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| Meggie Chapman |
A U.S. district court has ordered a defendant who assisted in a wide-ranging government grant scheme to pay $1.68 million, and has banned her from marketing money-making opportunities to consumers.
Under the federal court order, Meggie Chapman is ordered to pay a $1.68 million judgment to provide refunds to defrauded consumers. Chapman is also banned from future violations of the Federal Trade Commission’s Telemarketing Sales Rule. The FTC estimates that more than 8,000 consumers were affected by the Grant Writers scam.
As part of the agency’s ongoing crackdown on scams that target American consumers in financial distress, the FTC, along with the Attorneys General of Kansas, Minnesota, North Carolina, and Illinois, charged Chapman with assisting and facilitating the deceptive acts of Grant Writers Institute, LLC and several related entities, which allegedly falsely told consumers they were eligible for grants from the federal government.
Knew or should have known ...
According to the FTC, Chapman, who also did business as Meggie Chapman & Associates, provided telemarketing support for Grant Writers’ products and services, and “knew or consciously avoided knowing” about the misrepresentations being made. The FTC and the states alleged that the defendants’ false and deceptive claims violated federal law, state consumer protection laws, and the FTC’s Telemarketing Sales Rule.
Since at least 2007, according to the agency, Grant Writers made its phony pitch using postcards that it mass-mailed to consumers across the country. Consumers were told they were guaranteed $25,000 in free government grant money, and those who called a phone number on the card were pitched a $59 book on “professional” grant writing.
The defendants then called consumers who bought the book trying to get them to pay hundreds of dollars or more for grant research, writing, or coaching services, falsely claiming a 70 percent success rate in securing grant funding.
