CFPB Dismisses Lawsuit Against Zelle, U.S. Banks
The CFPB has dropped several cases since the new administration took over
- |
- Written by Global Exchange staff

The CFPB dropped charges against Zelle, JP Morgan Chase, Wells Fargo and Bank of America (the three largest United States-based banks that make up the most transactions).
The original suit was based on the premise that the firms did not investigate fraud or provide proper compensation for consumers who were victims of fraud.
The CFPB has dropped several cases since the new administration has taken over and Russel Vought has been in charge.
While Zelle has grown into having well over $1 trillion in transactions, the CFPB has also stated that customers of just those three banks have lost close to a billion dollars in fraud through the peer-to-peer platform.
Advocates of Zelle have pushed back on the charges and welcomed the dismissal.
Tagged under Consumer Credit; The Economy; Compliance; Cyberfraud/ID Theft; Fraud; Duties; Feature; Customers; Online; CFPB; Compliance/Regulatory; Feature3;
Related items
- Thank You to Our Attending Banks
- Banking Exchange Would Like to Thank Its Amazing 2025 Partners for the Banking Exchange National Conference in Chicago June 19
- Stable Coin, Global Payments and AI and Ethics are Keynote Topics During AI Week
- Xiaochen Zhang Leads AI Discussion at Banking Exchange Conference During AI Week
- Abrigo Executive Joining Two Banking Leaders for Discussion on Managing Fraud and Risk June 19th