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Last Updated
Case Status
Pending
Â鶹´«Ã½ Trade Commission, Plaintiff, v. Tate’s Auto Center of Winslow, Inc., an Arizona Corporation; Tates Automotive, Inc., an Arizona Corporation; Tate Ford-Lincoln-Mercury, Inc., doing business as Tate’s Auto Center, a Delaware corporation; Tate’s Auto Center of Gallup, Inc., a New Mexico Corporation; Richard Berry, individually and as an officer of Tate’s Auto Center of Winslow, Inc., Tates Automotive, Inc., Tate Ford-Lincoln-Mercury, Inc., and Tate’s Auto Center of Gallup, Inc., Defendants, and Linda Tate, Relief Defendant.
FTC Matter/File Number
162 3207
X180041
Civil Action Number
3:18-cv-08176-DJH
Â鶹´«Ã½ Type
Â鶹´«Ã½ Injunctions
Â鶹´«Ã½ Court
District of Arizona

Case Summary

A group of auto dealerships in Arizona and New Mexico must cease business operations as part of a court-approved settlement resolving Â鶹´«Ã½ Trade Commission charges that the dealerships deceived consumers and falsified information on vehicle financing applications.

In a case filed in 2018, the FTC alleged that Tate’s Auto Center of Winslow, Inc.; Tate’s Automotive, Inc.; Tate Ford-Lincoln-Mercury, Inc. (doing business as Tate’s Auto Center);  Tate’s Auto Center of Gallup, Inc.; and Richard Berry, an officer of the dealerships, falsified consumers’ income and down payment information on vehicle financing applications and misrepresented important financial terms in vehicle advertisements. The case continues against Berry and relief defendant Linda Tate.  

The Â鶹´«Ã½ Trade Commission is sending payments totaling more than $415,000 to 3,508 consumers who financed a car or truck at a Tate’s Auto dealership after January 1, 2013, and later had the vehicle repossessed. Tate’s Auto, which operated dealerships in Arizona and New Mexico, allegedly deceived consumers about payment information and falsified information on consumers’ financing applications.