Taco Bell Employee Charged With Fraud, Theft After Stealing Customer Credit Card InformationThe employee worked at a Taco Bell located in Oregon, Ohio.

ByEmily Rella

Getty Images
The drive-through lane at a Taco Bell restaurant.

One Taco Bell employee allegedly tried to 'Live Más' by overcharging customers' credit cards and pocketing the extra cash.

Trevell Mosby, who worked at an Oregon, Ohio, location of the chain, isbeing accusedof identity fraud and theft after multiple customers complained that they were incurring excess charges after he checked them out at the register, sometimes totaling hundreds of dollars.

One couple, Kristin and Crystal Orwig, claim that they frequent the location twice a week and have never had an issue until they noticed it took an abnormally long time for their card to run when Mosby was serving them earlier this month.

Related:Taco Bell Wants 'Taco Tuesday' to be 'Free' from Trademark

"I hand the kid my card and he swipes it," Kristin Orwig told local outletABC 13. "He's in there for a few minutes and kind of looks over at me because we're like 'Where's my card?' and he's like 'Oh. I'm sorry I'm having trouble with your card, I'm going to have to swipe it."

After checking their bank statements days later, the couple noticed around $700 in online charges on the card that they handed to Mosby, prompting an investigation by the Oregon Police.

Mosby was found guilty of stealing money from multiple customers and was taken into custody.

Oregon Police stated that customers can't do much to prevent similar incidents in the future other than opting to use cash to pay when possible, according toABC 13.

Authorities encouragethose who believetheir information was compromised to file a police report that includes a copy of their most event bank statement, indicating where the fraudulent charges are.

Related:Taco Bell Slammed With Class Action Lawsuit Over Crunchwraps

Taco Bell did not immediately respond to Entrepreneur's request for comment.

The company is also involved in other legal troubles. Last month, Taco Bell wasserved with a class-action诉讼after being accused of misleading customers through "unfair and deceptive trade practices" by providing a much lower amount of beef and cheese in its Crunchwrap Supreme and Grande Crunchwrap menu items than advertised.

Taco Bell is a part of Yum! Brands, which also oversees popular fast-food chains like KFC and Pizza Hut.

Yum! Brandswas upjust over 10% in a one-year period as of Monday afternoon.

Emily Rella

Entrepreneur Staff

Senior News Writer

Emily Rella is a Senior News Writer at Entrepreneur.com. Previously, she was an editor at Verizon Media. Her coverage spans features, business, lifestyle, tech, entertainment, and lifestyle. She is a 2015 graduate of Boston College and a Ridgefield, CT native. Find her on Twitter at @EmilyKRella.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Real Estate

How to Determine How Much Real Estate Your Business Needs

Here are a few things to consider when choosing a location for your business.

Business News

'An Absolute Prize': Rare Great Depression $10,000 Bill Sells For Nearly $500,000

The $10,000 bill is from 1934 and was never in circulation.

Starting a Business

How to Write Quality Content for E-Commerce Website 10x Faster

Content is one of the pillars of any e-commerce platform.

Business News

'Why I Have Trust Issues': Amazon Prime Video to Begin Increasing Subscription Prices Next Year

The streaming service will soon begin playing advertisements for streamers.

Business News

ByteDance's 'Meet Cute' Channel Allows Employees to Play Matchmaker

TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, reportedly has an internal matchmaking scheme.

Growing a Business

This is the Number One Mistake to Avoid After Hiring Your First Employee. Are You Guilty of It?

Hiring the "best candidate for the job" won't necessarily cut it anymore.