Quizzes & Puzzles6 mins ago
need a sort code address
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As above, if your story is literally true (as likely as "God invented cricket as a punishment, just for me") then you would have no involvement beyond speaking to your bank and to the payee. You would have no call whatsoever to speak to the other bank.
None.
Hey saintrichy,
Very tricky I'm afraid. Especially as you appear to have been given or found an invalid SC 20-99-11. Where did you get that from?
Anyways, the crux of it is that YOUR bank (who is your bank by the way? If it's another Barclays then this gets a lot (well - a bit) easier!) are the ones who will need to initiate a trace on who received the funds.
Here's the fun part - they WON'T TELL YOU!! It's a nightmare trying to get this info sometimes - especially if it's two different banks.
If it's Barclays to Barclays then the staff should at least tell each other what's going on (they still won't tell YOU the receviers information) and if they think it has gone to a wrong account they may well contact that person about it to try and get their OK to take the funds back.
If you bank somewhere other than Barclays then you're probably in for a long wait to get back not much information! A typical response is "The funds were deposited to account on the due-date" which basically means they gave your money to SOMEONE on the day it was due to go to them. They don't really care if it's the person you intended it for!
I do ramble don't I?! I know too much about this stuff but none of it's very helpful!
Bottom line - this can be brutal and if you genuinely think a fraud has taken place you probably should go to the police at the same time as the bank are investigating!