
One inaccurate item on your credit report can:
You’ve Already Tried Everything:
The credit bureaus are betting you’ll give up. We make them pay.
Todd M. Friedman doesn’t write more dispute letters. We sue credit bureaus under the Fair Credit Reporting Act for failing to conduct reasonable investigations, reporting information they know is inaccurate, and violating your federal rights.
Credit Report Inaccuracies
Credit Bureau Violations
Identity Theft on Credit Reports
Creditor Furnisher Violations
Employer/User Violations
Credit bureaus process over 1.2 million complaints per quarter. According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s 2025 data, 81% of all consumer complaints are credit reporting-related, with the most common issues being incorrect information, improper investigations, and credit bureau failures.
Here’s what happens to your dispute:
According to a 2024 Consumer Reports study, 44% of participants who checked their credit reports found at least one error—nearly double the Federal Trade Commission’s 2013 finding of 21%. The problem is getting worse, not better.





Discovery Power
Legal Accountability
Real Corrections
You don’t need to prove financial harm. If credit bureaus willfully violated the FCRA—meaning they knew or recklessly disregarded their legal obligations—you recover statutory damages even if you haven’t applied for credit.
Examples of willful violations:
Economic Damages:
Emotional Distress Damages: California courts recognize that FCRA violations cause compensable emotional distress:
When credit bureaus act with reckless disregard for consumers’ rights—ignoring obvious errors, conducting sham investigations, implementing systematic violation policies—courts award punitive damages to punish the conduct and deter future violations.
Punitive damage awards in FCRA cases have ranged from thousands to millions depending on:
The FCRA requires defendants to pay prevailing consumers’ attorney’s fees and costs. This means:
This is why credit bureaus fear lawsuits but ignore disputes. Disputes cost them nothing. Lawsuits cost them damages AND attorney’s fees.
You filed police reports. You submitted FTC Identity Theft Affidavits. Credit bureaus still report the fraudulent accounts.
Account Takeover Fraud
New Account Fraud
Synthetic Identity Theft
Tax Fraud/Employment Fraud





The FCRA requires credit bureaus to block identity theft information within 4 business days after receiving:
But credit bureaus routinely violate these requirements by:
When you’re an identity theft victim, the FCRA provides enhanced protections:
4-Business-Day Blocking Requirement Credit bureaus must block fraudulent information within 4 business days of receiving proper identity theft documentation—not investigate it, block it.
No Re-Reporting After Blocking Once information is blocked, credit bureaus cannot report it again unless they notify you in writing within 5 business days, include the furnisher’s contact information, and give you a statement of your rights.
Extended Fraud Alerts You can place 7-year fraud alerts on your credit files requiring creditors to verify your identity before opening accounts.
Security Freezes You can freeze your credit files, preventing any access without your specific authorization.
Todd Friedman’s firm has successfully represented identity theft victims in cases where:
Identity theft destroys credit, employment, housing opportunities, and causes severe emotional distress. When credit bureaus compound that harm by refusing to follow federal law, we make them pay.
We review:
We determine:
FCRA cases are filed in federal court against:
Complaints allege specific FCRA violations:
This is where cases are won. Through discovery, we obtain:
Credit bureaus hate discovery because it exposes that their “reasonable investigations” are automated, truncated, and designed to verify everything as accurate with minimal effort.
Most FCRA cases settle once credit bureaus see the evidence we’ve uncovered. Settlement typically includes:
If settlement negotiations fail, we take cases to trial. Todd Friedman’s consecutive Super Lawyer recognition and trial experience create settlement leverage that unrepresented consumers lack.
You have the EARLIER of:
Discovery doesn’t mean when you first saw the credit report error. The statute of limitations begins when you discover the credit bureau or furnisher violated the FCRA—typically after they complete an inadequate investigation and verify inaccurate information as accurate.
Don’t wait. Once you’ve disputed inaccuracies and credit bureaus verified them as accurate despite documentation proving otherwise, consult FCRA counsel immediately. Additional disputes rarely produce different results, and delay only burns your statute of limitations.
Todd M. Friedman has litigated FCRA violations for over two decades, representing thousands of consumers against:
The firm has recovered nearly $1 billion through settlements, judgments, and class actions. FCRA cases form a substantial portion of these recoveries, with individual results ranging from thousands to hundreds of thousands depending on violation severity and damages.
Super Lawyer—Consecutive Years Selected as a Super Lawyer consecutively—a designation awarded to only 5% of attorneys based on peer recognition and professional achievement in consumer rights law.
AV Preeminent Rating—Martindale-Hubbell The highest peer review rating, signifying preeminent legal ability and the highest ethical standards recognized by judges and fellow attorneys.
Top 40 Under 40 Recognized as one of the nation’s top young attorneys for consumer protection advocacy.





