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AT&T Refuses To Budge On A $139 Bill And A Lawyer Makes Them Pay $72,000 For It
Man frustrated on phone call outside modern building, symbolizing AT&T loss after city councilman's clever revenge.

AT&T Tries To Rob City Councilman Of $139, Ends Up With $72K Loss Per Year After His Clever Revenge

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Navigating a customer service dispute is essentially a modern version of Dante’s Inferno. There are circles, there are transfers, there are holds that last longer than some relationships, and at the bottom of it all are more lies. Most people eventually give up, pay the money, and spend the rest of their lives muttering about it at dinner parties.

This time, the corporation picked the wrong customer. What started as a $139 billing dispute with AT&T turned into one of the most satisfying corporate takedowns the internet has ever had the pleasure of reading.

More info: Reddit

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    Big corporations have been banking on customers giving up and paying for decades, and most of the time, that is exactly what happens

    Image credits: karlyukav / Freepik (not the actual photo)

    One councilman walked into an AT&T store, asked very specifically for the all-in price, and received a bill for double that amount two days later

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    Image credits: alexandrumusuc / Freepik (not the actual photo)

    Three separate representatives promised to waive the bill, it went to collections anyway, hit his credit report, and then got sold to a second collection agency for good measure

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    Image credits: namii9 / Freepik (not the actual photo)

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    While reviewing his town’s monthly expenses, he noticed they were paying AT&T close to $6,000 a month and decided to take a much closer look at that number

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    Image credits: TheThinGreenGiant

    Two weeks later, the city council voted unanimously to cut ties with AT&T completely, saving $108,000 a year and hiring an extra animal shelter employee with the difference

    When one man and his wife joined phone plans, they walked into an AT&T store and were told they would pay $70 a month all in, taxes and fees included. He was very specific about wanting the all-in price. Two days later, he logged in and found a bill for $139.

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    When he called to dispute it, they told him to essentially deal with it, and when he tried to cancel, they informed him he would lose both his and his wife’s phone numbers if he did. He switched to a new carrier, called back to cancel, and was told he had missed the three-day refund window by one day, which would have been fine had the first representative not denied him a refund on day two.

    A retention rep promised to waive the bill entirely. A month later, a bill arrived anyway. Another rep promised to handle it. The bill went to collections. A nice lady promised to send a letter to stop it. Then, the debt showed up on his credit report. He disputed it, got it removed, and then received a letter from an entirely different collections agency because the first one had simply sold the debt rather than verifying it.

    Here is where it gets extremely good. In addition to being a very determined individual, this man is also a lawyer and an elected city councilman. While reviewing his town’s monthly expenses, he noticed they were paying AT&T close to $6,000 a month for phones, internet, and TV services. He started digging and discovered they could cut that bill in half by switching providers, and the council agreed.

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    The city saved $72,000 a year, hired an additional part time animal shelter employee with the savings, and got better service in the process. AT&T refused to waive the $139 and lost a contract worth hundreds of thousands of dollars over the coming years. In a late edit, he updated that the actual savings came out to $108,000 per year. The internet has never been more satisfied.

    Image credits: LipikStockMedia / Freepik (not the actual photo)

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    Here is the thing about AT&T specifically: none of this is surprising. It consistently ranks last in Consumer Reports customer satisfaction rankings, and authorized dealers have been widely accused of misleading sales tactics, secret service additions, and outright fraud. He was not unlucky. He was just next in line.

    What he experienced has an actual name in behavioral science. It is called sludge, which refers to the friction and barriers corporations deliberately build into their processes to exhaust customers until they give up and pay. Long hold times, broken promises, and transfers between departments are a system, and it works on most people.

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    If you find yourself in a similar situation without a $72,000 contract to leverage, there are options. The FCC accepts complaints about phone and internet providers, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau handles debt collection and credit reporting disputes, and your state Attorney General’s office is a powerful resource that corporations take seriously.

    AT&T counted on the math working in their favor. What they did not account for was a customer with both the legal knowledge to fight back and the civic power to make the loss genuinely hurt. The $139 became $108,000 a year and counting, the best way to stick it to “the man”!

    Have you ever had a satisfying win against a big corporation? Share some details in the comments!

