If you’ve not yet heard about this case, here are the facts:
Nazita and her husband David have a joint account at a Chase branch in Kew Gardens, Queens, along with a custodial one for their three children. But Nazita also had a
bank account of $800,000—money that was apparently hers alone. Unbelievable though it seems, the suit alleges that
a bank employee at Chase called her husband David to encourage him to move some of that $800,000 in his wife’s secret bank account into other investments with Chase. David, it seems, knew nothing about that account until the phone call came in.
Had Nazita read either my book
How to Be Invisible, or my e-book
Invisible Money, this sad affair could have been avoided. Here is what she should have done:
1. Given a
ghost address when she opened the account, along with:
2. A secret voice mail number that only she could access.
Do you have a secret bank account? If so, does the banker have your true address and telephone number? If so,
move that account to another bank!
Labels: Chase bank, ghost address, nazita, secret phone number, secret bank account
Privacy blog post by JJ Luna at 6:00 AM
