With increasing resolution and sensitivity of photoelectron spectroscopy the influence of defects is becoming more and more obvious. The scattering processes induced by adsorbate atoms can be studied by time- and angle-resolved two-photon photoemission. We have examined the dynamics of electrons in image-potential states on the Cu(001) surface for statistically distributed Cu adatoms and identified different scattering mechanisms. Scattering of electrons from the second (n=2) to the bottom of the first (n=1) image-potential band is observed which we attribute to inelastic interband scattering with electrons in the bulk. At energies above the bottom of the n=2 band resonant interband scattering from the n=2 to the n=1 image-potential band is found. The rate for these processes can be determined by modeling the time-resolved measurements via optical Bloch equations of a four-level system. Comparison of transition and decay rate reveals that the decay rate of the n=2 electrons is almost exclusively changed by additional resonant interband-scattering processes upon adsorption.