Skip to content

Exception Tracking Spreadsheet (TicklerTrax™)
Downloaded by more than 1,000 bankers. Free Excel spreadsheet to help you track missing and expiring documents for credit and loans, deposits, trusts, and more. Visualize your exception data in interactive charts and graphs. Provided by bank technology vendor, AccuSystems. Download TicklerTrax for free.

Click Now!


CFPB sues 3 bank owners of Zelle for allowing fraud on network

The CFPB has announced it has brought suit against the operator of Zelle and three of the country's largest banks for failing to protect consumers from widespread fraud on America’s most widely available peer-to-peer payment network.

In its Complaint filed with the U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona, the CFPB alleges that Early Warning Services, LLC, which operates Zelle, along with three of its owner banks—Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, and Wells Fargo—rushed the network to market to compete against growing payment apps such as Venmo and CashApp, without implementing effective consumer safeguards. Customers of the three banks named in today’s lawsuit have lost more than $870 million over the network’s seven-year existence due to these failures. The CFPB’s lawsuit describes how hundreds of thousands of consumers filed fraud complaints and were largely denied assistance, with some being told to contact the fraudsters directly to recover their money. Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, and Wells Fargo also allegedly failed to properly investigate complaints or provide consumers with legally required reimbursement for fraud and errors. The CFPB is seeking to stop the alleged unlawful practices, secure redress and penalties, and obtain other relief.

Early Warning Services, LLC is a financial technology and consumer reporting company based in Scottsdale, Arizona. Early Warning Services designed and operates the Zelle network. It is co-owned by seven of the largest banks in the United States: Bank of America, Capital One, JPMorgan Chase, PNC Bank, Truist, U.S. Bank, and Wells Fargo.

Zelle allows near-instant electronic money transfers through linked email addresses or U.S.-based mobile phone numbers, known as “tokens.” Users can create multiple tokens across different banks and quickly reassign them between institutions, a feature that the CFPB alleges has left consumers vulnerable to fraud schemes. The CFPB alleges that Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, and Early Warning Services violated federal law through critical failures including leaving the door open to scammers, allowing repeat offenders to hop between banks, ignoring red flags that could prevent fraud, and abandoning consumers after fraud occurred.

Filed under: 

Training View All

Penalties View All

Search Top Stories