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Laura Rowley Money & Happiness

Laura Rowley, Money & Happiness

Banks Continue to Prey on Social Security Recipients

by Laura Rowley

Very Good (609 Ratings)
3.853852/5
Posted on Wednesday, July 16, 2008, 12:00AM
Over a 12-month period, the nation's banks garnished more than $170 million in federal benefits such as Social Security and disability payments on behalf of creditors, even though federal law specifically prohibits the practice, according to a new report by the Inspector General of the Social Security Administration (SSA).

A Spreading Crisis

Last November, I wrote a column about the problem, in which banks freeze the accounts - sometimes repeatedly -- remove the funds, and hit the account holder with non-refundable fees. For one in five seniors, Social Security is their only income, and for two-thirds of retirees, it accounts for most of their income.

The issue began back in the mid-1990s, when the government mandated direct deposit of federal benefits to save money. As of last December, the SSA had electronically deposited more than 80 percent of Social Security and disability payments. The crisis has mushroomed amid rising consumer debt levels, and the growth of third-party debt buyers who flood the civil courts with claims and exploit advanced technology to track debtors.

Last year, several senators asked the SSA Inspector General to investigate the scope of the problem, and it published the audit earlier this month. "We estimate approximately $171.4 million in garnishments could be attributable to beneficiaries receiving direct deposit of Social Security benefits and additional direct deposits," the report states. Another $6.3 million was deducted from accounts that only contained Social Security benefits.

Worst-Case Scenarios Only

The Inspector General polled a small sample of 25 financial institutions, which included the nation's 12 largest banks (although they weren't named). The report looked at the worst-case scenario - seniors whose funds had disappeared. It didn't examine how many seniors had their accounts frozen and later gained access to their funds through administrative or legal appeal.

"A good proportion of people who are doing without temporarily -- and that may be days, weeks, or months -- are not even captured in the [report]," says Margot Saunders, counsel with the National Consumer Law Center (NCLC), who testified before the House Ways and Means Committee on the issue in June.

Meanwhile, banks charge non-refundable fees of $100 to $150 to freeze the account, and often overdraft fees, because the seniors continue to write checks or make debit payments without realizing the money has been frozen. Seventeen banks that responded to the SSA Inspector General's audit reported collecting just over $1 million in fees for legal processing and non-sufficient funds between September 2006 and September 2007.

Regulatory Confusion

Why do some banks violate the Social Security Act? Although consumer advocates say that the federal law is clear, and electronic deposits are easy to track, industry representatives disagree. "When you're talking about volume and subjectivity, it's much harder than it seems," says Nessa Feddis, vice president and senior counsel for the American Bankers Association in Washington, D.C.
 
Feddis says debt collectors hit the large banks with up to 6,000 default judgments a month, which require a response by a specific deadline. Moreover, federal law does allow Social Security benefits to be garnished for alimony or child support, and the banks can't always tell whether the judgment is for that purpose, she says. If they decline to freeze the account, they can be held liable for ignoring the state court order.

Additionally, the rules aren't clear on what a bank should do with commingled funds, Feddis argues. "If you get a $500 gift and $500 from Social Security, and you take $600 out, is what's left exempt or not?" Feddis says. "The banks have to figure out whether to freeze the funds or not, for how long, and what to do if they get a deposit a month later. It's gets a little frustrating, because we are trying to do the right thing. We have worked with Congress and regulators to come up with a single, simple regulation."

Protective Measures


Despite meetings this year among the banking regulators, those rules haven't been issued. In the meantime, states are stepping into the void with their own strategies to shield consumers. New York governor David Paterson is expected to sign legislation this month that would automatically protect the first $2,500 of a depositor's money from being frozen if the account received Social Security funds through direct deposit in the previous 45 days. California and Connecticut already have similar laws.

Account freezing "continues to be the number one call that we receive to our legal hotline and the numbers of filings and judgments are going up every year," says Claudia Wilner, attorney with the New York-based Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy Project. "We really like the [legislation] for ease of administration and protection of the account holder. It would be great to see a system like that in place all across the country."

