Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The photos are posted on the last page. I don't see anything in those photos that make him the idiot. The teller was at fault according to the police.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes a Black pregnant Bank Teller. She fu&ked up. Apparently, she was processing the transaction and some sort of alert popped up on her screen because of the amount. So instead of calling her supervisor over to deal with the alert, she told her supervisor he was robbing the bank. The cops investigated and said she was at fault.Anonymous wrote:Isn't the woman who alerted someone to this, a black bank teller? I think that's what TMZ said. If so, this is not a karen situation.
What an idiot.
He's the idiot. Look at the photos.
He should have asked to speak to the bank manager. This wasn't about race.
NP. The teller was at fault for identifying it as an attempted robbery. But let's not ignore the fact that the bank's systems automatically flagged the transaction for special attention because it was over $10,000. This is very common, folks, even if you yourselves have withdrawn more than 10 grand and weren't aware of any alert. In banking, taxes, transport of cash internationally (like carrying more than 10k with you overseas, and yes, it happens)--that amount gets flagged for attention. Mostly you aren't even aware it's happening. Of course the fact it was something as specific as $12,000 and the wording of the slip should have been a clue that this wasn't a robbery but I wondered: The teller sounds possibly inexperienced, or possibly she had been present at a real bank robbery another time and was unwittingly biased to see such a request as a robbery etc. Not excuses but possible explanations.
I myself find it odd that a high-profile client wanting that amount of cash "discreetly" didn't simply ask to see a banker. No super secret room needs to be involved like some PPs posted; just ask to see a banker, you'll go to a desk or into a regular office, and can say what you want. They'll go out and deal the tellers for you and bring you the cash. Surprised he didn't just do that BUT also, it's not like it was $120,000, it was $12,000, and he probably has withdrawn that much with no issues before. It's just a pity that the teller reacted with the idea of robbery instead of asking a manager to come look at the note there and then.
It would never occur to me that I would have to speak to anyone other than the teller to withdraw large amounts of cash. If it was a concern, they, ie the bank staff, should direct the clients to another room or to the manager.
+1 The offices aren’t where the money is. I wouldn’t think to ask someone in an office for a withdrawal at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Things a black man can’t do, from this discussion
- withdraw money from his own checking account
- wear a hoodie in January
- wear a winter hat in winter
- wear a mask to comply with mask mandate
It's sickening that this has to be repeated again and again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The photos are posted on the last page. I don't see anything in those photos that make him the idiot. The teller was at fault according to the police.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes a Black pregnant Bank Teller. She fu&ked up. Apparently, she was processing the transaction and some sort of alert popped up on her screen because of the amount. So instead of calling her supervisor over to deal with the alert, she told her supervisor he was robbing the bank. The cops investigated and said she was at fault.Anonymous wrote:Isn't the woman who alerted someone to this, a black bank teller? I think that's what TMZ said. If so, this is not a karen situation.
What an idiot.
He's the idiot. Look at the photos.
He should have asked to speak to the bank manager. This wasn't about race.
NP. The teller was at fault for identifying it as an attempted robbery. But let's not ignore the fact that the bank's systems automatically flagged the transaction for special attention because it was over $10,000. This is very common, folks, even if you yourselves have withdrawn more than 10 grand and weren't aware of any alert. In banking, taxes, transport of cash internationally (like carrying more than 10k with you overseas, and yes, it happens)--that amount gets flagged for attention. Mostly you aren't even aware it's happening. Of course the fact it was something as specific as $12,000 and the wording of the slip should have been a clue that this wasn't a robbery but I wondered: The teller sounds possibly inexperienced, or possibly she had been present at a real bank robbery another time and was unwittingly biased to see such a request as a robbery etc. Not excuses but possible explanations.
