
A certain Florida lady, in the autumn of her years, has set in motion a suit against JPMorgan Chase, upon the unfortunate event of swindlers purloining more than a million dollars from her purse.
Miss Olga Ponorovsky, octogenarian and retired engineer, declares that the bank did not shield her or her funds from the wiles of an investment charlatan, as the tale is related by The Sun.
Miss Ponorovsky first discerned the deceit in September of the year 2023, when she perceived a solicitation she was apt to deem authentic.
The knaves persuaded her to make thirty successive transfers over five months, amounting to 1.3 million dollars, under the pretense of promised returns. Alas, no coin ever returned to her purse.
She observes that the bank marked the large in-person withdrawals as “suspicious,” yet took no measures to intervene.
She further asserts that the bank neglected to report the suspicious proceedings to Florida’s Central Abuse Hotline, a duty demanded by the state’s law.
As stated by Mr. Robert W. Georges, a Florida attorney, according to the report,
“Florida has enacted certain statutory protections against these very financial impostures, and banks stand bound by law-and by common sense-to prevent the financial ruin of their most venerable customers.”
Chase has filed a motion to dismiss the case, contending that Ponorovsky acted of her own free will.
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2026-01-31 21:11