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The Almighty Buck The Courts

PayPal Faces Lawsuit For Freezing Customer Accounts and Funds (engadget.com) 53

Three PayPal users who've allegedly had their accounts frozen and funds taken by the company without explanation have filed a federal lawsuit against the online payment service. From a report: The plaintiffs -- two users from California and one from Chicago -- are accusing the company of unlawfully seizing their personal property and violating racketeering laws. They're now proposing a class-action lawsuit on behalf of all other users who've had their accounts frozen before and are seeking restitution, as well as punitive and exemplary damages. Lena Evans, one of the plaintiffs who'd been a PayPal user for 22 years, said the website seized $26,984 from her account six months after it got frozen without ever telling her why. Evans had been using PayPal to buy and sell clothing on eBay, to exchange money for a poker league she owns and for a non-profit that helps women with various needs. Fellow plaintiff Roni Shemtov said PayPal seized over $42,000 of her money and never got an acceptable reason for why her account was terminated. She received several different explanations when she contacted the company: One customer rep said it was because she used the same IP and computer as other Paypal users, while another said it was because she sold yoga clothing at 20 to 30 percent lower than retail. Yet another representative allegedly said it was because she used multiple accounts, which she denies.
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PayPal Faces Lawsuit For Freezing Customer Accounts and Funds

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  • "exchange" (Score:2, Insightful)

    by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 )

    [Lena] Evans had been using PayPal to ... exchange money for a poker league she owns ...

    She misspelled "launder."

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Shaeun ( 1867894 )

      [Lena] Evans had been using PayPal to ... exchange money for a poker league she owns ...

      She misspelled "launder."

      That does not mean that Paypal gets to keep the money. Nor does it mean that they do not have to explain themselves. This has been a long time coming. It will be entertaining to watch.

      • No, they probably get to turn it over to law enforcement [justice.gov].
        • Not without due process from the law enforcement end they don't.
          • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

            Never heard of "civil forfeiture" have you?

            • by torkus ( 1133985 )

              Last I checked, private people (or companies, but stupid SCOTUS gave them personhood years back) cannot leverage civil forfeiture - only law enforcement can do that.

              Otherwise you could literally steal anything and claim it's civil forfeiture just like the cops do.

      • That does not mean that Paypal gets to keep the money. Nor does it mean that they do not have to explain themselves. This has been a long time coming. It will be entertaining to watch.

        Agreed. My comment was meant as a joke as her stated usage sounds suspicious. It's my understanding that PayPal -- and other online entities, like Facebook and Google, etc... -- have a history of freezing/seizing accounts with no or dubious reasons offered and also having difficult (if any) process for getting information about and/or appealing those actions. That's obviously wrong and unacceptable.

    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      Yeah... while I am not a huge fan of many of Paypal's behaviors, I am also always a bit skeptical of people who claim that Paypal shut them down and seized tens of thousands of dollars for 'no reason'. People are always innocent when telling their story to a sympathetic audience.
      • Yeah... while I am not a huge fan of many of Paypal's behaviors, I am also always a bit skeptical of people who claim that Paypal shut them down and seized tens of thousands of dollars for 'no reason'. People are always innocent when telling their story to a sympathetic audience.

        Her activity seems like a "suspicious mob thing" and I was actually joking on that -- and got mod'ed down for my efforts; guess I needed the :-) (sigh).

        In any case, I agree with your sentiment, but PayPal (and Facebook, Google, etc...) should provide clear reasons for account freezing/seizures and a well-documented process for getting information about the issue and appealing it. I know I'd be pissed is an account was disabled with no, or a dubious, reason offered and it was super difficult to more forw

  • by MpVpRb ( 1423381 ) on Friday January 14, 2022 @12:06PM (#62173033)

    I make tools for glass artists. Many of them make smoking pipes.Paypal treats them very poorly, taking their money and preventing them from selling a legal product

  • 15 years too late (Score:5, Interesting)

    by danda ( 11343 ) on Friday January 14, 2022 @12:08PM (#62173039)

    PayPal has been arbitrarily freezing accounts for at least 15 years, maybe 20. They froze one of mine back in 2004 or so just because I was making small payments of a few cents while testing out their API for an integration. Apparently that was somehow "suspicious". This was before they even had an API for testing, or if they had one they hid it well. I only had about $20 in the account and and was so angered that I never submitted the docs they requested, abandoned the account and integration, and swore never to give PayPal another dime.