But in most other states, consumers are left to fend for themselves. Henry Woodward, attorney with the Legal Aid Society of Roanoke Valley, says he continues to see the problem of frozen account in Virginia.

"The usual bank account garnishment doesn't run more than a couple months at most, because after losing a month's money most folks know to call Social Security and cancel their direct deposit," says Woodward. "The government says [direct deposit] is the way to keep money safe, a statement that has been dripping with irony the last ten years. It's not a good idea to push it until they can protect it."

Congressional Action at Last?


Some members of Congress agree. Last April, Sen. Herb Kohl (D-Wis.) introduced the Illegal Garnishment Prevention Act, which would prohibit the use of funds to promote the direct deposit of Social Security benefits until adequate safeguards are established to prevent their attachment and garnishment.

Saunders says back in 1994, when Congress passed the direct-deposit law, the NCLC asked for protections for low-income recipients of federal benefits to ensure they couldn't be garnished.

"No one knew what we were talking about," she recalls. "But the problem has become more severe in recent years because of third-party debt buyers and technology. It doesn't make sense that taxpayers should be spending hundreds of millions of dollars to keep the elderly and disabled out of poverty and allow [creditors] and banks to make a profit off those people when garnishment is not legal."

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153 Comments

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  • george - Tuesday, July 22, 2008, 6:07PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Seniors should pay what they owe - just like everybody else. But, charge them a fee becasue some debt collector wants to freeze the account? Ridiculous!! make the creditor pay, and you might just see a decrease in this "crime."

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Tuesday, July 22, 2008, 6:00PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    AHH, amazing that the pros are from former banking officials. Every situation is different, and I can guarantee you that garnishing SS checks for those bottom feeders can usually be related to medical bills that seniors have gotten behind on.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Tuesday, July 22, 2008, 5:59PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Thanks. I will certainly inform all my elderly relatives to cancel their Social Security direct deposits and return to getting checks in the mail. The other major bank fraud today is telling bold-faced lies about FDIC deposit insurance coverage. Banks are fighting to get every dollar possible on deposit. They are telling people its $100,000 per account; when its actually $100,000 per depositor SSN. See fdic.gov When banks do not uphold the laws and defraud the public, we really should have a run on all the banks. This kind of corruption means that our financial institutions are not sound and are not safe.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Tuesday, July 22, 2008, 5:53PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Thanks for the info. I had never heard of this bank practice against our senior citizens. Feds don't need to wear themselves out, figuring out how to protect seniors. Just copy the Calif. law.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Tuesday, July 22, 2008, 4:27PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Having worked for a bank, this rarely happens. On another note: Do you really think seniors shouldn't have to pay money they owe? How do I get in on that??

  • Robert - Tuesday, July 22, 2008, 3:05PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    I found this story untrue from my experience as counsel for a major detroit bank. We never held social scurity money nor did we charge a fee of more than $5.00 and we had two full time employees workin on garnishments. I found the most unreasonable in seizing accounts was the IRS, Many times seizing the wifes account for the husbands debts. Robert K Lockwood

  • wheelerx - Tuesday, July 22, 2008, 4:50AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    What a bunch of heartless sob's. There are only so many pints of blood in a human body and these parasitic bankers (yes I said PARASITIC) are willing to take it all and sit bank and say "we'll it's their fault, they should have paid their bills" You have no clue what reasons cause a person to fall behind and I sincerely hope that each and every one of you bankers who bashed this article have the wonderfull experience of getting into a head on collision on your way home this evening. Something as wonderful as being taken out by a stupid drunk crossing the centerline. Then you can lose all your hard earned assetts overnight, watch your children and loved ones go without because your medical bills are taking every dime your family has. And when it seems like it cant possibly get any worse,,,,, Your boss back at your old bank where you used to work before the accident, where you still have your bank account and that last couple of hundred dollars in your whole world,,,, he locks up your bank account, takes that last couple of hundred dollars for himself, calls it a fee, and, bounces those last couple of checks you just wrote today that you knew you had in your account. Bankers are parasites, they produce no product, they provide no service, they dont even have their own money, they have to borrow that from the feds, they contribute nothing to society. By definition they are PARASITES, leaches upon us all. So Laura, you just keep right on writing and dont cut these PARASITES any slack, ever! Go get em girl!!!

