FedEx employee says company overcharges businesses, government offices

In unsealed email, sales exec says he tried to bring the problem to the company’s attention for years

Alan Elam thinks it’s wrong to rip people off. So when he discovered that his employer, FedEx Corp., was overcharging some of its customers, he tried to do the right thing.

In emails to his superiors, Elam, a FedEx sales executive, said he believed FedEx was “systemically overcharging” customers by billing businesses and government offices at higher residential rates. Elam’s emails were unsealed yesterday in a class action claiming that FedEx violated federal civil racketeering laws by overcharging commercial and government customers as much as $3 per package for millions of packages. The plaintiffs in the suit seek three times the amount of the alleged overcharges. They also seek an injunction barring FedEx from charging commercial customers at residential rates.

It’s clear from the emails that Elam was frustrated by the lack of interest in his concerns. “I have brought this to the attention of many people over the past five or six years, including more than one managing director, and no action has been taken to address it,” he wrote in an August 2011 internal email. In another email, he wrote that he believed FedEx was “choosing not to fix this issue because it is worth so much money to FedEx.” He also told his superiors that the problem was “a huge class action lawsuit waiting to happen.”

One of Elam’s superiors, FedEx Senior Vice President for Sales Daniel Mullally, responded to one of Elam’s emails by saying that he hadn’t been aware of the overcharging problem but understood the “gravity of the situation.” He wrote that he would get the Solutions, Customer Service and Billing departments involved. Chris Suhoza, vice president of solutions, wrote to Elam and Mullally that Elam’s concerns “have not gone unheard. We are working this customer experience issue through.”

“Defendants’ own internal documents prove that defendants have known for years that they are unlawfully charging residential surcharges when they do not apply, but have permitted the unlawful surcharges to continue because they generate substantial illicit profits,” the plaintiffs said in their amended complaint filed yesterday.

Read Bloomberg Businessweek for more information.

For more stories about recent class actions, read:

Hearst lawyers email former unpaid interns seeking stories of “valued opportunities”

Greenberg Traurig facing $200 million gender discrimination class action

Judge OKs Facebook’s revised privacy settlement

Papa John’s sued for spamming

Comments

InsideScoop Daily eNewsletter

InsideScoop delivers the latest-breaking news affecting in-house counsel. Get the latest business trends, current corporate litigation, labor developments, technology initiatives and more — FREE. Sign up now!

You have been subscribed! You will receive a confirmation email soon.

See the entire list of InsideCounsel eNewsletters.

Resource Library


13 Things to do Now to Reduce Risk and Avoid...

We have developed best practices for lowering your e-Discovery costs, shortening the length of your...

7 Simple Strategies for Improving Legal Fee Budgeting Certainty

Understanding the legal fee budgeting paradigm and following seven simple strategies will help you control...

Complimentary White Paper: Best Practices for Meeting Critical eDiscovery Challenges

Packed with practical advice, this white paper discusses best practices for meeting eDiscovery challenges across...

Complimentary White Paper "Key Considerations for Collection Methodologies and Resources"

This white paper addresses the need for companies to reevaluate their current collection policies in...

Moving Matters In-House: How Technology Enables Legal In-Sourcing

Strategically shifting more matters to in-house counsel has proven to be an effective strategy to...

5 Ways to Promote Responsible Content Sharing

Find out five ways that organizations can promote responsible sharing of content among employees by...

Reducing the Costs of eDiscovery from Collection to Court!

Predictive coding is only one of many ways organizations can make eDiscovery faster, cheaper and...

Discovery Shifts to the Cloud

Adoption of Cloud computing continues to gain momentum. How can IT and Legal Teams avoid...

Lower Your Total Cost of Ownership

With the deployment of Proofpoint Enterprise Archive, organizations have realized significant cost savings in automating...

Health and Safety Risks of Counterfeits in the Global Supply...

This whitepaper underscores the prevalence of counterfeits within global supply chains across a number of...

View All »

Advertisement. Closing in 15 seconds.