U.S. FTC sues Walmart for allegedly allowing money transfer services for fraud

Reuters

Published Jun 28, 2022 04:36PM ET

Updated Jun 28, 2022 06:50PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Federal Trade Commission said Tuesday it sued Walmart (NYSE:WMT) Inc, alleging the company had done too little to prevent scam artists from using its money transfer services for fraud that cost consumers "tens of millions of dollars annually."

Walmart, which offers some financial services, acts as an agent for money transfer services such as MoneyGram and Western Union (NYSE:WU).

For years, the FTC said, Walmart policy was to issue payouts even when fraud was suspected, and that the retailer failed to take other actions to prevent consumers from being defrauded.

"Consumers have reported tens of millions of dollars annually in fraud-induced money transfers processed by Walmart employees," the FTC said in a complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.

The complaint alleges that the retailer "is well aware" that fraudsters posing as everything from distressed grandchildren to government agents, or employing other known scams, had used Walmart's money transfer services to get cash to fraud rings.

"Nevertheless, Walmart has continued processing fraud-induced money transfers at its stores - funding telemarketing and other scams - without adopting policies and practices that effectively detect and prevent these transfers," the complaint said.

Walmart said in a statement that it would fight what it called a "factually flawed and legally baseless" lawsuit.

"Claiming an unprecedented expansion of the FTC's authority, the agency seeks to blame Walmart for fraud that the agency already attributed to another company while that company was under the federal government’s direct supervision," Walmart added without naming the other company.