[0:00] Wells Fargo has just been caught trying to scam a woman out of fourteen hundred and seventy dollars. She ordered a debit card in the mail to replace her old one, but it never reached her. Instead, it was activated by an unknown party who used it to charge her for fourteen hundred and seventy dollars for computer repair. She opened a dispute as unauthorized. And then Wells Fargo looked into it for about a week, finally coming back with a dispute decision that she was the one who made that transaction and that the business had confirmed her details [0:30] and the transaction amount. So she decided to do some investigative work herself. She called the computer repair business and asked them did this transaction ever occur? They confirmed that not only had the transaction never occurred, but Wells Fargo never even called them in the first place. And you know how I know that? Because I was the computer repair business in question. So I decided to make a video letting people know that Wells Fargo just fabricated a detail in an investigation that they said that she was the one who made this transaction. [1:02] And then I supposedly confirmed the details. They're just trying to take her money. They're trying to find the dispute not in her favor so that they don't have to give her her 14 hundred dollars back that they lost. Because they have some kind of inside job going on where they're losing debit Cards. They're getting charged and they can't recover the funds, so they're trying to hold random people accountable. And if you need proof, just refer back to this video.