    But anyway, sites like paypalsux.com and paypalwarning.com existed even back then with thousands and thousands of complaints from people with frozen accounts, and PayPal's lack of customer service is also legendary.

    I am amazed there has not already been a successful class action lawsuit. Or maybe there has...?

    Anyway, I support this effort.

    • Re:15 years too late (Score:5, Interesting)

      by crunchygranola ( 1954152 ) on Friday January 14, 2022 @03:18PM (#62173365)

      Paypal has a policy now of "permanent banning" which seizes all assets in an account and have the extremely useful policy (for Paypal) of not only having no appeals process but also being very aggressive about never giving any information at all to explain the ban. They will give you no information at all, and state that they never will, and if you ask a CSR for information with will be directed to a page that declares the only way to find out why you were banned is to file a lawsuit.

      Googling about such lawsuits will show that these individually filed lawsuits never get any information either. Hence this class action lawsuit.

      • Googling about such lawsuits will show that these individually filed lawsuits never get any information either.

        I tried, but most of the links on Google are about this story.

        • Not because the stole my money (I never let it accumulate there) but because Paypal started declining a lot of my very respectable customer's payments.

          Stripe also has decent customer support, vs Papal zero. I think Papal will fade away.

          But for the other, it is one thing to close an account arbitrarily. It is quiet another to keep the money. Even if the T&Cs say they can do whatever they like.

      • by antdude ( 79039 )

        PayPal also wants to connect to your bank which I refused to do.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        This is why you never keep funds in your PayPal account. Withdraw them immediately.

        Now that eBay has ditched PayPal, that is much easier to do.

        In Europe there is one advantage if you pay for stuff with PayPal - their return policy is better than most retailers.

    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      I recently opened an online only account. There was a big button that said add money, so I used it to get some initial funds in. The I used it to build a balance. Then I get a email saying that doing so violated the TOS, as it appeared to be suspicious activity, and my account could be closed. To add insult to injury I opted for the paid option with these losers, and they want money to downgrade. Be careful about where you put money.
  • Paypal has long been fighting (and winning) that it it not covered under bank regulations.
    https://www.cnet.com/news/feds... [cnet.com]

    "PayPal does not physically handle or hold funds placed into the PayPal service," the FDIC said in its letter.

    This is from 2002, now nearly 20 years ago. This distinction has become more and more meaningless as the years go on. Its high time that paypal fall in line with banking regs.

    • > "PayPal does not physically handle or hold funds placed into the PayPal service,"

      Neither does a bank. It's all ones and zeros in a computer's memory.

  • This is exactly why crypto should have caught on. Yes, crypto has many flaws, but it doesn't let some tech company middleman steal from you.
    • by ebvwfbw ( 864834 )

      This is exactly why crypto should have caught on. Yes, crypto has many flaws, but it doesn't let some tech company middleman steal from you.

      Think so, eh? Once someone has hacked your wallet and cleaned it out tell me how great it is. It happens all the time. They're even stealing NFTs. Thief is a thief after all. Thug on the street with a gun or a thug dressed in a 3 piece suit and a briefcase. The thug with a briefcase can steal a lot more from you than the guy with a gun.

  • by raftpeople ( 844215 ) on Friday January 14, 2022 @03:33PM (#62173425)
    Is PayPal freezing the funds for some duration, and then ultimately returning the funds to these people, or is PayPal actually keeping the funds indefinitely?
    • for many of my friends, paypal kept the money for ever.

    • by Kwirl ( 877607 )
      So, from my experience, about 15 years ago i sold something on ebay, and the user said the item was broken. they returned a literal package of dirt. then they filed a complaint about it and i disputed this and won. 10 years later, my paypal account was suspended with a few thousand dollars out of the blue and after multiple attempts, one CSR told me that 10 years ago I had been 'convicted' of fraudulent activity on my account. a couple years after that i had to receive a payment and a friend suggested u
    • Is PayPal freezing the funds for some duration, and then ultimately returning the funds to these people, or is PayPal actually keeping the funds indefinitely?

      According to TFA, PayPal told one of the plaintiffs that:

      ... the money was taken from her account "for its liquidated damages arising from those AUP violations pursuant to the User Agreement."

      In other words, they charged her for their time and trouble freezing her account and keeping her from getting her money for six months, just like their contract s

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