santander bank escapes responsibility

A Massachusetts Appeals Court has ruled in favor of Santander Bank in a case that highlights the limited responsibility banks bear for customer cryptocurrency losses.

Lourenco Garcia, who lost a staggering $751,500 to the fraudulent crypto platform CoinEgg, walked away empty-handed after judges determined the bank had no obligation to prevent his authorized transactions—despite their suspicious nature.

The ill-fated transfers occurred during a three-week period bridging 2021 and 2022, when Garcia initiated multiple transactions including debit card purchases through Crypto.com and seven separate wire transfers.

The funds vanished like morning mist, leaving behind only digital footprints and a profound sense of betrayal.

Garcia’s lawsuit claimed Santander should have recognized the red flags waving frantically above these transactions.

His fingers pointed to the bank’s own marketing materials, which boasted about fraud monitoring and customer notifications.

“They promised to be vigilant,” one could imagine him arguing, while bank representatives shuffled uncomfortably in their seats.

The court, however, remained unmoved by this reasoning.

In their view, Santander’s customer agreement contained no promise to block authorized transactions, regardless of how suspicious they might appear.

The judges deemed the bank’s website language about fraud monitoring as mere marketing—colorful promises with no binding legal weight.

At the heart of the ruling lies a fundamental principle: banks aren’t financial guardians against scams involving transactions that customers themselves authorize.

The Legal Bitcoin News reported that the court confirmed Santander Bank was not liable for the customer’s crypto losses.

The cold reality of Authorized Push Payment fraud crashed against Garcia’s expectations like waves against an unyielding cliff.

Financial Crimes Enforcement Network regulations require strict compliance from crypto exchanges, but traditional banks operate under different guidelines for customer-authorized transfers.

This case emerges against a backdrop of exploding cryptocurrency scams, with losses skyrocketing by over 6,000% in early 2025 compared to the previous year.

As digital assets continue their march into mainstream finance, the legal landscape struggles to keep pace with evolving threats.

The legal process spanned two full years with decisions consistently favoring Santander in both Superior Court and appeals court proceedings.

For now, the message rings clear as a bell: when it comes to cryptocurrency transfers, customers stand alone at the precipice, with banks safely watching from a legally protected distance.

Leave a Reply
You May Also Like

Telegram Founder Blasts ‘Misinformation’ as France Quietly Adopts EU’s Strict New Rules

French authorities suddenly follow EU rules after Telegram founder’s controversial arrest. Durov insists the platform always complied while fighting censorship. The battle for digital privacy heats up.

Ondo Challenges SEC on Shaping the Future of Tokenized US Securities

SEC meets crypto rebellion: Ondo’s $1B tokenized securities empire challenges outdated regulations while their token surges 9%. The future of finance hangs in the balance.

Panama City’S Bold Move: Paying Taxes Now Possible With Cryptocurrency

While countries struggle with crypto laws, Panama City boldly allows Bitcoin tax payments, instantly converting digital currencies to dollars. The tropical metropolis is reinventing government finance. Officials believe this changes everything.

Ex-Celsius CEO Faces May Sentencing as Thousands Demand Accountability for Lost Billions

From 30 years to just 1 day? Ex-Celsius CEO awaits May sentencing while thousands of fraud victims demand prison time for the billion-dollar crypto collapse. Justice hangs in the balance.