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FL woman says 1 payment on estranged husband’s Spectrum bill led to $884 headache. How to avoid costly billing errors

Norma Brown wanted to help her estranged husband pay his phone bill. The Orange County, Florida, resident gave Spectrum his debit card in August to make a single payment that wasn’t from his account.

Brown says he flatly denied having his card registered, confirmed it was a one-time transaction, and even has paperwork listing it as such, per WFTV Action 9 (1).

Then Spectrum accused him again. And again. And again.

By December, four months of unauthorized monthly payments resulted in $884 being withdrawn from Brown’s account. “This is ridiculous,” he told Action 9. It wasn’t until I contacted the news outlet that Spectrum finally promised a refund — though as of mid-March, the money still hadn’t been refunded.

Under federal law, what Brown describes should never have happened. According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), when a company sets up automatic debit, it must provide the consumer with a copy of their payment authorization (2); This is a clear and understandable explanation of how much and how often to withdraw money.

Consumers should monitor their accounts to ensure the amount and timing of transfers exactly match the amount they agreed upon.

Brown had documentation showing the opposite: a single payment made to someone else’s account, according to Act 9, with a note stating that card information should not be stored.

Spectrum did not respond to questions about its authorization practices, the news outlet reported.

According to the Federal Trade Commission, the situation could have turned out very differently if Brown had used a credit card (3). With a credit card, you won’t have to pay a disputed fee that’s under investigation; With a debit card, the money is already withdrawn from your account.

This is a distinction that Action 9 has previously documented. When a billing glitch caused insurer Florida Blue to overdraft some customers’ accounts by as much as $142,000, the organization made clear the real problem (4):

“With a credit card, if you encounter overbilling issues, fraudulent charges, or other charges you didn’t authorize, you don’t get any money. Once you report the error to the credit card company, the process of correcting the problem begins immediately.

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