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Wells Fargo Agrees to Pay $3 Billion to Resolve Criminal and Civil Investigations into Sales Practices Involving the Opening of Millions of Accounts without Customer Authorization
justice.gov ^ | February 21, 2020 | DOJ

Posted on 02/21/2020 3:11:04 PM PST by ransomnote

$3 Billion Payment Result of Deferred Prosecution Agreement in Criminal Matter, Settlement of Civil Claims under FIRREA and Resolution of SEC Proceedings

Wells Fargo & Company and its subsidiary, Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., have agreed to pay $3 billion to resolve their potential criminal and civil liability stemming from a practice between 2002 and 2016 of pressuring employees to meet unrealistic sales goals that led thousands of employees to provide millions of accounts or products to customers under false pretenses or without consent, often by creating false records or misusing customers’ identities, the Department of Justice announced today. 

As part of the agreements with the United States Attorney’s Offices for the Central District of California and the Western District of North Carolina, the Commercial Litigation Branch of the Civil Division, and the Securities and Exchange Commission, Wells Fargo admitted that it collected millions of dollars in fees and interest to which the Company was not entitled, harmed the credit ratings of certain customers, and unlawfully misused customers’ sensitive personal information, including customers’ means of identification.

“When companies cheat to compete, they harm customers and other competitors,” said Deputy Assistant Attorney General Michael D. Granston of the Department of Justice’s Civil Division.  “This settlement holds Wells Fargo accountable for tolerating fraudulent conduct that is remarkable both for its duration and scope, and for its blatant disregard of customer’s private information.  The Civil Division will continue to use all available tools to protect the American public from fraud and abuse, including misconduct by or against their financial institutions.” 

“Our settlement with Wells Fargo, and the $3 billion monetary penalty imposed on the bank, go far beyond ‘the cost of doing business.’  They are appropriate given the staggering size, scope and duration of Wells Fargo’s illicit conduct, which spanned well over a decade,” said U.S. Attorney Andrew Murray for the Western District of North Carolina. “When a reputable institution like Wells Fargo caves to the pernicious forces of greed, and puts its own interests ahead of those of the customers it claims to serve, my office will not sit idle.  Today’s announcement should serve as a stark reminder that no institution is too big, too powerful, or too well-known to be held accountable and face enforcement action for its wrongdoings.”

“This case illustrates a complete failure of leadership at multiple levels within the Bank. Simply put, Wells Fargo traded its hard-earned reputation for short-term profits, and harmed untold numbers of customers along the way,” said U.S. Attorney Nick Hanna for the Central District of California.  “We are hopeful that this $3 billion penalty, along with the personnel and structural changes at the Bank, will ensure that such conduct will not reoccur.”

“Our office is committed to bringing to justice those who deliberately falsify and fabricate bank records in order to deceive regulators and the public,” said Inspector General Mark Bialek of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.  “I commend our agent and our law enforcement partners for their hard work and persistence that led to today’s announcement.”

“Today’s multi-billion-dollar penalty holds Wells Fargo accountable for its unlawful sales practices and pressure tactics in which it deceived millions of clients, thus causing substantial hardship for the very individuals who placed their trust in the institution,” said Inspector General Jay N. Lerner Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.  “The FDIC Office of Inspector General is committed to working with our law enforcement partners in order to investigate such financial crimes that harm customers and investors, and undermine the integrity of the banking sector.”

The criminal investigation into false bank records and identity theft is being resolved with a deferred prosecution agreement in which Wells Fargo will not be prosecuted during the three-year term of the agreement if it abides by certain conditions, including continuing to cooperate with further government investigations.  Wells Fargo also entered a civil settlement agreement under the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA) based on Wells Fargo’s creation of false bank records.  FIRREA authorizes the federal government to seek civil penalties against financial institutions that violate various predicate criminal offenses, including false bank records.  Wells Fargo also agreed to the SEC instituting a cease-and-desist proceeding finding violations of Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 thereunder.  The $3 billion payment resolves all three matters, and includes a $500 million civil penalty to be distributed by the SEC to investors.

