Bank Accidentally Deposits $31K In Teen's Account

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mrtonguetwista

$$ Deep Pockets $$
Feb 6, 2003
23,473
7,035
0
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#1
A Georgia bank is asking a teenager to return $31,000 that was mistakenly deposited into his account. The problem is he may have already spent most of the cash.

The Madison County Sheriff Office police were dispatched to First Citizens Bank in Hull, Ga., on March 18 concerning financial fraud, a police report states. There, employee Kristy Bryant explained that on March 7 a customer named Steven Fields deposited $31,000, but a teller entered the amount into the account of another customer who had the same name.

After receiving the mistaken deposit, Steven Fields, 18, withdrew $20,000 and made $5,000 in purchases with his ATM card, as first reported by the Athens Banner-Herald. The deposit error wasn't noticed until original Steven Fields complained to the bank of his missing money on March 17.

When the alleged deposit recipient tried to withdraw more money the next day, the bank "informed him of the mistake that was made and asked him to return the money," the police report stated, but "Mr. Fields claimed that the money was his from an inheritance."


He also claimed that the money entered his account through a direct deposit, which the bank said is not true, the police report stated. Nevertheless, Fields said he would return to the bank with proof of his inheritance, but he never returned, the police report stated.

After the police went to Fields' home, he stated that "he thought the money came from his grandmother's estate," the police report states.


"I informed Mr. Fields that the bank wanted the money back as soon as possible," according to the reporting officer's statement. "Mr. Fields stated that he would go to the bank and talk with Mrs. Bryant and try to settle this situation without going to jail."

The bank told police they would give Fields a deadline of March 19, 5 p.m. to return all the money or they want him prosecuted. On Thursday, the Madison County Sheriff's Office said charges had not yet been filed related to this case.

On Thursday, Angela English, director of corporate communications for First Citizens released a statement to ABCNews.com that said, "Due to the bank’s privacy policies and out of respect for our customers, I cannot comment on the police report or the matter under investigation."
 

Nuttkase

not nolettuce
Jun 5, 2002
38,734
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at the welfare mall
#6
Something similar happened to my friend back in the day but with 5 thousand dollars. He was broke as fuck too minus a small amount of savings and took all the money out and bought a bunch of shit with it. He got a call like a week later addressing the situation and told them he had already spent the money. The next time he checked his bank account it was in the negative like 3 thousand dollars (he had some money in his savings like I said) and they literally just took all of his paycheck through direct deposit until he paid it back. Totally wiped him out, dude was a fucking moron though and everyone told him they were gonna find out eventually. How they got their money back really didn't seem legal to me but I'm guessing he agreed to it so they wouldn't press charges even though he swore to us he didn't give them permission to do that.
 
Aug 26, 2002
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Hard Times
#7
Something similar happened to my friend back in the day but with 5 thousand dollars. He was broke as fuck too minus a small amount of savings and took all the money out and bought a bunch of shit with it. He got a call like a week later addressing the situation and told them he had already spent the money. The next time he checked his bank account it was in the negative like 3 thousand dollars (he had some money in his savings like I said) and they literally just took all of his paycheck through direct deposit until he paid it back. Totally wiped him out, dude was a fucking moron though and everyone told him they were gonna find out eventually. How they got their money back really didn't seem legal to me but I'm guessing he agreed to it so they wouldn't press charges even though he swore to us he didn't give them permission to do that.

Similar thing with my friend. They posted his thousand $ credit limit for his credit card as an available balance on his account on accident and he withdrew it and spent it. They were actually really cool about it I think he only had to pay back a portion of it
 

EVERgREENRIDER

ResidentRocketScientist
Dec 18, 2008
4,464
26,693
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At the Pump
#13
These types of articles have been around since I was a kid I don't know how people still think they can just spend it and get away. Same thing as finding bank deposits dropped by armored cars and shit, you can't keep it
If a fuckin armored truck dropped a bag im taking my fucking chances....
 
May 13, 2002
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Seattle
www.socialistworld.net
#18
Lol they pack the money with dye packs anyway that explode if it gets too far from the bank or car or you try to take them out of the bags
Not worth the trouble
Wasn't there a pretty good movie about this? Some random joe walking down the street, finds a couple of money bags? I think he ended up committing suicide like a year later, something like that.
 
May 13, 2002
49,944
47,800
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Seattle
www.socialistworld.net
#20
Money for nothing, starring John Cusack

Joseph "Joey" Coyle (born 1953 in Philadelphia – August 15, 1993) was an unemployed longshoreman in Philadelphia who, in February 1981, found $1.2 million in the street after it had fallen out of the back of an armored car and kept it.[1] His story was made into the 1993 film Money for Nothing, starring John Cusack,[2] as well as a 2002 book by Mark Bowden, Finders Keepers: The Story of a Man Who Found $1 Million.

Coyle passed out some of the money, in $100 bills, to friends and neighbors. He was arrested later in 1981 at JFK Airport while trying to check in to a flight to Acapulco; police found $105,000 of the cash in envelopes taped around his ankles.[1] He was tried, but found not guilty of theft by reason of temporary insanity.[1] The armored car company, Purolator Armored Services, eventually recovered around $1 million of the original amount.[1]

Coyle struggled with drug addiction for most of his adult life.[1] He committed suicide by hanging in his basement on August 15, 1993, about one month before the film Money for Nothing was released.[1]