State Attorney General Lori Swanson is suing a Texas company for fraud, accusing the payment card processor of using bait-and-switch tactics to rip off Minnesota small businesses.
Apex Merchant Services of Plano, Texas, routinely altered the contracts it signed with Minnesota companies without their authorization, hitting them with fees they didn't agree to and often reinstating a cancellation penalty that had been removed, the complaint said.
"It was so blatant," Swanson said in an interview. "Fortunately, some of the small businesses kept the contract."
Apex Merchant Services CEO Andy Frankel and other company executives did not return messages seeking comment Wednesday.
Swanson is charging Apex with violating the state's Prevention of Consumer Fraud Act and Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act, according to the complaint filed Wednesday in Hennepin County District Court. The suit seeks to stop to Apex's activities, impose civil penalties and gain restitution for an undisclosed number of businesses.
Apex has contracts to process debit and credit cards for more than 600 small companies in Minnesota. Swanson called the number of businesses affected significant.
One Apex salesman has been particularly active in the state, she said, but she wouldn't name him because the investigation continues.
Merchants have been locked in battle for years with the major card networks and banks over the hefty fees they must pay whenever customers pay with plastic. Companies like Apex aggressively pursue retailers eager to lower the processing bill. Swanson said Minnesota businesses are reporting being contacted multiple times a week by payment processors.