CarMax has come under renewed scrutiny in California after a study quantified the number of vehicles with open recalls at two of its stores. The California Public Interest Research Group and the Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety Foundation conducted the research and found 10 percent of the models at a showroom in Oxnard, CA, and nine percent at the Sacramento South location had pending safety campaigns, according to Automotive News.
Last year, consumer groups began lobbying the Federal Trade Commission to do something about this alleged false advertising, and US Senator Charles Schumer was also on board. Eventually, 11 customer protection agencies filed similar petitions. The FTC said that it received over 1,500 complaints from people against CarMax and another 802 from the Better Business Bureau.
CarMax contends that dealers are loathe to make recall repairs on used vehicles that they aren't selling. "We have found that dealerships are often more likely to provide timely recall repair to customers rather than to a competitor, like CarMax," the company said in a statement, according to Automotive News. The business allegedly has a policy to provide the list of open safety campaigns from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to buyers, and CarMax's homepage has a link to NHTSA's VIN search tool.
This article originally appeared on MSN.