financial and/or legal problem...
Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 2:00 pm
My brother, Alan, was attacked for his wallet about two years ago, and suffered a very serious Traumatic Brian Injury. It will take many years for him to recover. For a variety of sordid reasons, he did not move in with me until a couple months ago. I am trying to help him with a multitude of serious problems, and one of these leaves me almost completely buffaloed.
Since you are some of the smartest and most helpful people I know, I am asking you for your help.
My brother recently tried to open a local checking account here in Kansas. Apparently a report from Chex Systems scared the bank off.
About four years ago, a bank he was using (albeit inactively) was bought by another bank that sent unsolicited new checks to his mailbox. He never got the new checks, nor even knew that they were being sent. They were apparently stolen, and forged, and the bank held him liable because he hadn't responded within 30 days. I realize most people with any sense always open and check their bank statements, but then, my brother is not most people. And, the real issue now is what to do about it.
The bank never bothered to check the signatures against his signature card. He refused to make the bank whole on the many hundreds of dollars of forged fraudulent checks that were paid due to overdraft protection. So, the bank closed his account and quietly reported him to Chex Systems. He thought his lost $42 was the end of it, not just the beginning.
Apparently, the Federal Consumer Credit Fair Reporting Act gives immunity to banks for slander/libel, unless we can prove "malicious intent". I don’t see any malicious intent – only gross negligence and indifference.
At this late date, does the offending bank even have any legal obligation to respond to a request for comparison of signatures?
Does anyone have any ideas on a strategy to resolve this SNAFU?
Hugs,
Bernice
Since you are some of the smartest and most helpful people I know, I am asking you for your help.
My brother recently tried to open a local checking account here in Kansas. Apparently a report from Chex Systems scared the bank off.
About four years ago, a bank he was using (albeit inactively) was bought by another bank that sent unsolicited new checks to his mailbox. He never got the new checks, nor even knew that they were being sent. They were apparently stolen, and forged, and the bank held him liable because he hadn't responded within 30 days. I realize most people with any sense always open and check their bank statements, but then, my brother is not most people. And, the real issue now is what to do about it.
The bank never bothered to check the signatures against his signature card. He refused to make the bank whole on the many hundreds of dollars of forged fraudulent checks that were paid due to overdraft protection. So, the bank closed his account and quietly reported him to Chex Systems. He thought his lost $42 was the end of it, not just the beginning.
Apparently, the Federal Consumer Credit Fair Reporting Act gives immunity to banks for slander/libel, unless we can prove "malicious intent". I don’t see any malicious intent – only gross negligence and indifference.
At this late date, does the offending bank even have any legal obligation to respond to a request for comparison of signatures?
Does anyone have any ideas on a strategy to resolve this SNAFU?
Hugs,
Bernice