consumers to

believe that they could repair a consumer's bad credit history.

See S. Rep. No. 103-209, at 7 (1993) ("Fraudulent companies that

lead consumers to believe that the companies can 'repair' bad

credit histories have bilked consumers of millions of dollars . .

. ."); H.R. Rep. No. 103-486, at 63 (1994) (Credit repair

"businesses, through advertisements and oral representations, lead

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consumers to believe that adverse information in their consumer

reports can be deleted or modified regardless of its accuracy.").

In an attempt to combat such practices, CROA requires organizations

that fall within its ambit to make certain disclosures prior to

doing business with members of the public and prohibits them and

persons connected with them from engaging in deceptive practices

injurious to the public. See 15 U.S.C. §§ 1679b-1679e. 

This appeal concerns two CROA provisions that explicitly

apply to persons acting in connection with credit repair

organizations. Those provisions state:

No person may --

. . .

(3) make or use any untrue or misleading

representation of the services of the credit

repair organization; or 

(4) engage, directly or indirectly, in any

act, practice, or course of business that

constitutes or results in the commission of,

or an attempt to commit, a fraud or deception

on any person in connection with the offer or

sale of the services of the credit repair

organization.

Id. As this text makes clear, in order to find liability under

either provision, a court must find that the services at issue are

those of a credit repair organization, as defined by CROA.

Accordingly, we turn first to this threshold definitional question.

A. Application of CROA to Cambridge

1. Language of the Act

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CROA applies to a category of businesses termed "credit

repair organizations." A "credit repair organization" is defined

by the act as: 

any person who uses any instrumentality of

interstate commerce or the mails to sell,

provide, or perform (or represent that such

person can or will sell, provide, or perform)

any service, in return for the payment of

money or other valuable consideration, for the

express or implied purpose of--

(i) improving any consumer's credit

record, credit history, or credit rating; or 

(ii) providing advice or assistance to

any consumer with regard to any activity or

service described in clause (i) . . . 

15 U.S.C. § 1679a(3)(A). In interpreting CROA, as with any act of

Congress, "'our analysis begins with the language of the statute.'"

Zimmerman, 409 F.3d at 475 (quoting Hughes Aircraft Co. v.

Jacobson, 525 U.S. 432, 438 (1999)). The words Congress used to

define a credit repair organization must always be taken "in their

context and with a view to their place in the overall statutory

scheme." David v. Mich. Dep't of Treasury, 489 U.S. 803, 809

(1989). That overall scheme is a sweeping consumer protection act

explicitly intended to "protect the public from unfair or deceptive

advertising and business practices by credit repair organizations."

15 U.S.C. § 1679(b). Such consumer protection statutes are

construed "liberally in favor of consumers." Barnes v. Fleet Nat'l

Bank, N.A., 370 F.3d 164, 171 (1st Cir. 2004). 

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The theory put forward by the district court in Hillis 14

appears to be an outlier. Cf. Helms v. Consumerinfo.com, Inc., 436

F. Supp. 2d 1220 (N.D. Ala. 2005); Polacsek v. Dedicated Consumer

-25-

By its plain language, CROA applies to "credit repair

organizations." 15 U.S.C. § 1679a(3)(A). By focusing on the word

"repair" in the defined term, the defendants seek to draw a

distinction between purporting to repair or retroactively fix past

credit problems and purporting to improve credit in the future.

They argue that Congress intended CROA to apply to entities

performing the function of retroactive credit repair but not those

companies offering services aimed at improving clients' credit in

the future. In support of their theory, the defendants cite Hillis

v. Equifax Consumer Servs., Inc., 237 F.R.D. 491 (N.D. Ga. 2006),

in which the district court attempted to articulate such a

distinction:

the definition of a credit repair organization

is narrower than a cursory reading of the

statute would indicate. Specifically, when

the statute refers to services whose purpose

is to improve a consumer's 'credit record,

credit history, or credit rating,' these terms

[] refer to a consumer's historical credit

record. Congress did not intend for the

definition of a credit repair organization to

sweep in services that offer only prospective

credit advice to consumers or provide

information to consumers so that they can take

steps to improve their credit in the future.

Id. at 514. 

The distinction drawn by the Hillis court, and embraced

by the defendants, is unsupportable. By its plain terms, CROA 14

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Counseling, 413 F. Supp. 2d 539, 546 (D. Md. 2005). 

