They broke the law.
Now there are consequences.
When companies violate your rights, federal and state consumer protection laws provide powerful remedies — statutory damages, attorney's fees, and injunctive relief that give you leverage.
Submit Your CaseWhat Are Consumer Protection Laws
Consumer protection laws exist to prevent businesses from engaging in unfair, deceptive, or abusive practices. These laws cover everything from how your personal data is collected and shared to how debts are collected, how credit reports are maintained, and how products and services are marketed.
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) is one of the most powerful consumer protection statutes. It requires credit reporting agencies, creditors, and data furnishers to maintain accurate information about you — and provides statutory damages of $100 to $1,000 per violation, plus actual damages, attorney's fees, and punitive damages for willful violations. You do not need to prove financial harm to recover.
State consumer protection statutes — such as Florida's Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act — provide additional remedies including treble damages and attorney's fees. These statutes apply to a wide range of business conduct and are designed to give consumers the legal tools to hold companies accountable. When a demand does not resolve the matter, a formal complaint escalates the enforcement.
What We Handle
FCRA Violations
Unauthorized Data Sharing
Inaccurate Credit Reporting
Deceptive Business Practices
Debt Collection Abuse (FDCPA)
Unfair Trade Practices
Robocall Violations (TCPA)
Identity Theft Recovery
Data Breach Claims
False Advertising
Predatory Lending
Subscription Traps
What You Receive
Demand Letter + Enforcement Action
A formal demand letter documenting the violations, citing applicable federal and state statutes, and demanding specific remedies — including correction of records, deletion of inaccurate data, monetary damages, and cessation of unlawful conduct.
Statutory Demand
Many consumer protection statutes require a pre-suit demand letter before filing a lawsuit. We draft the letter that satisfies statutory requirements and maximizes your recovery.
Regulatory Complaint
When appropriate, we draft and file formal complaints with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), Federal Trade Commission (FTC), or state attorney general's office.
How It Works
Tell us what happened
Describe the violation — inaccurate credit report, unauthorized data sharing, harassing debt collection, deceptive advertising. Provide any documentation: letters, screenshots, account statements.
We identify the violations
We analyze the facts against federal and state consumer protection statutes to identify every applicable violation and the remedies available to you.
Demand drafted and sent
Your attorney drafts a demand letter citing specific statutory violations, documenting damages, and demanding remedies — sent to the violating company and, where appropriate, to regulators.
Resolution or escalation
If the company resolves the violations, the matter is closed. If not, we advise on next steps — including litigation, where consumer protection statutes often provide for attorney's fees, making legal action accessible.
Your rights. Enforced.
Submit Your CaseExperience
Brenden M. Moore has represented consumers against companies that violated FCRA reporting requirements, transmitted personal data without authorization, and engaged in deceptive trade practices. In each case, the leverage comes from the statute itself — federal and state consumer protection laws impose per-violation damages that accumulate rapidly, creating significant financial exposure for the company even when the individual consumer’s out-of-pocket loss is small.
His enforcement approach is built on that math: identify every violation, calculate the statutory exposure, and present the company with a demand that makes settlement the rational choice. The demand letter is the mechanism. The statute is the leverage.
Consumer protection law exists so that companies face consequences — not just complaints.
EDUCATION
Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law, J.D.
LICENSED IN
Florida · Illinois · New Jersey
Common Questions
Your rights. Enforced with teeth.
One action. They face the consequences. No obligation.
Submit Your CaseMost inquiries receive a response within one business day.