The country鈥檚 biggest bank has made a $19,000 settlement offer to an elderly woman who was tricked into buying nearly $40,000 in pre-paid gaming cards from a Mobil service station by scammers posing as ANZ fraud prevention staff.
In a letter to the victim鈥檚 family, ANZ concedes that a fraudster posing as the woman phoned the bank鈥檚 contact centre and convinced staff to divulge personal customer information. This enabled money to be transferred between her accounts, contributing to the financial loss.
The bank also accepts it failed to record the woman鈥檚 son as having power of attorney over her financial affairs and says a delay in responding to the family鈥檚 complaint compounded her stress.
The settlement offer was 鈥渁 token of our sincere regret for the way ANZ has handled aspects of your complaint and the time taken to resolve the matter鈥.
Mobil Plaza service station in Whangarei, where scammers convinced an 82-year-old woman to purchase nearly $40,000 in gaming vouchers over 12 days. Photo / Michael Cunningham
However, the woman鈥檚 son said the family believe the bank should compensate his mother for the entirety of her losses, given ANZ鈥檚 fraud prevention measures failed to notice anything suspicious about an 82-year-old pensioner making 13 separate 鈥淣eosurf鈥 card purchases at Whang膩rei鈥檚 Mobil Plaza in the space of just 12 days.
鈥淲e appreciate that you acknowledge the stress this has put our wh膩nau under,鈥 the son said in a letter to ANZ last month.
鈥淲e ask that you reconsider your $19,000 offer of reimbursement and compensation. We feel that ANZ has underestimated both the level of responsibility and the raruraru [trouble] caused as a result of this fraud.鈥
But ANZ, which made $2.3 billion profit last year, has refused to budge. It said it was not liable for the entire loss because the transactions were carried out by the authorised account holder using a secure PIN, meaning they weren鈥檛 flagged as suspicious by ANZ鈥檚 security systems.
While ANZ was sorry the scammers were able to fool the bank鈥檚 contact centre staff into handing over the woman鈥檚 customer number and transferring funds, 鈥渢he staff member involved believed they were dealing with an authentic request from a genuine customer鈥.
鈥淎NZ would never intentionally provide this information to someone we didn鈥檛 believe was authorised to access your account.鈥
The bank said customers were increasingly being targeted by scams and it hoped this case would raise awareness and prevent others falling victim.
聽鈥淲e also appreciate you bringing this to our attention to help us understand whether we can make improvements to our own internal processes.鈥
The woman was targeted late last year and told she needed to buy the gaming vouchers to safeguard her money, before handing over card serial numbers to the criminals to cash in.
Whang膩rei police Sergeant Andrew Ivey said the victim was an 鈥渦nwitting participant鈥 in money laundering and it was highly unlikely the culprits would be identified or the money recovered.
In his opinion, the case raised serious questions about ANZ鈥檚 fraud detection measures, and whether Mobil had inadvertently helped facilitate criminal offending.
The son has also criticised Mobil for allowing the 鈥渉ighly irregular鈥 transactions to proceed 鈥渨ithout arousing suspicion or meaningful action by your staff鈥.
In a January 25 letter to the petroleum giant, the son said his mother struggled with technology and cared for her husband who suffered from dementia.
鈥淸I believe] an elderly lady, who is very easily confused, spending such enormous amounts of money [should have] set off 鈥榬ed flags鈥 and prompt action.鈥
Twice, his mother made several large Neosurf purchases at the store in the space of a few hours.
鈥淗ow did this not prompt Mobil to intervene?鈥
鈥淵ou state that 鈥楳obil is proud to be an active and engaged member of the communities in which we operate鈥. In our experience this could not be further from the truth.鈥
In response, Mobil鈥檚 retail sales manager Nathan Lee defended the company鈥檚 actions, said it was assisting police and assured the son that Mobil took such cases 鈥渧ery seriously鈥.
Lee said cashiers served hundreds of customers each hour. An internal review showed the victim was served by several different cashiers over multiple days.
鈥淲e will share the lessons learned from this issue with our network to help avoid any repetition in future. However, as you can appreciate, it can be challenging for cashiers to monitor or intervene in the spending habits of individual customers who are purchasing a legal product, especially when they may only be present for some of the transactions.鈥
The son told the听贬别谤补濒诲听the family was disappointed with Mobil鈥檚 response and with ANZ鈥檚 position re compensation.
鈥淚n my view we were negotiating from a moral and ethical standpoint which doesn鈥檛 hold a lot of weight against a super power.鈥
ANZ declined to comment. Mobil did not respond.
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