American Express agreed to pay $230 million to settle Department of Justice charges that it engaged in deceptive marketing and deficient recordkeeping in pitching its credit cards to small businesses.
The Justice Department alleged that the New York-based card company entered “dummy” account information on behalf of businesses applying for credit cards, undercutting required recordkeeping, according to a Justice Department news release Thursday.
American Express employees also misrepresented the rewards and fees attached to those cards, and were not upfront about whether credit checks would be conducted without a customer's consent, the release said.
The company also touted tax breaks that didn’t exist when it marketed a wire product that let business owners pay their payroll directly from an Amex account, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York said in a separate news release. American Express deceitfully told customers that fees on the wire service were tax deductible, the release said.
“When financial companies engage in deceptive sales tactics or falsify information to cover up a failure to follow applicable regulations, they threaten the integrity of our financial system,” Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Brian M. Boynton said in the news release.
Amex acknowledged the settlements in its own press release Thursday and said it had ended the practices years ago. “We cooperated extensively with these agencies and our regulators and took decisive voluntary action to address these issues,” the statement said.
The credit card behemoth engaged in these deceptive credit card practices from 2014 through 2021, the DOJ alleged. The company fired 200 employees after an internal investigation, the New York U.S. Attorney’s Office said.
Under the DOJ civil penalty, Amex agreed to pay $108.7 million, plus 4% annual interest. Separately, Amex entered into a non-prosecution agreement with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York and agreed to pay a criminal fine and forfeiture that total $138.4 million, according to the news release from the district’s office.
American Express will receive a credit of $30.35 million toward the civil penalty if it makes full payment of the forfeiture and fine amounts due under the criminal resolution.
The company cooperated with the Justice Department and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System to address the allegations by updating its policies, discontinuing certain products, conducting an internal review, and taking disciplinary actions, American Express said in its release and a regulatory filing.
An American Express spokesperson did not immediately respond to a message requesting more specifics on the corrective measures.