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California bakery had $212K go missing, bank account frozen over clerical error. Are US banks allowed to do that?


Sarah Torres was counting on two government checks to keep her family-owned bakery afloat when an unfortunate mishap turned her business upside down.

After depositing two Employee Retention Credit (ERC) checks from the U.S. Treasury worth $212,853, Torres discovered that not only were the checks placed on hold, but her entire business account was frozen.

“It was just a nightmare,” Torres told ABC7 News. “I was crying to them, ‘please, this is a business account… I have 20 employees that I need to pay!’”

Torres eventually learned that the issue was a clerical error involving her business’s Employer Identification Number (EIN) that had been changed last year but apparently wasn’t updated with the IRS.

For more than a month, Torres struggled to access her business funds — which threatened the very existence of A Sweet Affair Bakery, a staple for those with a sweet tooth in Walnut Creek, California for more than four decades.

Congress created the ERC program in 2020 to help U.S. businesses keep employees on payroll during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. For Torres, these credits represented a vital financial lifeline.

“It’s money we’ve been waiting for years for, and we desperately need,” said Torres.

Unlike many small businesses during the pandemic, A Sweet Affair Bakery didn’t receive any federal Paycheck Protection Program loans, making these retention credits all the more critical to her operation. But with her business account frozen, Torres was forced to take drastic measures.

“We had to take out money from my kid’s college account… borrowed money from family members,” she said. “So it’s been a lot of stress. And I don’t really know why.”

When Torres contacted the IRS about the situation, she was reportedly told there were no flags on her account and that the agency had verified the cashed checks with her bank.

“I was so confused — like someone’s stealing our money? What’s going on?” she asked.

Her attempts to resolve the issue with Bank of America proved to be equally frustrating. Torres estimates she tried to contact the bank “hundreds” of times, with disappointing results.

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