A plea from me - please talk to friends and family about the epidemic of banking fraud.
This summer my mother in law was defrauded of c. £17k. The bank (Barclays) has signed up to a voluntary code of conduct obliging them to take extra measures to protect vulnerable customers from fraud. My MiL is vulnerable to fraud, but the bank did nothing extra in her case. It then refused to take any responsibility or reimburse her a penny.
This type of fraud (its called an authorised push payment, or APP) is massive. In the first half of 2022, fraudsters took over £249m off unsuspecting UK a/c holders.
I took my MiL's case to the financial ombudsman and, after several months, Barclays has "reassessed" and has now agreed to repay the entire sum, along with interest on the money while it was missing. Our third request was for an apology from the bank. They've not offered any apology (surprise surprise!)
What's really surprising is that, in talking to people about this I've been shocked how many people have been defrauded (or know other people who have). There's a great deal of shame attached to being defrauded like this (undeserved shame - fraudsters are extremely good at what they do), so people tend not to talk about it, unless encouraged to do so.
My MiL was knocked for six by this, and we had to work hard to reassure her and rebuild her confidence. If someone you care about has been defrauded, you need to talk to them, folks!
This summer my mother in law was defrauded of c. £17k. The bank (Barclays) has signed up to a voluntary code of conduct obliging them to take extra measures to protect vulnerable customers from fraud. My MiL is vulnerable to fraud, but the bank did nothing extra in her case. It then refused to take any responsibility or reimburse her a penny.
This type of fraud (its called an authorised push payment, or APP) is massive. In the first half of 2022, fraudsters took over £249m off unsuspecting UK a/c holders.
I took my MiL's case to the financial ombudsman and, after several months, Barclays has "reassessed" and has now agreed to repay the entire sum, along with interest on the money while it was missing. Our third request was for an apology from the bank. They've not offered any apology (surprise surprise!)
What's really surprising is that, in talking to people about this I've been shocked how many people have been defrauded (or know other people who have). There's a great deal of shame attached to being defrauded like this (undeserved shame - fraudsters are extremely good at what they do), so people tend not to talk about it, unless encouraged to do so.
My MiL was knocked for six by this, and we had to work hard to reassure her and rebuild her confidence. If someone you care about has been defrauded, you need to talk to them, folks!
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