I myself find it odd that a high-profile client wanting that amount of cash "discreetly" didn't simply ask to see a banker. No super secret room needs to be involved like some PPs posted; just ask to see a banker, you'll go to a desk or into a regular office, and can say what you want. They'll go out and deal the tellers for you and bring you the cash. Surprised he didn't just do that BUT also, it's not like it was $120,000, it was $12,000, and he probably has withdrawn that much with no issues before. It's just a pity that the teller reacted with the idea of robbery instead of asking a manager to come look at the note there and then.
It would never occur to me that I would have to speak to anyone other than the teller to withdraw large amounts of cash. If it was a concern, they, ie the bank staff, should direct the clients to another room or to the manager.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Things a black man can’t do, from this discussion
- withdraw money from his own checking account
- wear a hoodie in January
- wear a winter hat in winter
- wear a mask to comply with mask mandate
Come on don't be a drama queen. Just don't give hand-wrriten note to a teller when you are dressed like a bank robber. Is that so hard? He just happened to be a black, the teller didn't call the cop just because he is a black.
Yep. Act like a bank robber and get treated like a bank robber. That's the name of that story.
By putting in his bank card and entering his PIN number and giving her his is when she asks for it?? That’s how a bank robber acts?? The worst part was the police trying to tell him at the end that he should try talking first next time (he did talk to her.) So condescending. I would have lost it. There’s nothing he could have done here.
Anonymous wrote:Things a black man can’t do, from this discussion
- withdraw money from his own checking account
- wear a hoodie in January
- wear a winter hat in winter
- wear a mask to comply with mask mandate
+1 I had no idea. The only thing I've ever used those offices for is when I've lost my debit card, opened an account, or to applied for a loan. Had no idea they handled withdrawals too.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The photos are posted on the last page. I don't see anything in those photos that make him the idiot. The teller was at fault according to the police.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes a Black pregnant Bank Teller. She fu&ked up. Apparently, she was processing the transaction and some sort of alert popped up on her screen because of the amount. So instead of calling her supervisor over to deal with the alert, she told her supervisor he was robbing the bank. The cops investigated and said she was at fault.Anonymous wrote:Isn't the woman who alerted someone to this, a black bank teller? I think that's what TMZ said. If so, this is not a karen situation.
What an idiot.
He's the idiot. Look at the photos.
He should have asked to speak to the bank manager. This wasn't about race.
NP. The teller was at fault for identifying it as an attempted robbery. But let's not ignore the fact that the bank's systems automatically flagged the transaction for special attention because it was over $10,000. This is very common, folks, even if you yourselves have withdrawn more than 10 grand and weren't aware of any alert. In banking, taxes, transport of cash internationally (like carrying more than 10k with you overseas, and yes, it happens)--that amount gets flagged for attention. Mostly you aren't even aware it's happening. Of course the fact it was something as specific as $12,000 and the wording of the slip should have been a clue that this wasn't a robbery but I wondered: The teller sounds possibly inexperienced, or possibly she had been present at a real bank robbery another time and was unwittingly biased to see such a request as a robbery etc. Not excuses but possible explanations.
I myself find it odd that a high-profile client wanting that amount of cash "discreetly" didn't simply ask to see a banker. No super secret room needs to be involved like some PPs posted; just ask to see a banker, you'll go to a desk or into a regular office, and can say what you want. They'll go out and deal the tellers for you and bring you the cash. Surprised he didn't just do that BUT also, it's not like it was $120,000, it was $12,000, and he probably has withdrawn that much with no issues before. It's just a pity that the teller reacted with the idea of robbery instead of asking a manager to come look at the note there and then.
It would never occur to me that I would have to speak to anyone other than the teller to withdraw large amounts of cash. If it was a concern, they, ie the bank staff, should direct the clients to another room or to the manager.
+1 The offices aren’t where the money is. I wouldn’t think to ask someone in an office for a withdrawal at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The photos are posted on the last page. I don't see anything in those photos that make him the idiot. The teller was at fault according to the police.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes a Black pregnant Bank Teller. She fu&ked up. Apparently, she was processing the transaction and some sort of alert popped up on her screen because of the amount. So instead of calling her supervisor over to deal with the alert, she told her supervisor he was robbing the bank. The cops investigated and said she was at fault.Anonymous wrote:Isn't the woman who alerted someone to this, a black bank teller? I think that's what TMZ said. If so, this is not a karen situation.
