Oop! Bank Of America Ordered To Pay $250M For ‘Double-Dipping’ & ‘Illegally’ Making Fake Accounts

Oop! Bank Of America Ordered To Pay $250M For 'Double-Dipping' & 'Illegally' Making Fake Accounts

It looks like Bank of America (BoA) is on the hook for over $250M, as the corporation has been accused of “double-dipping on fees” and opening fraudulent accounts!

The High-Stakes Accusations Will Seemingly Cost Bank Of America $250M In Total

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) announced the news in a statement released on Tuesday (Jul. 11).

Within the press release, the CFPB “ordered Bank of America to pay more than $100 million to customers.” The basis of this order was rooted in BoA “systematically double-dipping on fees imposed on customers with insufficient funds.”

Additionally, the bank was accused of skimping credit card holders on reward bonuses while “open[ing] accounts without customer knowledge or authorization.” Oop!

As a result, CFBP Director Rohit Chopra slammed BoA’s practices as “illegal” and declared that they “undermine customer trust.”

“Bank of America wrongfully withheld credit card rewards, double-dipped on fees, and opened accounts without consent. These practices are illegal and undermine customer trust. The CFPB will be putting an end to these practices across the banking system.”

On top of having to pay customers over $100M in redress, BoA was also ordered to pay $90M in fines to the CFPB.

Furthermore, due to the “double-dipping,” BoA must pay $60M to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). All in all, this will run BoA upwards of $250M.

The CFPB Details The Impact That BoA’s Actions Had On Loyal Customers

As the CFPB statement continued, the agency didn’t hold back while detailing how Bank of America “harmed hundreds of thousands of consumers over a period of several years.”

Specifically, it accused BoA of orchestrating a “double-dipping scheme to harvest junk fees.” This was done by Bank of America “allowing fees to be repeatedly charged for the same transaction.”

The findings ultimately found, “Bank of America generated substantial additional revenue by illegally charging multiple $35 fees.”

Additionally, BoA was ruthlessly called out for “fail[ing] to honor rewards promises” and “illegally us[ing] or obtain[ing] consumers’ credit reports” to open fake accounts.

“Because of Bank of America’s actions, consumers were charged unjustified fees, suffered negative effects to their credit profiles, and had to spend time correcting errors.”

At this point, Bank of America has not publicly addressed the CFPB’s accusations and fines.

partner logo extra

RELATED STORIES

Become A Roommate!

TSR Logo

The Latest Tea Sent Daily

Read More
Nick Fenley

Latest

Too Little, Too Late? Sony Music Fires Off Blanket Warning Against the AI Mining of Its Catalog

Too little, too late? Sony Music has fired off a blanket warning against the unauthorized training of AI systems on its song catalog and other IP. The overarching Sony Music Group today made that clear-cut announcement on behalf of Sony Music Entertainment (SME) as well as its various subsidiaries and Sony Music Publishing (SMP). Spanning

Pandora Hits Back at MLC Lawsuit Over Streaming Royalties: ‘Legally Incoherent’

Music In a strongly-worded response, Pandora says the royalties...

Newsletter

Don't miss

Too Little, Too Late? Sony Music Fires Off Blanket Warning Against the AI Mining of Its Catalog

Too little, too late? Sony Music has fired off a blanket warning against the unauthorized training of AI systems on its song catalog and other IP. The overarching Sony Music Group today made that clear-cut announcement on behalf of Sony Music Entertainment (SME) as well as its various subsidiaries and Sony Music Publishing (SMP). Spanning

Pandora Hits Back at MLC Lawsuit Over Streaming Royalties: ‘Legally Incoherent’

Music In a strongly-worded response, Pandora says the royalties...

News24 Business | For R350 a month, residents of informal settlements can use a waterless toilet

Qaqamba Matundu Share your Subscriber Article You have 5 articles to share every month. Send this story to a friend! Loading, please wait... Subscribers can listen to this article A waterless toilet provides clean and safe sanitation for informal residents (Ntando Mbhele/ Supplied). A waterless flushing toilet, to help communities that lack water and sanitation

Want to succeed in business? Find a problem to solve | Anthony Tan and Amane Dannouni

Update requirements Looking for ted.com? v95+ v58+ v13+ v96+ v82+ Looks like your browser is out of date For questions contact us at support@ted.com

News24 Business | Garth Theunissen | SENS needs fixing, but the JSE disagrees

Subscribers can listen to this article The JSE building in Sandton. (Fivepointsix/Getty) While the JSE has made efforts to simplify its listing requirements, little evidence of this can be seen in many an indecipherable regulatory announcement. Given the plethora of scandals involving JSE-listed companies in recent years, perhaps it's time to consider some plainer language