Telemarketing Charities: An end run around the Do-Not-Call List?

I’ve thought up something that might be possible and I want to know if it is. As you all know, charities are immune to the Do-Not-Call List: They can ring up people with impunity, regardless of their being on the List or not. Charities do this for the same reason everyone else mass-calls: money. They need money, and they think the outside world has enough of it to be worth the phone calls.

Businesses also have money in advertising budgets. Money that, until recently, could be spent in the millions (or, well, thousands) on the kinds of things the List is meant to curb.

So how about this: Businesses `donate’ their ad budgets to charities on the condition that those charities do their dirty work for them: The charities, who are immune to the List, make the mass calls for the businesses, who are constrained by it.

Since the List is only effective against businesses, charities can make as many calls as they want to whoever they want. Can businesses harness that power to their own ends?

Charities are strictly bound by the conditions 26 USC § 501©(3) that grants their federal tax exempt status. No charity is going to risk losing their tax exempt status and become liable for taxes on their income by playing fast and loose with the rules of their exemption:

501(3)© Federal Tax Exempt Status

Won’t work. As soon as the charity starts taking money to make calls on behalf of a company, they are no longer acting as a charity, and thus they become constrained by the List.

Actually given the telemarking calls I’ve gotten in the past 2 days I think they’ve already gotten around it. All they had to do is just move the phone centers over seas.(I’ve gotten 2 telemarking calls from people with thick Indian accents and 1 with a really bad chinese accent.) I’m not sure what can be done if they do this. (And probably the people they use work rather cheaply.)

Nope.

From http://www.donotcall.gov/FAQ/FAQConsumers.aspx

[QUOTE]
Note that it says “a company within the U.S.”. So the obvious way to get around this is to have their foreign subsiduary hire the locals to make calls into the U.S.

P.S. I signed up on the no-call list (it worked fine), but mainly to indicate my support for anti-telemarketing efforts. I really don’t expect it to have much effect on telemarketing. (The kind of slimeballs who do this for a living aren’t likely to care much about such laws.) Certainly not as much effect as me saying “I’m not interested. Good-bye” and haning up within the first 10 seconds of their call.

The wording of the FAQ answer indicates that any company subject to US jurisdiction that hires someone else (even someone overseas) to make calls for them are still responsible.

I would venture to guess that if a foreign subsidiary were used to call you, the US-based parent company would still be ultimately responsible for any violation of the Do Not Call List. I really don’t think that there would be such an obvious loophole.

The only people that would probably be exempt would be wholly foreign companies calling you on their own behalf, and that’s not likely to happen.

Considering that phone numbers can very easilly be traced, and violating the List can result in the company being fined of up to $11,000 per call, I’m pretty confident that the slimeballs will care about the list.

Plenty of people in the United States of America have “thick accents.”

There’s a more readily available loophole - surveys are allowed. I suspect that a fair number of telemarketing calls are going to become “surveys”.

How will telemarketers make money off of surveys? As soon as they ask you to buy something, it’s not a survey, and they get fined $11,000. How do they get around that?

“Have you visited a Ford dealership in the last six months?”
“Would you consider buying a Ford automobile at this time?”
“Why not?”
“Were you aware that the new Ford Fliedermaus won best-in-its-class in the prestigous ‘Driving machines for silly nits’ awards?”

I’m conducting a “survey”, not selling Fords, technically. I don’t actually ask you to BUY a Ford, I just word the questions to imply that you ought to. And if called on it, I can state that I’m just trying to assess public awareness of my product. Yeah, right.

I work for a 501©(3). If a telemarketing concern tried to hide under the guise of a 501©(3) charity, let me assure you that the IRS would be very interested in it.

Considering that the Republican Governor of our state has a plan to release sexual psychopaths from a state prison hospital to save money, I can’t imagine much likelihood at all of any state prosecutor spending their budget on pursuing “telemarketers” – they’ll be far too busy with the murderers, rapists, etc. to pursue minor things like telemarketers.

I’m sure the law allows such fines: I just say they aren’t very likely to actually happen.

Did you notice the recent conviction of the man responsible for the infamous “my late husband from Nigeria…” email scams – he is known to have bilked people out of over $6 million – he was sentenced to 18 months probation! What a tremendous deterrent that must be to other SPAMmer scammers. Haven’t you all noticed a great reduction in the SPAM scams you get? Yeah, right!

You obviously haven’t recieved many telemarketing calls. Telemarketers (the employees making the calls) are paid by the sales they make. No sales, no paycheck. Nobody is going to pay somebody an hourly wage to make phone calls all day that can’t be tied to sales. There is no motivation to succeed.

That’s the beauty of the American system of law; if I get a call violating the law, I can sue the telemarketer. There will be no shortage of lawyers eager to take a portion of the $11,000 fine on contingency. No burden on state prosecutors at all.