FTC settlement bars RentGrow from inaccurate tenant screening reports and imposes $2.25 million penalty
Tenant-screening consumer reporting agencies must maintain accuracy, source-disclosure and dispute-handling procedures under the FCRA or face court-enforceable penalties
- — Consumer reporting agencies that compile tenant or background screening reports must maintain and document procedures that prevent duplicate entries for the same criminal or eviction proceeding, so reports do not overstate an applicant's record — the order makes this a court-enforceable obligation under the FCRA and FTC Act, and the FTC treated pre-existing awareness of the defect without remediation as an aggravating factor.
- — Consumer reporting agencies must disclose all data sources used in a screening report when a consumer requests them, including third-party vendors such as LexisNexis Accurint where used to match records to a consumer, since non-disclosure obstructs the consumer's ability to dispute inaccurate data.
- — Consumer reporting agencies must follow FCRA dispute-resolution procedures rather than labelling disputes 'invalid' without further action, and must not misrepresent dispute outcomes to landlords or property managers — telling a consumer a correction was communicated while telling the property owner nothing changed is an FTC Act violation exposed to civil enforcement.
- — Consumer reporting agencies that compile tenant or background screening reports
- — Pending court approval: the stipulated order was filed by the DOJ in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia and takes the force of law once approved and signed by the District Court judge.