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Stolen T-Mobile Phone Nightmare

Posted Tue June 17, 2008 12:00 pm, by S S. written to T-Mobile USA, Inc.

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Last summer when my son went to middle school, we decided to add a line to our family plan and give him a phone for emergencies. On May 19th we could not find his phone and we suspected the worse. Someone got into his bag in school and stole it. After I called the phone I got music, which immediately aroused our suspicions.

We called T-Mobile right away and they suggested to suspend the number...

Just got my phone bill and and trying to overcome the state of shock. In 3 days some kid raked nearly $400 in charges. Out of which almost $85 in game downloads, almost 80 in music downloads and the rest is text messaging.

Now, I gave my son my old phone which I did not realize even had such functionality. Besides, I called earlier in the year and requested to make sure that there were no text messaging and other add-ons. I never use texting and find it annoying when my phone gets spam once in a while. I called T-Mobile right away, but they say that they are not responsible for charges prior cancellation of the service. I feel I should not be liable for charges incurred by services I never even selected, in fact explicitly requested to block. In fact I checked where the text messages were sent and received from and a largest part of it to and from other T-Mobile phones.Shouldn't they have an alert system in place that will detect clearly unusual behavior, like a sudden extreme usage of features that are not even included in a plan? I am talking about 561 messages sent, 508 messages received, 32 Mega Tone and 13 game downloads and all in 4 days?!

Hello, T-Mobile, Can You Hear Me Now? Even credit cards are not making you liable when you card is stolen, and this company is trying to milk it all the way.

So, as long as I pay my bills on time they thank me for being such a loyal customer, but as soon as I fall victim to their inability to protect me from their own weak system they can not do anything??? I've been with T-Mobile for over 6 years and never had anything like this. Unfortunately I renewed my contract till next March, but as soon as it's up, I'm leaving this provider. I used to have AT&T and I'm never going back. I guess T-Mobile just made my black list too.

Just got off the phone with T-Mobile customer rep. As it turns out you can only suspend a phone line for up to 30-day, something T-Mobile forgot to mention when I called them initially after reporting stolen phone.

After 30-days suspension, if the line is not activated it will be canceled and since I still have 3 more months on that line's contact, T-Mobile will charge me some $200 bucks for terminating the contract earlier. Now, this is clearly not the only option. In fact I wa presented with 3 alternatives:

1. Buy a new SIM card for $22
2. Transfer that line to someone else for only $35 (Any takes out there?)
3. Or buy a new phone.

As you can see T-Mobile could not care less about the customer because all the options you are given are designed to squeeze more money out of you.

I was trying to point out to the rep. that T-Mobile offers NO consumer protection what so ever, therefore making itself wide open to class action suits. Granted, they nickel-and-penny their customers enough to afford the best legal defense the money can buy, but if there's a lawyer (or firm) out there willing to give ti a shot, feel free to give me a howler. After all big tobacco companies also thought they were invincible at some time.

...and yes, whoever is reading this, watch your phone more then your wallet out there, especially if you have T-Mobile.

Cancel all the charges that do not belong to us. Do something for 5+ year long customer! I am already a victim of theft, stop the robbery.

Regards.


Reply



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by amarjit s. Posted Sat February 2, 2013 @ 5:10 AM

go to www.trackimei.com and report theft there there are so many
chances to get it back and if thief will try to sale this can catch


Wbr

Reply
by S S. Posted Fri June 27, 2008 @ 10:45 AM

I've had enough of calling Customer Service. Last time I called couple
of days ago and asked to speak with the Supervisor I was told she was
on another call and will return my call in 30 minutes. Still
waiting...

I wrote a letter to Consumer Relations, faxed and mailed it to them.
Apparently the Fax number on BBB site has been changed or
disconnected. Here's a copy of the letter with new fax number:
June 27, 2008


Consumer Relations
T-Mobile USA Inc.
PO Box 37380
Albuquerque, NM 87176-7380
Fax: 813-353-6545


Dear Consumer Relations,

Last year my son went to middle school and we gave him a phone for
emergencies. Our Family plan does not include any add-on features --
just basic phone service. In fact, in response to my concerns, I was
offered by T-Mobile to add PIN to my account in order to prevent
anyone from adding any additional services or features to any of our
lines.