    The internet read every single word of this story, and the satisfaction in the comments section is truly something to behold

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    Louise Pieterse

    Louise Pieterse

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

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    This lazy panda forgot to write something about itself.

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    Louise Pieterse

    Louise Pieterse

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    This lazy panda forgot to write something about itself.

    Rūta Zumbrickaitė

    Rūta Zumbrickaitė

    Author, BoredPanda staff

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    Hi! Here at Panda's I'm responsible for Photo Editing and all of the things surrounding it. I love finding great, moody or even dramatic photos to fit the story. Besides that, I'm a proud owner of 2 cats with the silliest names and a bazillion plants<3You can find me at a makeup counter with headphones swatching all of the sparkly eyeshadows

    Read less »

    Rūta Zumbrickaitė

    Rūta Zumbrickaitė

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    Hi! Here at Panda's I'm responsible for Photo Editing and all of the things surrounding it. I love finding great, moody or even dramatic photos to fit the story. Besides that, I'm a proud owner of 2 cats with the silliest names and a bazillion plants<3You can find me at a makeup counter with headphones swatching all of the sparkly eyeshadows

    What do you think ?
    Michael Largey
    Community Member
    17 hours ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    For those of you who have seen the movie "The President's Analyst", never trust TCP.

    g90814
    Community Member
    21 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is why I use MintMobile for my mobile service. The big carriers have too much overhead. I pay $15/mo (paid annually) for unlimited text/calls and 5GB/mo of data. No this isn't an ad! 😂

    person (i think)
    Community Member
    5 hours ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I’ll shout out USMobile. I think I post $22/month for unlimited text/talk + 20 GB data (then unlimited lower speed) + 10 GB hotspot _and_ they have _fantastic_ customer service. (Srsly, customer service is so good that I’ve emailed the company a few times to praise it).

    Load More Replies...
    Otto Katz
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    ATT did this to us. Supposed to get a teachers discount after providing proof of being a teacher. No matter how many times we provided proof, discount never appeared. Switched to Consumer Cellular as soon as we learned about it, bill went to half. We took to to Europe, no extra charges for texting, for internet, didn't need a special simcard, worked seamlessly. Coverage is great where we live out here in the boonies. Now, if only T-Mobile would get here for internet, we could lose Spectrum, the att of internet garbage.

    William Mesker
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Yeah, I switched from Spectrum to Metro By T-Mobile's internet, as I was paying $115 a month for just internet. No phone or TV. Now I'm paying $102 a month for both my phone and internet. The speeds are actually faster than Spectrum, and I also live in the boonies, and I get great service. I haven't had any issues with Metro and I've been with them for a long time as far as service goes.

    Load More Replies...
    Load More Comments
    Michael Largey
    Community Member
    17 hours ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    For those of you who have seen the movie "The President's Analyst", never trust TCP.

    g90814
    Community Member
    21 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is why I use MintMobile for my mobile service. The big carriers have too much overhead. I pay $15/mo (paid annually) for unlimited text/calls and 5GB/mo of data. No this isn't an ad! 😂

    person (i think)
    Community Member
    5 hours ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I’ll shout out USMobile. I think I post $22/month for unlimited text/talk + 20 GB data (then unlimited lower speed) + 10 GB hotspot _and_ they have _fantastic_ customer service. (Srsly, customer service is so good that I’ve emailed the company a few times to praise it).

    Load More Replies...
    ADVERTISEMENT
    Otto Katz
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    ATT did this to us. Supposed to get a teachers discount after providing proof of being a teacher. No matter how many times we provided proof, discount never appeared. Switched to Consumer Cellular as soon as we learned about it, bill went to half. We took to to Europe, no extra charges for texting, for internet, didn't need a special simcard, worked seamlessly. Coverage is great where we live out here in the boonies. Now, if only T-Mobile would get here for internet, we could lose Spectrum, the att of internet garbage.

    William Mesker
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Yeah, I switched from Spectrum to Metro By T-Mobile's internet, as I was paying $115 a month for just internet. No phone or TV. Now I'm paying $102 a month for both my phone and internet. The speeds are actually faster than Spectrum, and I also live in the boonies, and I get great service. I haven't had any issues with Metro and I've been with them for a long time as far as service goes.

    Load More Replies...
    Load More Comments
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