Australian man, 73, says his bank failed to protect him from ‘ghost tapping’ scam — and so he’s taking them to court

Australian man, 73, says his bank failed to protect him from ‘ghost tapping’ scam — and so he’s taking them to court


A 73-year-old man in Australia has launched a legal war against one of the country’s biggest banks — and he may be the first scam victim to ever take things this far.

According to a recent report from ABC News Australia, pensioner Ian Williams is suing National Australia Bank (NAB) for $379 million after it said he was responsible for $1,338 in transactions he said he didn’t recognize.

After CCTV footage collected by the police proved it wasn’t him who made those transactions, the bank said it would return the money in full under two conditions.

Williams refused.

“It’s the principle of the thing. I just won’t wear being called a liar,” he said. “I’m a stubborn old turd, and I will not give up.”

Here’s what happened.

It all began in October 2022. Williams says he discovered two suspicious charges on his account — $515 and $823 — at a Coles supermarket in Bundoora, a suburb 150 kilometers away from his home.

When he contacted NAB’s digital subsidiary, uBank, he says a representative told him the transactions were made using his Google Pay account.

“They said that I was guilty, I was responsible, I was personally at Coles to do the transactions with my phone and my thumbprint,” he said.

His maps app and sleep-tracking app both supported his claim he was in Bendigo around that time. He had call and text logs which showed his friend was coming over that morning. He also made a statement at the police station and sent it to the bank, but it was not enough.

Eventually, CCTV footage confirmed that the shopper wasn’t him — police said it showed “two young males” using what appeared to be cloned card credentials on phones.

That’s when the bank offered to reimburse him the $1,338 — on the condition that he sign a non-disclosure agreement and agree that the payment did not mean the bank was taking responsibility for the missing funds.

Five months after Williams declined, a second offer of $1,500 came with strings attached: no legal action allowed. He turned that down too.

Read more: Want an extra $1,300,000 when you retire? Dave Ramsey says this 7-step plan ‘works every single time’ to kill debt, get rich in America — and that ‘anyone’ can do it

What followed was a year-long journey of legal research and late nights. He said no civil lawyer he met was willing to take on his case without fees.


finance.yahoo.com
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