Checking or savings account -- Problem with a lender or other company charging your account -- Complaint #17314955
Complaint Overview
Complaint ID: 17314955
Company: U.S. Bancorp
Product: Checking or savings account
Sub-Product: Checking account
Issue: Problem with a lender or other company charging your account
Sub-Issue: Transaction was not authorized
State: California
ZIP Code: 92805
Date Received: 2025-11-17T12:00:00-05:00
Date Sent to Company: 2025-11-17T12:00:00-05:00
Company Response: Closed with explanation
Timely Response: Yes
Consumer Disputed: N/A
Submitted Via: Web
Tags: Older American
Consumer Narrative
This is a supplemental complaint updating our two prior CFPB filings ( Case # XXXX and XXXX # XXXX ), which U.S. Bank closed without addressing key evidence of fraud. For context : the fraudulent activity began when an unknown individual accessed our U.S. Bank business account, added a fake employee ( XXXX XXXX ), changed our business address and phone number, and opened a credit cardall without any verification by U.S. Bank. The fraudster later initiated the first external XXXX debit ever on our account : a {$13000.00} transfer on XX/XX/year>, sent to a new and unfamiliar bank account. U.S. Bank denied our fraud claims on XX/XX/XXXX and XX/XX/XXXX on the basis of consistent login patterns, despite internal records showing the opposite. Since our last complaint, law enforcement uncovered new evidence that directly contradicts U.S. Banks findings and shows that the XX/XX/XXXX transaction was not authorized and was part of a criminal scam. The most important new information is this : On XX/XX/year>, the receiving financial XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX that the XX/XX/XXXX XXXX debit was suspicious and returned {$3300.00} back to U.S. Bank ( the remaining balance in the fraud recipients account ). This fact was confirmed to us by XXXX XXXX of the XXXX Police Department ( Report # XXXX ). U.S. Bank never notified us of this recovery and never credited these returned funds back to our account. Instead, in its XX/XX/XXXX response to the CFPB, U.S. Bank inaccurately stated that the request to recover the funds from the receiving financial institution was " denied, which is factually incorrect based on the documentation the police obtained. Additionally, the police investigation found that the individual whose account received the funds is likely a romance-scam victim who was instructed by a third-party fraudster to receive and move stolen money. This further confirms that the XX/XX/XXXX payment order was not authorized by us and was part of a broader criminal scheme. This new evidence must be evaluated alongside the earlier facts already submitted to the CFPB : XXXX. The fraudster added a fake employee ( XXXX XXXX ), opened a credit card under our business name, and changed our address and phone numbernone of which U.S. Bank verified before processing. XXXX. The {$13000.00} debit on XX/XX/XXXX was the first external XXXX debit ever on our account, sent to a new and unfamiliar bank. XXXX. XXXX Banks internal log shows the debit originated from a new IP address in XXXX, Oregon and a new device first seen XX/XX/XXXX, contradicting their assertion that it came from a consistent login pattern. 4. A failed {$8000.00} transfer from our personal account occurred on XX/XX/XXXX, but U.S. Bank did not notify usmissing a critical early warning sign of the account compromise. 5. U.S. Bank only notified us of these changes by postal mail, which arrived after the fraud. This reliance on postal mail prevented us from identifying the fraud in time. 6. U.S. Bank denied our fraud claims on XX/XX/XXXX and XX/XX/XXXX without addressing any of these red flags. Despite clear evidence that the account was compromisedand despite now receiving a partial recovery from the receiving bankU.S. Bank continues to deny the claim and has not refunded any portion of the loss. We request that U.S. Bank to explain in writring : When did U.S. Bank receive the {$3300.00} returned from Minnesota XXXX XXXX XXXX XXXX? Why were we not notified of this recovery? What is the basis for stating that the recovery request was denied, when law enforcement records show the opposite? Why have these recovered funds not been credited back to our account? What support is U.S. Bank relying on to characterize this as a consistent login despite the login originating from a new device in a new location that has no connection to our business or historic logins? Is it standard practice for U.S. Bank to notify customers of address or phone number changes only by postal mail, without any real-time alerts ( email, text, or in-app )? Is it standard practice to complete such changes without verifying them directly with the authorized signor or account holder? What support or verification did U.S. Bank rely on in asserting that XXXX XXXX was an authorized employee of XXXX XXXX XXXX? Total unreimbursed loss : {$13000.00}.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Complaint #17314955 about?
Complaint #17314955 was filed against U.S. Bancorp regarding Checking or savings account specifically about Problem with a lender or other company charging your account. It was received by the CFPB on 2025-11-17T12:00:00-05:00.
How did U.S. Bancorp respond to this complaint?
The company responded with: "Closed with explanation". The response was timely.
What is the risk level of this complaint?
See the risk assessment section for details on this complaint's risk profile.
How do I file a similar complaint?
You can file a complaint with the CFPB at consumerfinance.gov/complaint. Select the appropriate product category (Checking or savings account) and describe your issue in detail.
Can I see other complaints against U.S. Bancorp?
Yes, visit the U.S. Bancorp company profile at readthecomplaint.com/company/u-s-bancorp to see all complaints, risk scores, and analysis.
Disclaimer
This analysis is AI-generated based on publicly available CFPB complaint data. It does not constitute financial or legal advice.