Katherine Webster  |  July 1, 2020

Category: Jail / Prison

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ICS providers allegedly inflated the costs of making inmate calls.

Three prison phone providers stand accused of colluding to inflate the cost of inmate calls made from U.S. jails and prisons.

Plaintiffs Ashley Albert, Ashley Baxter, Karina Jakeway and Melinda Jabbie have filed a class action lawsuit against Securus Technologies LLC, Global Tel*Link Corp. and 3Cinteractive Corp. after paying what they say are high prices to speak with their imprisoned relatives. 

Not only are the companies charging high prices, the plaintiffs say, but they also allegedly repeatedly lied to their customers and local governments about the costs of the calls in order to charge the inflated prices. 

The plaintiffs say inmate calling service (ICS) providers charge consumers a per-minute rate on many collect calls made by inmates. The recipients of these collect calls typically establish an account with ICS providers using a credit card, which allows the recipients to receive multiple calls from inmates. 

Beginning in January 2010, Securus and GTL, two leading ICS providers, implemented a new “single call” payment method for receiving a one-time collect call from an inmate, the class action lawsuit says.

The ICS providers were able to charge these rates by agreeing to stop competing between themselves and to fix the same inflated prices to consumers, the plaintiffs say. 3CI, a marketing company and payment processor, allegedly helped the ICS providers in their plan.

The defendants also misrepresented and omitted information given to governments and consumers so they could charge the high prices, the complaint says. Securus and GTL allegedly lied by indicating the high prices of single calls were justified because the bulk of the money made from those calls went to 3CI as “transaction fees.”

However, the plaintiffs say the companies were paying 3CI only a fraction of the supposed fees and pocketing the difference, violating the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO).

Inmates placing calls from correctional facilities must use inmate calling services, according to the class action lawsuit. The government contracts with an ICS provider for service within a given facility. The inmates have no say in which provider is used.

ICS providers enter into government contracts that identify the rates consumers will be charged for ICS calls, the complaint explains. Those contracts also promise to provide local or state governments with “site commissions” — a percentage of the revenue earned from ICS calls. Site commissions reportedly average approximately 50%.

In a competitive market, ICS providers compete for these contracts by submitting bids, the complaint states. Governments typically award bids based on how reasonable the call rates are and on the site commission percentage.

ICS providers allegedly inflated the cost of calling inmates.

Securus offered two single-call options: PayNow, which charged the recipient’s credit card $14.99 for a call lasting up to 15 minutes, and Text2Connect, which charged $9.99 to the recipient’s mobile phone account for calls up to 10 minutes, the plaintiffs say.

These programs were included in the government contracts, along with the traditional per-minute rates.

When the single-call programs were included in the government contracts, Securus allegedly paid low site commissions of $1.60 for each PayNow call and $0.30 for each Text2Connect call.

State and local governments received a site commission of only 3% or 11% from each single call sold by Securus, the class action lawsuit claims. By comparison, governments made an average of about 50% on traditional, per-minute ICS calls.

3CI offered collect call recipients the PayNow and Text2Connect options, processed the charges and managed the single-call websites, the plaintiffs claim. When Securus launched its single-call program through 3CI, Securus accounted for about 80% of 3CI’s revenue.

After Securus launched its PayNow program, GTL also began developing a single-call program, then called AdvancePay OneCall (APOC), the ICS providers class action lawsuit says. 

APOC also offered recipients of collect calls from inmates the ability to pay without setting up an account, according to the complaint. APOC charged recipients a transaction fee of up to $3 plus a per-minute rate equal to the per-minute rate recipients with established accounts paid. The program also paid site commissions at the same percentage GTL paid for traditional per-minute calls. 

In November 2012, Securus purchased 3CI’s patent covering technology used to charge mobile phone accounts for single calls, the class action lawsuit says. In 2013, Securus allegedly directed 3CI to approach GTL to request that GTL enter into a contract for 3CI to provide single-call services “identically priced as those provided by 3CI for Securus.”

GTL initially rejected the offer, the plaintiffs claim, but before APOC launched, Securus and 3CI persuaded GTL to agree to provide a single-call program charging the same rates as Securus’ program.

At least one other company has faced a similar lawsuit.

Earlier this year in legal news, Global Tel Link Corp. agreed to pay $25 million to settle claims that it overcharged inmates for phone calling services. Class Members claimed Global Tel Link charged up to 100 times the market rate for calls and didn’t disclose administrative cost charges. Securus, another company in the case, has faced allegationsof taking advantage of immigrant detention.

