CONSUMER ALERT
MIKE COX
ATTORNEY GENERAL
The Attorney General provides Consumer Alerts to inform
the public of unfair, misleading, or deceptive business practices, and to
provide information and guidance on other issues of concern. Consumer Alerts
are not legal advice, legal authority, or a binding legal opinion from the
Department of Attorney General.
Police and Fire Solicitations -
What You Should Know
We've all
received calls from members of our local police, fire, or sheriff's departments
requesting a contribution. Or have we......?
Consider
this example - the Michigan Sheriffs' Association never solicits donations by
telephone and warns consumers to beware of aggressive telemarketing by callers
who falsely claim to represent sheriffs.
The
moral? We all want to support our police officers and firefighters who risk
their lives to make our communities safer - but in order to make sure your
contribution will be used for the right purposes - know before you give.
FACT - Most public safety organizations are not charitable.
Most of them are trade organizations, labor unions or lobbying groups. Even if
they tell you about charitable causes they support, your donation may not be
used for any charitable activities. In addition, because most public safety
groups are not 501(c)(3) charitable organizations, contributions are likely not
deductible on your income taxes.
FACT - The person who telephoned you requesting a contribution was
likely not a member of your local police or fire department. Almost all
solicitation by telephone is done by for-profit, professional fundraisers, who
sometimes keep as much as 90% of your contribution as compensation. In other
words, for $100 to be given to the organization after the fundraiser's fee, you
may have to contribute $1000.
FACT
- Some professional fundraisers have been known to imply that you will be better
protected if you make a donation. For example, you may be told that emergency
police or fire response to your house will be faster. The truth is that
contributions to these organizations - or their fundraisers - will have no
effect on the level of protection police and fire departments provide.
FACT - Some fundraisers may use deceptive tactics to induce you to
make a donation. If you receive a bill for an unfamiliar pledge (promise to
donate) you don't recall making, there's a good chance you never made such a
promise - you may merely have requested written information about the
organization. Or an unethical telemarketer may thank you for previous
donations, even if you never made any.
What you should know
Michigan
law provides the following protections:
- Public
safety organizations and their professional fundraisers must register with the
Attorney General's Charitable Trust Section before soliciting.
- All
telephone solicitations made by public safety organizations and their
professional fundraisers must be recorded and kept for 60 days.
- The
caller cannot legally tell you that you will receive special benefits or
treatment if you make a pledge, or that you will receive unfavorable treatment
if you do not pledge.
- You
cannot legally be billed for pledges you did not make.
- The
caller must tell you whether he or she is employed by a professional
fundraising organization rather than a police department, sheriff's office or
fire department.
What you should do
Remember, the only way we will know about a scam and can take action is if you
file a complaint.
If you believe that you have been misled or lied to, or if you have received a
bill for a pledge you did not make, you are welcome to file a complaint with the
Attorney General's Charitable Trust Section. If you report a suspicious call
promptly, the Charitable Trust Section may obtain a copy of the recorded
solicitation to determine if formal action should be taken.
Send a detailed description of your complaint along with any materials you
received from the organization or call 1(800) 769-4515. Your name and contact
information are helpful, but not necessary. Please include the date you received
the phone call or the solicitation material.
You may
visit
www.michigan.gov/ag to file a complaint online (click on "File A
Complaint" in the left frame) or send a written complaint to:
Department of Attorney General
Charitable Trust Section
PO Box 30214
Lansing, MI 48909
You may
also call the Attorney General's Public Safety Information Line, toll-free, at
(800) 769-4515.
*
For
information on a variety of issues affecting consumers, visit
www.michigan.gov/ag or contact the Attorney General's Consumer Protection
Division at:
Consumer Protection Division
P.O. Box 30213
Lansing, MI 48909
517-373-1140
Fax: 517-241-3771
Toll free: 1-877-765-8388