Bank Fraud Enters a New Era: Bank-to-Bank Wire Transfers Loot Customers

Gunnar Larson g at xny.io
Fri Feb 2 09:11:08 PST 2024


https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/02/bank-fraud-enters-a-new-era-bank-to-bank-wire-transfers-loot-customers/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: February 2, 2024 ~

Broken Piggy BankYesterday, the U.S. Senate Banking Committee held a
hearing under the title: “Examining Scams and Fraud in the Banking System
and Their Impact on Consumers.” Let that title sink in for a moment –
“Scams and Fraud,” “Banking System.” That’s the federally-insured banking
system of the United States of America in which millions of Americans have
entrusted their life savings because they believe it to be the safest place
to put their money.

Indeed, federally-insured banks had been the safest place to put money
since 1933, when the Glass-Steagall Act was signed into law, until the
repeal of the Act by the Wall Street friendly Bill Clinton administration
in 1999.

Thanks to that egregious repeal of critical consumer protection
legislation, the following has happened:

Trading casinos on Wall Street have been allowed to merge with
federally-insured banks with a porous wall of separation;

The trading activities of these so-called “universal banks” crashed the
U.S. financial system in 2008, bringing about the worst economic crisis in
the U.S. since the Great Depression of the 1930s;

Because these trading casinos had created a protection racket of holding
enormous sums of federally-insured deposits, they were deemed
“too-big-to-fail” and received a secret $29 trillion bailout by the Federal
Reserve from December 2007 through at least July of 2010;

Today, an American consumer can walk into a federally-insured bank seeking
to buy a federally-insured certificate of deposit and walk out with an
uninsured product sold to them by a salesperson from the trading side of
the bank;

The criminal division of the Justice Department and federal regulators have
had to bring non-stop charges of fraud against these “universal banks.”
(The nonprofit watchdog, Better Markets, has tallied up the 23-year crime
spree of just six of the Wall Street mega banks. The six banks have paid
almost $207 billion in settlements and fines – and yet the frauds continue.)

Yesterday we learned from the Senate Banking hearing that some of these
same banks are refusing to make their customers whole when a fraudulent
wire transfer is made by a scam artist and loots the customer’s
federally-insured deposits. Consider the following three examples cited in
the written testimony of Carla Sanchez-Adams of the National Consumer Law
Center. These three frauds occurred at Chase Bank, the federally-insured
banking unit of the global trading firm, JPMorgan Chase, which has racked
up five criminal felony counts since 2014.

“Jeff Phipps from Columbus, Ohio lost $8,500 after the fraudster,
impersonating a bank employee, called and convinced the man that his
account had been hacked into and he needed to provide login information to
protect it. They asked him if he had authorized a wire transfer and he
replied, ‘no’. They kept him on the phone for an hour and 47 minutes. They
said, ‘Well, we want to deactivate your account. Can you send us your
username and your passcode?’ And he did thinking it was Chase. The
fraudster took $8,500 with this information and Chase refused to refund the
victim’s money since he had given information to the scammer, ‘authorizing’
it.

“Kelli Hinton, 7 months pregnant at the time, received a text about a
fraudulent wire transfer from her account, then a follow-up call from a
fraudster posing as a Chase fraud agent, spoofing Chase’s real phone
number. The fraudster kept her on the line for an hour and convinced her to
change her username and password, allowing him to drain $15,000 from her
account.

“Just months after experiencing a near fatal collision that left him in a
wheelchair, Todd Evans from West Chester Township [of Ohio] was called by a
fake Chase fraud protection agent. The fraudster told him about a
fraudulent purchase from his account, which Todd confirmed was appearing on
his account and which neither he nor his wife had made. The fraudster then
mentioned a $45,000 fraudulent wire transfer from the account. Todd and his
wife were nervous about addressing the fraud and asked the caller to verify
his identity. He asked the couple to look at the number he was calling from
and verify it matched the number on their debit card. Based on this
confirmation, the couple allowed the fraudster to guide them through a
‘wire reversal process.’ Hours later they were out $63,000.”

Bank fraud has exploded over the past three years. Some typical scams can
be avoided as follows:

If you receive an email stating it is from your bank and asking you to
click on a link or call a specific number, ignore it and call the customer
service number at your bank that is listed on your monthly bank statement
to check for any fraudulent activity.

Never put your bank account number in an email. Never put the name of your
bank or your bank account number on your cell phone. Cell phones and emails
can be hacked.

Make sure your personal and/or business checkbook and boxes of extra checks
are maintained at home (or at your small business location) in a locked,
secure location, inaccessible to after-hours cleaning crews or workmen. Do
the same for bank statements.

Inform yourself about the heightened fraud risks of using Person-to-Person
(Peer-to-Peer) (P2P) payment apps by reading the full testimony of Carla
Sanchez-Adams of the National Consumer Law Center here.
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