Post-Tribune

Banks planning to reimburse some victims of Zelle scams

- By Stacy Cowley

The seven banks that own the payments network Zelle are preparing a major rule change early next year that will require the network’s member banks to compensate customers who fall victim to certain kinds of scams, according to two people familiar with the plans.

The shift would reverse the network’s current policy, which typically sticks customers with the losses on any Zelle transactio­ns that the customers physically initiated themselves — even if they were tricked into sending their cash to a thief.

A growing number of scams using Zelle has angered lawmakers and regulators, who have pressured banks to better protect — or indemnify — their customers.

Many details of the new policy are still being worked out, said the people, who requested anonymity to describe private discussion­s. The approach would, for the first time, require banks to assume liability for certain transactio­ns made on the Zelle network. The plan was reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal.

Zelle has become the nation’s most popular peerto-peer payments platform; last year, customers used it for 1.8 billion cash transfers totaling $490 billion. The network lets customers move money instantly to others across any of Zelle’s 1,700 member banks and credit unions.

That speed is the network’s biggest selling point but also its biggest vulnerabil­ity: Under the network’s current rules, all payments are irrevocabl­e once made. That means that even when a transactio­n turns out to be fraudulent, neither the customer who sent the money nor the customer’s bank has any recourse for retrieving it.

The issue was thrust into the spotlight this year after a New York Times investigat­ion found that scammers, often posing as bank representa­tives, were using a sophistica­ted combinatio­n of technical trickery and psychologi­cal manipulati­on to defraud customers. Victims frequently lost hundreds, or even thousands, of dollars in just minutes.

Under the planned rules, if the banks determined that a customer had been deceived into sending money, the recipient bank — the one holding the thief ’s bank account — would be responsibl­e for returning the money to the victim’s bank. That bank would then refund its defrauded customer.

The change would apply only to frauds in which a customer was misled — by, for example, someone posing as a bank employee — into sending cash that they did not otherwise intend to transfer. It would not apply to other common frauds, like romance scams or sellers advertisin­g false goods for sale, like purebred puppies or concert tickets.

A representa­tive of Early Warning Services, the Scottsdale, Arizona, company that operates the Zelle network, declined to comment on the planned changes. “Part of our work includes collaborat­ing with our financial institutio­n participan­ts to evolve and enhance our network-wide rules,” the company said in a statement.

Early Warning Services is owned by Bank of America, Capital One, JPMorgan Chase, PNC, Truist, U.S. Bank and Wells Fargo. Those banks agreed in recent weeks to make the policy change, the people with knowledge of the plan said.

 ?? GABRIELA BHASKAR/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Executives of several large U.S. banks appeared this year before a Senate panel, where fraud on the payments network Zelle was a hot topic.
GABRIELA BHASKAR/THE NEW YORK TIMES Executives of several large U.S. banks appeared this year before a Senate panel, where fraud on the payments network Zelle was a hot topic.

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