-26-

applies to organizations that provide, in exchange for

consideration, "any service" for the "express or implied purpose"

of improving a consumer's credit record, credit history, or credit

rating. 15 U.S.C. § 1679a(3)(A). The language of the Act does not

bind the concept of an improved credit record, credit history, or

credit rating to the literal alteration ("repair") of an historical

record, history, or rating. As the district court explained,

"[t]he ostensibly forward-looking orientation" of representations

about improving clients' credit "does not mitigate the obvious

message to debtors that [those] services might modify the effect of

their past credit history on their credit score." Zimmerman, 529

F. Supp. 2d at 275. Credit records are constantly changing based

on the ongoing performance of the consumer. By improving credit

behavior prospectively, a consumer aims to improve a pre-existing

credit record, credit history, and/or credit rating with a more

favorable record, history, or rating in the future. Thus, credit

counseling aimed at improving future creditworthy behavior is the

quintessential credit repair service. 

2. The Facts of this Case

As detailed earlier in this opinion, the undisputed facts

are that in advertisements, informational materials, and employee

scripts, Cambridge repeatedly represented to consumers that its

debt management services would "restore your credit rating" and

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"improve your credit." Puccio company employees were trained to

tell customers that a Debt Plan "can only help your credit." At a

certain point, the employee scripts instructed that clients be

told, "Our program is designed to help you get out of debt and

improve your credit rating." Even more explicitly, the script

stated, "Over the course of the program, your credit rating will

improve." Cambridge's promotional materials made promises such as

"[w]hen you join our debt management program, we'll be able to help

you reestablish your credit." The Cambridge website contained a

feature which answered questions such as, "How Can I Rebuild My

Credit?" Their quarterly newsletter dispensed advice on the same

subject. The welcome package mailed to customers listed "an

improved credit profile" as among the "life benefits you receive by

using our program." BC Mass employees contacted clients' creditors

to try to negotiate "re-aging" of accounts, a process designed to

improve credit scores by relabeling delinquent accounts as current.

The Puccios cite the disclaimer in Cambridge's contract

stating that "[t]he CLIENT'S credit rating is outside of the scope

of this Agreement" as evidence that the company did not represent

that it would improve a client's credit rating. Apparently, the

Puccios believe that a company could represent repeatedly in

advertisements, on its website, and in its employee scripts, that

it would help improve clients' credit ratings, but escape liability

under CROA by inserting a disclaimer in its contract about the

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relevance of its services to the credit rating of its clients.

That is an implausible position which captures the duplicity of the

Puccios' enterprises. Cambridge repeatedly held itself out as a

company that would provide "advice and assistance" in order to

"improv[e] any consumer's credit record, credit history, or credit

rating." 15 U.S.C. § 1679a(3)(A)(i)-(ii). Those services are

squarely covered by CROA.

B. Application of CROA to the Puccios

The district court found the Puccios liable for violating

both Section 1679b(a)(3), which prohibits any person from "mak[ing]

or us[ing] any untrue or misleading representation of the services

of the credit repair organization," and Section 1679b(a)(4), which

prohibits, either through an act or a course of business, the

commission or attempted commission of "a fraud or deception" in

connection with the offer or sale of the services of a credit

repair organization. 15 U.S.C. § 1679b(a)(4). Because we affirm

the finding of liability under Section 1679b(a)(3), which suffices

to support the judgment, we do not reach the question of the

Puccios' liability under Section 1679b(a)(4). 

1. The District Court's Finding of Liability Under

Section 1679b(a)(3)

In their opening brief on appeal, the Puccios offer no

challenge to their liability under Section 1679b(a)(3). In their

reply brief, they explain that curious omission, contending that

the district court did not actually find them liable under Section

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 The court made one exception for an enterprise called 15

Southfork. Zimmerman, 529 F. Supp. 2d at 280 n.27. The court

dismissed Southfork from the case after noting that the plaintiffs

had not presented any evidence suggesting that the company was

significantly involved in the Puccios' credit repair business. Id.

-29-

1679b(a)(3). That position is untenable. The district court

unambiguously held in section III.C.3.a of its opinion, entitled

"CRO Violations," that the "[d]efendants betrayed [p]laintiffs'

trust when, as was its policy for all [Cambridge] clients, it

transferred Plaintiffs' account to BC Mass, straightforwardly

violating § 1679b(a)(3)" by misleading consumers into thinking they

were doing business with a non-profit corporation, when, in fact,

their accounts were being wholly serviced by a for-profit.

