Paul Tassin  |  July 1, 2016

Category: Consumer News

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Target-logoA California man says that Target tricks consumers into using a payment method that comes with an unreasonable risk of excessive fees.

Plaintiff James Walters claims that Target deceptively presents its RedCard payment method as an analog to traditional debit cards, when in fact using the card exposes consumers to vastly more expensive penalties and fewer legal protections.

According to the Target class action lawsuit, Target’s RedCard is a house-brand payment method that the retailer offers customers.

Using a RedCard to pay for a Target purchase initiates an electronic transfer of funds from the customer’s associated bank account. In exchange for using the RedCard, Target offers customers a five percent discount on all Target purchases made with the card.

Walters says that Target exploits consumers’ ideas of how debit cards work to get them to use the Target RedCard – which Walters says doesn’t work like traditional debit card at all.

According to the class action lawsuit, Target tells customers that funds for purchases made with a RedCard are immediately and directly withdrawn from the customer’s checking account.

Target also requires customers to pick a unique Personal Identification Number for use with the card. Walters argues that these aspects of the RedCard deceptively encourage customers to think it works like a debit card.

The problem, according to Walters, is that RedCard transactions don’t work like debit card transactions at all. He says that purchases made with a RedCard function are processed over the Automated Clearing House network.

These ACH transactions function more like electronic checks, Walters says. They do not immediately draw funds from the payer’s bank account, causing a delay that he says consumers aren’t expecting.

In addition to the delay inherent in ACH transactions, Walters says Target intentionally delays processing RedCard transactions.

He alleges that to save money on processing fees, Target submits RedCard transactions to the ACH network in massive batches. This batch processing can add several days to the time it takes a single transaction to post to the customer’s account, Walters claims.

This delay increases the chance that a customer’s checking account may become overdrawn by the time the Target transaction posts, Walters says.

Like banks, Target charges its RedCard customers a fee if the transaction is refused. But unlike bank fees, which are regulated by federal law, these Returned Payment Fees are unrestricted.

Walters claims that a single declined RedCard transaction can rack up compounded RPF charges of $100 or more.

In addition to the RPFs, Walters says the customer’s bank may also charge an NSF fee for the declined transaction. Walters adds that while Target’s card agreement warns customers about the possibility of being assessed “overdraft fees,” it makes no mention of the danger of NSF fees.

Walters quotes several customer complaints from Internet forums showing that many who signed-up for and used the RedCard had the mistaken impression – allegedly based on Target’s representations – that the card would work just like a debit card.

Some of these customers say this alleged misrepresentation resulted in their being hit with RPF charges they weren’t expecting.

If certified by the Court, Walters’s proposed Class will include all U.S. consumers who incurred RPF charges by using their Target RedCard within the applicable statute of limitations period.

The plaintiff is asking the court to award damages and restitution of all charges Target has assessed its customers as a result of its alleged deceptive business practices, plus costs and attorneys’ fees.

Walters is represented by attorneys Jeffrey Kaliel of Tycko & Zavareei LLP; and Jeffrey Ostrow and Scott Edelsberg of Kopelowitz Ostrow Ferguson Weiselberg Gilbert.

The Target RedCard Class Action Lawsuit is James Walters v. Target Corp., Case No. 16-cv-1678, in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California.

UPDATE: On June 19, 2019, Target debit card holders reached a $8.2 million class action settlement which would end claims that Target deceptively markets its store debit card.

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100 thoughts onTarget Class Action Says RedCard is Deceptively Marketed

  1. Gary Fischer says:

    Would like to be part of this

  2. Lashunda says:

    How do you I join the suit!!

  3. Lara says:

    WOW. This is ridiculous. Do not spend money you do not have and you will not incur fees. You are in charge of your finances and should keep a written or digital account of what you have spent and how much you have to spend. It is not targets fault.

  4. Becky morris says:

    I also have a target red card which is a bunch of bs I have tried to cancel it but they want I have been charged with these bogus charges from target plz include me

  5. Angela KB says:

    I too have had this happen it seems Everytime I use the card an just yesterday I received the new one with the chip.. how to add me to case !!! I have many back statements same issues..

  6. Janice says:

    Add me to list

  7. Susan Byno says:

    How do I join this suit?

  8. Vonda says:

    Target marketed it to me as a debit card, just like my bank debit card. It is not the same. Had I known the truth I would not have applied for one nor used it. They are deceptively misleading the public. Whether a person has had NSF fees charged or not, that is not the issue. Basically the lawsuit is trying to stop a large corporation from abusing the public. Yes, the person who charged their purchases on the Target not-a-debit card should have funds in their account to cover it, and if not, face the fees allowable; however, the fees charged against them should be the NSF fees allowable for debit cards, not the fees of the type of card Target actually uses. This is because Target led consumers to believe their card worked just like a bank debit card.

  9. herman sapp says:

    I had it once ,but didn’t like it

  10. Sharon Odell says:

    The purpose of this card is confusing. Is it supposed to give the customer a lower price on merchandise, which is how it was explained to me by the personnel who asked me if I wanted the card. As I found out, you must attach a credit card account to it. Clarification is needed.

    1. EDNA HERRERA says:

      In response to comment from Ms. Odell regarding having to attach credit card to Target card. I do not know where you are getting that information from but the truth is that you only have to attach a bank account to it. I have never had a credit card and have had no problems with my Target card.

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