Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the heads up. I recently started paying by Zelle. Not sure if that's standard with all checking accounts. I don't believe your routing and account number are shared, so hopefully this is a safer way to pay for things.
Zelle is worse if it’s tied to your bank account. There is no fraud protection like there is with banks. If you use Zelle or Venmo, tie them to your credit card.
https://www.wsbtv.com/news/local/customers-scammed-zelle-banking-app-have-virtually-no-fraud-protection-consumer-advocates-say/KKSK5LIOWVD47PF2UPTR4IMXSA/
Anonymous wrote:You dont' even need to have checks. If they have your routing number and account number (many online bill payment services ask this), then they can make a fake check with that info.
I had it happen once when they stole a check from outgoing mail (from a USPS mailbox). Very annoying. It's happening all around MoCo, here's a case from yesterday:
http://www.rockvillenights.com/2022/04/mail-stolen-out-of-home-mailbox-in.html
I have an email alert on all my accounts for any transaction over $100. Sure it's a bunch of emails, but I've caught a credit card fraud pretty quickly that way.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the heads up. I recently started paying by Zelle. Not sure if that's standard with all checking accounts. I don't believe your routing and account number are shared, so hopefully this is a safer way to pay for things.
Anonymous wrote:So, a mistake was made and they gave her her money back
Anonymous wrote:OP - what you didn't say (or I didn't catch) is --- if the bank put back the 12K ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow thanks for this PSA!
In Europe people routinely give out their bank account numbers for people to transfer money in without problems, I don't know why we have such an insecure system here.
Europe uses the SEPA system and bank account numbers can only be used to send money to, not withdraw money from. So who cares if someone has your number -- they can only give you money, not take it away.
The US uses ACH, which allows both directions of transactions, since it was designed for an earlier era. There is a new version of this on the way, but it'll be years, partly because we have 10,000+ banks that would need to ugprade their systems, and it's a massoive undertaking.
Remember when your creidt cards didn't have a "chip' in them? That was a 2-3 year effort to get all those upgraded, and I still now and then come across a point of sale system where I need to swipe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First of all, why do you have $12k in a bank account?
Put that in another type of account to make you more in interest!
Secondly, no more checks, you grandmas and grandpas!
If they won't accept an online payment, find another company/service. It's 2022 not 2002.
I find DCUM posters who don’t bother to read the posts and then comment supremely annoying.
As I said, before, I am a freelancer and often get large deposits. I don’t get a “regualr” paycheck.
Also, I have bills. I pay my mortgage, my mother’s AL payment, and that alone adds up to 8.5k a month.
I don’t need to have a reason why i had 12k in my bank. It’s a bank. It’s supposed to be safe.
I did nothing irresponsible so stop trying to blame me. Yeesh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FYI, the exact same thing happened to me about a month ago, except thr amount was $17,000, and I only had that much money in my account because I had a big tax bill coming due that was set up to be paid by ACH. I write almost no checks, only to my cleaning people and the occasional handyman, but mobile check deposit has increased the problem. I suspect my cleaning lady deposited a check and then tossed it in her garbage or recycling without shredding it, and it had all of the information somebody needed to make a fake check. It was deposited, not at Bank of America, which is my bank, but Chase. BofA has been good about helping me fix it, but I still have all sorts of things like the $35 charge from WSSC for a payment that didn’t clear. They won’t reimburse me for that. And it wasn’t their fault - it was Chase!
I really don’t think people are going through the trash looking for checks to forge. I think it’s much more likely someone bought your account number from an online list stolen in a data breech.
Anonymous wrote:FYI, the exact same thing happened to me about a month ago, except thr amount was $17,000, and I only had that much money in my account because I had a big tax bill coming due that was set up to be paid by ACH. I write almost no checks, only to my cleaning people and the occasional handyman, but mobile check deposit has increased the problem. I suspect my cleaning lady deposited a check and then tossed it in her garbage or recycling without shredding it, and it had all of the information somebody needed to make a fake check. It was deposited, not at Bank of America, which is my bank, but Chase. BofA has been good about helping me fix it, but I still have all sorts of things like the $35 charge from WSSC for a payment that didn’t clear. They won’t reimburse me for that. And it wasn’t their fault - it was Chase!