Tesco Bank's boss has apologised after thousands of its current account customers were targeted by fraudsters.
The
bank confirmed some of its customers' current accounts "have been
subject to online criminal activity, in some cases resulting in money
being withdrawn fraudulently".
"We apologise for the worry and inconvenience that this has caused for customers," said Benny Higgins.
He said the bank would refund affected accounts "as soon as possible."
"We
continue to work with the authorities and regulators to address the
fraud and will keep our customers informed through regular updates on
our website, Twitter, and direct communication," he added.
The bank earlier said that the number of customers affected were in their "thousands but less than 10,000".
"We can reassure customers that we will ensure they do not lose out financially," added Mr Higgins.
Over
the weekend, customers complained about money being withdrawn without
permission, cards being blocked and long delays to get through to the
bank on the phone.
Some cards had been immediately blocked as a
precautionary measure, but affected customers would still be able to use
online banking and carry out chip and pin transactions, the company
said earlier.
Alan Baxter from Berwick-upon-Tweed said he had lost £600, leaving him with just £21.88 in the bank.
He said: "Tesco said they couldn't offer me emergency funds but would offer £25 as a goodwill gesture.
"I've
got food and petrol to pay for. I have a delivery of coal coming
tomorrow for our coal-fired heater and I won't be able to pay."
Kevin Smith, from Blackpool, said he had lost £500 from one account and £20 from another.
He
said: "I was just about to go to bed last night when I received a text
message from Tesco saying there had been fraud on my account. So of
course you panic."
'Vanished'
Other
customers complained on Tesco Bank's website and through social media
about long delays when calling the company's customer service line to
find out if their account was affected.
"Appalling service here. Woken at 4am to say contact urgently. Spent over three hours on hold. No answer," one wrote.
Another wrote: "Been waiting 40 mins to get through to @TescoBankNews. I hope my money is safe..."
A
third said: "My weekend is not going very well, thanks to Tesco Bank.
Money has vanished from my account and you don't even answer the phone."
Robert
Schifreen, editor of the computer safety website Security Smart, said
Tesco Bank must tell people what happened and how fraudsters obtained
customers' bank details.
'Hacked'
"It
could be, for example, that people have been attaching skimming
devices, card readers and cameras specifically to Tesco's cash point
machines, so that they've been capturing people's accounts there," he
told the BBC.
"It could be somebody who works at Tesco Bank who's
had access to the database. It could be somebody else, who Tesco have
passed information to, and that information has been hacked."
The
Financial Conduct Authority says banks must refund unauthorised payments
immediately, unless they have evidence that the customer was at fault
or the payment was more than 13 months ago.
Banks are also required to refund any charges or interest added to your account as a result of the fraudulent payments.
Tesco Bank has been owned by Tesco plc since 2008, after starting as a joint venture with Royal Bank of Scotland.
The bank has more than seven million customer accounts and 4,000 staff, based in Edinburgh, Glasgow and Newcastle.
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