Four burgers at his neighborhood Burger King cost George Beane a whopping
$4,334.33.
Beane ordered two Whopper Jr.s and two Rodeo cheeseburgers when he pulled up
to the drive-through window last Tuesday. The cashier, however, forgot that
she'd entered the $4.33 charge on his debit card and punched in the numbers
again without erasing the original ones ¡ª thus creating a four-figure bill.
 A man orders food from the
drive-up window at Burger King in Miami in this file photo.
[AP] |
The electronic charge went through to George and Pat Beane's Bank of America
checking account and left the couple penniless. Their mortgage payment was due
and they worried checks they had written would bounce, Pat Beane said.
"We were thinking, 'No, not now!'" she said of the overcharge.
Terri Woody, the restaurant manager, said Burger King officials tried to get
the charge refunded. But the bank said the funds were on a three-day hold and
could not be released, Pat Beane said.
The hold is designed to prevent customers from spending money that no longer
is available in their accounts and to let the bank confirm a transaction is
legitimate before transferring funds, said Bank of America supervisor Joel
Solorio.
Burger King did not charge the Beanes for their meal, and the couple got
their $4,334.33 back on Friday.
"For those three days, those were the most expensive value burgers in
history," Pat Beane said.