Consumer protection agency closes the Biden era taking big swings

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For the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, it’s been an anything-but-quiet holiday season.

On Friday, the federal watchdog agency the organization that runs Zelle and three of America’s largest banks over their handling of fraud on the popular payment platform.

Monday brought two more major enforcement cases. In the first, the government’s lawyers accused Walmart of some of its gig workers to accept payment through costly, fee-laden deposit accounts operated by a fintech partner. Later, it unveiled a suit against the real estate company Rocket Homes, accusing it of in its referral network so that they would steer clients to their sister lender, Rocket Mortgage.

The lawsuits are just the latest examples of how CFPB Director Rohit Chopra has opted to sprint ahead in the final days of the Biden administration with aggressive new actions that could potentially be reversed by President-elect Donald Trump’s appointees — effectively daring them to drop the efforts. Along with the flurry of lawsuits, the agency has finalized rules on and in recent weeks.

Trump is widely expected to replace Chopra, who has signaled that he will leave the agency if asked (he has also said he does not believe his agency should be a “dead fish” in the meantime). Whether the incoming administration chooses to continue these latest suits or retract them could be an early test of its approach to consumer protection enforcement, and will be watched carefully by both pro-business groups and progressive activists.

If “these and other cases are dropped, it will be very clear why that has happened,” said Robert Weissman, the co-director of the left-wing consumer protection group Public Citizen. “The big corporations and big donors will be getting favors from the Trump administration that claims to be on the side of little people.”

Florida Bankers Association President Kathy Kraninger, who led the CFPB under Trump, called the flurry of suits “transparently political” given their timing.

“I would never say they can’t take enforcement actions during this transition time period,” she said. “But these are clearly cases they’ve been working on for a long time, and when they haven’t brought them sooner, it becomes clear it’s this political imperative, not about the case itself.”

Friday’s action involving Zelle follows years of consumer complaints about fraud on the country’s largest peer-to-peer payment app.

The case targets Early Warning Services, which runs the platform, along with Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and JPMorgan Chase, three of the seven banking giants that sit on its board. It alleges that the companies effectively allowed scams to run rampant on Zelle while brushing off customers who had been conned or had their accounts hijacked, often instructing them to work out the problems with law enforcement or even the scammers themselves. According to the CFPB, customers at the three banks lost $870 million over seven years.

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