Employees At Major US Bank Accused of Draining Customers’ Accounts, Triggering $363,452 in Losses
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) says employees at a major US bank have been caught draining hundreds of thousands of dollars from customers’ accounts.
The thefts allegedly happened at Truist Bank over the course of about five years in multiple separate incidents.
The FDIC says Truist insider Mountee Brown caused losses of more than a quarter of a million dollars over two months.
“Respondent [Mountee Brown], while serving as a Financial Service Specialist at Truist Bank, Charlotte, North Carolina (Bank), on at least 26 occasions between October and November 2022, authorized the withdrawal of funds from customer accounts to individuals who were not authorized to receive those funds.
As a result of this unauthorized activity, the Bank suffered a loss of $255,000 and Respondent received financial gain of at least approximately $30,200.”
The FDIC is now banning Brown, who pleaded guilty to charges of bank fraud and aggravated identity theft in a U.S. District Court, from the US banking industry.
Next up is Elias Israel Roblero Rangel, a former Truist Bank personal banker. In a separate incident about five years ago, the FDIC says Rangel accessed the accounts of five clients and ordered debit and credit cards for the quintet without authorization and had them mailed to himself.
Using the credit and debit cards linked to the five customers, Rangel then made unauthorized ATM withdrawals from the accounts of three customers and shopped using the cards linked to two customers’ accounts.
The FDIC, which says Rangel caused $44,187 in losses to Truist Bank, is banning him from the banking industry. Rangel admitted the theft accusations and is facing a civil money penalty of $35,000 from the FDIC.
The former Truist Bank teller, Branden J. Ayala, is also facing an enforcement action from the FDIC.
Ayala allegedly processed at least 18 unauthorized withdrawals from customer accounts between August and October of 2020. The FDIC also says he cashed unauthorized checks and handed the proceeds to impersonators. Ayala caused at least $39,950 in losses to the bank, per the FDIC. The FDIC is banning Ayala, who neither admitted nor denied the allegations, from the banking industry and ordering him to pay a civil money penalty of $7,000.
Lastly, the FDIC is taking action against former Truist Bank employee Derrick Alan Smith. According to the agency, Smith stole $24,315 from four elderly customers of Truist Bank by cashing 16 forged counter checks while working at the lender.
The FDIC is consequently banning Smith, who pleaded guilty to forgery in October of 2021 after getting arrested, from working in the banking industry. The agency is also fining him $35,000 and ordering him to restitute Truist Bank for $24,315.
Generated Image: Midjourney
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Bitcoin Updates: Fed Divided Over Rate Reduction Amid Conflicting Inflation and Employment Concerns
- Fed officials debate December rate cuts amid conflicting inflation data and labor market risks, with no consensus on policy path. - Short-term inflation expectations rose to 4.7% in Nov 2025, while long-term forecasts stabilized at 3.6%, reflecting cautious public confidence. - Government shutdown delays critical economic data, forcing policymakers to rely on limited information as officials warn against both high rates and rapid cuts. - Tech/industrial firms showed resilience with strong Q3 earnings, co
LUNA Rises 10.0% in a Day Despite Market Fluctuations
- LUNA surged 10.0% in 24 hours on Nov 7, 2025, but remains down 78.51% year-to-date amid broader crypto market declines. - Analysts attribute the short-term rebound to buying activity, yet highlight persistent bearish trends and macroeconomic uncertainties. - Technical indicators show LUNA trading below 50-day and 200-day moving averages, reinforcing the continuation of a long-term downtrend. - Backtesting suggests sharp price surges like LUNA's 5%+ daily gains historically lack sustained momentum without
European Central Bank to launch digital euro pilot phase starting in 2027
DeFi protocol Balancer suffers 128 million USD hack
