Anne Bucher  |  November 24, 2017

Category: Closed Class Actions

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This settlement is closed!

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Bank-of-America-TCPA-lawsuit

Bank of America NA has agreed pay nearly $42 million to settle a class action lawsuit over allegations it has charged thousands of military service members’ families excessive interest on certain accounts since Sept. 11, 2001, and that it has attempted to conceal these excess interest charges.

If you received or were eligible to receive additional compensation related to military reduced interest rates from Bank of America at any time on or after Sept. 11, 2001, you may be entitled to compensation from the military member fee class action settlement.

According to the BofA class action lawsuit, Bank of America charged thousands of military servicemember family customers excessive interest on mortgage accounts, credit card accounts, and other interest-bearing obligations. The plaintiffs further allege that Bank of America tried to conceal these excess interest charges and in doing so violated the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, the Truth in Lending Act and North Carolina’s Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices Act.

The Bank of America class action lawsuit also asserts claims for breach of contract, negligence and negligent misrepresentation.

“Since our country’s founding, members of our military services have been asked to make many sacrifices for our nation,” the Bank of America class action lawsuit says. “One of these sacrifices is financial; leaving family, friends and the comforts of civilian life to answer our country’s call to duty also requires leaving behind employment, a career, and financial security.”

The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act was enacted to address these sacrifices, and it guarantees that all debts incurred by a service member before being called to active duty are reduced to an interest rate of no more than six percent. Bank of America reportedly implemented a program that promised benefits that were more generous than those required by the SCRA in order to attract servicemembers.

“Bank of America, however, has failed to honor the active duty status of America’s fighting forces by: (1) charging an unlawfully high interest rate on the debts of servicemembers while they were abroad serving our nation, in violation of the SCRA and the Bank’s own contractual duties; (2) temporarily ‘subsidizing’ interest charges on servicemembers’ mortgages rather than re-amortizing their loans as necessary to permanently forgive interest above 6%; (3) allowing these unlawful interest charges to improperly inflate servicemembers principal balances and deprive plaintiffs of equity in their homes, equity to which they are legally entitled; and (4) charging compound interest on those inflated balances.”

Bank of America denies the allegations but agreed to settle the military member service fee class action lawsuit to avoid the costs and uncertainty of trial. The Bank of America class action settlement was preliminarily approved on Sept. 13, 2017.

Class Members who would like to opt out of or object to the Bank of America military member service fee settlement must do so no later than Dec. 12, 2017.

Who’s Eligible

Class Members of the Bank of America settlement include: “All persons identified in Bank of America’s records as obligors or guarantors of an obligation or account that, at any time on or after September 11, 2001, received and/or may have been eligible to receive additional compensation related to military reduced interest rate benefits from Defendant, but excluding persons who have executed a release of rights claimed in this action.”

Potential Award

Varies, depending on the type of account, amount of time the accountholder was eligible for a refund related to military reduced interest rate benefits, whether the accountholder received a prior refund from Bank of America related to the military reduced interest rate benefits, whether the accountholder received an additional payment of three times the refund or $500 (whichever is greater), and (for mortgage accounts) the method by which Bank of America applied military reduced interest rate benefits to the account.

BofA class action settlement groups

According to the BofA settlement website, it is not currently possible to calculate Class Members’ individual payments. Detailed information about how the settlement payments will be calculated for each group is available in the distribution section of the Bank of America settlement agreement.

Proof of Purchase

N/A

Frequently Asked Questions

NOTE: If you do not qualify for this settlement do NOT file a claim.

Remember: you are submitting your claim under penalty of perjury. You are also harming other eligible Class Members by submitting a fraudulent claim. If you’re unsure if you qualify, please read the FAQ section of the Settlement Administrator’s website to ensure you meet all standards (Top Class Actions is not a Settlement Administrator). If you don’t qualify for this settlement, check out our database of other open class action settlements you may be eligible for.

Claim Form Deadline

N/A. If you have been identified as a Class Member, you will automatically be mailed a check if the Bank of America settlement becomes final.

Case Name

Childress v. Bank of America NA, Case No. 5:15-cv-00231, in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina

Final Hearing

2/5/2018

UPDATE: The Bank of America Military Member Fee Class Action Settlement was granted final approval on February 5, 2018. Let Top Class Actions know when you receive a check in the comments section below or on our  Facebook page.