Earlier this year after I received a few spam text messages I called
T-Mobile again and requested to make sure that there were no text
messaging or other add-ons on this account and to block any possible
incoming solicitations. I was told that T-Mobile could stop any
messages that came from other phones but could not stop the ones send
from the web. They credited my amount to absorb any incoming messages
and said they'd monitor my account. Now I understand that it is
probably a part of T-Mobile customer service training to tell the
customer whatever they want to hear and hope the problem will go away
on its own.

On May 19 we discovered that someone got into my son's bag in school
and stole his phone. Customer representative suggested suspending the
number which we did immediately. On June 17 we received T-Mobile bill.
In just few days someone raked in nearly $400 in charges, ALL in
premium services that were never a part of this phone plan, i.e. $85
in game downloads, almost $80 in music tone downloads and the rest is
phone-to-phone text messaging. I called customer service again and was
told that T-Mobile is not responsible for charges prior to requested
suspension of the service.

I do not expect anyone to replace the hardware if we loose of break
it. I am responsible for the phone calls a crook may make if he/she
gets a hold of my phone. My problem with T-Mobile is that I repeatedly
asked to make sure no add-on can be added to this plan, because all we
need is a basic phone service. Can't the phone company understand this
simple concept?

T-Mobile knowingly misled me as a customer and provided with a false
sense of security by reassuring me that adding a PIN on the account
will guarantee that I will be the only person capable of making any
changes to any line on this account, such as adding or removing
features. As it turns out, they put a lock on the door but left all
windows open.

After I insisted that I've been a customer for over 5 years and
there's a clear record of my usage pattern, I was offered to reduce my
bill by 25%. After I called second time, another person looked at the
notes in my account and after speaking with her supervisor, admitted
their mistake of not informing me about outstanding charges on my
account at the moment when I called to report stolen phone. She
offered to add "Unlimited Texting" to my account and remove 1069 text
messages at the price of $0.15 each. She actually offered to sell me a
service that I have specifically asked to protect my account from?!

We feel we should not be liable for charges incurred by services we
NEVER SELECTED, and in fact explicitly requested to block. The third
time I called I was told that that my son's line can only be suspended
for 30 days and that it was automatically terminated after suspension
elapsed. Because that line is still under the contract I will be
liable for early contract termination. I did not break the contract
you did. This is outrageous! When I asked to speak with the supervisor
and was told I would receive a call back within 30 minutes. Nobody
ever called. That was two days ago. During my last call I found out
that the contract on my son's line was extended along with my line
when I accepted promotional offer in March. Before I did that I
specifically called to make sure that the offer affected ONLY my line
and was told it was so. I understand that you record these calls.
Please research it and you will see how the actions of your company do
not follow its promises.

T-Mobile's dishonest practices are shocking. Every solution I was ever
offered so far would require more money out of my pocket into
T-Mobile's. I am already a victim of theft - stop your racketeering on
top of it. At this point T-Mobile is not any better then a pawn shop
making money off selling stolen property!

I will be terminating every line as soon as each contract expires. I
have filed official complaint with the BBB (CASE#: 2216XXXX) and
posted multiple blogs about this incident. I will continue to do so as
long as T-Mobile continues its deceptive practices.

Reply
by S S. Posted Thu June 26, 2008 @ 1:16 AM

I may repeat myself in this response.

This post is NOT about:
- whether to give kids phones or not
- whether T-Mobile is responsible for charges before you report your
lost or stolen phone
- not even about all the great pre-paid ideas

This post is about:
- misleading promises and deceptive practices of T-Mobile USA, from
sales to customer service.

I already mentioned that all I ever wanted from my cell was just a
phone service without Internet, texting, games or music downloads.
JUST PHONE. Since when a phone company does not get this?!

YES, I am responsible for my hardware (phone). I paid for it and it's
mine. If I loose or break it, I won't blame anyone.

Now, if I lost it and someone found it and called a cousin 1069 times,
I AM responsible, because as I said, I am responsible for my PHONE and
the CALLS originating from that phone.

In order to ensure that my phone plan remains just that, a phone,
while technology moves forward and new gimmicks are added to a list of
"must-haves" I expressed my concerns to T-Mobile and was blessed with
the perfect solution that would address all my worries -- a PIN
(there's a record on file). Because, as I was told, without this magic
PIN nobody would be able to alter any selection that I have made, on
any line under this plan. Great! Thank you T-Mobile, I can sleep now.

After what had happen, I see that PIN did nothing I was told it would.
It did not stop the crook from downloading anything from games to
music, which I understand are called Premium Tones and are an add-on
premium feature. It did not stop texting, the very service I called
and complained about just weeks earlier. I am still trying to figure
out if this PIN does more then just add and extra question when I try
to reach Customer Service... My guess, the crook won't be able to
talk to the customer service, because I hold the key!