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Monday, July 21, 2008, 10:19PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    I wonder which politicians were bought by the banking lobby to rip off old people. Banks are always allowed to break the law and get away with it. Yet the taxpayers have to bail out the lousy bank crooks, which is killing our dollar.

  • Willliamw - Monday, July 21, 2008, 9:51PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    This artical needs to be published via radio and news papers, in a very bg way..

  • Lawrence W - Monday, July 21, 2008, 9:41PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Breeding person irresponsibility: Borrow money and take advantages of certain laws so that you don't have to make good on your loans.

  • Christopher - Monday, July 21, 2008, 7:58PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    This article is EXTREMELY MISLEADING!!! I am a branch manager at a credit union and not a bank but we fall under the same legalities when it comes to garnishments. It is extremely hard for a financial service employee to determine the source of the funds in an account especially if there are more deposits than just the Social Security direct deposit. This article only briefly touches on that and sure makes the banks seem like the "evil' ones here. Keep in mind that the account holder would not have the garnishment if they would have just PAID THEIR BILLS IN THE FIRST PLACE. This articles title is extremely misleading as well. We do not prey on Social Security receipiants. We are mearly doing as the law requires us to do.

  • Kathy - Monday, July 21, 2008, 7:15PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    I didn't realize that this goes on. Thank you.

  • Franzi - Monday, July 21, 2008, 1:16PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Its really unacceptable that banks take advantage of people who can least afford or protect themselves. Penalties to banks should be triple amount garnished for the period of time garnished. Paid immediately.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Monday, July 21, 2008, 7:27AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    America: We Can't Afford It... Cut your debt, save your money, and live within your means. http://nahnopenotquite.wordpress.com/2008/05/23/america-we-cant-afford-it/

  • ARNE KP - Sunday, July 20, 2008, 11:37PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Bankers need to be taught lessons, expensive ones usually work the best.Multimillion dollar fines could be directed to the Soc Sec Admin.

  • R - Sunday, July 20, 2008, 11:22PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    Weak opinion at best. I wonder if the courts will be able to set ECOA aside from SS/retirement recipients who seek out loans from lenders. The easy solution for lenders would be to say no loans to retiree's. Their shelf life as a commodity to market to is running out. Either in terms of income or life expectancy. But, artificial legal/legislative interference will be a boon to the reverse mortgage market. I'm sure that would make the court's and Laura sleep much better at night.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Sunday, July 20, 2008, 11:20PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Wow, sdobson67, you're a landlord and a banker - no wonder the bad rating for this article. Your bank probably cleans up on these freeze charges and overdraft fees, so it is all good for you. I just love it when banks claim that something like figuring out that a deposit came from the SSA is "too hard to do." It just shows what a bunch of liars they are. They have the newest and best technology to help them make this determination with a zero percent error rate, so they have no excuses. Banks have always been greedy, and this is just the latest example of how they don't care who their greed affects.

  • Tim - Sunday, July 20, 2008, 11:04PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Here Here -- General. Sorry, I don't think we should be compensating for people who make stupid decisions. The banks are acting on their legal obligations for money's they have to be accounted for. After about the last five articles, I've decided that Laura is a complete whiny hack, looking to get a read out of the the despot or people who, by their own fault get in trouble. This is that last article I'll read Laura.

  • Shun - Sunday, July 20, 2008, 10:25PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    The racketeering aspect of the collection industry is largely unaddressed. Under the 8-year Repoublican rule, the creditors' tactics to seize consumers' money under the guise of collection is astounding. For example, the first thing the collection agency does is to "report" the alleged debt to the credit reporting agency to ruin the consumer's credit rating, without knowing whether the debt is legitimate, and without any evidence to prove the debt, in order to coerce payment. Large banks like Chase (a good boy of Federal Reserve?) is spearheading this illegal conduct. Chase will not have a second thought to breach its agreement to raise a fixed rate account from 3% to 30% when it allegedly did not receive one payment, report the consumer to the credit reporting agency to coerce payment, engages unscrupulous collection agencies, or its own legal staff to hire unscrupulous process servers to create perjurious proof of service to get a default, and then coerce its employee to fabricate testimony to get a default judgment. Laissez faire??

