
New York AG sues Zelle parent company, alleging shortcomings allowed scammers to steal $1 billion
EWS, which is co-owned by Bank of America, Capital One, JPMorgan Chase, PNC Bank, Truist, U.S. Bank and Wells Fargo, launched the Zelle app in 2017. At its debut, Zelle said the digital payment network would be a "faster, safer way" for people to send and receive payments "within the security of their financial institution," according to the company.
As of 2024, the app has 151 million users, according to Zelle's website.
The push to launch Zelle led to design oversights that made the network "an obvious conduit for fraudulent activity," the lawsuit alleges. Those alleged flaws include Zelle's quick registration process and lack of verification, which James claims made it easy for scammers to infiltrate the service.
The limited information shown to customers during transactions also allowed fraudsters to use false or fraudulent email addresses to trick consumers, she said.
"EWS knew from the beginning that key features of the Zelle network made it uniquely susceptible to fraud, and yet it failed to adopt basic safeguards to address these glaring flaws or enforce any meaningful anti-fraud rules on its partner banks," the New York AG's office claimed in its statement.
The lawsuit also alleges that EWS failed to enforce rules to prevent fraud, even though it knew its partner banks were violating them.
In a statement to CBS News, a Zelle spokesperson called the lawsuit a "political stunt" and said it was a "copycat" of a similar lawsuit the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau filed in December, which was dismissed in March. That lawsuit alleged EWS failed to protect consumers from widespread fraud.
The lawsuit seeks restitution and damages for New Yorkers affected by fraud on Zelle, as well as a court order requiring the company to maintain anti-fraud measures.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
LA28 to break longstanding tradition with corporate venue names at Games
For the first time in Olympic and Paralympic history, competition venues will carry corporate names during the Games, breaking from the long-standing 'clean venue' tradition. That policy, also enforced at other mega-events like the Fifa World Cup, requires stadiums and arenas to strip or cover all non-official sponsor branding, including naming rights signage. The aim is to protect the exclusivity of global partners who pay millions for official status. In past events, Arsenal's Emirates Stadium became 'Arsenal Stadium' for Uefa matches, and New Jersey's MetLife Stadium will be known as 'New York New Jersey Stadium' during the 2026 World Cup. Related: Trump announces he will chair White House taskforce for 2028 LA Olympics The shift follows years of debate inside the IOC. Former president Thomas Bach had signaled a move towards a 'clean field of play' rather than a blanket 'clean venue' policy, opening the door for more sponsor visibility around the Games. LA28 chair Casey Wasserman said naming rights are 'truly embedded' in the US sporting culture and that many venues are already commonly known by their sponsor names. LA28 announced Thursday that Comcast and Honda will be the first naming rights partners under an IOC-approved pilot program designed to generate additional revenue for the privately funded Los Angeles Games. Comcast Squash Center at Universal Studios will stage squash's Olympic debut. Honda Center in Anaheim, home to the NHL's Ducks, will host indoor volleyball while keeping its corporate name. Other permanent venues with existing naming deals, including SoFi Stadium, Intuit Dome, Arena, BMO Stadium, Peacock Theater and Devon Park in Oklahoma City, could retain their titles if their sponsors purchase the rights. 'From the moment we submitted our bid, LA28 committed to reimagining what's possible for the Games,' Wasserman said. 'These groundbreaking partnerships with Comcast and Honda, along with additional partners to come, will not only generate critical revenue for LA28 but will introduce a new commercial model to benefit the entire Movement. We're grateful to the IOC for making this transformation possible.' Under the program, up to 19 temporary venues will also have naming rights available to worldwide and LA28 partners, with the first opportunities going to members of the Olympic Partner (TOP) program. TOP sponsors will have first choice on temporary venues, followed by LA28's highest-tier domestic sponsors. Any company outside that group would need to sign on as a founding partner to gain rights. Wasserman has estimated the total value could reach nine figures, depending on the venue and location. Historically, the 'clean venue' policies have meant significant losses for venue sponsors. Marketing analysts estimate that losing naming rights exposure at a World Cup can cost between $5m and $9m for early matches, rising to $80m for the final. For 2026, Fifa has told host cities to hand over full control of their stadiums for more than a month, with all non-sponsor logos removed or covered, even on equipment and roof signage. An IOC statement described the LA28 plan as a 'pilot' that will be 'assessed for relevancy for future hosts'. It said the approach 'takes into account market realities of venue naming and generates critical revenue to stage the Games' while maintaining the principles of clean venues on the field of play. The move underscores the growing commercialization of the Games as organizers seek new funding models. LA28 will be the first US Summer Olympics in more than 30 years and aims to rely entirely on private financing to meet its estimated $7.1bn budget. Outside the new naming rights program, standard clean venue rules will still apply. The Games run from 14 to 30 July, followed by the Paralympics from 15 to 27 August.
Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Dillard's Posts Higher Sales, Lower Net Income in Second Quarter
Dillard's Inc. managed to claw its way into a sales increase in the second quarter but didn't have the same luck when it came to net income. In the period ended Aug. 2, the Little Rock, Ark.-based retailer reported that its net income slid to $72.8 million, down from $74.5 million a year earlier. However, earnings per share increased $4.66 from $4.59 as the company bought back its own stock. More from WWD Brooks Sees Double-Digit Global Revenue Growth for Second Consecutive Quarter Skechers Beat Expectations in Q2 as Shoe Firm Continues on Path to Go Private Under Armour Expects Tariffs to Bite, Sees Profits Halving This Year Both total retail sales and comparable-store sales inched up 1 percent to $1.447 billion. The strongest performing categories were juniors' and children's apparel and women's accessories and lingerie while home and furniture turned in the weakest results. 'We were happy to achieve a sales increase for the first time in a while and encouraged by strengthening sales trends in July,' said William T. Dillard 2nd, chief executive officer. 'In an operating environment that changes daily, we focused on controlling inventory, ending up 2 percent compared to 6 percent at the end of first quarter.' Retail gross margin fell slightly to 38.1 percent of sales from 39.1 percent for the same quarter last year. The company said gross margin decreased slightly in men's apparel and accessories and 'significantly' in women's apparel but were essentially unchanged in juniors' and children's apparel, cosmetics, home and furniture. The company does not hold an analyst call and did not offer guidance on sales or earnings projections for the second half. Dillard's operates 272 stores in 30 states, which includes 28 clearance centers. Best of WWD Harvey Nichols Sees Sales Dip, Losses Widen in Year Marred by Closures Nike Logs $1.3 Billion Profit, But Supply Chain Issues Persist Zegna Shares Start Trading on New York Stock Exchange
Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Agentic AI Takes Center Stage at Cognite's Global Impact 2025 Conference to Showcase Industrial Value
Featured speakers include Cognite customers ExxonMobil, Koch Ag & Energy Solutions, Idemitsu Kosan, NOVA Chemicals, Aker BP, Cosmo Energy Holdings, Nippon Shokubai, and HMH. Microsoft, SLB, and Radix serve as platinum sponsors. PHOENIX, August 14, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Cognite, the global leader in industrial AI, announced today its annual conference, Impact 2025, will return to Houston from October 13-16. This year's event will focus on accelerating business value from agentic AI, bringing together AI-driven leaders from the energy, manufacturing, and life sciences sectors. Speakers will share proven strategies for moving from vision to implementation and demonstrating tangible business value with agentic AI solutions. Agentic AI-driven automation is rapidly becoming a requirement for industrial organizations to remain competitive. According to a 2025 report from Capgemini, 82% of organizations are planning to integrate AI agents into their operations by 2027. This surge in adoption is driven by the fact that early adopters are already seeing measurable business value, including 25-40% efficiency gains in automated workflows. "Impact connects innovators to share ideas, learn together, and grow faster," said Josh Dotson, Industry 4.0 Capability Leader, Koch. "In a rapidly changing Industry 4.0 environment, partnerships and knowledge sharing are essential. The connections we make at Impact give us the insights and confidence to accelerate our transformation with more speed and less risk." Following last year's sold-out inaugural conference, Impact is returning with more sessions, networking opportunities, and additional industries. This year's sessions include: Keynote Plenaries and Executive Speakers who will demonstrate how AI is being harnessed to accelerate growth, transform industries, and realize value from digital transformation, including: Karl Johnny Hersvik, CEO of Aker BP Noriko Rzonca, Chief Digital Officer of Cosmo Energy Holdings Sameer Purao, Global CIO & CDO of Celanese Bjørnar Erikstad, General Manager, Foundation VI Breakout Sessions & Workshops delivered primarily by customers to address key themes such as: Agentic AI for Industry: See how industrial organizations are using AI agents to increase operational efficiency and learn what it takes to build and scale trusted AI agents. Driving Business Impact: Separate the AI hype from reality, see how organizations are getting started with agentic AI, and learn how to track the business outcomes of your digital strategy. Achieving Operational Excellence: Explore how AI integration can increase production capacity, enhance operational efficiency, and reduce risk. Leading Innovation: Hear from digital transformation experts about driving organizational change, the future of operations, and new operating paradigms. Building a Scalable, AI-Ready Data Foundation: Discover how to solve the industrial data problem by contextualizing data and how to scale digital initiatives from sites to enterprise. "To truly unleash agentic AI in industrial operations, Cognite has emphasized an AI-ready data foundation and an open ecosystem," said Girish Rishi, CEO, Cognite. "At Cognite, we're building the bridge from AI's potential to proven business value. Join us at Impact 2025 and witness how real-world leaders, customers, and partners are leveraging our leading industrial AI platform to create a more efficient, sustainable, and profitable future." Conference speakers will also illustrate how they are accelerating their journey towards autonomous operations, scaling AI, and gaining more business value by incorporating Cognite Atlas AI™, a no-code workbench for building industrial AI agents. Integrated with the robust data foundation provided by Cognite Data Fusion, Atlas AI makes agentic AI capabilities easily accessible for industrial organizations to use and improve their existing workflows. Space is limited. For more information and to register, please visit Impact 2025. About Cognite Cognite makes GenAI work for industry. Leading energy, manufacturing, and power & renewables enterprises choose Cognite to deliver secure, trustworthy, and real-time data to transform their asset-heavy operations to be safer, more sustainable, and profitable. Cognite provides a user-friendly, secure, and scalable platform that makes it easy for all decision-makers, from the field to remote operations centers, to access and understand complex industrial data, collaborate in real-time, and build a better tomorrow. Visit us at and follow us on LinkedIn and X. View source version on Contacts Media Contact: Michelle Holford, VP of Global 擷取數據時發生錯誤 登入存取你的投資組合 擷取數據時發生錯誤 擷取數據時發生錯誤 擷取數據時發生錯誤 擷取數據時發生錯誤