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Monday, March 18, 2024
March 18, 2024

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Ore.-based publishers sued in alleged scam

The Columbian
Published:

MADISON, Wis. — The Wisconsin state Department of Justice has filed a lawsuit against two Oregon-based publishing groups alleging they ran a subscription scam targeting the elderly.

The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in Madison, alleges Liberty Publishers Service and Orbital Publishing Group, both based in Medford, sent invoices to nursing home residents and older people warning them to renew their periodical subscriptions and charging them far more than the actual cost.

For example, the groups offered a year’s subscription to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel for $499. An actual year’s subscription to that newspaper costs $182, according to the lawsuit. The groups also offered a year’s subscription to the Milwaukee Business Journal for $189; the actual cost is $102. Some of the invoices identified the “Madison State Journal,” which doesn’t exist.

The groups touted their prices as reduced rates and led consumers to believe their subscriptions were close to expiring when in reality they weren’t. In some cases, consumers never received the subscriptions, the lawsuit alleges.

“Defendants … engaged in a practice of issuing fraudulent invoices for both existent and nonexistent publications, designed to confuse consumers into believing they are paying for an ongoing subscription with a newspaper or periodical,” the lawsuit said.

The Wall Street Journal has told the groups to cease and desist, saying it won’t honor subscriptions and renewals the groups facilitate, the lawsuit added. Other publishers have placed scam alerts on their websites warning consumers not to accept renewals from the groups, according to the filing.

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