An 83-year-old Texas woman says Wells Fargo left her on the hook for nearly $15,000 after fraudsters altered a check she mailed — and now going to the bank induces vomiting and tears.
Billie Young, a Dallas resident who has been caring for her cancer-stricken husband, wrote two checks in August 2024, according to her family.
One was for her electric bill. The other, for $14,952.52, was meant to pay off her car loan.
Only one payment reportedly made it where it was supposed to go.
While the utility bill was processed normally, the car loan check was altered and cashed by an unauthorized party, draining nearly $15,000 from Young’s Wells Fargo account, her family told WFAA-TV.
Wells Fargo denied Young’s fraud claim in May, citing “untimely reporting,” according to correspondence reviewed by the family.
“The claim will remain denied, and we will not reimburse you for the disputed transactions,” the bank reportedly wrote.
The rejection has taken a toll on Young, according to her family.
“It’s been very sad, and more so to see we can’t get through a bank visit without her vomiting or being in tears,” Young’s granddaughter, Kecia Byars, told WFAA-TV.
Young’s family insists she contacted the bank well within the reporting window mandated by Wells Fargo in order to submit a claim for reimbursement.
On Sept. 6, Young called Wells Fargo to ask about both checks — a call she documented in her checkbook, WFAA-TV reported.
A bank representative told her the electric bill check had not cleared, and Young requested a stop payment.
She was also told the car loan check had cleared.
According to the family, the rep did not tell Young that the check had been cashed by someone other than the intended payee.
Believing the loan had been paid, Young took no further action.
Later that month, she received a bill from the lender showing the balance was still due.
It wasn’t until mid-October, after she obtained an image of the cashed check, that the fraud became clear, the victim’s family said.
The name of the payee had been changed to someone Young did not know and her signature appeared to have been altered.
Young filed a fraud claim with Wells Fargo, and her family filed a report with the Dallas Police Department, they said.
They added that the altered check was initially rejected by one bank because it appeared fraudulent before another bank ultimately cashed it.
Young, who had banked with Wells Fargo since 1996, later closed her account.
After WFAA reported the story late last month, viewers nationwide contacted the station with similar accounts involving elderly relatives whose fraud claims were denied over timing issues.
Following a second report earlier this week, Wells Fargo said it was “re-reviewing” Young’s case.
Dallas police also said they were taking another look at the case.
The Post has sought comment from Wells Fargo.


