Attorney general investigating Costa Mesa group
- Share via
Paul Clinton
The state attorney general is investigating a local consumer
advocacy group for its role in a lawsuit abuse scheme to bilk small
business owners out of thousands of dollars.
The Costa Mesa-based for-profit organization Citizens for Fair
Business Practices has come under the scrutiny of the spotlight of
the state’s top cop, said Tom Dresslar, a spokesman for Attorney
General Bill Lockyer.
The organization is purportedly the litigation arm of Tustin law
firm Callahan, McCune & Willis, investigators said.
The law firm has been suing mortgage firms, alleging a number of
purported violations of California’s Unfair Competition Law, Dresslar
said. Under this law, attorneys can sue businesses on behalf of the
general public, as represented by consumer advocacy groups.
These firms offer to absolve the businesses of any wrongdoing if
they submit a payment to the firm by a specified date, Dresslar said.
“They use this [Costa Mesa] organization to file the lawsuits,”
Dresslar said. “We’re trying to determine how they’re conducting
themselves and whether they’ve violated any laws.”
Pete Callahan on Wednesday said his firm had done nothing wrong.
“They’re wrong in that regard,” Callahan said. “They probably
don’t know the facts.”
Callahan said his firm has been suing mortgage brokers who engage
in “blatantly deceptive advertising” by offering low-rate loans with
hidden hooks.
“These brokers use bait-and-switch tactics to make the phone
ring,” Callahan said. “To mislead customers is not a good thing. ...
It’s not a good idea to trick people.”
Calls to partner Larry Willis were not returned Wednesday. The
firm’s third partner, Steve McCune, is deceased.
The state is also investigating four other law firms, two in the
Southland and two in Sacramento, in a broader probe of these
frivolous suits. Beverly Hills-based Trevor Law Group, Brar & Gamulin
in Long Beach, the Consumer Action League and the Californians for
Fair Business Practices are also under investigation. The last two
groups are represented by Sacramento attorneys Brian Kindsvater and
David Byers.
State investigators say the law firms threaten to sue the
businesses to net a quick settlement payment for themselves. Many of
the businesses targeted by these law firms, investigators say, are in
ethnic and immigrant communities.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.