The 16-page statement of facts accompanying the deferred prosecution agreement and civil settlement agreement outlines a course of conduct over 15 years at Well Fargo’s Community Bank, which was then the largest operating segment of Wells Fargo, consistently generating more than half of the company’s revenue.  The statement of facts outlines top Community Bank leaders’ knowledge of the conduct.  As part of the statement of facts, Wells Fargo admitted the following:

Beginning in 1998, Wells Fargo increased its focus on sales volume and reliance on annual sales growth.  A core part of this sales model was the “cross-sell strategy” to sell existing customers additional financial products.  It was “the foundation of our business model,” according to Wells Fargo.  In its 2012 Vision and Values statement, Wells Fargo stated: “We start with what the customer needs – not with what we want to sell them.”

But, in contrast to Wells Fargo’s public statements and disclosures about needs-based selling, the Community Bank implemented a volume-based sales model in which employees were directed and pressured to sell large volumes of products to existing customers, often with little regard to actual customer need or expected use.  The Community Bank’s onerous sales goals and accompanying management pressure led thousands of its employees to engage in unlawful conduct – including fraud, identity theft and the falsification of bank records – and unethical practices to sell product of no or little value to the customer. 

Many of these practices were referred to within Wells Fargo as “gaming.”  Gaming strategies varied widely, but included using existing customers’ identities – without their consent – to open checking and savings, debit card, credit card, bill pay and global remittance accounts. From 2002 to 2016, gaming practices included forging customer signatures to open accounts without authorization, creating PINs to activate unauthorized debit cards, moving money from millions of customer accounts to unauthorized accounts in a practice known internally as “simulated funding,” opening credit cards and bill pay products without authorization, altering customers’ true contact information to prevent customers from learning of unauthorized accounts and prevent Wells Fargo employees from reaching customers to conduct customer satisfaction surveys, and encouraging customers to open accounts they neither wanted or needed.

The top managers of the Community Bank were aware of the unlawful and unethical gaming practices as early as 2002, and they knew that the conduct was increasing due to onerous sales goals and pressure from management to meet these goals.  One internal investigator in 2004 called the problem a “growing plague.”  The following year, another internal investigator said the problem was “spiraling out of control.”  Even after senior managers in the Community Bank directly called into question the implementation of the cross-sell strategy, Community Bank senior leadership refused to alter the sales model, which contained unrealistic sales goals and a focus on low-quality secondary accounts.

Despite knowledge of the illegal sales practices, Community Bank senior leadership failed to take sufficient action to prevent and reduce the incidence of such practices.  Senior leadership of the Community Bank minimized the problems to Wells Fargo management and its board of directors, by casting the problem as driven by individual misconduct instead of the sales model itself.  Community Bank senior leadership viewed negative sales quality and integrity as a necessary byproduct of the increased sales and as merely the cost of doing business.

* * *

The government’s decision to enter into the deferred prosecution agreement and civil settlement took into account a number of factors, including Wells Fargo’s extensive cooperation and substantial assistance with the government’s investigations; Wells Fargo’s admission of wrongdoing; its continued cooperation in the investigations; its prior settlements in a series of regulatory and civil actions; and remedial actions, including significant changes in Wells Fargo’s management and its board of directors, an enhanced compliance program, and significant work to identify and compensate customers who may have been victims.  The deferred prosecution agreement will be in effect for three years.

The global settlement also reflects coordination between the Department of Justice and the SEC to ensure a resolution that appropriately addresses the severity of the defendants’ conduct while avoiding the imposition of fines and penalties that are unnecessarily duplicative.    

The deferred prosecution agreement was handled by the United States Attorney’s Offices in Los Angeles and Charlotte, with investigative support from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation - Office of Inspector General, the Federal Housing Finance Agency - Office of Inspector General, the Office of Inspector General for the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and the United States Postal Inspection Service.

