Wells Fargo refuses to refund $28K tax payment after thieves steal Bay Area homeowners’ check. Here’s the bank’s reason

651889af2badd0a77bdaae114d1bf586

Jody and Paul Glaser of Los Altos did what millions of Americans still do every year: They wrote a property tax check and dropped it in a blue USPS mailbox outside the post office.

Three months later, Santa Clara County received a delinquency notice. Paul said he knew he had paid – he had seen it clear on the check. So they pulled up a picture of the check online and discovered that the name that was supposed to be that of the county tax collector was someone else’s.

“Apparently the check had been tampered with and cashed by someone else,” Paul told ABC7’s 7 On Your Side (1).

Criminals stole the checks from the mail, wiped the payee line with chemicals, wrote them with new names and then deposited them into a Bank of America ATM machine in Minnesota. Amount: Nearly $28,000. The Glazers still owe the county money, and with fines, their total loss is about $60,000.

They went to Wells Fargo hoping for a direct refund. Within 30 days, they received an automatic rejection. What’s the reason? They did not report the fraud within 30 days of receiving the bank statement.

San Jose homeowner Kathy Pham had a nearly identical experience — a $2,400 property tax check was stolen from the mail, altered and cashed by someone else, and then declined by the same bank with the same explanation.

This is what puts both families in trouble. Under the Uniform Commercial Code, each state’s framework that governs commercial transactions, customers must review their bank statements and report unauthorized transactions immediately, usually within 30 to 60 days. Wells Fargo’s 42-page deposit account agreement sets that period at 30 days.

Fraud cannot be detected by claims alone. “It just shows the date and the amount,” Jody Glaser said. “It doesn’t show who you wrote the check to. It doesn’t say who cashed the check. It just says ‘check.'”

See also  UNI surges 25% on BlackRock investment

The only way to capture it is to download the actual check image – something most people wouldn’t think of doing for every cleared transaction. Wells Fargo’s position is that customers should do this. The bank updated the account agreement last November to clarify this expectation, although the provision was not in place when the families filed their claims.

Spread the love

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *