Gym Thinks New Member Isn't A Real Person; Drains Nearly $1,000 From Her Checking Account To 'Verify'
from the i'll-need-two-forms-of-ID...-and-all-of-your-cash dept
Any business that requires a.) the signing of a lengthy contract and b.) access to credit card or checking account information is setting up a system prone to abuse. AOL was particularly infamous for this, doing everything it could to retain users income as broadband coverage expanded, even if it meant charging people for services they had cancelled and were no longer using.
Gyms and fitness centers seem to be developing this reputation as well. A quick search will bring up dozens of complaints about these businesses charging customers long after they've cancelled their memberships. Once the information is on file, it seems it takes a lot of complaining to force some fitness centers to stop dipping into the account every 30 days or so.
Part of this can be chalked up to carelessness -- all the steps needed to properly inactivate an account aren't being taken. Part of this can be chalked up to greed -- ding the customer's account a few more times and turn a little extra profit. What happened to former Fitness 19 member Kathleen Tester is so inexplicable, it doesn't even register on the usual chart of Handy Excuses.
Tester had signed up for a membership and authorized Fitness 19 to automatically withdraw her monthly fee of $6 from her checking account. On July 15th, Fitness 19 accessed her account and withdrew substantially more than that -- $817.50 over two transactions ($165.00 and $652.50).
That same day, Tester noticed the withdrawals and spoke to someone at Fitness 19, who immediately referred her to someone else at a different branch. Tester called this branch and spoke to Fitness 19's "financial manager," who stunningly claimed that Fitness 19 had removed the money from Tester's account because "it did not believe she was a real person."
This "rationale" was repeated the next day when Tester visited the financial manager in person. By way of apology, the manager offered her three month's free membership ($18 retail value!). Tester declined the generous insulting offer and cancelled her membership on the spot. The manager told Tester it would take 1-2 days for the money to show up in her account and tired to lure her back with a full year's free membership ($72!). This too was declined and the withdrawn funds were deposited back in Tester's account on July 18th.
At this point, Tester was understandably concerned that Fitness 19 might decide to dip into her account again. After all, it still had her info. These fears were confirmed slightly over a month later when Fitness 19 withdrew $165.00 from her account, which directly resulted in $105 in overdraft fees for Tester. No excuse was given for the most recent withdrawal but Tester's money was returned the next day.
Whatever the fitness center's actual rationale for repeatedly accessing Tester's account, it had better be on much firmer legal ground then "we thought that was a fake name." Tester is specifically asking for a trial by jury to determine damages. I doubt she'll get it. There's no way Fitness 19's owners and management want to see this taken to trial, not if they can possibly settle for less than a few thousand dollars.
Verifying accounts electronically doesn't require the withdrawal of several hundred dollars, or even ten bucks. If Fitness 19 thought the name was fake, it had many options it could have pursued before draining someone's account of nearly $1,000. What this looks like is fraudulent abuse of its electronic transfer system, and wholesale abuse of its members' trust.
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Filed Under: fraudulent charges, gyms, kathleen tester
Companies: fitness 19
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Silly, they were obviously TESTING Ms TESTER for authenticity.
[/lame pun]
Ahem. I had similar issues twice and that's why I'm very wary of allowing automatic debts. I keep a very close eye on my account (I get sms notifications whenever there's any activity) and I usually call my bank and block the party trying to mess with my account on sight. The second attempt was less damaging overall, they were able to withdraw only once (against 3 times in the first one). On both cases the bank returned the money and dealt with the offenders for me. With all the connectivity why not set up a system where you can review such activities before allowing them, especially for services?
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I'm actually certain Ms Tester's last name is why they thought it was fake. Still no excuse for "verifying" like they did. And the later $165 withdrawl is just bizarre.
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This would explain the original response and the fact that it happened again.
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What it DOESN'T explain is why, if an annual membership cost $72, the recurring charge was set to more than twice that per MONTH!
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My money. My rules. Not theirs.
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So, I've stopped doing that stuff. I'd rather pay upfront when I get paid, not when they schedule the money to be taken out.
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More than once someone at the bank (more than one bank) has "noticed" that I "forgot" to enable overdraft protection on my card and "fixed" it for me. The one time I didn't notice coincided with a screwup with an automatic payment, I had to threaten to get the state AG involved for them to waive the multiple overdraft fees.
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This is why I use a CC for everything like this
2) Credit limit is higher than I will ever remotely touch, so instead of hitting a point where something takes too much money like this, they just hit my credit line a bit harder than they should. No real harm done.
3) Points for using the card. Hey, why not get free stuff when I can?
4) It's free! I only spend what I need to, pay the card off every month, and there's no charge for using it.
5) Only one big hit to my bank account per month. I don't automatically pay the card, each month I look over all charges, manually schedule the money to be paid to the CC company, and at the same time, make sure there's enough money in the account to cover it, so I never get hit on overdraft penalties.
Seems to me like my method would have saved her a LOT of trouble.
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Re: This is why I use a CC for everything like this
It's not free, they ding the merchant for somewhere around .20$ to .40$ + a percentage of the purchase service fee. They are typically not allowed to pass on to only credit card transactions. As a result they just work that tax from the credit card company into every price. So even the people who pay cash for everything have to pay a an invisible tax to the credit card companies.
That said, screw giving anyone direct access to my bank account. I can call a credit card companies up and rake them over the coals when someone pulls this garbage, the bank typically makes you pay for other people's mistakes. (60$ fee to cancel a check vs. a the cost of long phone call to the credit card company?)
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Stunning
Even if Ms. Tester was not “a real person” —even if she was not— what gave Fitness 19 any right to that money? Any right at all?
I think this should be criminal. If this account is accurate, I think Fitness 19 ought to get a jury. And then that gang ought to get some jail.
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Re: Stunning
Hint: In programming, there are people in EVERY database named TEST, TESTER, TESTING, etc. that are test accounts.
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Not in production databases. If there are, then some serious retraining needs to happen, as that violates best practices.
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Silly me .....
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Re: Silly me .....
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If you authorize someone to take $6 and they take well over $600…
This isn't a case where you authorized them to take $6 and they took $16. This isn't even you authorized them to take $6 and they took $60. I mean someone could make a mistake between six and sixty, right? It's just one little extra zero…
But this was well over six-hundred. Over six-hundred. And it wasn't like they just slipped up and just carelessly added a couple extra zeros on the end. No, looks like the six got magically changed into an eight, too.
You think that's an accident? Does that look like an accident to you?
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"We didn't think it was a real account, so we tried charging $800 just to see what would happen."
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Suppose there had been a paper check involved?
Suppose it was like that.
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Re: Silly me .....
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False equivalence. You missed this part:
you know, the part about providing public services. Now that sequestration is starting to bite, you can call it theft because the IRS is one of the few government departments that are still working and you're not getting ROI via the services the sequestered ones usually provide.
But you're still getting some services in the form of police, courts, national defense, etc. Otherwise you'd be living in a lawless wasteland where you'd have to defend yourself as best you can as there would be no police, courts, or anything like that.
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Whether or not you personally avail yourself of them is by-the-by. You'd certainly notice it if they were gone.
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I didn't ask the government to provide me with police, courts, and the like. I don't want or need their "help".
I didn't "miss the part" at all. But why should you care, when you still haven't answered a question I asked you months ago?
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*Cop searches purse*
Lady: I can just show you my ID card.
Cop: Cool $652 dollars in your purse.
*Cop puts the money in their pocket and hands the lady's purse back*
Cop: I guess that means you're a real person, have a nice day.
Lady: Wait a minute, I want my money back!
Cop: I'll give you a $10 off coupon at the local grocery store, we'll call that even.
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The same farmers that are mortally terrified of GMOs with even less evidence.
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Oh, and "super-weeds."
And right here in TD you may find you need a license from the GM companies to test their products...
...and that's why farmers all over the world are opposed to GM. GM companies and their apologists respond by accusing them of being superstitious Luddites, or something.
If we're going to have a debate over it, let it be on the facts, not the myths. From either side.
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Flat out Fraud...
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never assume malice...
What I think happened is some clueless admin-person was testing things and set up a recurrent charge of $ random_three_digits, plus a one-time charge of $ another_random_three_digits. Perhaps expecting that this will fail because of bad account number, or perhaps "the person who set up this testing account made sure this would work".
Turns out it's a real account - oops.
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Re: never assume malice...
So, I guess United States Senator Jon Tester sounds like a dummy senator?
I guess that would some of his votes.
Cancel that. Sorry. I don't want to offend the gentleman from the great state of Montana. Instead, let me proclaim that all all the U.S. senators are dummies! Every single one of 'em!
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I would imagine something similar (but careless/negligent) was happening here. Someone was testing something in the CC billing code, and was used to searching for user last-named Test and firing off a charge. They probably didn't notice that the returned value wasn't Test anymore, for some reason, but Tester.
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I am saddened to hear that there are so many incompetent developers working on financial systems.
1) You never run tests on a live system unless it's absolutely unavoidable.
2) You never indicate a test account as such by using the name "Test" or any variety of that, for reasons your friend has found out. You use a special flag in the records, or if you really have to use a bogus name for some reason (legacy system, perhaps), you use one that absolutely could not be a real name. A GUID or random string of digits, for example.
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Me too.
Thirty-some, thirty-five-some odd years ago, I guess now—back then, as a beginning database administrator, I had that passed down to me as an ironclad rule from more senior DBAs.
Don't mix test data onto the production databases. No. Do not do it. Don't do it. No.
Copy the schema. And then run your tests on the test db.
Copy the schema, kid. I'm serious. You wanna get fired?
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But, to be fair, there can be situations where a test db is impossible. A few months back, I had to investigate a problem in a customer's production database. The database was so enormous that it it couldn't be copied onto a test server. I had to work with the live production system.
Those situations are very, very rare, though, and we treat it like we're handling nitroglycerine. Every action taken has to be reviewed and approved by the development team and the qa team prior to doing it.
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Maybe it was the other way around - production data in the test database, because they were having problems in production that they couldn't duplicate with the normal test data. But they failed to realize that the "withdraw money" function actually worked in the test system - most likely that ordinarily just fails in the test system because nothing is hooked up to a real bank account.
Something similar happened to a company I worked for, except that was just emails being sent from the test system. Much less serious, yet still a bit annoying.
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What about me?
Due to my maternity ward nurse accidentally filling out my birth certificate on a laptop with numlock turned on, my name is W5335a0 J6hns6n, you insensitive clod!
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http://xkcd.com/327/
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It gives me 100 percent control of the maximum that someone could fuck me out of.
It sounds like a pain in the ass to setup and do every month but it's not since you have to do it once. I auto fill my prepaid cards at the last Thursday every month.
I use them for-
Dish
Internet
I would use one for my GYM, but they take cash so there is no need.
Various game subscriptions
Better safe than sorry.
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"These fears were confirmed slightly over a month later when Fitness 19 withdrew $165.00 from her account, which directly resulted in $105 in overdraft fees for Tester."
I always wonder how come ppl don't have more money sitting in their chequeing account... Does most ppl have their chequeing account sitting at $0 and only transfer money in when they have issued a cheque? That sounds like a system that would most likely benefits the bank since people ARE prone to forget and make mistakes.
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In fact, I find it kind of strange that you even ask this question. Have you seriously never been broke?
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and usually my budget for the entire month is in my chequeing account, about $2000 and I usually have about 1000 sitting in there so I don't have to pay bank fees.
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It's not about carrying debt. It's about people who earn so little that they can't carry a surplus in their checking accounts. Which is a large percentage of people in the US.
The people who can't carry a surplus are the same people for whom being able to spend $2,000/mo would be considered luxurious.
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That one bounces ($35 overdraft fee). As do the next two ($70 in overdraft fees). $105 in overdraft fees for an account she would have been right to assume was standing at $130. That's how that happens. It's not like a person just tops off the account in order to cover outstanding checks. Plus, this was done electronically, so there's no way she would have known that withdrawal was coming.
The system benefits the banks either way.
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As much as people hate them credit cards are extremely useful. If you pay a credit card off at the end of the month you pay nothing but you still get access to many perks including a very useful dispute system and extended warranty service plus no overage fees if an unexpected charge goes through.
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And I don't have to worry about paying a credit card payment.
My bank account has overdraft protection on it.
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The big win is that then you don't have to use credit cards and get all the hassle that comes with them (including having to deal with credit card companies), and the people you use cards with don't get quite as ripped off with usurious charges.
There are advantages to using credit cards, and I understand why people go that route. But there are disadvantages to using credit cards as well. Every person has to decide for themselves what they're comfortable with.
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I do not think that means what you think it means.
"Overdraft protection" is the PR term that banks invented when legislation was passed requiring them to inform their customers of their overdraft policy and requiring customers to opt-in for the "benefit" of paying overdraft fees.
They pushed "Overdraft protection" down our throats in order to keep the hefty fees that they were raking in.
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AOL
The supervisor had a major attitude with me. I was told that they were AOL. I gave them permission to debit from my account any amount and at any time they want and if they wanted to continue to debit from my account, they will. I ended up having to cancel my checking account and then open up a new one to prevent them from debiting any more. I filed a complaint with the BBB and there was no resolution. AOL's response said that if I want my money back, I would have to sue them and they had plenty of lawyers to handle people like me. I never did get my money back.
NEVER allow any company to debit directly from your checking account if you want to keep your money.
I HATE AOL after what they did to me. It is still a sore point to me. It is nice to find a place to vent after all these years.
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The first option is a ridiculous verification; the second is just operator error.
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Why do you think they took the higher option?
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Why would they care?
Also, wouldn't it be safe to assume that the bank had already vetted the person behind the account?
This sounds more like fraud then anything else. I only wonder if the financial manager is doing this solo or if there is a group of them working together. In either case I suppose they could hire Prenda to handle their defense.
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credit not debit...
a long time ago, had a cell phone when they came in bags; after a year or so of dicking around with it, decided to cancel the account... went PERSONALLY into the office, and -thought- i had cancelled the account (they didn't tell me otherwise)... kept on getting dinged for the phone, kept on insisting i had cancelled the account... when it all came out in the wash, turns out they don't 'accept' a cancellation WHEN YOU DO IT IN PERSON (HOW much more 'official' can you get?), i had to jump through hoops and send letters, etc... fuckers...
a similar occurrence with an online payment processor happened, only complicated by the fact it was a slimy company ten levels deep that had been bought/sold a number of times in the interim... didn't have to do *SHIT* to 'sign up' and create an account, etc; *BUT*, when i went to cancel said account, there were EXTREME hoops to jump through: had to provide a copy of my driver's license, etc, etc, etc...
WTF ? didn't have to provide ANY of that sort of info when i signed up, but to *cancel* i have to ? again, fuck those fuckers...
the safe and prudent course of action is to presume ALL companies are out to screw you (because they are), AND that virtually ALL the laws are slanted to their favor...
(hell, simply the one-sided arbitration requirements *SHOULD* be illegal in a moral universe... we are no longer in such a universe...)
art guerrilla
aka ann archy
eof
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Tomrrow's story
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Not surprising, really
There were multiple whole rooms dedicated to material filed in lawsuits over this.
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$6 month?!
I mean, I feel like Dr. Who asking where Oswin gets the milk for her souffle but WHERE DOES A GYM MEMBERSHIP ONLY COST $6? That screams that you're going to find a lot of surprise charges elsewhere.
The price I keep coming back to is the cost of a 24-hour membership at Costco. I would call this the lowest cost of a reputable membership and it's only because of the bargaining power of Costco and the negotiating power of a guaranteed payment for two years. The last time I checked it's around $300, or about $15/month.
And she walked in and got a $6/month membership? Does. Not. Compute.
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Re: $6 month?!
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I agree with you, such agreements are absurd. Lately, I often read reviews of sports equipment and after the next article https://formmefit.com/best-weight-benches I decided that I would be cheaper to make your own sports area.
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