The civil settlement agreement was the result of a coordinated effort between the Civil Division’s Commercial Litigation Branch and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles. 

Topic(s): 
Financial Fraud
Press Release Number: 
20-219
 


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: investigation; wellsfargo; wellsfargofine

1 posted on 02/21/2020 3:11:04 PM PST by ransomnote
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To: ransomnote

Drop in the bucket. They should have been shut down.


2 posted on 02/21/2020 3:18:23 PM PST by aimhigh (THIS is His commandment . . . . 1 John 3:23)
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To: ransomnote

“Today’s multi-billion-dollar penalty holds Wells Fargo accountable for its unlawful sales practices and pressure tactics in which it deceived millions of clients, thus causing substantial hardship for the very individuals who placed their trust in the institution,”


I understand how these actions hurt investors. How did they hurt customers? Open accounts that no one was aware of or ever used would seem to do nothing but slightly decrease then increase one’s credit rating.


3 posted on 02/21/2020 3:21:15 PM PST by lepton ("It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into"--Jonathan Swift)
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To: ransomnote

No, the remaining depositors do.


4 posted on 02/21/2020 3:24:51 PM PST by relictele
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To: ransomnote

Wells Fargo and its execs pay NOTHING. The depositors do. This is a joke.


5 posted on 02/21/2020 3:34:47 PM PST by Seruzawa (TANSTAAFL!)
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To: ransomnote

So no one at Wells Fargo will be going to jail for this? Or at least flogged?


6 posted on 02/21/2020 3:37:39 PM PST by Carl Vehse
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To: ransomnote

So no one at Wells Fargo will be going to jail for this? Or at least flogged?


7 posted on 02/21/2020 3:38:55 PM PST by Carl Vehse
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To: ransomnote
Those slimy, sleazy, fetid, fecal, foul, malodorous, loathsome, detestable, wretched, horrific, vile, offensive, criminal, thieving, swindling, treacherous sumbitches should have been filleted up like a tuna and sold off like 7-Eleven franchises fifteen years ago, and left everyone from the branch managers to the CEO hanging from lamp posts outside. It would have saved me and my wife ten years of headaches and heartaches, and we weren't the only ones. *spits*
8 posted on 02/21/2020 3:40:14 PM PST by Viking2002 (There's a little Al Bundy in all of us. And we vote.)
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To: aimhigh

“Drop in the bucket. They should have been shut down.”

Precisely correct. They should have been shut down for this level of perfidy and illegal actions. All assets sold and those harmed given compensation equal to their harm. The remainder given to the stock holders that would take a financial bath, and prosecution for the executives that allowed this crime.

Years in Leavenworth gives one time to ponder their errors of judgement and breaking the law and screwing innocents over.

ps
During the mortgage meltdown years ago and the bailouts of the banks, NOBODY WENT TO JAIL! Who runs our nation?


9 posted on 02/21/2020 3:43:24 PM PST by cpdiii ( canecutter, deckhand, roughneck, geologist, pilot, pharmacist THE CONSTITUTION IS WORTH DYING FOR)
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To: ransomnote

A WF employee told me about this today. Said last week Warren Buffett (Berkshire Hathaway) sold his entire stake in WF. Wondered aloud to me about the insider trading rules.


10 posted on 02/21/2020 4:08:58 PM PST by Honest Nigerian
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To: ransomnote

They did it to me as a Personal Line of Credit. I had no knowledge of it. They had sent me a stern letter after someone had used it up. I called the president of my local WF and told them to stick it. Changed banks.


11 posted on 02/21/2020 4:24:21 PM PST by waterhill (I Shall Remain, in spite of __________.)
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To: ransomnote

3 Billion is pocket change to Wells Fargo and means nothing. Except to the innocent shareholders who will be the ones who really pay.

How ‘bout some meaningful prison terms for those involved in the planning and execution of this fraud?