Zimmerman, 529 F. Supp. 2d at 279. The court then made explicit in

section III.C.3.b, entitled "Non-CRO Violations," that "[t]hose

Defendants that are not themselves CROs within the meaning of CROA

- namely, John and Richard Puccio, . . . are still liable for the

above violations." Id. at 280. That statement is an unmistakable

finding that all of the defendants, both the credit repair

organizations themselves, and John and Richard Puccio, violated

Section 1679b(a)(3).15

2. The District Court's Decision to Pierce the Corporate

Veil to Support Section 1679b(a)(3) Liability

The Puccios argue in the alternative that, if the

district court did find them personally liable under Section

1679b(a)(3), the district court's veil piercing analysis does not

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 We acknowledge the Puccios' suggestion that the veil- 16

piercing question, given its relevance to the federal cause of

action in this case under CROA, may be viewed as one of federal

common law. While "we arguably have discretion to use federal

law," Nisselson v. Lernout, 469 F.3d 143, 154 n.3 (1st Cir. 2006),

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support that determination. Again, that barely developed argument

appears for the first time as a footnote in their reply brief.

Ordinarily, such an undeveloped argument, raised for the first time

in a footnote to the defendants' reply brief, would not suffice to

raise an argument, see Waste Mgmt. Holdings, Inc., v. Mowbray, 208

F.3d 288, 299 (1st Cir. 2000). Here, however, we see no meaningful

difference between the Puccios' fully developed challenge to the

veil piercing analysis of the district court under Section

1679b(a)(4) and the challenge to that analysis under Section

1679b(a)(3). We therefore choose to address the Section

1679b(a)(3) veil piercing argument of the Puccios on the merits. 

To be sure, we tread carefully when determining whether

it is appropriate to put aside the basic tenet of corporate law

that "corporations - notwithstanding relationships between or among

them - ordinarily are regarded as separate and distinct entities,"

Scott v. NG U.S. 1, Inc., 881 N.E.2d 1125, 1131 (Mass. 2008), and

thereby to "allow a plaintiff to pierce the corporate veil of

limited liability." In re Ontos, Inc., 478 F.3d 427, 432 (1st Cir.

2007). In Massachusetts, "the corporate veil will only be pierced

in rare situations." Birbara v. Locke, 99 F.3d 1233, 1239 (1st

Cir. 1996). Such situations do occur, however, and Massachusetts 16

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we choose to apply Massachusetts law. Id. at 154 ("We look to

state law to ascertain when wrongful conduct should be imputed to

a corporation."). 

 That list is not exhaustive, nor does every factor have to 17

be present in every veil piercing case. The list, rather, is an

analytical tool used to "form an opinion whether the

[corporation's] over-all structure and operation misleads." Evans

v. Multicon Constr. Corp., 574 N.E.2d 395, 400 (Mass. App. Ct.

1991), review denied, 577 N.E.2d 309 (1991).

-31-

has recognized that it is the "right and the duty of courts to look

beyond the corporate forms" when necessary "for the defeat of fraud

or wrong, or the remedying of injustice." Hanson v. Bradley, 10

N.E.2d 259, 264 (Mass. 1937) (quoted in Scott, 881 N.E.2d at 1132).

Massachusetts has identified as relevant to the veilpiercing analysis a set of twelve factors. They are: "(1) common

ownership; (2) pervasive control; (3) confused intermingling of

business assets; (4) thin capitalization; (5) nonobservance of

corporate formalities; (6) absence of corporate records; (7) no

payment of dividends; (8) insolvency at the time of the litigated

transaction; (9) siphoning away of corporation's funds by dominant

shareholder; (10) nonfunctioning of officers and directors; (11)

use of the corporation for transactions of the dominant

shareholders; and (12) use of the corporation in promoting fraud."17

Att'y Gen. v. M.C.K., Inc., 736 N.E.2d 373, 381 n.19 (Mass. 2000).

Looking to some of these factors, and to the guidance provided in

the seminal Massachusetts case, My Bread Baking Co. v. Cumberland

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For example, as we outlined earlier, while John Puccio was 18

running Cambridge, that company paid $150,000 to another Puccio

enterprise, JRJ Associates, Inc., without receiving any

consideration for the payment.

As described above, at least one person who worked at 19

various times for Cambridge, CCC, and BC Mass, received the bank

statements and paid the bills of one of those companies while he

was not an employee of that company, but was instead on the payroll

of a different Puccio entity.

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Farms, Inc., 233 N.E.2d 748, 751-52 (Mass. 1968), we find ourselves

confronted with a textbook case for lifting the corporate veil. 

The undisputed evidence shows that the Puccios owned and

had "pervasive control" over all of the entities involved in this

litigation, including Cambridge. John Puccio set the terms of

dealing among the Puccio companies, which functioned without clear

boundaries or separate corporate structures. Those dealings were

conducted without independent representatives to protect the

interests of the individual corporations. 

