Chase has man jailed for trying to cash valid cashiers check

This is probably the most horrible thing I have heard come out of Chase’s inept culture.

When they purchased a home in 2006, Perez and Vargas obtained two loans from Chase’s predecessor, Washington Mutual Bank, including one loan in the amount of $312,000 secured by a first trust deed, and a second, home equity line of credit for $38,610 (the loan transactions). On February 6, 2008, Perez and Vargas withdrew $38,000 from the home equity line of credit, receiving a cashier’s check.

On November 6, 2008, Perez and Vargas presented the cashier’s check for payment at Chase’s National City branch. A branch employee informed Perez and Vargas that because the cashier’s check exceeded $10,000, cashing it in full would “require the bank to generate substantial paperwork” and cause a delay in receiving the funds which “could be avoided if the bank paid out $10,000 in cash and the balance in another bank check for $28,000.” Vargas and Perez were informed that to cash the $28,000 check that day, they “would have to go to three other banks and cash out each subsequent bank check in amounts of $10,000.00 or less at each bank.” Following the direction of the bank branch employee, Perez and Vargas cashed the $38,000 cashier’s check, receiving $10,000 in cash and a second cashier’s check in the amount of $28,000. Perez and Vargas proceeded to Chase’s Chula Vista branch, where they were given another $10,000 in cash and a third cashier’s check in the amount of $18,000.

Perez and Vargas then sought to cash the $18,000 cashier’s check at Chase’s Imperial Beach branch. According to declarations submitted by Chase, Perez presented the $18,000 cashier’s check to an operations supervisor, Nena Gelacio, who reviewed information on Chase’s computer system indicating that Perez’s account required investigation for “excess activity.” Gelacio became suspicious and asked Perez why he was attempting to cash a check that had been issued earlier in the day. Perez told Gelacio that he had cashed similar checks that day at Chase’s National City and Chula Vista branches. After receiving this information, Gelacio, the branch manager and assistant branch manager conducted an investigation and learned that in February 2008, Perez and Vargas had received a $38,000 check from the home equity line of credit account, which had not been cashed as of November 5, 2008, and that the account was closed in May 2008 and put “on collection.” The assistant branch manager called the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department (Sheriff’s Department) and requested that the department “investigate a possible fraud committed against the Bank by Perez and Vargas.”

Sheriff’s Department deputies arrived, and the assistant branch manager told them that the bank believed that the $18,000 check Perez was attempting to cash was “drawn on funds from a closed account.” The deputies took possession of the cash held by Perez ($20,000) and the $18,000 cashier’s check, and arrested Perez. Perez was jailed for five days. The San Diego District Attorney’s Office later dropped all charges.

Did you get that?  The customer followed Chase’s advice and was ultimately jailed for it.

Chase’s regulator visits anti-chase site

I’ve always found it interesting that Chase has never tried to contact us to see what it would take for us to stop publishing this site.  It is clear from our server logs that Chase personnel do regularly visit our site.  Whether this is just random Chase personnel bored with not doing their jobs very well or upper level management types keeping tabs on the vocal dissenters, is a big mystery.

Well, in a twist to this game, apparently someone from the Comptroller of the Currency, who regulates Chase bank visited chasehomefinancesucks.com.  Just for the record, I haven’t checked our logs to see if we have had similar visits.  We can only hope they are on a fact-finding mission and plan to actually start regulating banks like JP Morgan Chase.

Chase better late than never with East Bay foreclosure office

Chase may call them homeownership centers, but they are more aptly called foreclosure prevention offices.  Well their latest one is in the San Francisco Bay Areas East Bay region which has been rife with foreclosures for a good two years.  Why so late to the party?  The question remains whether Chase is truly committed to working with people facing foreclosure of whether their move is simply a political one.

Avoid Chase Leisure Rewards for your debit card

Chase is pushing their Chase Leisure Rewards for your debit card which runs $25/year.  When one customer signed up the teller convinced him that he would be getting hundreds of dollars back per year, making it well worth it.  So he started using his debit card for everything expecting big rewards.  After three months, his rewards added up to a sum total of four dollars.

You might want to avoid this “deal”.

Chase agrees to reverse fee, if you sign up for additional services

Is this Chase’s new way to force people into signing up for services they don’t need?

This customer went to a Chase branch to complain about an incorrectly levied service charge and was bombarded by offers of every kind.  At one point, the teller told him that they would waive the fee if they could show him how to use online bill payment.

His other observation was that the fact that Chase employees were bombarding customers with a ton of offers in the branch made the wait time longer for those in line.

Nice work Chase.

Chase loan mod – delay, delay, delay, foreclose

Cindy reports:

Trying since April 2009 for home loan mod.. made my payments.. did everything they asked.. and now on June 23, 2010.. my property of 25 plus years will be sold at auction…i’m fighting this.. but after reading your letters.. i think this is what they do.. i also.. submitted paper..after paper.. call after call.. and now no one i’ve spoke with is there.. and they can’t find papers.. or say i didn’t send papers..

What can you do ??

We’ve reported this same exact scenario many times.  What is still an open question is whether Chase is doing this on purpose or because they are inept and just can’t seem to get their act together.

JP Morgan Chase gambles, loses $250M on obscure trade

Apparently JP Morgan Chase’s brilliant commodities traders lost $250 million on a single trade that bet on the differential prices between the costs associated with shipping coal in northwest Europe and the price of delivering coal in South Africa.

Nice job guys!

Android vs iPhone apps for Chase

If you use an iPhone, rest assured that the app store is policed and only apps actually provided by a particular financial institution can be downloaded there for that institution.

Not so apparently for the Google app store for Android phones.  Google recently removed 50 applications (all by the same developer) that purported to be for various banks, out of concern about such apps harvesting peoples account and login information.

So be careful on the Android marketplace for now if you are looking for a Chase app.