So now I am blocked from posting to the Lame and the Halt Blog. I have tried to post the below a couple of times, and nothing happens. Normally, you would get the message "your post is awaiting moderation".
> Why have people accessed these accounts previously, many have paid off debt.
Name one.
and
> [alien6] You still never answered the question; (nor do I expect that you ever will) what was deposited in Beanes Account that allowed him to obtain the motor home?
I've actually answered it repeatedly.
[wserra] With stolen money. With money that he got from USAA Bank by linking a fake funding account and taking advantage of ACH delay combined with USAA Bank’s goodwill towards veterans (now ended, thanks to Beane) and a hole in their verification procedures (now fixed).
[wserra] On the first day of testimony – January 23, 2018 – one Monica Alcala, a representative of USAA Bank, answered this very question. She testified (pp 128-130) that on July 3, 2017, Beane added a funding account to his USAA account. The routing number for the account he attempted to add was to the Federal Reserve, followed by his own Social Security number as the account number. He then proceeded to rack up the charges. She testified that, since USAA Bank deals with veterans, they will credit immediately, not waiting for the funding bank to actually transfer the money. If you look into the nature of ACH (Automated Clearing House) transfers, typically they do not clear immediately in any event, and most banks will not allow immediate withdrawals. USAA is different because, as Ms. Alcala testified, “It goes back to we try to take care of our members who are active military, so we try to take care of them as fast as possible.” Unfortunately for USAA Bank, some of their members are more trustworthy than others. Beane fell on the wrong side of that line.
[wserra] So: electrons were deposited in that account. USAA Bank allowed them to be withdrawn as dollars because they trusted someone who turned out to be a thief.
So in fact I've answered that question in considerable detail. You just don't like the answer. Have you ever known anyone who bounced a check but still got to take home the item that the bad check was supposed to pay for? Did the fact that s/he took the item mean that there was really money in the account to pay for it? Just as with Beane, did there come a time of reckoning when the person either had to return the item or pay for it? And, failing that, did there come a time when law enforcement came calling? Are you starting to see the parallels?
Moreover, after I first submitted these, people continue to challenge me, with no one honest enough to recognize (let alone say) that I can't respond. I'd still like to ask a question there: if they all are so sure they're right, why don't they try to buy a $500K RV by "accessing their value"?