Fraud, scam cases increasing on Zelle, Senate report finds Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

NEW YORK (AP) — Incidents of fraud and scams are occurring more often on the popular peer-to-peer payment service Zelle, according to a report issued Monday by the office of Sen. Elizabeth Warren, giving the public its first glimpse into the growing problems at Zelle.

The report also found that the large banks that partly own Zelle have been reluctant to compensate customers who have been victims of fraud or scams. For instance, less than half of the money customers reported being sent via Zelle without authorization was being reimbursed.

Warren, D-Massachusetts, a long-time critic of the big banks, requested data on fraud and scams on Zelle from seven banks starting in April. The report cites data from four banks that tallied 192,878 cases worth collectively $213.8 million in 2021 and the first half of 2022 where a customer claimed they had been fraudulently tricked into making a payment. In only roughly 3,500 cases did those banks reimburse the customer, the report found.

Further, in the cases where it’s clear funds had been taken out of customers’ accounts without authorization, only 47 per cent of those dollars were ever reimbursed.

Since being launched in June 2017, Zelle has become a popular way for bank customers to send money to friends and family. Almost $500 billion in funds were sent via Zelle in 2021, according to Early Warning Services, the company that operates Zelle.

Zelle is the banking industry’s answer to the growing popularity of peer-to-peer payment services like PayPal, Venmo and the Cash App. The service allows a bank customer to instantaneously send money to a person via their email or phone number, and it will go from one bank account to another. More than 1,700 banks and credit unions offer the service. But the service has also grown more popular with scammers and criminals.

Once money is sent via Zelle, it requires a bank’s intervention to attempt to get that money back.

The cases of growing fraud and scams at Zelle have been highlighted in previous news reports, including two by The New York Times. But those stories cited mostly anecdotal evidence. Early Warning Services has previously said that 99.9 per cent of all transactions happen without complaints of fraud or scams. A group of Democratic senators asked for usage data on Zelle after the report in The New York Times.

Banks are required under the Electronic Fund Transfer Act to repay customers when funds are illegally taken out of their account without authorization. Banks have argued that in cases of fraud — meaning a customer’s account becomes compromised somehow and they send an unauthorized payment — they do reimburse customers. Banks are more reluctant to reimburse customers who claim to have been scammed, arguing that customers would make such claims more often and it would be hard to tell whether the customer is telling the truth.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has also been looking into Zelle and other payment platforms, and is expected to issue regulations that could require banks to reimburse customers for a wider array of scams and fraud.

The banking industry, aware of Washington’s increased scrutiny of Zelle, has been on a campaign to show Zelle is a safe way to send money. The industry typically likes to point out that fraud and scam claims occur more often on the non-bank payment platforms like Venmo or the Cash App.

The data for individual banks shows the increase in fraud and scams. PNC Bank had 8,848 cases on Zelle in 2020, and is on pace to have roughly 12,300 cases this year. US Bank had 14,886 cases in 2020 and had 27,702 cases in 2021. Truist had 9,455 cases of fraud and scams on Zelle in 2020, which ballooned to 22,045 last year.

In response to Warren’s report, Zelle’s owner said the increased cases reflected the fact the service has become more popular.

“Zelle usage has grown significantly since its launch, from 247 million transactions in 2017 to 1.8 billion in 2021, while the proportion of fraud and scams has steadily decreased,” Early Warning Services said in a statement.

Warren made fireworks at a congressional hearing last month involving most of the CEOs of the big Wall Street banks that use and partly own Zelle, where she pushed each of the CEOs to release fraud and scam incident data at their banks. The seven are JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, PNC Financial, Truist, Bank of America, Capital One and US Bank.

The hearing featured an exchange where Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase, apologized to Warren for not getting her the data she requested and promised she would have it at the end of that day.

Warren’s office says ultimately JPMorgan’s data on Zelle did not provide the information they were looking for, so data from JPMorgan is not included in the report. The other banks that did not provide data to Warren’s office were Wells Fargo and Capital One. JPMorgan did not return a request for comment.

By Ken Sweet

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Post-mortem determines slain Mexicans died from gunshot wounds; bodies to be flown home next Wednesday, source says

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

The bodies of the two Mexicans killed at the Pillar Rock Hotel will be flown home for burial in two weeks.