Todd Friedman’s firm represents FCRA clients on contingency fees. You pay nothing upfront and owe nothing unless we recover compensation for you.
The FCRA’s attorney fee-shifting provision requires defendants to pay your legal fees in successful cases, making enforcement accessible regardless of your financial situation.
Many consumer attorneys only handle FCRA cases with six-figure economic damages. We represent consumers with “smaller” damage cases that still involve clear violations and life-disrupting consequences.
If credit report errors cost you a job opportunity, prevented apartment rental, caused mortgage denial, or resulted in months fighting credit bureaus, your case matters. The FCRA’s statutory damage provisions and fee-shifting make these cases viable for law firms committed to consumer protection rather than simply maximizing per-case revenue.
Based in Los Angeles with offices in Ohio, Illinois, and Pennsylvania, we represent FCRA clients in federal courts nationwide. While we maintain strong California roots and knowledge of state-specific consumer protections, we litigate FCRA cases wherever credit bureaus violate consumers’ federal rights.
Note: Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Each case is unique.
Client filed police reports and FTC identity theft affidavits for fraudulent credit cards opened by a former roommate. TransUnion and Experian refused to block the accounts, claiming additional “proof” was needed beyond federal identity theft reports. We sued for FCRA Section 605B violations. Credit bureaus settled for $75,000, deleted all fraudulent accounts, and agreed to 7-year fraud alerts.
Client shared a common name with someone in the same city. Credit bureaus merged their files, reporting the other person’s foreclosure, bankruptcy, and collections on our client’s report. Client disputed for 18 months with no resolution. We sued all three bureaus for unreasonable procedures to maintain maximum possible accuracy. Obtained $125,000 settlement plus permanent file separation.
Client’s Chapter 7 bankruptcy discharged $80,000 in debt. Two years later, creditors still reported debts as unpaid with balances owed. Client disputed with documentation of bankruptcy discharge. Credit bureaus “verified” debts as accurate without checking PACER bankruptcy records. We sued creditors and bureaus. Settled for $45,000 and permanent deletion.
Employer pulled applicant’s credit report without written authorization and denied employment based on credit history without providing proper adverse action notices. We sued for FCRA user violations. Employer settled for $32,000 plus policy changes requiring proper disclosures.
Generally yes. Courts typically require consumers to dispute inaccuracies with credit bureaus, giving them opportunity to investigate before filing lawsuits. The FCRA violation typically occurs when credit bureaus conduct unreasonable investigations and verify inaccuracies as accurate—not when errors first appear.
Exception: When defendants act with such reckless disregard for accuracy that disputes would be futile, courts may excuse the dispute requirement.
That’s exactly when you need a lawyer. Credit bureaus claiming to have “verified” obvious errors despite your documentation is the core FCRA violation. They haven’t conducted reasonable investigations—they’ve rubber-stamped furnisher responses without genuine review.
We subpoena their investigation files and expose inadequate investigations that don’t satisfy FCRA requirements.
Yes. The FCRA protects accuracy regardless of overall credit score. Even consumers with strong credit can recover statutory damages for willful violations. Additionally, inaccuracies may prevent access to the absolute best credit terms even if you’re approved.
Most FCRA cases resolve within 6-18 months through settlement. Timeline depends on:
Many cases settle during or shortly after discovery when we expose inadequate investigation evidence.
No. FCRA lawsuits don’t appear on credit reports. Defendants cannot legally retaliate by adding negative information or refusing to correct inaccuracies after litigation begins. In fact, lawsuits typically result in deletion of inaccurate information and prohibition against re-reporting.
Credit repair companies dispute inaccuracies but cannot sue credit bureaus—only attorneys can file lawsuits. If credit repair disputes failed to correct errors, you likely have FCRA claims based on inadequate credit bureau investigations.
Many credit repair services use deceptive practices. Todd Friedman’s firm handles actual FCRA litigation that credit repair companies cannot provide.
Case value depends on:
We provide realistic case valuations during free consultations based on these factors.
Technically yes, but it’s extremely difficult. FCRA litigation requires:
More importantly, credit bureaus take attorneys seriously but ignore unrepresented consumers. Our demand letters trigger immediate settlement discussions that your disputes and complaints never will.
The FCRA’s fee-shifting provision means you don’t pay attorney’s fees from your recovery—defendants pay them separately. There’s no financial reason to go it alone.
Mortgage Costs A 100-point credit score drop can increase interest rates 1.5-2%, costing $50,000-$100,000 in additional interest over a 30-year mortgage. On a $400,000 home:
Auto Loan Costs Subprime auto rates average 14-18% versus prime rates of 5-7%. On a $30,000 car loan:
Credit Card Access Credit report errors can:
47% of employers conduct credit checks according to Society for Human Resource Management data. Negative credit reports can:
Lost income from employment denial often exceeds credit-related financial costs. A $75,000/year job rejection due to credit report errors costs $75,000 annually in lost wages—far more than higher interest rates.
Rental Applications Landlords routinely deny applicants with:
Denial often comes with:
Mortgage Approvals Credit report errors can:
Months or years fighting credit bureaus causes:
California courts recognize these emotional harms as compensable damages in FCRA cases.
You’ve disputed. You’ve called. You’ve sent documentation. You’ve waited months. Nothing changed.
Credit bureaus profit from inaccuracy—they’re paid by furnishers, not you. They have no incentive to investigate thoroughly when rubber-stamp approvals cost less.
The only language credit bureaus understand is litigation.
Todd M. Friedman has spent over two decades forcing credit bureaus to follow federal law. With consecutive Super Lawyer recognition, an AV Preeminent rating, and nearly $1 billion recovered for consumer protection clients, our firm has the experience and track record to hold credit bureaus accountable.
✓ Review all three credit reports and identify violations
✓ Gather evidence and document inadequate investigations
✓ File federal FCRA lawsuits against credit bureaus and furnishers
✓ Conduct discovery to expose rubber-stamp investigation systems
✓ Negotiate settlements or take cases to trial
✓ Force permanent deletion of inaccurate information
✓ Recover statutory damages, actual damages, and punitive damages
✓ Obtain attorney’s fee awards from defendants
✓ Free case evaluation—no obligation
✓ Contingency fee representation—no upfront costs
✓ You pay nothing unless we win
✓ Defendants pay attorney’s fees separately from your damages
Every day you wait is a day closer to losing your right to sue under the FCRA’s 2-year statute of limitations. Once that deadline passes, credit bureaus can ignore your disputes forever with no consequences.