Posted on 09/03/2017 4:40:32 PM PDT by nickcarraway
A university student in South Africa who discovered an erroneous deposit of $1 million in her financial aid account spent more than $60,000 of the fortune before authorities realized the mistake, school officials said.
The oversight occurred at Walter Sisulu University in Eastern Cape province when a massive over allocation of funds was accidentally loaded onto the students financial aid debit card.
The money, which was supposed to be a $100 stipend for food and books, was immediately available to the student, according to Intellimali, the company responsible for issuing the student cards. Four extra zeroes were added to the direct deposit.
University officials were alerted to the mistake by another WSU student who noticed the young womans newly found spending habits.
Several local media outlets identified the student through social media, creating an uproar throughout WSUs student community. In compliance with South African law, university officials declined to release the students personal details but have confirmed she is not responding to media inquiries and has made no official statement at this time.
Intellimali and WSU claim the student spent tens of thousands of dollars in just a few weeks and have begun examining her full transaction records to determine the extent of the spending spree.
The students account has since been blocked and the remaining balance has been retracted, said WSU spokeswoman Yonela Tukwayo in a statement.
The student will be liable for the money she has already spent, Tukwayo said.
Intellimali took full responsibility for the extraordinary oversight and claimed new policies already have been implemented to ensure such an incident never gets repeated.
The National Student Financial Aid Scheme, which provides a lump sum for universities to distribute to financial aid recipients, has demanded a full report from Intellimali and WSU.
When a mistake occurs in these processes, it is in the hands of the university, NSFAS said in a statement. NSFAS is not involved, except to get an official report from the university detailing what happened.
Intellimali has appointed a forensic auditor to investigate this incident which can only be described as unprecedented in our 10-year history, said the companys CEO Michael Ansell.
The formal investigation is underway, and Intellimali claimed legal action will be taken against the student for the misappropriation of funds.
The gross oversight drew swift condemnation from the South African Parliament.
This is unacceptable that such a grave mistake as this one could occur undetected on money appropriated by Parliament, said MP Connie September, who chairs the Committee on Higher Education and Training.
I don't know how that can happen, except by human error.
Surprised she didn't clean out the account and moved to a foreign country.
I saw an account elsewhere of what she did with it; sounds like she was too busy partying, giving her friends money, and buying crap to consider making a break for it.
Easy come, easy go.
I see the level of maturity and responsibility, as well as knowing right and wrong, are as screwed up for non-US students as they are for US students. Integrity? What integrity?
Now she will have pay off an amount that she could probably not fathom at her age. Did she really think that they were going to let her spend $1 Million and not want it back?
Wait a minute!
Is this guy the, ‘Prince’ who keeps sending me e-mails, asking me to take a few million off of his hands for a while?
*SNORT*
"Well, that's the way I'd be if I had it...easy come, easy go!"
One could buy an awful lot of pizza with that kind of money.
Dough for dough exchange.
I wonder if the error maker was fired?
My cousin once had over $300,000 show up in his PayPal account by mistake. He immediately called them up in order to correct the mistake. I used to have a screenshot of his account that day though.
I hope it all ends with a final trip back to South Africa. Now that we know her moral character.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.