Senators Want Regulators To Take Action On Zelle Fraud

Elizabeth Warren and other Senate Democrats have asked financial regulators to do something about fraud with the Zelle P2P payments service, which is owned by a bank.
Early Warning Services runs Zelle. Seven of the largest banks in the US own Early Warning Services. When it came out in 2017, it was a huge success. By 2022, it will have helped $629 billion worth of transactions happen, which is twice as much as Venmo.
But, as Warren, Bob Menendez, Jack Reed, Sherrod Brown, and Mark Warner wrote in a letter to the Federal Reserve Board, FDIC, National Credit Union Administration, and OCC, it has also opened the door to fraud and scams on a massive scale.
Regulators should “closely review and examine the customer reimbursement and anti-money laundering (AML) practices of depository institutions that participate in the Zelle network,” says the letter.
Specifically, as the regulators of the seven banks that own Zelle, as well as 1800 depositary institutions that participate in the network, “you have authority to supervise their activities to ensure they comply with key consumer protection and AML laws, including the Electronic Fund Transfer Act (EFTA) and the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA).”
Continue the senators:
“We raise these concerns about safe and sound operation of Zelle because depository institutions currently take the position that they are under no obligation under the EFTA to make their customers whole when fraudsters use the network to steal their hard-earned money.
Instead, depository institutions appear to have forced their customers to foot the bill in the vast majority of these circumstances, often relying on ambiguity over whether a payment is classified as “authorized,” “unauthorized,” or a “error” to avoid reimbursing customers who have been victims of fraud.”










