heads up itulipers with kids with student loan debt...
Wells Fargo Empties Customer’s Checking Account to Pay Delinquent Student Loan
Published 07 May 10 07:32 AM | NextStudent
An Atlanta couple has found themselves with their savings wiped out after their bank, Wells Fargo, cleared out their checking account in order to pay a piece of what bank officials maintain is an outstanding student loan (“Suddenly, Bank Account Was Gone,” The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, May 1, 2010).
After Hope and Matt Hughes had problems trying to make a purchase with their debit card last month, they discovered that Wells Fargo had cleaned them out, withdrawing $4,059.82 — everything they had — from their checking account. They were also hit with $385 in overdraft fees for debit-card purchases they had made on the day their checking account was emptied.
Wells Fargo appropriated the funds under its right of “setoff,” a prerogative held by most banks that allows a bank to take money from a customer’s savings or checking account in order to pay off any other account — a home mortgage, credit cards, student loans — that the customer holds with the bank that’s overdue.
In the Hugheses’ case, Wells Fargo was collecting money it says it was owed on a $10,000 student loan Hope had taken out with Wachovia Bank, which was acquired by Wells Fargo in 2008.
Published 07 May 10 07:32 AM | NextStudent
An Atlanta couple has found themselves with their savings wiped out after their bank, Wells Fargo, cleared out their checking account in order to pay a piece of what bank officials maintain is an outstanding student loan (“Suddenly, Bank Account Was Gone,” The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, May 1, 2010).
After Hope and Matt Hughes had problems trying to make a purchase with their debit card last month, they discovered that Wells Fargo had cleaned them out, withdrawing $4,059.82 — everything they had — from their checking account. They were also hit with $385 in overdraft fees for debit-card purchases they had made on the day their checking account was emptied.
Wells Fargo appropriated the funds under its right of “setoff,” a prerogative held by most banks that allows a bank to take money from a customer’s savings or checking account in order to pay off any other account — a home mortgage, credit cards, student loans — that the customer holds with the bank that’s overdue.
In the Hugheses’ case, Wells Fargo was collecting money it says it was owed on a $10,000 student loan Hope had taken out with Wachovia Bank, which was acquired by Wells Fargo in 2008.
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