Zelle fraud class action lawsuits overview:
- Who: Bank customers recently filed class action lawsuits against Capital One, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Navy Federal Credit Union and Zelle.
- Why: Customers claim the financial institutions do not do enough to protect them from fraudulent activity on Zelle’s digital peer-to-peer payment platform.
- Where: The class action lawsuits have been filed in U.S. federal courts.
Consumers filed a number of class action lawsuits recently against financial institutions accused of not protecting account holders who were financially injured after being defrauded while using the digital peer-to-peer payment platform Zelle.
An influx of scams targeting Zelle users prompted a pair of U.S. senators to write a letter in April to the owner of Zelle, warning it about the amount of fraud perpetrated on the platform.
Sens. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Robert Menendez, D-N.J., accused Zelle owner Early Warning Services LLC of not doing enough to prevent fraud from occurring on the platform.
The Democratic senators also placed blame on Zelle’s owner banks, including Capital One, JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo and Truist.
“We seek to understand the extent to which Zelle allows fraud to flourish and the steps your company is taking to increase consumer protection and help users recover lost funds,” the senators wrote.
Consumers, meanwhile, have since begun…
