Attorney General Steve Carter says consumers entered into contracts ranging between $1,000 and $8,900 on timeshares and vacation club packages or memberships.

updated: 11/27/2007 1:38:43 PM
Three companies that operated a timeshare and travel club sales center in Crown Point have been sued by the Indiana Attorney General’s Office for alleged fraud. The lawsuit filed in Lake County claims that Harbor Management Corp., Harbor Management of Colorado, LLC and Vacation Resort Management, Inc. misrepresented terms of consumer contracts, failed to provide products and services and refused to honor refunds and prize giveaways.
Source: Inside INdiana Business
The lawsuit currently names nearly 15 consumers, but Attorney General Steve Carter expects the number of complaintants to increase.
Harbor Management and Vacation Resort Management also have ties to another group sued last week by for violating the Indiana Do Not Call law.
Press Release
Indianapolis, Ind. -- The Indiana Attorney General’s Office is seeking penalties and restitution from three companies that operated a timeshare and travel club sales center out of Crown Point, Indiana before closing last summer. Harbor Management Corporation, Harbor Management of Colorado, LLC, and Vacation Resort Management, Inc. are alleged to have misrepresented terms of consumer contracts, failed to provide products and services, and refused to honor refunds and prize giveaways.
“This operation was like a vacation bait and release program based on the information we’ve received,” Attorney General Steve Carter said. “This is a marketing strategy that has gone awry and caused thousands of dollars of damage to people along the way.”
The lawsuit alleges that the companies did business in Indiana under various assumed and fictitious names, including Harbor Resort Management Group, Harbor Management Resort Group, Harbor Resorts, Vacation Resorts, Star Vacation Club, Star Vacations, and VRM.
The violations alleged by the attorney general include:
-- Failing to disclose the retail value or odds for the prizes listed in mailing notices sent to consumers
-- Failing to disclose all the eligibility limitations and additional costs to receive prizes
-- Failing to provide promised prizes or an adequate substitutes
-- Telemarketing to consumers and making false representations of winning a prize or gift
-- Failing to file the required registration to sell timeshares in Indiana
-- Misrepresenting to consumers that they would receive a free prize or gift
-- Misrepresenting terms of contracts with consumers
-- Misrepresenting consumers’ financial obligations to third party finance companies
-- Misrepresenting the consumers’ rights and remedies and obligations for refunds and cancellation terms
-- Misrepresenting that they would perform the enrollment and fulfillment services for the consumer’s timeshare interests and vacation exchange club memberships.
The three companies operated from 5263 Commerce Drive, Crown Point, Indiana from 2005 until last summer. The companies and their principal officers also have ties three other states, including Illinois.
Vacation Resort Management has offices in Batavia, Illinois and Oak Brook, Illinois. Harbor Management of Colorado, LLC has another location in Broomfield, Colorado.
Harbor Management Corporation has a location in Las Vegas, Nevada. The principal officers named in the lawsuit are Madeline M. Allerton of Illinois, David W. Haddad of Las Vegas, Nevada and Lisa B. Jantalezio (a.k.a. Haddad, Alonso & Rogers) with addresses listed in Arkansas & Nevada.
The lawsuit names nearly 15 consumers who entered into contracts and submitted down payments on timeshares and vacation club packages or memberships with the companies. The contracts ranged between $1,000 and $8,900. The attorney general’s office anticipates that number to rise as more complaints are processed.
Harbor Management and Vacation Resort Management also have ties to another group sued last week by the attorney general’s office for making illegal pre-recorded telemarketing calls and for violating the Indiana Do Not Call law.
Sonnenschein Financial Services, Inc. and two related companies are named in a lawsuit filed by the Indiana Attorney General’s Office earlier this month in Porter County. At least one consumer who received a pre-recorded message from “Paul at the Prize Claim Center” indicated they were invited to a sales presentation in Crown Point for Vacation Management Resorts. The number the call was traced back to was registered to Sonnenschein Financial Services.
The lawsuit filed this week is in the Lake Superior Court.
Source: Office of Indiana Attorney General Steve Carter