In the past six months, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau under the Trump administration has focused on rolling back penalties against companies from the Biden era, resulting in dropped lawsuits and dismissed orders.

Navy Federal Credit Union settled with the CFPB to refund $80 million in overdraft fees, but the new administration agreed to dismiss the order, leaving members, mainly service members, families, and veterans, uncertain about refunds.

The CFPB proposed reducing overdraft fees to $5 from $27, but the regulations were overturned by the Republican-controlled Congress, potentially costing banks billions in overdraft revenue.

Capital One was sued by the CFPB for allegedly cheating customers out of $2 billion in interest payments, but the case was dropped shortly after the Trump administration took over the bureau.

The CFPB filed a lawsuit against Walmart and Branch Messenger for deceptively steering delivery drivers to open accounts with high fees, seeking $10 million in refunds for harmed drivers, but the case was dropped by the Trump administration.

Zelle’s parent company and major banks were sued by the CFPB over failing to protect consumers from fraud, resulting in approximately $870 million in losses, but the lawsuit was dropped by the CFPB in March.

Read more at Yahoo Finance: A look at some of the consumer cases dropped by the CFPB under Trump