T-Mobile lost nothing! Most of the text messages went to other
T-Mobile phones.

The paradox is: T-MOBILE WILL MAKE MORE MONEY IF MORE PHONES ARE
STOLEN. Why would they bother about fixing this? Responsible customers
are too predictable and boring. Nothing in comparison with the gold
rush they get as a result of the stolen phone's "joy ride".

Do you hear me now?

Reply

by S S. Posted Thu June 26, 2008 @ 12:11 AM

It appears that many on this board are very quick to point finger at a
teen vs. a corporation that rips you off.

I am not the one to advocate for giving a phone to a teen, however, my
son is going to a magnet school across town. If he misses a bus or
needs to stay after school this is the only way sometime he would be
able to get in touch with his parents. He had this phone since mid
September and all together used perhaps 10-15 minutes. Granted,
knowing now what I do, it is safer to send a kid with a pre-paid
service phone, however when I walked in T-Mobile store and asked what
they would recommend, adding an additional line for $10/mo sounded
like the best deal. The phone was for emergency situations only and
nobody in our family uses texting.

I reside in Texas. When I looked at the contract for the number in
question, it says that any dispute REQUIRES MANDATORY ARBITRATION and
that it the contract REQUIRES MANDATORY WAIVER OF THE RIGHT TO JURY
TRIAL AND WAIVER OF ANY ABILITY TO PARTICIPATE IN A CLASS ACTION.
T-Mobile certainly has a lot to fear and their sales reps usually
spend about 20 seconds on each contract, mainly pointing out where to
initial and sign.

I have an appointment with an attorney on Friday, who seem to be
confident that these clause won't stop us from getting justice.

In the current situation T-Mobile benefits more when someone steals
your phone and rakes up a huge bill, then a loyal customer just paying
his/her dues.

Today I called T-Mobile again and their rep. was telling me that they
offered me a 25% credit and I refused. Wow, how generous. That means
that T-Mobile will keep a 75% of the money stolen from me by a crook.
Now, let's multiply this by how many customers that get ripped of in
similar situations?

Customer rep also said that they did not monitor my phone usage. I
disagree again. If I have 1000 minutes in my plan and I use 1001, will
they miss this? Noup. It is a lot more convenient for them to miss
1069 text messages going back and forth in 3 days from and to a phone
that does not even have that add-on service. Please try to convince me
otherwise.

He also pitched an idea of purchasing a new SIM card. When I asked how
much it would cost, he said "$20 bucks". "So", I said, "T-Mobile is
not willing to absorb $20 to make a life of a 5 year customer easier?"
He said he had no such powers (how convenient). I asked is his
supervisor could help. After a minute of being placed on hold he came
back and said that the supervisor was on a phone with another
customer, and will call me back within 30 minutes. That conversation
was 6 hours ago. I am not surprised that BBB rating for T-Mobile USA
is UNSATISFACTORY
(http://alaskaoregonwesternwashington.bbb.org/WWWRoot/Report.aspx?site
=114&bbb=1296&firm=27026359)

Reply
by Dark H. Posted Sat June 21, 2008 @ 9:04 AM

Your son is the one you should be angry at for not keeping track of
the phone, not T-Mobile.

But that horse has already left the barn. You can buy a new SIM on
ebay for around $5, and any GSM phone that supports 850/1900 MHz will
work with T-Mobile service. Buy a used unlocked phone and a new SIM on
ebay. If the kid complains, tell him he brought it on himself and to
earn the money for a new phone.

With T-Mobile, every non-prepaid account gets basic data access and
per use SMS. These features don't cost anything unless you use them.
As for you asking to remove text messaging and data, if you called up
and said something like, "I'm not paying anything extra for text
messaging or data, am I?" then they would have told you truthfully
that you were not.

Reply

re: Text messages by S S. Thu June 26, 2008 @ 12:15 AM

by CrazyRedHead Posted Wed June 18, 2008 @ 12:53 PM

Apparently, you have not read your terms and agreements that you
signed. You are responsible for all charges on your account until it
is reported. You cannot start a class action suit against any
cellular company, you can only Arbitrate. This is all outlined in
your contract.

Also, a middle schooler should not have a cell phone that has a
contract. Give them a prepaid phone that has a set number of minutes.
You could put $25.00 on it and if it gets stolen then you are only
out $25.00. With a contracted phone the sky is the limit.