What an idiot.
He's the idiot. Look at the photos.
He should have asked to speak to the bank manager. This wasn't about race.
NP. The teller was at fault for identifying it as an attempted robbery. But let's not ignore the fact that the bank's systems automatically flagged the transaction for special attention because it was over $10,000. This is very common, folks, even if you yourselves have withdrawn more than 10 grand and weren't aware of any alert. In banking, taxes, transport of cash internationally (like carrying more than 10k with you overseas, and yes, it happens)--that amount gets flagged for attention. Mostly you aren't even aware it's happening. Of course the fact it was something as specific as $12,000 and the wording of the slip should have been a clue that this wasn't a robbery but I wondered: The teller sounds possibly inexperienced, or possibly she had been present at a real bank robbery another time and was unwittingly biased to see such a request as a robbery etc. Not excuses but possible explanations.
I myself find it odd that a high-profile client wanting that amount of cash "discreetly" didn't simply ask to see a banker. No super secret room needs to be involved like some PPs posted; just ask to see a banker, you'll go to a desk or into a regular office, and can say what you want. They'll go out and deal the tellers for you and bring you the cash. Surprised he didn't just do that BUT also, it's not like it was $120,000, it was $12,000, and he probably has withdrawn that much with no issues before. It's just a pity that the teller reacted with the idea of robbery instead of asking a manager to come look at the note there and then.
It would never occur to me that I would have to speak to anyone other than the teller to withdraw large amounts of cash. If it was a concern, they, ie the bank staff, should direct the clients to another room or to the manager.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Things a black man can’t do, from this discussion
- withdraw money from his own checking account
- wear a hoodie in January
- wear a winter hat in winter
- wear a mask to comply with mask mandate
Come on don't be a drama queen. Just don't give hand-wrriten note to a teller when you are dressed like a bank robber. Is that so hard? He just happened to be a black, the teller didn't call the cop just because he is a black.
Yep. Act like a bank robber and get treated like a bank robber. That's the name of that story.
By putting in his bank card and entering his PIN number and giving her his is when she asks for it?? That’s how a bank robber acts?? The worst part was the police trying to tell him at the end that he should try talking first next time (he did talk to her.) So condescending. I would have lost it. There’s nothing he could have done here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Things a black man can’t do, from this discussion
- withdraw money from his own checking account
- wear a hoodie in January
- wear a winter hat in winter
- wear a mask to comply with mask mandate
Come on don't be a drama queen. Just don't give hand-wrriten note to a teller when you are dressed like a bank robber. Is that so hard? He just happened to be a black, the teller didn't call the cop just because he is a black.
Yep. Act like a bank robber and get treated like a bank robber. That's the name of that story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like the teller didn’t believe he was who he said he was (sun glasses, hat, mask). Presumably someone like a manager could ask him to remove his mask and sunglasses to confirm his ID? That seems reasonable for a >10,000 withdrawal. Calling the cops is strange for suspected identity theft.
Agree - walking into a bank dressed like a bank robber probably wasn’t the best idea. LA - winter hat, hoodie, sunglasses.
How should one dress in winter? If he wasn't supposed to give the teller a handwritten note why didn't the bank inform him of this the other times he conducted his transactions this way?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Things a black man can’t do, from this discussion
- withdraw money from his own checking account
- wear a hoodie in January
- wear a winter hat in winter
- wear a mask to comply with mask mandate
Come on don't be a drama queen. Just don't give hand-wrriten note to a teller when you are dressed like a bank robber. Is that so hard? He just happened to be a black, the teller didn't call the cop just because he is a black.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, they are racists posting her. He didn't do anything wrong.
The teller, bank manager and cops were also black.
Just because people are black doesn't mean they have biases against people in their race..
There's more violence with black on black. Still this wasn't about race.
This was about his actions which raised the alarm.