Post-mortem examinations conducted last week have determined that the duo – Cesar Santos Ramirez, 36, and Ronaldo Emmanuel Sandoval Stone, 39 – died from injuries related to gunshot wounds. This paves the way for their families to lay their loved ones to rest.

A coroner’s inquest into the death of both men commenced on Monday, September 12, with a small jury panel.

A source says the coroner, Chief Magistrate Joanne Walsh, has since signed off on the relevant documents, and death certificates have been issued to the consulate.

The soonest the bodies can be flown back to Mexico is October 12, since AmeriJet – the expected carrier – comes to Antigua only on Wednesdays. And it is already full this week, the source says.

The person adds that Mexican officials want the bodies to be accompanied by a representative of the Royalton Hotel, where the deceased worked up to the time of their deaths. However, it is unclear whether this request will be fulfilled.

Ramirez and Sandoval Stone were shot to death at their usual residence, the Pillar Rock Hotel, at Dieppe Bay, Five Islands, on Wednesday, September 7, 2022, apparently while lounging at the hotel’s pool.

The Police are still investigating the double murder. No one has been arrested and charged for the crime, although a fellow employee reportedly was questioned in relation to the incident.

Ramirez’s body was the first to be discovered, floating in the pool, after the hotel manager reported hearing four loud explosions shortly after 9:30 p.m.

Sandoval Stone’s body was not discovered until much later because it had sunk to the bottom, and due to the volume of blood in the pool.

Both men were guests at the hotel and held senior management positions at the Royalton Hotel. — REAL News

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Autopsy: UWI staffer strangled, beaten

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Marissa Edwards –

MURDERED mother Marissa Edwards was beaten and strangled, her autopsy revealed.

Edwards, 39, was an administrative clerk at the Department of Paraclinical Sciences at UWI’s Faculty of Medicine. Her decomposing body was found in a drain in Waterloo on September 26, just over a week after she was reported missing.

Her boyfriend Simeon Roopchand’s body was found hanging in the Tabaquite forest on September 24, four days after his car was found abandoned a kilometre away.

Speaking with Newsday on Monday afternoon, Edwards’ sister Lisa Edwards said according to the autopsy report, Edwards died of blunt force trauma and strangulation with a copper wire, which was found around her neck.

Lisa Edwards said the funeral for her sister will be finalised by the end of the week.

Since the discovery of her body, there have been nightly wakes.

“This is like a blessing in disguise, because she really liked her gospel music, so we get the chance to play that for those who are coming.”

She said she wondered how her sister spent her final moments as she expressed her anger at how she died.

Last Friday both the principal of UWI, St Augustine campus, Prof Rose-Marie Belle Antoine and Dr Sue Ann Barratt, head of UWI’s Institute for Gender and Development Studies, denounced Edwards’ killing.

In a media release Antoine said the killing of Edwards was irrational and pointed to “deep-seated defects” in society that needs to be addressed.

Barratt said: “We call for an ‘all-of-society approach’ in identifying, and eliminating all forms of tolerance that facilitate the growth, expression and acceptance of these interlocking and varied forms of violence.”

Edwards was one of two women murdered in September. The other was Krystal Long, who was first believed to have died after falling during a night of binge drinking.

Long, the 37-year-old mother of three, died on September 9, after going out drinking with a man she had known for just over a year. Her autopsy, done on September 19, said she died of multiple blunt force injuries. She was buried on September 23.

Long’s male friend was arrested at his Arima home last week in relation to her death.

Relatives told Newsday Long was afraid of the man, who used to beat her. One of the occasions, weeks before she died, was recorded on camera and showed a man dragging Long by the hair into a car, which drove off.

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OW start pilotproject ‘Aanpak verlaten percelen en gebouwen’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

PARAMARIBO — Het ministerie van Openbare Werken (OW) is gestart met een pilotproject om verlaten percelen en gebouwen aan te

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Fred Reno, professeur de science politique à l’Université des Antilles « Il y a des hommes politiques qui alimentent cette peur de l’autonomie »

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Interview

Samedi, à la résidence départementale du Gosier, il était question d’autonomie et d’évolution institutionnelle. A l’initiative du président du Département, élus et universitaires ont joint leurs réflexions lors d’un séminaire débat parmi eux, Fred Reno, professeur de science politique à l’Université des Antilles.

