A former Chick-fil-A employee in Texas allegedly stole more than $80,000 from his former workplace by repeatedly entering the restaurant and processing fraudulent refunds to his personal credit card, according to Grapevine police.
How the Scheme Unraveled
Keyshun Jones worked at the Grapevine Chick-fil-A location before his termination last year. The investigation launched in November 2025 after restaurant owners reported hundreds of suspicious refund transactions. Detectives reviewed surveillance footage that allegedly captured Jones behind the cash register conducting the fraudulent activity, despite no longer being employed there. Police have not disclosed how Jones accessed the point-of-sale system after his firing.
The scheme involved Jones entering fake food orders into the register system, then immediately processing refunds that directed funds to his personal credit card. This type of employee theft represents a common vulnerability in the restaurant industry, where workers with register access can manipulate systems to issue unauthorized refunds. The scale of the alleged theft—exceeding $80,000—suggests the activity continued for an extended period before detection.
Arrest and Serious Charges
A warrant for Jones’ arrest was issued on April 6, 2026. He was taken into custody on April 17 with assistance from the Texas Attorney General’s Fugitive Task Force and Fort Worth Police Department. Jones now faces multiple charges including property theft, money laundering, and evading arrest. The money laundering charge applies when proceeds from alleged illegal activity are processed through financial transactions. The evading arrest charge indicates authorities believe Jones attempted to avoid apprehension.
What This Means
Under Texas law, Jones could face up to 10 years in state prison if convicted on these charges. The case highlights security vulnerabilities that exist in restaurant point-of-sale systems, particularly regarding access controls after employee termination. Neither the Grapevine Police Department nor Chick-fil-A representatives have provided additional comment on the case. The incident serves as a reminder for businesses to implement strict controls over cash register access and monitor refund transactions for suspicious patterns.

This story doesn’t wash. How could he possibly get $80,000 in refunds in 5 months? Obviously the restaurant owners were not very bright.
Ex employee or maybe the manager? But someone was not doing their job.
My question is how the system allows a refund to a card that was not charged prior to the refund being issued,