Actions speak louder than dollars.


12 posted on 02/21/2020 5:40:58 PM PST by upchuck (Mayor Pete is not running to win. He's running to mainstream homosexuality. ~ Cowboy Bob)
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To: ransomnote
Simply put, Wells Fargo traded its hard-earned reputation for short-term profits...

Their hard-earned reputation disappeared about the time of their last stagecoach run.

13 posted on 02/21/2020 5:43:29 PM PST by Mr. Jeeves ([CTRL]-[GALT]-[DELETE])
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To: ransomnote

But how much did Wells Fargo make?
How much did those at the top make?


14 posted on 02/21/2020 8:49:22 PM PST by minnesota_bound (homeless guy. He just has more money....He the master will plant more cotton for the democrat party)
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To: lepton
How did they hurt customers?

Here you go.

From 2002 to 2016, gaming practices included forging customer signatures to open accounts without authorization, creating PINs to activate unauthorized debit cards, moving money from millions of customer accounts to unauthorized accounts in a practice known internally as “simulated funding,” opening credit cards and bill pay products without authorization, altering customers’ true contact information to prevent customers from learning of unauthorized accounts and prevent Wells Fargo employees from reaching customers to conduct customer satisfaction surveys, and encouraging customers to open accounts they neither wanted or needed.

Having your money moved from the account where you expect it to be into another account that is "in your name" but of which you have no knowledge would do you great harm.

Having several credit cards open in your name even if they have zero balances will do you great harm if you go in to take out a mortgage.

15 posted on 02/21/2020 8:59:41 PM PST by Harmless Teddy Bear (A hero is a hero no matter what medal they give him. Likewise a schmuck is still a schmuck.)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear

Having your money moved from the account where you expect it to be into another account that is “in your name” but of which you have no knowledge would do you great harm.
——
That would be a theft of funds, which I don’t see referenced. As I understand, the money was moved into those accounts and then moved back to create the illusion that the accounts were in use. Was the money actually retained?

Credit scores have a variety of inputs, including borrowed funds due ( competing monthly obligations), proportion of open credit used, making regular payments on time, and average duration credit accounts have been open. Opening new accounts can spew the average towards new, until they slew the average towards longevity. Having more unused credit raises the score, apparently because it means you’ve been approved by others.

If you are someone who has little credit history, I suppose it could during a narrow window depress your score a few points, which could enter into the loan decisions at the margins, but the claims seem all out of proportion to that.


16 posted on 02/21/2020 9:29:11 PM PST by lepton ("It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into"--Jonathan Swift)
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To: ransomnote

That is nowhere close to enough. Let’s go for twenty billion, cease and desist orders on senior executives and the breakup of the bank into four parts


17 posted on 02/22/2020 4:26:40 AM PST by Jimmy Valentine (DemocRATS - when they speak, they lie; when they are silent, they are stealing the American Dream)
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To: lepton
Having more unused credit raises the score, apparently because it means you’ve been approved by others.

To a point. But when we were applying for our mortgage they were going to knock down our rating because we had too much open credit. They were zero balance accounts but by their logic if we had it available we might use it. We closed all but two and shaved a half a point off our locked in interest rate.

As I understand, the money was moved into those accounts and then moved back to create the illusion that the accounts were in use.

Moving money from account to account does not happen at once. There is a delay. If you have something hit during that delay you get a NSF. This hurts your rating, it hurts your relationship with the vendor and it can be a criminal matter if they want to get nasty about it.

And for some people those accounts they opened were used by someone and then not cleared. That leaves a very nasty ding on your record and is a pain to clean up. If WF employees had not opened the bogus account in the first place it would not have been sitting there fat dumb and happy to be stolen.

18 posted on 02/22/2020 11:04:41 AM PST by Harmless Teddy Bear (A hero is a hero no matter what medal they give him. Likewise a schmuck is still a schmuck.)
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