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The Almighty Buck

Up To 1.4M More Fake Wells Fargo Accounts Possible (siliconvalley.com) 91

An anonymous reader quotes the Bay Area Newsgroup: Wells Fargo may have opened as many as 3.5 million bogus bank accounts without its customers' permission, attorneys for customers suing the bank have alleged in a court filing, suggesting the bank may have created far more fake accounts than previously indicated. The plaintiffs' new estimate of bogus bank accounts is about 1.4 million, or 67%, higher than the original estimate -- disclosed last year as part of a settlement with regulators -- that up to 2.1 million accounts were opened without customers' permission... The attorneys covered a period from 2002 to 2017, rather than the previously scrutinized five-year stretch from 2011 to some time in 2016 in which the bank acknowledged setting up unauthorized accounts.
Wells Fargo terminated 5,300 employees for creating fake accounts, and their CEO now acknowledges that "we had an incentive program and a high-pressure sales culture within our community bank that drove behavior that many times was inappropriate and inconsistent with our values." In a possibly-related story, Wells Fargo plans to shut 450 branches over the next two years.
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Up To 1.4M More Fake Wells Fargo Accounts Possible

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  • Glad we left (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Closed our accounts with WF when the fake accounts issue first appeared and moved everything to a credit union, best move ever, customer service much better and I get small interest dividends and other perks like discounted tickets to the state fair in our area. Hope to refinance the mortgage with them soon too, and get away from the "for profit" lender.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Closed our accounts with WF when the fake accounts issue first appeared and moved everything to a credit union, best move ever, customer service much better and I get small interest dividends and other perks like discounted tickets to the state fair in our area. Hope to refinance the mortgage with them soon too, and get away from the "for profit" lender.

      Don't worry, the friendly Wells Fargo reps opened several additional accounts for you. So you are still a customer! Isn't that nice of them?

      • I didn't see them open accounts without permission (though I wouldn't be surprised if they did) but my mom had a mortgage with another company until Wells Fargo bought the mortgage. Somehow it was worked out that she couldn't pay the payments without physically walking into the bank, and each time they hustled her HARD to open a checking account. She finally opened one, mostly just to get them to shut up, and it turned out that they still had another really old personal loan account that she chapter 7'ed ag

      • Wells Fargo reps opened several additional accounts for you. So you are still a customer! Isn't that nice of them?

        You can't be part of a class action if they didn't open accounts without permission. So yes, it is nice when they open an account behind your back if you want a portion of the payout.

  • No Jail Time (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 13, 2017 @08:24PM (#54412363)

    There will be no jail time.
    The DoJ is rotten to its core.
    It's senior officials are inextricably linked with banking oligarchs.
    It gives immunity to bank insiders, and enforces their private codes.
    The Fed will make good all insider losses, at public expense.
    Market will not save us.
    Technology will not save us.
    Politics will not save us.
    Law is fallen.
    All is lost.

  • What Regulation (Score:4, Insightful)

    by rtb61 ( 674572 ) on Saturday May 13, 2017 @08:26PM (#54412367) Homepage

    Good to see all those people prosecuted for fraud, what, not one, not even the executives who planned it, not one single individual custodial sentences for mass fraud, I am sure that will kerb the banksters criminal behaviour, excellent precedent set by Uncle Tom Obama, bankers never go to jail, bankers always keep their bonuses, arms dealing, banking for warlords and terrorists, drug dealing, all a token percentage of the profits made by those criminal operations, thankyou for that precedent Uncle Tom Obama the Choom Gang Coward.

  • by paiute ( 550198 ) on Saturday May 13, 2017 @08:27PM (#54412373)

    their CEO now acknowledges that "we had an incentive program and a high-pressure sales culture within our community bank that drove behavior that many times was inappropriate and inconsistent with our values.

    Maybe they should hire a guy to be like the head executive or something who would be in charge of the whole company and who would keep an eye out for shady shit like this. Oh yeah - and if that executive let this stuff happen on his watch he could be given a box to empty his desk into before security showed him to the parking lot.

  • which was laundering money for arms and drug dealers. WF was doing what comes naturally.
  • by bmo ( 77928 ) on Saturday May 13, 2017 @08:44PM (#54412417)

    The magic hand of the market will fix all of it. /sneer

    --
    BMO - who has lived through two major banking crises in his lifetime (you know, the kind that people kill themselves over), and expects more, because bankers are asshats, and most investment-bankers more so.

    • The magic hand of the market will fix all of it. /sneer

      -- BMO - who has lived through two major banking crises in his lifetime (you know, the kind that people kill themselves over), and expects more, because bankers are asshats, and most investment-bankers more so.

      The sick thing is whoever is chosen to fall on their sword this time will get a mighty fine bonus.

      • by bmo ( 77928 )

        >The sick thing is whoever is chosen to fall on their sword this time will get a mighty fine bonus.

        The head of RISDIC walked free while various people with less political pull went to jail. (shit floats).

        The fact that /nobody/ went to jail or is going to go to jail over the 2007-2008 nonsense tells me that you're right.

        I have more respect for hookers, porn stars, strippers, etc., than anyone in the banking industry, as a result. Bankers and investment bankers (these days, they are one and the same, lega

    • What good is regulation if they don't enforce existing laws? No banker gets sent to jail, so why bother.
  • Looks like some more Wells Fargo Executives will be getting some well deserved huge bonuses when they retire to spend more time with their families.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    There is a recent NPR story about the people inside the bank who complained to management about this. They got black marks on their U5 which made them unemployable at any other financial institution. Good luck getting that cleared up.

    Never be a whistleblower in the US.

    • No employer really likes whistleblowers. In every company there are corners that are being cut avoiding some requirements from governmental regulations or "standards". Usually this stuff is not really important (like some documentation/procedure stuff), but if revealed it can still hurt the company by being breach of some contract or incurring penalties. If you employ someone that was a whistleblower in the past you have to give yourself an extra question: if he feels discontent with us for whatever reason

  • CEO Stumpf retired (Score:5, Insightful)

    by chipschap ( 1444407 ) on Saturday May 13, 2017 @10:35PM (#54412675)

    Actually the WF CEO, John Stumpf, "retired" last October in the wake of the scandal. He was punished by having $41 million taken away from his retirement package, leaving him with a paltry $133 million. Such severe punishment will surely serve as a warning to others!

    http://fortune.com/2016/10/13/wells-fargo-ceo-john-stumpfs-career-ends-with-133-million-payday/

  • Wells Fargo isn't a community bank. It's pretty much the antithesis of a community bank.

  • WF did me in 2003.. I took a 3.5%$ HELOC & disbursed from an unauthorized 16% line of credit. I have all the docs. DOJ is not interested.
  • by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Sunday May 14, 2017 @04:23AM (#54413153)
    If a company instructs tellers to sell bogus policies, and heaps huge pressure on them to sign up customers - or be sacked - then those ARE their values. Wells Fargo may as well own that shit because no believes for a second that it happened without the full knowledge and direction of those in charge. The bank didn't stray from it's values, it changed the values to suit its bottom line.
  • How is it that corporations can rip off or defraud tens of thousands of customers/victims and no one is going to jail?

    At the very least there should be a $1000 fine per bogus account for the employees opening them, $1000 per account for their supervisors, $1000 per account for the executives responsible and another $10000 per account for the company as a whole. Anyone who can't pay goes to jail.

    $35 billion might get Wells Fargo's attention.

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