Further, there was a total failure to “make clear which

corporation [was] taking action” or “to observe with care” the

corporate form. My Bread, 233 N.E.2d at 752. The Puccios did not

delineate between their businesses, channeling funds between them, 18

using employees interchangeably and applying funds from one entity

to pay the bills for another. Corporate formalities of even the 19

most basic nature were largely nonexistent, as when Cambridge

purchased BCC and CCC's nonexistent "intangible assets" for over

$14 million. 

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The facts also show an obvious "element of dubious

manipulation and contrivance, finagling, such that corporate

identities are confused and third parties [could not] be quite

certain with what they [were] dealing.” Evans v. Multicon Constr.

Corp., 574 N.E.2d 395, 400 (Mass. App. Ct. 1991), review denied,

577 N.E.2d 309 (1991). When customers contracted with Cambridge,

their accounts became wholly serviced by BC Mass. The plaintiffs

were utterly "misled about which corporate entity - [Cambridge or

BC Mass] - was obligated to them or was dealing with them."

Birbara, 99 F.3d at 1239 (refusing to pierce the corporate veil in

the absence of any confusion about which corporate entity was in

dealings with the plaintiffs). The Puccios also siphoned money

from corporate accounts to pay for personal expenses such as adult

entertainment and costs associated with a yacht.

As the district court rightly emphasized, the money that

was funneled from Cambridge into other Puccio entities and

ultimately to the Puccios themselves cannot be reached by the

settlement with Cambridge or the judgment against the other

corporations. In order to obtain full relief, the plaintiffs must

be able to reach the Puccios, who were the lead players in the

scheme being carried out by their network of corporations. 

That logic is at the very heart of the alter ego

doctrine. See 1 W.M. Fletcher, Cyclopedia of the Law of

Corporations § 41.10 (2010) ("One rationale behind the theory [of

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 The Puccios' only "merits" challenge to their liability 20

under Section 1679b(a)(3) was their veil piercing challenge.

-34-

alter ego liability] is that if the shareholders or the

corporations themselves disregard the proper formalities of a

corporation, then the law will do likewise as necessary to protect

individual and corporate creditors."). The corporate form should

not bar the plaintiffs from seeking the full relief to which they

are entitled when the defendants themselves treated Cambridge and

their other companies as mere shells, ignoring financial, legal and

practical formalities in furtherance of their own money-making

enterprise. In short, we agree with the trenchant assessment of

the district court:

Defendants served as alter egos of the Puccios

and thus may be held directly liable for

[Cambridge's] actions by piercing

[Cambridge's] corporate veil. Since funds

were funneled out of [Cambridge] to other

entities in the Puccios' network and

ultimately to the Puccios themselves, the

settlement with [Cambridge] could not provide

the Zimmermans with full relief and they must

now seek their remedy from these other

defendants. The corporate form should not

serve as an obstacle to that relief where, as

here, it was a mere shell, ignored by the

Puccios in their everyday business dealings.

Zimmerman, 529 F.Supp.2d at 271-72.20

V.

When Cambridge held itself out as an organization that

could help consumers "rebuild," "reestablish" and "restore" their

credit, it operated as a "credit repair organization" within the

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meaning of CROA. Having made that threshold determination

correctly, the district court pierced the corporate veil to find

that the Puccios were personally liable under Section 1679b(a)(3)

of CROA for a misrepresentation by Cambridge that it offered credit

repair services as a non-profit entity. That determination was

also correct. We therefore affirm the district court's grant of

summary judgment to the plaintiffs based on the liability of the

Puccios for violations of 15 U.S.C. § 1679b(a)(3).

So ordered.

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Appendix

Acronym Name Function Location Status

BCC Brighton Credit Corporation Credit

Counseling

New

York

Forprofit

BC Mass* Brighton Credit Corp. of Massachusetts

Brighton Debt Management Services, Inc.

First Consumers

Back Office Mass ForProfit

BCMC Brighton Credit Management Corporation Credit

Counseling

Florida Forprofit

Cambridge

**

Cambridge Credit Counseling

Corporation

Credit

Counseling

Mass NonProfit

CBBPC Cambridge/Brighton Budget Planning

Corporation 

Credit

Counseling

New

York

Forprofit

CCC Cambridge Credit Corporation Credit

Counseling

New

York

Forprofit

 Debt Relief Clearinghouse Ltd. Marketing

Cypress Advertising and Promotions, Inc. Advertising

* For-profit company providing the services offered by Cambridge. 

** Company responsible for misleading representations that its clients were contracting for the

services of a not-for-profit.

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