On March 16, the CFPB sued a California-based student loan debt relief company, its owner, and manager (collectively, “defendants”) for allegedly charging borrowers more than $3.5 million in unlawful advance fees. The complaint alleged that between 2015 and 2019, the defendants violated the Telemarketing Sales Rule (TSR) and the CFPA by unlawfully marketing and enrolling borrowers in the company’s purported debt relief services. Defendants allegedly charged and collected advance fees from borrowers with federal student loans to file paperwork on their behalf in order to access free Department of Education debt-relief programs. According to the Bureau, the defendants violated the TSR by requesting and receiving payment of fees before renegotiating, settling, reducing, or altering the terms of at least one debt pursuant to an agreement, and before the consumer made at least one payment pursuant to that agreement. The Bureau also alleged that the owner defendant formed a California limited liability company (relief defendant) and unlawfully transferred a portion of the funds received from the advance fees into the relief defendant’s bank account. The complaint seeks injunctive relief, as well as restitution and civil money penalties. The complaint also seeks to have the relief defendant disgorge or compensate consumers for the funds it received.