Paul Tassin  |  June 22, 2017

Category: Consumer News

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centurylink_logoTwo CenturyLink customers who’ve had enough of the company’s billing and customer service practices have responded with a consumer class action lawsuit.

Plaintiffs Craig McLeod of Alabama and Steven McCauley of Kansas claim that CenturyLink has been committing a slew of business violations against millions of its customers.

According to these two plaintiffs, CenturyLink’s offenses include billing for services never purchased, imposing improper fees, billing at higher rates than those agreed to, continuing to bill after cancellation of service, charging customers for keeping rental modems after the customers had returned them, and referring those customers to collections when they refused to pay for the returned modems.

By the plaintiffs’ estimate, the allegations in this CenturyLink class action lawsuit could entitle Class Members to as much as $12 billion in damages.

McCauley says that when he heard about a $24.99 CenturyLink plan from a friend in another state, he called CenturyLink to inquire about switching to that plan. He says he was told that plan was not available in his area, but another plan was available that would offer him 10 mbps service for $27.99.

McCauley agreed to switch to the $27.99 plan. But when his next bill came, he discovered he was being billed the full $80 non-contract price of his original plan.

On calling to complain to CenturyLink, McCauley was told the $27.99 plan did not exist and never had. The CenturyLink rep told him the only available alternative was a contract plan for $43 per month. When McCauley told the rep he wanted to switch internet providers, he was told he’d have to pay a $200 contract termination fee.

McLeod says that in April 2017, he accepted an upgrade offer from CenturyLink that should have increased the speed of his internet service from 10 to 25 mbps for only $2 more per month.

He was told he’d only need to restart his modem to get the new service, but after he did so, his service shut off completely. Two visits from CenturyLink technicians resulted in two replacement modems he was allegedly told he wouldn’t need.

When his next bill came, McLeod found he was being charged far more than the $2 he was told he would pay for faster service. The bill also showed a $35 “wiring” charge, ostensibly to cover the cost of the technicians installing modems he was previously told he would not need.

McLeod reports that when he found incorrect charges on his bill and pointed them out to the company, a CenturyLink representative told him it was his own fault that he had not discovered the charges earlier.

Other CenturyLink customers apparently got the same line of victim-blaming. This CenturyLink class action lawsuit shows a screenshot of an instant message conversation between a CenturyLink rep named Chay and a customer named Nichole, in which Chay tells Nichole:

“Nichole, I understand your frustration, but at the same time it’s also the customer’s responsibility to look at their bill. That’s why you are sent one.”

McLeod and McCauley report that thousands of other consumer complaints about CenturyLink billing have been lodged on the consumer interest website Consumer Affairs.

The plaintiffs say that to submit copies of all these complaints with their CenturyLink class action lawsuit would exceed the capacity of the court’s electronic filing system, so they include a few excerpts of these reviews in their complaint.

One reviewer reports being billed over $300 for mostly phone services after specifically purchasing only internet service for $60 per month. Another reports her monthly bill, which she was led to expect would be around $94, has consistently clocked in at over $160.

McLeod and McCauley launched this action only days after Oregon plaintiff Heather Gonisor filed her own claims on behalf of thousands of Oregon CenturyLink customers who she says were grossly overbilled with fees that the company failed to properly disclose.

The company is also in the crosshairs of a whistleblower lawsuit filed in Arizona by a former employee who says she was fired after bringing evidence of unlawful billing practices to the attention of her supervisors.

The plaintiffs are proposing to represent a plaintiff Class of persons who had experiences with CenturyLink similar to their own.

They seek an award of actual, statutory, punitive, consequential and incidental damages for themselves and for potential Class Members. They are also asking the court to award reimbursement of court costs and attorney’s fees, plus pre- and post-judgment interest on all amounts awarded.

The plaintiffs are represented by attorneys Mark J. Geragos, Ben J. Meiselas, Zack V. Muljat and Eric Hahn of Geragos & Geragos APC.

The CenturyLink Unlawful Overbilling Class Action Lawsuit is Craig McLeod and Steven McCauley v. CenturyLink Inc., et al., Case No. 2:17-cv-04504, in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California.

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163 thoughts onCenturyLink Class Action Calls Out Bait-and-Switch Tactics

  1. Micheal r kelm says:

    I live in florida and on their auto pay … Because I do not check on how much they take out each month they raise my bill over 60 dollars a month for channels I never ordered or watch … Sports packages !!!

  2. KAMY BELL MENAPACE says:

    Been thru all the above and beyond with cl. Please post link for suit

  3. Michael says:

    I am a shareholder, the stock has done nothing.,. Now going down? come on, be honest!

  4. marcie nash says:

    I live in arkansas and I have had trouble with centurylink for years. Everything from high bills, $14 late fees, internet droppage and slow speeds even after talking with customer service and their claims that my speed had been increased. Could you please post a link to join the class action lawsuit.

  5. Rhonda Stahl says:

    I too currently have a Century Link account and after several years of up and down bills where we more often than not paid 178.00 or more a month with no HBO, Showtime or Cinemax….I finally got the most simple service recently….for 90.00 a month including internet. Ironically, I just got notified after lowering my services (and I had to talk to 5 different ppl whose names I have written down just to accomplish that)….that there has been a fraudulent bill with Century Link, but I had never seen this bill before….and I know from personal experience if you are late a month CL WILL turn off your service…which I still have, so that fraudulent crap makes no sense. Please put up a link to this class action. I would love to join as a plaintiff. I have all the bills to back up what I have claimed.

  6. Robyn Garris says:

    They need a class action for us former CenturyLink employees…led to believe we are being hired to be a customer service agent, when almost the entire training is on how to talk customers into buying more when they call already upset about hidden fees and charges. They put crazy sales quotas on the reps, and you get in trouble if you give credit on a customer’s bill more than an average of around $2. I watched employees so scared of losing their jobs that they resorted to placing extra services on customers’ accounts out of fear of not being able to feed their children. I ended up leaving because the stress of the pressure they put on all of us to sell more, more, more made me physically sick, and I refused to resort to unethical and dishonest practices. Unfortunately, that’s not true of everyone I worked with.

  7. Patricia McGahee says:

    I’m with CenturyLink in Arkansas. Please sign me up.

  8. E. Miller says:

    I have centurylink in wyoming. When I started my service I originally wanted only internet service and they talked me into phone service also, claiming itwas cheaper with phone service than without. Which it was but only for a year. My complaint about them is that they sell your new phone number to telemarketers. Thats the only calls I receive. And when I called to complain the agent saidthat yes, unless you specify when you get your service, you dont want your number sold they will do it. Now who would think to do this when they sign up? Then the agent said they could place a block on my line for a fee. Which really pissed me off. I ended up waiting until monday morning to call the business office to complain about all of this. The woman I spoke with this time actually talked me out of cancelling my service and told me they never charge to place block for telemarketers. So now we 18 months later I only receive maybe 1 telemarketing each week, but my introductory period is over and its no longer cheaper to have the phone. Gonna call and cancel it and find out why only new customers can get 20 dallar a month internet for the same I have and I get charged 70 dollars monthly. And new customers get that price locked in for 5 years. You would think on they would be a little more generous with their long term customers.

  9. John Hammond says:

    I was thinking of starting my own lawsuit against Cent Linq, now I won’t have too. I rarely received the same bill 2 months in a row. Even wrote to the company never received a reply.

  10. Samuel Martin says:

    Can someone please post a link to this class action. So we can sign up too.

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