
Originally Posted by
lauram
So as we know its almost impossible to use credit cards to make a deposit into a casino. We use other sources such as click2pay moneybookers instadebit ewallet and so on. My question is this so when you win at these casinos they deposit the funds back into the means of deposit, but now the prob comes when you want to use this money to deposit into another casino why is it they still charge back to you bank account. So what does someone do next this person had a nice sum of money into one of those deposit features and during this had planned on changing their bank account from saving to checking account so when they went to deposit they charged the bank the money rather then taking it from the money they had in their account such as c2pay instadebit and so on.
I havent had to deal with this issue for them so thought i would ask here to see what she should do. She is now dealing with 40 dollar charge for nsf from bank plus the charge that one of c2pay instadebit will charge her instead of them using the money she had in her account with them, if you cant load up the account and depend on them using that what else do you do.
1) Do not have it linked to a bank account.
2) If a link is needed, deregister the account with the eWallet BEFORE you ask the bank to make any changes.
3) Provided the funds are in the eWallet, they should have been used to fund a new deposit, the linked bank account is only for the purpose of funding deposits where insufficient funds exist within the eWallet to cover the request.
It would seem that the eWallet made a mistake in this instance, and should therefore compensate the customer for the consequences of this mistake. Enforcing it is a different matter though, they are not usually regulated in the same country as the player, although if they are regulated elsewhere, a complaint might be possible.
Click2Pay seems questionable, they are a German company, but when I had cause to complain I was contacted by their then CEO - from CYPRUS! I had a Cyprus address for their "offices", and was assured this was the GREEK part, and not the Turkish part - important, because only the Greek part is in the EU, and regulated as such.
Moneybookers and Neteller are regulated here in the UK, and also the IOM for Neteller (it is rather light regulation though, more a licence that excuses them from many of the provisions required of proper banks).
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