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The Role of the State Attorney General - Nicholas Smyth - Spring 2022

Single State Attorney General Consumer Fraud Matters

UDAP statues were enacted at a time when goods and services were exchanged by local firms.  Whether it was buying a refrigerator or a car, the chances were very high that the transaction would be local and from a business with whom the consumer regularly dealt.  Enforcement by an attorney general was therefore almost always a single state, localized prosecution.

 

Today our integrated economy has made most attorney general consumer cases multistate, but single state cases do continue.   The Accretive and cable cases are examples of single state enforcement actions by a single attorney general.

 

Single State:

The 644 multistate settlements represent a subset of more than 7,600 state AG cases we compiled for an expansion of the attorneysgeneral.org Violation Tracker database. In the period since 2000, the largest number of single-state AG announcements came from the following states: Massachusetts (1,765), New York (1,128), Connecticut (632) and Missouri (408).

 

 

In total-dollar terms, the leaders are: New York ($9.8 billion), California ($7.5 billion), Massachusetts ($2.6 billion) and Mississippi ($2.0 billion).

The largest single-state case we found was a $1.6 billion settlement that New York, in cooperation with the Securities and Exchange Commission, reached with American International Group in 2006 to resolve allegations of fraud and bid-rigging. We found six other single-state settlements worth $750 million or more.

While multi-state cases almost always result in civil settlements, more than 500 of the single-state cases ended with fines or court verdicts. About 70 of these were filed as criminal matters.