House Committee Votes to Strip CFPB’s Victim Compensation Fund

$4.2 million restitution still owed consumers after nearly a year.

predatory online training
A predatory online training bootcamp trapped its students with illegal and deceptive ‘income share’ loans.
By Charlene Crowell –

For more than a decade, consumers have lauded the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) for its myriad accomplishments that have brought transparency and fairness to the financial marketplace.

Earlier this year, a survey commissioned by the Center for Responsible Lending found that 82% of Americans believe it is important to regulate financial services to ensure they are fair for consumers.

Research, regulation, investigations, and litigation were among the effective tools CFPB used to return more than $21 billion to over 200 million defrauded consumers.

At the same time, the anti-regulatory interests that opposed CFPB’s creation never stopped trying to weaken, defy, or eliminate the agency. Now with a president and Congress actively embracing a deregulatory stance, the combination of pro-business presidential executive orders vigorously pursued by executive appointees have wreaked financial harm on consumers and compromised the agency’s mission.

From slashing CFPB staffing by 70%, halting both investigations and pending litigation, to reversing regulations on overdraft and credit cards, in recent days a third anti-consumer move announced the agency would not enforce regulation of “buy now, pay later” credit. In sum, today’s agency actions no longer reflect its name or mission.

Yet the fight to neuter CFPB is still not done. It is now moving monies—denying or delaying millions that consumers are rightfully owed, and sending billions of dollars earmarked for victim compensation to the US Treasury instead.

A pending, real-life case illustrates the harm wrought by such moves, and the financial injustice that results.

This February, several state attorneys general began restitution inquiries owed by Prehired, LLC. Earlier, CFPB determined that Prehired, LLC, an unlicensed online sales training program, violated two federal laws: the Truth in Lending Act, and Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. The firm lured prospective tech sales students with false promises of guaranteed minimal annual earnings of $60,000 at a “tech company of their choice.” The cost per student was half that amount: $30,000. Then the firm sold loans to its students to cover enrollment costs.

A March 12, 2025 joint letter to CFPB that asked about the status of payments to Prehired’s victims failed to receive a reply. On May 6. 2025, a follow-up letter restated their earlier concerns.

Terming Prehired “a predatory online training bootcamp,” the state attorneys general in Colorado, Delaware, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, and South Carolina as well as the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation, wrote in part:

“Prehired trapped its students with illegal and deceptive ‘income share’ loans. Prehired then resorted to abusive debt collection practices—including filing hundreds of debt collection lawsuits—when students could not repay those loans and the job offers Prehired promises did not materialize. Prehired specifically targeted military veterans with its advertising.”

“Prehired was in bankruptcy and unable to issue refunds to its victims,” the letter continued. “In such cases, the CFPB’s Civil Penalty Fund is available to compensate harmed victims. Our offices worked with the CFPB to secure an allocation from the Civil Penalty Fund, in the amount of $4,248,249. The CFPB finalized the allocation on May 30, 2024.”

Ironically, a recent party-line vote by the House Financial Services Committee (HFSC) approved a resolution to remove CFPB’s ability to repay defrauded consumers from its Civil Penalty Fund (CPF). If subsequently passed by the full House and the Senate and signed by the president, the fund’s unallocated revenues would be given to the Treasury Department instead of remaining available to compensate victims.

Billions of Dollars at Stake

In June 2024, the Office of Inspector General at the CFPB reported that the CPF had collected $3.4 billion and held a balance of $1.9 billion, as of September 2023. Much of that balance came from a $1.7 billion fine levied against Wells Fargo Bank, according to  a February 2025 report by the Congressional Research Service.

An important part of the law creating CFPB designated the CPF to be used for payments to legally defrauded victims or, when available, for consumer education and financial literacy programs. The law also identifies the fund’s administrator as the official responsible for supervising payments. Additionally, every six months the administrator sets aside monies for payments to harmed consumers.

Democratic members of HFSC offered multiple amendments as alternatives, rather than ceding monies to Treasury. For example, Massachusetts Rep. Ayanna Pressley proposed that bad financial actors would bear the financial burden for funding when their practices violated applicable laws. This and other amendments made by committee Democrats were also rejected by majority members.

“[M]y Republican colleagues are telling their constituents loud and clear that they care more about protecting their friends on Wall Street than the people who voted to send them here,” noted New York Congressman Greg Meeks, also a committee member.

“It’s not really about saving taxpayer money or anything related to the budget. It’s about getting rid of the Bureau,” said Christine Hines, senior policy director at the National Association of Consumer Advocates.

Charlene Crowell
Charlene Crowell

 


Charlene Crowell is a Senior Fellow with the Center for Responsible Lending. She can be reached at [email protected].

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