$10,000 wire transfer disappears after bank puts it in wrong account

CIBC says wrong information on form led to the error

Image | Robert Behan, left, and Barbara Behan

Caption: Robert and Barbara Behan battled both TD Bank and CIBC for months, trying to figure out how $10,000 they wired to their son ended up in a stranger's account. (Keith Burgess/CBC)

It's advertised as a safe and reliable way to send money, but an Ontario couple says the $10,000 wire transfer they sent their adult son was deposited into a stranger's account, then disappeared.
Barbara and Robert Behan wanted to help their son and his young family finish the basement in their home, so they sent the cash as a Christmas gift.
The transfer was sent from the couple's TD Bank account in Penetanguishene, Ont., on Dec. 21, to a CIBC branch in Calgary where their son has been banking for decades. But the money never showed up in his account.
Weeks later, CIBC told the Behans the money was gone — deposited into someone else's account the day it was sent — and that the account holder had withdrawn all $10,000 the next day, then shut the account down.
"It's inconceivable. Apparently this person had the exact same account number as our son," Barbara said.
"But they [CIBC] never matched the name of the account number to our son's name. They just put it into the wrong person's account. Nobody checked it."
CIBC says clients can have identical account numbers. It's another set of numbers — the five-digit transit numbers that identify a specific branch — that differentiates between accounts.

Image | Robert Behan

Caption: Some of the paperwork the Behans accumulated during the two months they were trying to get their money back. (Keith Burgess/CBC)

All of this could have been prevented if banks had a better system in place to make sure wire transfers end up in the right place, says banking expert Werner Antweiler.
"It really points to the [issues] with the current system," said Antweiler, an associate professor at the Sauder School of Business at the University of British Columbia.
"A simple mistake can get compounded very quickly because once the money has left an account, it is not easy, or it's often impossible, to retrieve it … so that's really imperative to get the transfer information right."
After two months of battling the banks, CIBC's ombudsman decided the bank was not at fault but offered the couple half of their money back as a goodwill gesture.
The bank returned the entire amount after Go Public contacted it.
WATCH | Wire transfer goes missing:

Media Video | The National : Couple loses $10K wire transfer after bank deposits it in wrong account | Go Public

Caption: An Ontario couple says their $10,000 wire transfer was deposited in the wrong account and then disappeared. The case highlights a key problem with Canada's wire transfer system — a lack of built-in error detection.

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'Many sleepless nights'

Until then, the Behans say they spent "many sleepless nights" wondering if they'd ever see their money again.
"I worried constantly. I said to all the bank managers and everybody we've been in touch with, 'If this was your $10,000, would you be so laid-back about it?' It's $10,000. It's not a $1.50. It's hard-earned money," Barbara said. The couple says they were bounced back and forth between the two banks, with neither taking responsibility.
TD told the couple the missing funds were CIBC's fault — because it put the money into someone else's account after TD had successfully transferred it.
CIBC's ombudsman blamed the Behans, telling them that, instead of providing the transit number for their son's Calgary branch, they should have given TD the one for the Burlington, Ont., location where he first opened his account decades ago.
The ombudsman also said the bank is attempting to recoup the money from the other account holder, "through legal action."
"We encourage clients to double-check this information when sending payments to ensure the funds are delivered to the intended recipient," wrote CIBC spokesperson Trish Tervit in an email to Go Public.
The couple says any problem should have been flagged and the money returned.
"It never should have reached the point that it did," Barbara said.

Image | TD Bank branch Calgary

Caption: TD told the couple the missing funds were CIBC's fault — because it put the money into someone else's account after TD had successfully transferred it. (Colin Hall/CBC)

Prone to errors

Such errors are a direct result of Canada's flawed wire transfer system, says Antweiler — a system, called Lynx, that's prone to mistakes even though it was launched just last September. The majority of banks operating in Canada use Lynx,(external link) including CIBC, with a few exceptions(external link).
"There are a great number of errors that happen when forms are filled out [and] the slightest error can lead to these kinds of situations where people are out of pocket, often quite deeply out of pocket," he said.
Lynx is only used in Canada. It's owned and operated by the non-profit Payments Canada, which is governed by organizations including the chartered banks and the Bank of Canada. It's in charge of almost all the systems (including debit, cheques and wire transfers — but not credit cards) used to make payments or otherwise send money.
More than 11 million transactions valued at $126 trillion were processed between financial institutions in 2021, including international payments, according to Payments Canada.
Lynx doesn't require banks to match the account number with the name of the account holder — and Antweiler says most banks don't — which increases the chance of errors like what happened to the Behans.

Image | CIBC branch

Caption: CIBC denied it was at fault, but eventually returned the Behans’ $10,000. (Colin Hall/CBC)

"We need to allow Canadians to transfer money more easily from bank to bank … a system that is not as error-prone, where if a few characters are wrong, the money ends up in the wrong place," he said.
Lynx replaced the Large Value Transfer System (LVTS) that had been in place for more than 20 years, according to the Payments Canada website. It calls Lynx(external link) "another milestone in payments innovation."
There is a solution, says Antweiler, pointing to other countries that use the International Bank Account Number (IBAN) system.
Unlike Lynx — which uses a three-digit bank code, a five-digit transit code and the account number — IBAN uses a lengthy alphanumeric code that allows its built-in error detection to flag problems, leaving little room for human error.
"That means if there's any error, like a number transposed or digit missing, [the transfer] would not work," Antweiler said.
As of January, 79 countries were using the IBAN system, including countries in the EU, Middle East, North Africa and the Caribbean.

Image | Werner Antweiler

Caption: Banking expert Werner Antweiler says, despite being less than a year old, Canada's wire transfer system called Lynx is flawed. (University of British Columbia)

Go Public asked five of Canada's major banks, Finance Canada and Payments Canada for statistics on wire transfer errors, but none made the information available.
The Behans say a safer, more reliable system is needed.
"We discovered during this time that our banking system, our banks, do not talk to each other. They do not work together. They don't have the same wire transfer forms. They don't communicate back and forth," Robert said.
"The thing we are saying is, how are [the banks] going to correct it in the future so it doesn't happen to anybody else?"
Go Public asked Payments Canada about the problems with Lynx and if it's considering changing to the IBAN system, but it didn't answer the questions.

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