Quel est l’objectif de ce débat- séminaire?

Je peux essayer de vous répondre  sans me mettre à la place des organisateurs mais je pense que l’objectif c’est d’abord que les élus soient informés de choses qu’ils puissent ensuite les expliquer à la population. Vous avez noté que là, il n’y avait que des élus.

Ils étaient peu nombreux.

Ca aussi, c’est un problème. Il y avait des universitaires dont le professeur Soucramanien qui est une référence sur ces questions. L’objectif, c’était…


France-Antilles Guadeloupe

1423 mots – 03.10.2022

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Un homme de 61 ans meurt noyé à Bouillante

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Rédaction web
Lundi 3 Octobre 2022 – 18h32

Noyade – shutterstock

 Un sexagénaire est mort noyé ce lundi à la plage de Malendure à Bouillante.

Ce lundi peu avant 16 heures, les secours ont été contactés pour une noyade en mer sur la plage de Malendure à Bouillante.La victime, un homme de 61 ans avait été extrait de l’eau et secouru par des médecins internes avant l’arrivée des sapeurs pompiers qui ont pris le relais. Selon nos informations, malgré une tentative de réanimation par le médecin du SMUR, le sexagénaire n’a pas survécuSur place huit sapeurs pompiers, des medecins du Smur et une brigade de gendarmerie ont été mobilisés

Sur le même sujet

  Un blessé grave à Sainte-Anne …

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Two men arrested in relation to West Bay shooting Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass

The Royal Cayman Islands Police Service (RCIPS) reported that, yesterday, 2 October, RCIPS officers arrested two men on suspicion of attempted murder and possession of an unlicensed firearm, in relation to the shooting incident which occurred in West Bay on the morning of Thursday, 29 September.

One of the men, age 31 of George Town, was further arrested for possession of ecstasy.

Police conducted further searches of the residences of the men, and recovered a quantity of cocaine at the address of the second man, age 28 of Bodden Town, who was further arrested on suspicion of possession of cocaine.

Both men remain in custody as investigations continue.

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Des manifestants en uniforme d’?coles tournent en d?rision la rentr?e des classes aux Cayes

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Le Nouvelliste

Plusieurs centaines de manifestants aux Cayes, dont la majorit? portait des uniformes d’?tablissements scolaires de la ville, ont entam? un deuxi?me mois de protestation aux Cayes ce lundi 3 octobre 2022. Tournant en d?rision la rentr?e scolaire qui ?tait pr?vue ce lundi sur le territoire national, les protestataires r?clamaient la d?mission du Premier ministre Ariel Henry.

Sacs au dos ou livres en mains, les manifestants r?citaient l’alphabet fran?ais amalgam? de slogans acides contre le pouvoir en place. Selon eux, les conditions ne sont pas r?unies pour la rentr?e des classes dans la ville des Cayes. ” Les ?coles n’ouvriront pas leurs portes avec Ariel Henry “, a lanc? un manifestant.

Les ?coles ont gard? leurs portes ferm?es. Les activit?s fonctionnaient au ralenti au centre-ville dans la matin?e. Les mouvements de protestation ont provoqu? une situation de panique for?ant les commerces ? fermer leurs portes.

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Trelawny MP says PNP’s Operation PRIDE left constituents with nothing Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Member of Parliament (MP) for Trelawny Northern, the Jamaica Labour Party’s (JLP) Tova Hamilton, has criticised the controversial Programme for the Resettlement and Integrated Development Enterprise (Operation PRIDE) that was established by a People’s National Party (PNP) Government in 1994.

Hamilton has taken issue with the fact that more than 20 years after a number of her constituents made deposits on Government-owned lands for the construction of houses under the programme, the promised development is yet to materialise.

A first-term MP in the former PNP stronghold, Hamilton recently levelled the criticism while making her contribution to the 2022-2023 State of the Constituency Debate in the House of Representatives.

