This April 30, 2018, file photo shows a T-Mobile store in Herald Square, Monday April 30, 2018, in New York. Consumer advocacy groups are worried that T-Mobile's bid for Sprint could lead to higher prices on cellphone plans. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, File)

New York City is suing T-Mobile for what it calls "abusive sales tactics" at Metro by T-Mobile stores, the wireless carrier's prepaid phone brand.

The city's lawsuit says dozens of stores sold used phones to customers as new, charged fake taxes and unexpected fees and offered financing for phones that resulted in higher-than-expected prices. The city also says a 30-day return policy is deceptive and comes with restrictions.

The city filed its lawsuit in a New York state court on Wednesday. New York's is separately leading a coalition of states in suing to block T-Mobile's $26.5 billion deal for rival carrier Sprint.

T-Mobile says it's investigating, as the allegations are "at odds with the integrity of our team."