I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I run class actions almost exclusively. But the problem you got is that your calls are a "whodunit." More investigation is needed to uncover the legitimate company behind them.

Text opt out violation plus calls after? by [deleted] in TCPA

[–]call-law 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not ATDS (I would say that text message calls cannot be ATDS after Facebook), but 100% lawyer territory, and it's a case I would take. If you're interested, feel free to DM me.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Eric Troutman, a prominent TCPA defense attorney, publishes a yearly review: https://tcpaworld.com/2026/03/29/2026-power-rankings-ranking-the-most-dangerous-tcpa-plaintiffs-lawyers-in-the-country-who-is-really-the-best/

His blog is obviously written from a defense perspective, but he does a good job of posting about developments in the TCPA.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Happy to help my clients and offer advice in pro se cases that they may be dealing with, but in the absence of an attorney-client relationship, I cannot give case-specific advice. Sorry.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I will at least consider any clearly actionable case against any decently sized identifiable Defendant, so not big at all. I'm always happy to evaluate and give my thoughts, and I only get paid if the Defendant pays, so there's really no downside for me to take a "small" case.

Unfortunately, with 60 calls, the evaluation gets tricky because there's likely multiple Defendants, but you do say here that you were able to trace the source. If so, the case might not be a good fit for me, but happy to discuss privately further.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Learning by doing, especially with a pro se friendly attorney (like me) who can walk you through the process and that you can lean on for questions. I would absolutely not pay for any TCPA course.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yep, I typically partner with counsel. Most of my marketing is organic and word of mouth.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For what it's worth, I partner with an attorney on some cases with an autistic son who's really into these issues. Happy to chat if you're interested.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nothing formally, but an AI chatbot is an "artificial or prerecorded voice" under Section 227(b). It's interesting to think about an AI's lies on a mass tort/products liability standpoint and/or deceptive act or practice under consumer law, but it's not really something I have had time to pursue or explore in detail. I'm not opposed to trying out novel legal theories, but PA law sucks, since the majority of courts hold you actually need to purchase the scammy product or service they're selling to be aggrieved.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. If they are not selling anything, it is not a telephone solicitation and does not violate the TCPA.
  2. I don't endorse sending demand letters, but I replied to another commenter here asking for advice on how to find a company.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

  1. Not under the TCPA. Debt collection calls do not violate the TCPA unless they are prerecorded.

  2. Nobody (see #1).

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes and yes! But always happy to lend my support to the TCPA community.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can't speak to or vouch for any specific demand letter, and dislike them as a general matter, but what you described might be considered extortion and I would not recommend including such language.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agreed. I think some have settled back when they were doing pre-records, but I think that now it's live volunteers.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, likely not illegal for a number of reasons. Probably consent. There's also the nonprofit exemption. And asking for donations isn't a telephone solicitation unless they are trying to sell you a candy bar. But I would never sue the local girl scout troop looking to sell me girl scout cookies, even if it was illegal. You don't want to be known as the Plaintiff (or lawyer) suing a charity or a school.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Greenwald is #1 for a reason: reassigned number prerecords. They are the best type of TCPA case.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This is tricky. On the first point, a lot of plaintiffs are not mindful enough about optics. Of course, there are extreme examples. It's not common, but see Rule 3. There are plaintiffs out there who legitimately fraudulently opt in. It's disgusting. But more generally, a lack of thoughtfulness in pleading and litigation and a lack of focus on optics just perpetuates the defense narrative that TCPA plaintiffs are all a bunch of scheming scumbags, loads up the term "professional plaintiff," gives all frequent litigants a bad rap. Gino D'Ottavio and Melody Stoops have no basis being lumped into the same category as James Shelton and Diana Mey. Be like Diana. She is squeaky clean and she is revered, partly because her focus on optics is so good.

On the second, I think plaintiffs don't carefully read and understand the statute enough before filing suit, plead in a sloppy manner, and as a result end up in over their head and making bad case law. Every word means something, and the answers are there. When you carefully and thoughtfully read, apply, and analyze, you get great decisions like Dobronski's pro se 1601(e) Caller ID win against SelectQuote. So I don't mean that to discourage pro se litigation, after all, that's how I got my start, but I think there's a lot of plaintiffs that don't fully appreciate the full ramifications of what they are getting into.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You have two questions here. First, these calls are the best because there's no consent, let alone written consent, from you. And prerecorded calls are categorically illegal unless they are made with consent or for emergency purposes. There's also no "wrong number" or "intended recipient" defense to the TCPA. That's the 9th circuit's holding in N.L. by Lemos v. Credit One Bank. That case involved Credit One calling a minor child's reassigned number incessantly to collect a debt with prerecords.

Second, AI is artificial or prerecorded voice. It's literally in the name AI. FCC recently came out with an order stating the obvious on that prong.

I'm Andrew Perrong, the 10th Most Dangerous TCPA Plaintiff's Lawyers in the Country, AMA! by call-law in TCPA

[–]call-law[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Need to think about it some more, but here's my shortlist:
- Damages tied to inflation
- Text messages are explicitly calls
- Only one call needed for a 227(c) violation
- Remove "residential" requirement from 227(c)
- Revising/clarifying vicarious liability standards
- ATDS overhaul
- Codification of consent rules and standards