Reply


Wow...great idea by dulynoted Thu June 19, 2008 @ 7:43 AM


That's what I do. by Blackrack Thu June 19, 2008 @ 11:12 AM

May I respectfully disagree? by Birman Thu June 19, 2008 @ 7:04 PM


Thank you. by CrazyRedHead Fri June 20, 2008 @ 12:49 PM


I have to respectfully disagree with him, CRH! by RedheadwGlasses Fri June 20, 2008 @ 1:21 PM


Awwww shucks!! by CrazyRedHead Fri June 20, 2008 @ 5:10 PM


by dulynoted Posted Wed June 18, 2008 @ 12:36 PM

First of all you son was not very responsible to leave his bookbag
unattended with a cell phone in it.
And second why did it take you so long to realize he did not have it?
I bet he never missed it or he was afraid to tell you about it
missing.
So those first three days this thief put all those charges on that
phone and because your son did not tell you immediately that his phone
was missing its your responsiblity. I mean you can tell them any date
that it was missing...the day you call to report it missing is the day
they will stop service to that number.

I have T-Mobile family plan. My son has the additional line and has
texting on his line ONLY! He pays an additional monthly fee for
unlimited texting so I have no problem with that. But if he does not
give me the money that month for it I will cancel it and then remove
the texting. And only I can make any upgrades or do anything on this
account because I am the primary holder of the account.

And how was their system weak by any means. Your son was irresponsible
so that makes it T-Mobiles problem evidently.

T-Mobile is one of the better companies I have ever been with.
As a matter of fact they just comped me 1/2 month service because I
have texting blocked from my phone and somehow a few companies got
through with their ads. I remained calm, asked what we could do about
this and they were very nice in suggesting the comp.

Next time you get a cell phone provider ask about the protection
policy...they are generally all the same.
But that does not mean your son will learn how to be more responsible.
Things happen...thats a given, but leaving the bookbag unattended is
not T-Mobile's fault. Nor is the time that it went undetected as
missing.

Reply


I won't comment on the rest of your response by Casmly Fri June 20, 2008 @ 8:44 AM


I guess I am one of those parents who... by dulynoted Mon June 23, 2008 @ 6:50 PM

a woman? by S S. Thu June 26, 2008 @ 1:27 AM

by calm Posted Wed June 18, 2008 @ 9:54 AM

As the others say, you should be developing the argument that you
asked for certain features to be disabled and you should not now be
expected to pay for the use of those features. Do you have a copy of
a letter you sent T-Mobile about that? Do you have the day and time
of a call you made to them? Do you have the name of the rep you
talked to? I'd suggest that you rewrite this letter and use the whole
thing for this argument, because it's the only shot you've got.

As far as the rest of it is concerned: these are terms you agreed to
in the first place. Kids today may think it is impossible to survive
without a cell phone, but you and I are old enough to know better.

Reply


. by chilin stone cold Sat June 21, 2008 @ 3:26 PM

PIN is on record by S S. Thu June 26, 2008 @ 1:39 AM

by RowdyRetailer Posted Wed June 18, 2008 @ 9:30 AM

A middle school kid should not have a cell phone anyway.



Good Day


Reply


Says you by LadyMac Wed June 18, 2008 @ 12:03 PM


I agree.. by Harleycat (aka Usual Suspect #2) Wed June 18, 2008 @ 1:50 PM


I blocked games and text messaging by LadyMac Wed June 18, 2008 @ 3:27 PM


We finally got her.. by Harleycat (aka Usual Suspect #2) Wed June 18, 2008 @ 3:51 PM

Have you really? How? by S S. Thu June 26, 2008 @ 1:31 AM


My 7 yr old.. by SiotehCat Wed June 18, 2008 @ 6:44 PM


It is irrelevant. by All About the Branding Wed June 18, 2008 @ 8:36 PM


I was thinking the same thing about pay phones, Jeffrey by RedheadwGlasses Wed June 18, 2008 @ 11:36 PM


What bothers me... by Casmly Wed June 18, 2008 @ 7:09 PM


I know the old argument by RedheadwGlasses Thu June 19, 2008 @ 11:13 AM


Exactly right.. by Harleycat (aka Usual Suspect #2) Thu June 19, 2008 @ 12:00 PM


Hey Now! by MA Cunningham Thu June 19, 2008 @ 9:10 AM


by Harleycat (aka Usual Suspect #2) Posted Wed June 18, 2008 @ 8:18 AM

This is not just T-Mobile, this is all carriers. Here is a quote from
the Verizon Wireless contract:

"Until you notify us, you're still responsible for all fees and
charges"

Reply
by S S. Posted Thu June 26, 2008 @ 12:38 AM

Not sure how one company's bad practices make it OK for your company
to take advantage of you?..