She said Operation PRIDE was launched to “inter alia, resolve the housing needs of the majority of low-income Jamaicans by developing new planned settlements and the upgrading of existing settlements.

“Operation PRIDE was described as a unique method of making land legally accessible to low-income groups at affordable prices through Government subsidies. The necessity arose given the high cost of housing solutions in the formal sector; the limited available capital for housing; and the inability of the majority to access mortgages,” she said.

“It was the year 2000 that Operation PRIDE decided to utilise Government lands in Cave Island (Northern Trelawny) for a new planned settlement: 269 members of a providence society signed up for lots at a subsidised cost, and were promised infrastructure such as sewage, electricity, water, roads and drains.

“Fast-forward 22 years and the promise of infrastructure remains unfulfilled because of project overruns, improper choice of location for our particular development (which is very rocky terrain), corruption and nepotism,” Hamilton lamented.

She said the situation was made worse by the fact that 10 persons paid in full on the original price that was agreed.

“The 269 members of the providence society have now looked to me to solve this 22-year-old issue, which is one of 80 such informal settlements island-wide that PRIDE has left in its wake. It is evident that PRIDE will cost you everything, but leaves you with nothing,” Hamilton declared.

Operation PRIDE became a major scandal for the then PJ Patterson-led PNP Government, with accusations of millions of dollars wasted on lands that were not suitable for building, and connected persons benefitting, instead of those for whom the programme was designed. One Government minister was forced out of the Cabinet as a result of the scandal.

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McKenzie weighs ‘constitutional rights’ vs rights of innocent citizens Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) Deputy Leader and Government Minister, Desmond McKenzie, is lamenting that the state’s efforts to deal with crime are being affected by talks of “people’s constitutional rights”.

McKenzie is also questioning the whereabouts of persons who support the rights of innocent citizens that are being taken away by criminals, who he called “terrorists”.

He made his positions known while addressing the JLP’s Area Council One meeting on Sunday, which was hosted by Councillor for the Trafalgar Division in St Andrew, Kari Douglas, at Jacques Road community centre.

McKenzie said the JLP Administration is not afraid of taking decisions to tackle the issues relative to crime and violence.

“This Government is not afraid to take those decisions that we have been taking! But every time we put one foot forward, we hear them talking about people’s constitutional rights.” he stated.

“What about the innocent families? What about their rights? Who is going to support the rights of innocent Jamaicans who are murdered by these terrorists?” questioned the Local Government and Rural Development Minister.

The Government has, in the past, used states of emergency (SOEs) to assist in the crime fight.

Critics, including the Opposition People’s National Party (PNP), have largely opposed the Government’s use of the SOEs as a major crime-fighting tool, citing alleged constitutional breaches relative to extended detentions of some persons who are arrested without charges being laid against them.

In June of this year, the Constitutional Court ruled against aspects of the Emergency Powers Regulations governing earlier versions of SOEs, which were declared to be unconstitutional. The ruling came out of a case that was brought by St James taxi operator Roshaine Clarke, who was awarded nearly $18 million in damages.

Clarke sued the state after he was detained for seven months during the SOE that was declared for St James in January 2018. Among other things, the court ruled that Clarke’s fundamental right to freedom and liberty had been infringed.

The Government has said new methods to assist the crime-fight will be coming soon, such as a new Emergency Powers Legislation and a new Bail Act.

McKenzie, on Sunday, pointed to the recently passed new Firearms (Prohibition, Restriction and Regulation) Act as one of the new methods to address gun violence.

“We just passed the (new) Firearms Act in Parliament. It soon come into law! And let me tell yuh, anybody who is found with an illegal gun, regardless of who you are or where you come from, prepare to face the consequences of the law!” declared McKenzie.

At the same time, he urged JLP supporters to play their part in the crime fight by not supporting acts of violence.

“… And I want to appeal to all of you here today, to make sure that we don’t, in our communities, support any act of violence.

“Nuh cover up fi nuh gun bwoy! Nuh support any methods that are not in keeping with building a decent society!” he appealed.

The minister also sent condolences to the grieving family members and school community of slain 16-year-old Kingston Technical High School student, Michion Campbell.

The teenager was stabbed to death by a 17-year-old schoolmate during a brawl on the school compound last Thursday.

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