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 COURIER LIFE, N 12     OVEMBER 15-21, 2019 
 The city shutdown a Flatlands car dealership for operating without a license.   Google Maps 
 DRIVEN OUT  
 OF BUSINESS 
 City shutsdown Flatlands car dealer  
 accused of cheating customers 
 BY JESSICA PARKS 
 The city shut down a Flatlands auto  
 dealer accused of predatory sales tactics  
 for operating without a license on  
 Wednesday, according to the Department  
 of Consumer and Worker Protection. 
   
 “Champion Auto Sales cannot continue  
 to fl out the city’s laws and prey  
 on New Yorkers,” said department  
 Commissioner Lorelei Salas. “We believe  
 they lied to consumers about everything  
 from the prices of their cars  
 to the condition of their cars. They are  
 not fi t to operate in New York City.” 
 Among several other infractions,  
 owners of Champion Auto Sales allegedly  
 swindled consumers by advertising  
 a lower sale price for their inventory  
 and then charged a higher price  
 during the signing process, investigators  
 said.  
 In one instance, a customer purchased  
 a 2013 Nissan Rogue — which  
 was advertised online as $9,980 — but  
 they were charged $13,000 after being  
 rushed through the signing process,  
 the agency said.  
 Additionally,  the  dealership  allegedly  
 failed to conduct mandated safety  
 inspections on their vehicles and  
 failed to provide customers with receipts  
 of deposit — in addition to multiple  
 other illicit actions, according to  
 investigators.  
 But when Champion’s management  
 later applied to renew their business license, 
  which expired on July 31, they  
 allegedly lied about their past behaviour  
 — leading city bureaucrats to  
 deny the dealer’s renewal application.    
 Still the dealer — on Utica Avenue  
 between Avenues K and L — continued  
 to sling used cars, leading regulators  
 to fi nally pull the plug on Nov. 6.  
 As  part  of  their  investigation,  the  
 Department of Consumer and Worker  
 Protections reached a settlement with  
 Champion’s fi nancial lending company  
 — which fi nanced the dealer’s suspect  
 transactions.  As  part  of  that  settlement, 
  the department secured over  
 $105,000 in damages for 11 customers,  
 and required the money lender to work  
 to remove any negative information on  
 the consumers’ credit reports that resulted  
 from the dealership’s  allegedly  
 deceptive transactions.  
 Champion’s closure comes amid a  
 continuous nine-year rise in auto loan  
 debt accrued by New York State residents, 
  according to the state’s Federal  
 Reserve Bank.  
 And customers’ problems with auto  
 dealers are widespread, according  
 to the department, which claimed to  
 have issued nearly $3.3 million in fi nes  
 since 2014 that resulted from over 8,500  
 complaints regarding the industry.  
 Brooklyn’s  Champion  Auto  Sales  
 LLC could not be reached for comment.