Office of the Maine Attorney General

AG Mills Announces Meeting on Foreclosures Process in Maine

(AUGUSTA) Maine Attorney General Janet T. Mills will be convening her Foreclosure Working Group on Thursday, November 14 at 3 PM in Augusta. The panel consists of members representing homeowners, mediators, counselors, realtors and financial institutions. The Working Group will meet to continue discussing residential foreclosures and what steps can be taken to improve the process.

The meeting will be held on Thursday, November 14 at 3:00 PM in Room 208 of the Cross State Office Building in Augusta. The meeting will be streamed live on the Legislature?s audio system.

US Department of Justice is seeking victims of MoneyGram schemes

(AUGUSTA, Maine) Maine Attorney General Janet T. Mills is encouraging Maine consumers who used the money services business MoneyGram to contact the Department of Justice, Victim Asset Recovery Program to see if they are entitled to a refund for unfair business practices conducted by the company.MoneyGram International, Inc. (MoneyGram), a global money services business headquartered in Dallas, Texas, has agreed to forfeit $100 million to the United States and enter into a deferred prosecution agreement with the Justice Department.

Attorney General Mills files Civil Rights Complaint Against Windham Man

Attorney General Janet Mills announced that her office has filed a complaint against 30-year old Justin Boucher of Windham for violating the Maine Civil Rights Act. The complaint filed in Cumberland County Superior Court alleges that Boucher threatened an African American woman with violence because of racial bias. The complaint seeks an injunction against Boucher preventing him from having contact with the victim and forbidding him from violating the Maine Civil Rights Act.

Attorney General Mills announces agreement with U.S. Department of Energy to strengthen key Energy Efficiency Standards

(AUGUSTA, Maine) Attorney General Janet Mills applauded the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) for agreeing to update overdue energy efficiency standards for four common commercial appliances. The federal agency has finally met the demands of an 11-member coalition of states and cities to update these efficiency standards.

The decision will help reduce energy consumption, saving American consumers millions of dollars each month and reducing pollution that contributes to climate change, water and air pollution.

Attorney General Janet T. Mills warns homeowners to be wary when dealing with door-to-door sellers

Augusta, Maine) Attorney General Janet T. Mills reminds Maine homeowners to be wary of door-to-door sellers using high pressure tactics to sell home repair services, paving jobs and other goods. Maine has three statutes specifically intended to regulate door-to-door sales and to protect consumers from high pressure tactics. In many cases, door-to-sales require a state license and a three day waiting period.

Attorney General Janet T. Mills joins first National Military Consumer Protection Day

(AUGUSTA, Maine)? Maine Attorney General Janet T. Mills is joining the Department of Defense, Pine Tree Legal Assistance, the Federal Trade Commission and other state and federal organizations to celebrate the first annual Military Consumer Protection Day on Wednesday, July 17, 2013. Military Consumer Protection Day is a joint initiative to empower active duty and retired service members, military families, veterans and civilians in the military community.

Arundel woman sentenced to 4 years for multiple charges which included financial misdeeds at Kennebunk children?s clinic

ALFRED ? A former executive director of a clinic that provided mental health and developmental services to children has been sentenced in connection to a number of charges stemming from her mismanagement of that clinic. Mari Jo Allen, 42, of Arundel, Maine, was sentenced on Friday, July 12, 2013 to four years all but 20 months suspended and has been ordered to pay $76,561 in restitution.

Maine AG responds to Supreme Court decision on Indian Child Welfare Act

AUGUSTA - Maine Attorney General Janet T. Mills expressed dismay at the decision handed down by the Supreme Court this week in the case of Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl. The decision places limits on the applicability of the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) in a case in which the Court found that the biological father who was a tribal member had relinquished his rights to his daughter because he did not have 'legal custody' of the child.

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