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Cases are listed alphabetically by first named party. Documents are in PDF format.
The National Consumer Law Center is located in downtown Boston, easily accessible by commuter rail, Amtrak, bus, subway, bicycle and car. The NCLC office entrance is on Otis St. (Take a left off Summer, the entrance door will be on your right).
Red and Orange Line to Downtown Crossing: Take either line to Downtown Crossing. Exit Chauncy Street. To your left walk 50 feet and take right onto Summer Street. Walk one block.
Green Line to Park Street: Exit the station and cross the street toward Finagle a Bagel. Proceed down Winter Street. Winter Street changes to Summer Street – keep going straight for 2 blocks.
Blue Line to State: Take the Blue Line (Bowdoin) inbound to State Street. Change to the Orange Line (Forest Hills) inbound to Downtown Crossing. Exit Chauncy Street. To your left walk 50 feet and take right onto Summer Street. Walk one block.
Silver Line to Temple Place: Take a right off of the bus. Take your first left onto Washington. Take a right after Macy’s onto Summer Street. NCLC is 2 blocks up Summer Street.
Use the map above to insert your departure point for driving directions.
Take the Orange Line (Forest Hills) inbound to Downtown Crossing. Exit Chauncy Street. To your left walk 50 feet and take right onto Summer Street. Walk one block.
Still need help getting to NCLC? Call (617) 542-8010
Media inquiries: Jan Kruse jkruse [at] nclc.org
Boston Headquarters
7 Winthrop Square, Boston, MA 02110-1245
Phone: 617/542-8010
Fax 617/542-8028
consumerlaw [at] nclc.org
Washington, D.C. Office
1001 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite 510, Washington, DC, 20036
Phone: 202/452-6252
Fax: 202/296-4062
Webmaster for technical difficulties: helpdesk [at] nclc.org
Troubleshooting problems downloading PDFs or other materials from our website:
1) Try updating to a newer version of Adobe Acrobat
2) Try using a different browser. We recommend Mozilla Firefox or Google Chrome
Disclaimer: We are a consumer advocacy group providing research assistance to consumer attorneys, writing manuals on law, and working with lawmakers to adopt laws and regulations which benefit and protect consumers. Unfortunately, our resources do not permit us to handle individual consumer complaints directly.
HOT TOPICS
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In the last several years, banks have been able to ignore state consumer protection laws because those laws have been “preempted” – wiped out – by federal bank regulations and court interpretations of federal laws. Broad preemption of state law is a recent phenomenon. For most of the 150 years since national banks were created, they were expected to comply with state law. Preemption has harmed states’ ability to respond to financial abuses in both the banking and the non-bank world. NCLC works to restore the states’ role as “first responders” to consumer abuses.
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