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Bank of America unemployment insurance fraud class action lawsuit

UPDATE:

  • Bank of America has been ordered by a federal judge to provide preliminary relief to Class Members whose accounts were frozen after fraudulent charges were made.

Jennifer Yick relies on unemployment insurance to survive the COVID-19 economic downturn. Unfortunately, Yick, a former real estate agent and property manager from San Francisco, had her last $400 stolen from her account because of unauthorized transactions.  

Yick claims Bank of America, the financial institution in charge of administering the unemployment benefits where she lives, doesn’t do enough to properly protect fund recipients like her from potential fraud. 

Yick filed a class action suit Friday against Bank of America in San Francisco federal court accusing the bank of being unwilling or unable to stop criminals from breaching its systems and stealing millions of dollars of Employment Development Department (EDD) benefits. Yick aims to represent a class of unemployment benefit recipients who have also found themselves in similar situations as victims of fraud.

Yick’s story may sound familiar to many Americans. Every day there is a new story of an EDD recipient who has gone to use their Bank of America EDD debit card, only to discover that the money in their account was suddenly gone, according to the complaint. 

“It’s kind of like a nightmare. . . . Every day I’m wondering what’s more important. Do I get on the phone with the bank and try again so I have a place to sleep tomorrow, or do I just accept that I’m going to be on the street and focus on my job search? Because you can’t do both,” said one EDD cardholder and fraud victim, according to the complaint.

Unemployment insurance has been stolen from Bank of America recipients

Bank of America has a “zero liability” policy stated in its own EDD cardholder agreement, to deal with potential fraud. However, Bank of America has failed to offer any assistance to the numerous defrauded EDD cardholders, instead opting to deal with the situation in a range of harmful ways including not answering the customer service phone lines for EDD debit cardholders, opening claims and closing them before a full review could be completed, crediting funds and debiting without any notice to the cardholder, not abiding by the legal requirements to provide provisional credit to EDD cardholders, and freezing EDD cardholder’s accounts unaffected by fraud. 

The suit alleges that Bank of America violated California’s consumer privacy and unfair competition laws and the federal Electronic Funds Transfer Act, and also accuses the bank of negligent performance of contract, negligent failure to warn, breach of contract, breach of implied contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and breach of contract concerning third-party beneficiaries.

Customer service representatives at Bank of America have voiced their frustrations at being unable to offer real support to affected customers. 

“We’re actually no longer allowed to tell them [defrauded EDD cardholders] a timeframe, because we have no clue . . . . Every day, I talk to 30 people with the same story. I just pray for them after my shift, honestly.” 

A Bank of America spokesperson told Law360, “As California’s unemployment program faces billions of dollars in fraud, Bank of America is working every day with the state to prevent criminals from getting money and ensuring legitimate recipients receive their benefits.”

On May 19, U.S. District Court Judge Vincent Chhabria hit Bank of America with an injunction in the class action lawsuit. The order requires Bank of America to provide some urgently needed relief to Class Members who were frozen out of their accounts after the bank failed to protect them from fraud.

In the order, the judge cited a “strong likelihood of success” concerning the plaintiffs’ claims and extended certification of the Class to all benefits cardholders who contacted Bank of America to report fraud.

“The harm being suffered by class members is irreparable,” stated the order, which also noted that Class Members are in dire need of assistance after their unemployment benefits were stolen and then locked in frozen Bank of America accounts.

“Continued denial of these benefits will seriously hinder the ability of many class members to feed their families and keep a roof over their heads,” wrote Judge Chhabria in his order.

Details of the relief that will be provided to Class Members under the order will be hashed out in the following week, according to court documents.

Over the years Bank of America has faced a range of class action lawsuits. In Oct. 2020, a class action lawsuit was filed against the bank for ATM bank fees that consumers weren’t informed about. 

Have you been a victim of fraud, or had unemployment benefits stolen from your account? Share your experiences in the comment section below.

The Unemployment Insurance Recipients Class Action Lawsuit is Yick v. Bank of America, N.A., case number 3:21-cv-00376, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

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202 thoughts onBank of America Sued for Failing to Protect Unemployment Insurance Recipients

  1. Tyra Hollingsworth says:

    Please add me.

  2. Chakira Hollingsworth says:

    Please add me.

  3. Ronald Hollingsworth says:

    Please add me.

  4. Phebie Hollingsworth says:

    Please add me.

  5. Joanne Freeman says:

    Add me someone used m u account n they charged me

  6. KANESSA WALLS says:

    Add me please.

  7. Jeannine Trott says:

    B of A hijacked my unemployment and continues to keep my account closed. They closed my account a whole month before sending me a letter informing me that my account was closed. I called them multiple times (at lest weekly) to discuss getting my account open to access my funds, which I greatly needed. I also called EDD multiple times and was informed that my account is in good standing and should not be closed. I am grateful to the EDD representative who suggested that I change to paper checks because my unemployment check would have been deposited into the B of A account and I would have been left completely broke and lose my car along with other financial damages. Not to mention the stress and anxiety that this situation has caused has impacted me emotionally and physically. B of A needs to be held accountable for their actions in hurting people who need their unemployment benefits.

  8. Aaron says:

    I had roughly 14,000 stolen from my account me my wife and 3 kids became homeless. I filed a report with the FTC, Local police department, and Bank of America. Through investigation and footage from atm it was proved it was fraud. I live in Oregon the transactions happened in California. But after I faxed the report numbers and still shots from camera’s of clear evidence, Bank of America froze my account holding the little amount of funds I had left. I filed the reports in October and I still have no access to my account or anything. I explained everything I was told by edd as the lady faced them demanding my funds dated from October be put in account for availability. The claims department lady said I was rude and hung up to cause me to call and start my wait time all over again 2 hours later I talked to a representative who said the department I need is now closed all they need to do is look at their emails it’s crazy the stress and hardship this situation is a specially during a pandemic . The representative stated when I call everyday the have to make a new claim report which the only open and research the newest one and it takes 5-7 days and since I call all the time it’s never processed properly and it’s my fault that my calls keep restarting the process

  9. garrett says:

    Over 3000 taken from me

  10. Meghan says:

    Had over $500 stolen from me on December 7th from an ATM on the other side of the country. Bank of America is STILL refusing to give me any sort of answers or help me at all

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