The plaintiffs in the current case seek to establish a nationwide Class and three subclasses including individuals and entities “that have paid or will pay $9.99 or $14.99 to receive a single collect call operated by 3CI from an inmate in a prison or jail” in the U.S.

They also ask the Court to decree the defendants’ alleged actions to be in violation of the Sherman Act and the RICO statute, and to stop them from continuing the alleged misrepresentations. In addition, the plaintiffs seek a jury trial and to recover damages, pre- and post-judgment interest, court costs, attorneys’ fees and any other relief deemed proper by the Court.

Have you been charged an exorbitant amount for collect calls placed from an inmate at a U.S. jail or prison? Tell us about it in the comments.

The plaintiffs are represented by Matthew K. Handley, Rachel E. Nadas, George F. Farah, Rebecca P. Chang and William A. Anderson of Handley Farah & Anderson PLLC; Benjamin D. Brown, Brent W. Johnson, Robert A. Braun and Christopher J. Bateman of Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC; Benjamin D. Elga, Kelly Jo Popkin, Brian J. Shearer and Craig L. Briskin of Justice Catalyst Law Inc.; Daniel Marshall of the Human Rights Defense Center; and Hannah E.M. Lieberman of the Washington Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs. 

The Inmate Collect Call Rates Class Action Lawsuit is Ashley Alber, et al. v. Global Tel*Link Corp., et al., Case No. 8:20-cv-01936-PWG, in U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland.

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437 thoughts onPrison Phone Providers Allegedly Inflate Price of Inmate Calls

  1. Freddie Li says:

    I currently have a loved one in a Texas prison. I live in another state. I get numerous calls from an Afghanistan number which I accept because I know it’s my loved one. He does not call me collect but he does place money on the phone through his books. The calls went from .06 a minute for thirty minutes to about 2.80 for the same thirty minutes. I have called securus to see why the inmate is being charged more than the normal .06 a minute. They continue to claim that it is indeed six cents but the math doesn’t add up, also looks like it’s being charged as an international call because it’s coming in from Afghanistan instead of Texas. Was never given an answer but those extra charges are adding up for no reason. If there is a class action with this company please count me in, they have ripped us off for thousands.

    1. Kate says:

      I’m being charged 30 cents a minute! Their own website says the max someone can be charged is 21 cents and they won’t return my emails.

  2. Sabrina Bragg says:

    Here we are in 2023 and GTL Connect Network and Securus are still at it. Accusing us of 3 way calls which I don’t even know how to do on a cell…also, it’s not 1990 something and I’m using a landline. Also, what’s up with “if you want to” I can’t recall the terminology but it’s something to the affect of if you spend just a bit more, click on the extra you want to pay to improve your calls.

  3. Ceci zamora says:

    Hola soy cecy yo estoy muy molesta pues hice una llamada de 5 minutos y me cobraron 50 dollar y marco al servicio al cliente y solo hay una maquina que no da ni una opción de de hablar con una persona porfabor alguien que pueda ayudar la compania dice llamarse TIP y la busco en el Internet y no sale porfabor si alguien me puede ayudar se los agradecería

  4. Evelyn Rosario says:

    I was also charged a lot. I have a loved one upstate right now and Securus is the only company that the recording states for you to use. I was sent a post card about the class action and I sent it. I’m waiting to hear from them because as of today, I haven’t heard anything. I feel so violated! We’re already going through the motions of having someone in jail and don’t need any more stress and frustration.

  5. Gena says:

    I have been talking to my baby for 10 years and the calls are ridiculous. But I started back in 2007 when a very good friend was calling me to talk everyday. I use spend hundreds each month. I believe at one point it was close to 400.00. I have given them thousands and thousands. Its so wrong. I want this to stop. . Just because these people gave made a mistake and ended up in prison is no reason to extort money from families. Just like bringing in a $5.00 pizza from little Caesars and making the innate pay 10.00. They call it a fund raiser. The guards are extorting fir their own purposes

  6. Jamie Kass says:

    I would definitely like to be a part of this. These companies have taken me for thousands of dollars over the years! Talk about criminals! They should have to pay AND end up in the very places in which they made things next to impossible for people to speak to their loved one’s do to the ridiculous cost! At one point I was putting $100 a week on the phone alone! Nevermind commissary.

  7. Robin Dease says:

    Add me please

  8. Miranda Hattie says:

    Add me

  9. Jeanette Dawson says:

    Please add me. They are total crooks

  10. Kannon says:

    Add me I was locked up federally from 2016-2019 we used there service

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