An Ontario woman who was shocked by $1,400 in video game charges on her credit card said she's heartbroken that the fees won't be refunded.
"I don't know how anyone could rack up that much on a game. My grandson said it was for skins or credits," Diana Liscoumb of Sutton, Ont. told CTV News Toronto.
Liscoumb said her 13-year-old grandson asked if she could use her credit card to buy him points for one of his games he plays and she agreed.
She thought the most he could spend was $15, but over the course of three days he ran up $1,400 in charges.
Liscoumb said when she got her credit card bill, she had been charged $1,400 in fees and it would have been higher, but her credit card stopped the charges as they were considered unusual activity.
"I don't know how anyone could rack up that much on a game. My grandson said it was for skins or credits," Diana Liscoumb of Sutton, Ont. told CTV News Toronto.
Liscoumb said her 13-year-old grandson asked if she could use her credit card to buy him points for one of his games he plays and she agreed.
She thought the most he could spend was $15, but over the course of three days he ran up $1,400 in charges.
Liscoumb said when she got her credit card bill, she had been charged $1,400 in fees and it would have been higher, but her credit card stopped the charges as they were considered unusual activity.
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Grandmother shocked by $1,400 in video games charges on her credit card that won't be refunded
An Ontario woman who was shocked by $1,400 in video game charges on her credit card said she's heartbroken that the fees won't be refunded.
toronto.ctvnews.ca