Claims Administrator

Bank of America Military Settlement
c/o Kurtzman Carson Consultants
P.O. Box 404036
Louisville, KY 40233-4036
1-877-468-0425
info@BankofAmericaMilitarySettlement.com

Class Counsel

Steve W. Berman
Shayne C. Stevenson
HAGENS BERMAN SOBOL SHAPIRO LLP

Knoll D. Lowney
SMITH & LOWNEY PLLC

Kieran J. Shanahan
Brendon S. Neuman
Christopher S. Battles
SHANAHAN LAW GROUP PLLC

Defense Counsel

Bryan A. Fratkin
MCGUIRE WOODS LLP

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332 thoughts onBank of America Military Member Fee Class Action Settlement

  1. Kathy Sanders says:

    Received three checks today totaling $249.24

  2. Diane says:

    I received $346.82 today.

  3. Jlynd says:

    For those that have received a check in the last couple days, did the claim number match up to the card you received in the beginning?

    1. Lurinda says:

      My husband and I had 3 claims each. We both received 2 checks each check had a claim no that matches. We both have 1 claim left. Each check was for 77.86.

      1. Ns says:

        We received a total of 5 checks, totalling just under 800.00

  4. Thomas m Meeks says:

    my name is thomas m meeks my sons name is thomas j meeks we both were military we are trying to see if the check is his or mine it just say thomas meeks please contact me asap.

    1. Em says:

      hi, you should call the law office directly (scroll back through the posts to find the phone number). This message board is probably not monitored by the firm.

  5. Kamarra says:

    Check came today for $211.22, my husbands was $246.12 Glad this is over!!!

  6. Jennifer says:

    Received my check today for $101. It is in my name only(I’m the military spouse), so will my husband be receiving one also? This is all so confusing and frustrating. My statement states I am in group 1, but payment step 4?

    1. Bill says:

      I also received my check for 155.72 I’m the military member 4 yrs ago I revived over 10,000 all I can say is thanks for the funds

      1. HM says:

        This is the first check that I have received. I didnt get any previous checks, so now what?

  7. Rich V says:

    Everyone thought they were going to get thousands of dollars for some reason….. it’s a class action people, which means less for everyone as a whole, more for the lawyers and the company can settle the claim without admitting guilt. Oh by the way, they can now ultimately not be held accountable and gone after individually now that you’ve settled for you share. Take your $50-70 and go buy a meal for what it’s worth.

  8. Ashley says:

    So 127,000 checks at “roughly” $77.86 (some less)? So there was only $9.8 Million dollars left?

    1. Em says:

      Some checks sent a few months ago were much more, which reduced our amount. I’m not sure how much the people writing angry posts and calling the media thought they were going to get. The math has always been clear.

      1. Cyndr says:

        Those checks were for the people who did not cash their checks the first time. So yes they were larger; like my first check was in 2013. So I don’t expect much being in group 2. It’s all broken down in the class documents.

        1. HM says:

          Ok so what about us that never recieved any previous checks?

  9. Mary says:

    My husband is a vet. We received checks back 4-5 years ago & mine was about $2500 & his was $22,000. We then owed the IRS $9000 that year in taxes!!. They confirmed my check this time was the 77.86…but I’m not sure what his will be. They couldn’t tell me without speaking to him.

  10. Mary says:

    I just called & found out they sent checks out today….mine was for a whopping $77.86. Wonder how much these attorneys reaped in for all of this!

    1. Bob says:

      $50 here. Shocking considering they told me I was in Group 1, meaning I never got the second payment of $500 or three times the overcharged amount. That’s lawyers for ya! I’m sure they’ll enjoy their cut.

    2. Lorelei says:

      Were you a vet or a spouse of a vet? I am the spouse of a vet and mine was the same amount as you ($77.86) My husband and I both received checks 4-5 years ago but his was 4 times the amount of mine at the time. (His was around 8K while mine was around 2K) just trying to see if the actual vets are getting more of this or if it is the same for each person involved.

      1. Bob says:

        I’m the military member, so not sure why mine was only $50.

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