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Attorney General Neronha files new claims in lawsuit against residential solar panel company for deceptive sales practices

Office’s ongoing investigation into Smart Green Solar and its CEO uncovers additional dishonest practices as AG continues to warn consumers against solar industry scams


PROVIDENCE, R.I. – Attorney General Peter F. Neronha today announced the Office has filed a motion to amend and supplement the Office’s complaint against Smart Green Solar, LLC (Smart Green) and its CEO Jasjit Gotra for violating the Rhode Island Deceptive Trade Practice Act (DTPA) by engaging in a pattern of unfair and deceptive trade practices targeting Rhode Island consumers of residential solar panels. The proposed amended complaint builds on the allegations the Office made in June 2023, identifies additional, previously unknown patterns of alleged illegal conduct, and adds two more company executives – Christopher Schiavone and George Nixon – as individually-named defendants.

As alleged in the initial complaint, Smart Green engaged in a pattern of deceptive and unfair trade practices as they went door-to-door, making unsolicited sales pitches for residential solar panel systems in Rhode Island. The Attorney General sought a court order requiring Smart Green to stop misleading customers, provide paper contracts to customers immediately, and pay restitution to injured customers.

Attorney General Neronha continues to warn consumers about misleading practices in the solar industry. Consumers interested in learning more about safely purchasing residential solar panels for their home should visit the Attorney General’s dedicated website.

“In response to our suit against Smart Green Solar in June, the Office received an influx of new information from employees and consumers; information which supported and built upon our allegations. Simply put, we continue to believe that the defendants deceived and took financial advantage of Rhode Islanders who wanted to support our state’s clean energy transition,” said Attorney General Peter Neronha. “With this amended complaint, we continue our work to both hold the defendants accountable and make sure they do right by Rhode Island consumers going forward. Businesses that deceive consumers for profit should heed this lawsuit as a warning; our Consumer Protection Unit continues to grow in size and talent, and we will weed out companies that don’t play by the rules.”

Since the Office began investigating Smart Green, the Office has received more than 55 complaints regarding the company and has conducted interviews with a number of former employees. New information obtained from these complaints and interviews has provided further support for the Office’s original allegations but also forms the basis for the new allegations in the amended complaint.

New allegations

 

Building on previous allegations

In the updated complaint, the Office of the Attorney General reasserts previously made allegations, supplemented with information obtained from new complainants and former employees.

The proposed amended complaint also seeks additional injunctive relief from the Court, including requiring the company to provide consumers with itemized invoices, permanent prohibitions on charging customers in connection with bonus payments, and an order banning Defendants Gotra and Schiavone from the consumer sales industry in Rhode Island. Mr. Gotra is already banned from engaging in nearly all outbound telemarketing pursuant to a court order in a separate case.