  • "General" - Sunday, July 20, 2008, 10:07PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Very biased article. She dances around the fact that garnished money is to repay debts and the banks are under court orders to act. All the efforts of do-gooders and the nanny state can't protect stupid people from their own stupidity.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Sunday, July 20, 2008, 9:30PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    The title of this article is misleading and unfair. It is not the bank's fault if the courts issue a freeze order. Laura Rowley should know better.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Sunday, July 20, 2008, 8:25PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    If the depositor overdrafts their account then they should pay for it. It is called financial responsibility.

  • IDGAD - Sunday, July 20, 2008, 5:21PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    Once again, a careful reading and common sense belie the headline on articles of this type. No financial institution as a matter of even mid-level policy decision process is out to screw customers of any stripe, let alone those who are so vulnerable. Where such is the effect through confusion or mendacity, the law should be quickly enforced.

  • zxdfmlp - Sunday, July 20, 2008, 4:54PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    Should the courts require evidence that the money is garnishable, and then issue the garnishment notice onl for the garnishable amount?

  • suren - Sunday, July 20, 2008, 4:40PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Well just going through the System of retirement .....Well my Employer didnot pay-into the PBG/Insurance as mandated by Congress 1969...P.S. 99% the Senoir Nhavenot even heard about this REITREMENT SAVING "offer by Congress" ask your Edlderly Employee or your Employer! We Senoir Work 30 40 years in case you POEPLE forgot ..WE BROUGHT AMERICA OUT OF THE WWII. The VETERANS fought for you .....and nowday "GET A PENSIO of $ 400.00! Well in the mean time THE collection agency are LIARS, If you have a creditcard debt it goes to ARBITRATION.Congress "NEW BANKING LAWS" 2003....If you get a COURTORDER in the Mail and donot recall being in COURT or have recieved Papers pertaining to the Debt1 CHECK OUT the Haeder of the Cortorder and see "IF IT IS your COURT" where you live: Check out the dates and signature go to the court on the order and find out "IF IT IS A LEGALDOCUMENT" a lot of COLLECTION AGENCY ARE FALSIFIEING COURT DOCUMENTS .....I went to Court and WON ......NOW to the writer of this Artilce Banks write off "BAD DEBTS" every day and SELL THEM TO COLLECTION AGENCY etc.WHICH inturn s"SHOULD be Investegated for FRAUD , since in most cases "the banker Has A friend "in the BUSINESS.. (town

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Sunday, July 20, 2008, 4:11PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    You should pay what you owe. Don't get credits if you can't pay. Just because they are old or disabled, it doesn't mean that they should not be obligated to fulfill their obligations.

  • Amar - Sunday, July 20, 2008, 2:00AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    As others have indicated this article is a sham and hides the real story. Typical BS by the news media.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Saturday, July 19, 2008, 9:06PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    People love beating up on banks. Sometimes they deserve it, but not in this case. Once social security benefits are deposited into a checking account via direct deposit, the funds just become part of the total balances in the account --- the funds are commingled as mentioned in the article. There is no evil plot by banks to take or garnish seniors wages --- there is just no easy or standardized approach to how or what you deem to be the "hands off" social security funds. This is not a trivial data challenge although I'm sure the average Joe just doens't "get it" and assumes banks are out to get them.

  • NorcoWayne - Saturday, July 19, 2008, 5:45PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    After reading you article it turns out these people are dead beats that are not paying their bills, so the title “Banks Continue to Prey…” is grossly inaccurate and unfair. It attracts readers, though, so you have no ethics. .

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Saturday, July 19, 2008, 4:04PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    It's not just Social Security. Large banks have an amazing array of fees that they apply to all account holders wavering on the edge, i.e., people of limited means many of whom are trying very hard to get by. Why do you think that Wells Fargo stock does so well? Loan-sharking has become respectable (they sponsor the Olympics!!), but it is still loan-sharking.

Showing comments 6-35 of 153<< PreviousNext >>
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