I specifically requested a basis phone service. Certainly I am
responsible if someone uses my minutes. What I argue here are the
services I opted out of by adding (with T-Mobile's recommendation) a
PIN that, as I was told, would prevent anyone from adding any features
to my basic phone service.

Reply

by All About the Branding Posted Wed June 18, 2008 @ 7:11 AM

All wireless companies have this same policy: you're responsible for
all charges until you call to cancel. It's not the same as a credit
card.

However, if you specifically asked for a lock on the phone/account for
features such as text and downloads, then they need to abide by that.
My guess is that they have no record of you ever asking, right?

"As you can see T-Mobile could not care less about the customer
because all the options you are given are designed to squeeze more
money out of you."

No, they want you to fulfill your contract. Unless the phone was
insured, why would you think that YOU wouldn't be responsible for
paying for a new one? Is there anyone that will give you a free
replacement when something is stolen?

"I was trying to point out to the rep. that T-Mobile offers NO
consumer protection what so ever..."

They do. It's called buying insurance.

"if there's a lawyer (or firm) out there willing to give ti a shot,
feel free to give me a howler. After all big tobacco companies also
thought they were invincible at some time."

There are plenty of things about wireless companies that may end up
coming back to bite them. Not giving you a free replacement or
releasing you from your contract isn't one of them.

If, on the other hand, you can show that you asked to have these
services disabled on the phone and they didn't do it... then you have
a case. However, it's going to cost you more than what you owe to
fight.

One last thing: if you want a phone for you kid for emergencies, go
with a phone and service designed for this. There are several that
charge a very low monthly fee, charge $100 or so for the phone (if
even), and offer none of these frill services. Some, in fact, allow
the phone ONLY to call 911 and a small number of numbers (e.g., mom's
cell, dad's cell, and home). This'll end up being cheaper and avoids
getting a big bill when the phone is stolen.

Reply

T-Mobile's PIN is a scheeme by S S. Thu June 26, 2008 @ 12:31 AM
by Calvin w. Posted Wed June 18, 2008 @ 12:35 AM

Hello SS,
I am very sorry to hear the state of afairs that have happened for
you. Sadly this is something that happens very frequently anymore. I
have read from alot of people in this case. To a degree you should be
happy its only 400 one was taken by verizon for over 1400 in the
matter of only two days. Sadly for cell phone service, unlike a credit
card there really is no way of tell who is using the phone unlike
signatures put down for credit card use. As even stated on all the
cell contracts for every carrier you are liable for any charges on the
account untill the phone is reported lost/stolen. And even with the
change in usage, I agree that should have a red flag of some nature
somewhere but people change usage habits all the time with these
things. I text about 2000 out alone each month and am even typing this
up on my phone now.
So sorry to say as much as it stinks, t-mobile is right, you are
liable for those charges as stated in your contract and can be found
online under terms and agreements. But what I would try and do is
contact thier customer relations department. There cust care reps have
their hands tied by policy and can't make exceptions to them at all.
No matter how long you been with them they can't do anything to help
at all. You can call cust service for the customer relations fax
number (sadly can't call them directly) dont talk to them for anything
else just tell them you want that fax number. That passes to the
executive team who can help. They will contact you in 72 hours to help
out possibly. I have heard before sometimes they might atleast be able
to go halfzies with you on it atleast.
But on a different thing that I think on cell phone users should do as
a rule to protect themselves. And that is simply to setup the serurity
on your phones. Make a password that you would need to use to gain
access to the device so that without it can't even see phone book and
when powered on will ask for it.
Also setup a pin number for the sim card too. Only will be asked for
when phone is first turned on. Or restarting the phone. That way, even
if your sim is moved to a different phone will be asked for that
before they can call or do anything. With those two simple steps (sure
minor inconvine to enter all the time) you will protect yourself and
not even make this type of scenario even possible. P.S. Not T-Mobile
or etc cell carriers responsibilty to tell you these things but a
little research will go along way.
Hopefully this was a little helpfull
Calvin~

Reply

I can try that by S S. Thu June 26, 2008 @ 1:51 AM




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