Auto Finance News
  • Home
  • News
  • AI Tool
  • Big Wheels Data
  • Events
    • Auto Finance Summit
    • Auto Finance Summit East
    • Auto Finance Capital Summit (NEW)
    • PowerSports Finance Summit
    • Current Webinars
    • Webinar Library
    • Equipment Finance Connect
  • Podcast
  • Features
  • Powersports
  • Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
Auto Finance News
  • Home
  • News
  • AI Tool
  • Big Wheels Data
  • Events
    • Auto Finance Summit
    • Auto Finance Summit East
    • Auto Finance Capital Summit (NEW)
    • PowerSports Finance Summit
    • Current Webinars
    • Webinar Library
    • Equipment Finance Connect
  • Podcast
  • Features
  • Powersports
  • Subscribe
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
Auto Finance News
No Result
View All Result

Home » American Honda Finance settles with DOJ for alleged SCRA violations

American Honda Finance settles with DOJ for alleged SCRA violations

The captive will pay $1.6 million in relief

Joey PizzolatobyJoey Pizzolato
October 1, 2021
in Compliance
Reading Time: 1 min read
0
American Honda Finance settles with DOJ for alleged SCRA violations

© Can Stock Photo / zimmytws

American Honda Finance Corp. (AHFC) settled with the U.S. Department of Justice on Wednesday in response to allegations that the lender violated the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA). The captive will pay about $1.6 million in total compensation to 714 servicemembers in response to allegations that it violated the SCRA by failing to refund up-front […]

AFN V1 (1)

Already subscribed? Log in

Tags: American Honda Finance Corp.DOJlawsuitPremium
Previous Post

Sheffield Financial launches Suzuki Marine financing program

Next Post

Global Lending Services to start digitizing loan servicing in 2022

Related Posts

dallas skyline with highway in front
Compliance

New Texas ID rule could affect renewals on 500K vehicles, threaten dealer business 

December 11, 2025
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau headquarters in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Wednesday, Dec. 23, 2020. The Trump administration has done its best to cut the CFPB giving large banks a reprieve from aggressive enforcement and new rules. With Joe Biden ascending to the White House, Wall Street is worried it will be quickly resurrected.
Compliance

CFPB streamlines supervision focus for 2026 examinations

November 24, 2025
CFPB sues TransUnion
Compliance

Trump nominates a new CFPB head, but Vought isn’t going anywhere

November 20, 2025
CFPB to cut financial firm supervision, curb fintech focus
Compliance

CFPB funding in jeopardy following DOJ decision 

November 12, 2025
Next Post

Global Lending Services to start digitizing loan servicing in 2022

Stay Informed with Our Newsletters

PowerSports Finance - Monthly coverage of the powersports lending market

The Roadmap Podcast

ABOUT US

HELP CENTER

ADVERTISE

PRIVACY TERMS

ADA COMPLIANCE

CODE OF JOURNALISM ETHICS

[wt_cli_manage_consent]

EXECUTIVES OF THE YEAR

AUTO FINANCE EXCELLENCE AWARDS

MAGAZINE ARCHIVE

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

facebook linkedin twitter podcast podcast

© 2025 Royal Media Group

Ok

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • All News
    • Capital & Funding
    • EVs
    • Technology
    • Management
    • Powersports Finance News
    • Risk Management
    • Sales & Marketing
  • Events
    • Auto Finance Summit East
    • Equipment Finance Connect
    • Auto Finance Summit
    • PowerSports Finance Summit
  • Features
    • Latest Issue
    • Features
    • New Tracks
    • Car Culture
    • Staffing Shuffles
    • Under The Hood
    • Spotlight
    • Issue Archive
  • Podcast
  • Big Wheels Data
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • Log In / Account

© 2025 Royal Media Group