This is how much the American public can trust banks and their Republican allies. Thank you Elizabeth Warren for not trusting banks and for telling the Republicans to shove it. Thank God we have Democrats to stem the tide of financial institution corruption and the complicit corruption of the entire GOP. BUSINESS Wells Fargo Just Made The Case For Elizabeth Warren’s Bank Agency The bank was scamming customers for years, until the CFPB put an end to it. 09/09/2016 02:09 pm ET | Updated 10 minutes ago Emily Peck Executive Editor, Business and Technology, The Huffington Post Elizabeth Warren (D. Mass.) in the aftermath of the financial crisis ― announced that Wells Fargo would pony up a total of $185 million for perpetrating a huge scam on its customers. Over at least the past five years, Wells Fargo employees created more than 1.5 million sham checking accounts and applied for 565,000 credit cards, using customer names and money. Customers were charged unnecessary fees, saw their credit scores fall or were simply confused when debit and credit cards they never asked for showed up in the mail. “Was the Great Financial Crisis so long ago that all chasteness and propriety are already out the window? This scam has been apparently going on for five years,” writes Josh Brown, a financial blogger. “These people are fearless.” We never take for granted the trust our customers have placed in us.Prominent display text in the Wells Fargo 2015 annual report The CFPB has come under intense criticism from Republicans, who say it’s a drag on business. Many ― including presidential hopeful Donald Trump and his running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence ― have said they would like to see the agency abolished as part of their intended dismantling of the 2010 Dodd-Frank legislation passed to prevent another economic meltdown. But every time the agency exposes wrongdoing in consumer banking ― as it did on Thursday ― the CFPB offers a strong counterfactual for those arguments. The job of the CFPB, now headed by Richard Cordray, isn’t to regulate the hot new derivative investment banks are peddling to hedge funds. It’s to protect ordinary people from the kind of everyday scams that financial institutions have shown again and again that they will commit if no one is watching. The agency oversees a myriad of businesses like consumer banking, debt collection and payday loans that hundreds of millions of Americans use every day. It’s had an impact. Last year, the CFPB fined Citibank for illegal credit card practices after the bank was found to be charging customers for benefits they didn’t receive. It’s uncovered student loan fraud and financial products that take advantage of the elderly, and is looking to crack down on the payday loan industry. Wells Fargo Fires About 5,300 Workers in Account Scandal: Officials Wells Fargo has fired about 5,300 workers after an investigation found that "hundreds of thousands of unauthorized deposit accounts" had been opened on behalf of customers as well as "tens of... Though it’s obviously a huge blow to the bank’s reputation, the Wells Fargo fraud wasn’t even that profitable ― scamming thousands and thousands of customers out of a total of $2.6 million in surprise fees over five years doesn’t provide much financial boost to a bank that made $86.1 billion in revenue and $22.9 billion in profit last year alone. The scam also wasn’t really that profitable to the rank-and-file employees who carried it out. Retail bank employees inhabit the lowest rung of the finance industry. They make an industry average of around $10 an hour, and turnover is incredibly high. The fine the CFPB levied in response to the fraud is the largest the agency has ever imposed. The remaining millions will go to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the city and county of Los Angeles, which helped to uncover the scam. The bank also must refund all fees to customers ― about $2.6 million ― including overdraft charges and penalties for falling below minimum balances on sham accounts. The bank wouldn’t say if any senior executives were leaving the organization in response to the fraud. But it did say that it had fired 5,300 workers over the past five years in connection with the scam ― out of a division of 100,000. That would seem to mean about 5 percent of the group was engaged in wrongdoing. In an email to HuffPost, the bank argued that only 1 percent of employees in the division were involved. It’s curious accounting, and seems to imply that each worker is new every year. “Our entire culture is centered on doing what is right for our customers. However, at Wells Fargo, when we make mistakes, we are open about it, we take responsibility, and we take action. Today’s agreements are consistent with these beliefs,” the bank said in a statement Thursday. YURI GRIPAS / REUTERS Richard Cordray is the director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which exposed Wells Fargo’s massive scam on Thursday. After the nation’s biggest banks utterly burned down Americans’ trust and faith by wrecking the economy in 2008, you’d imagine that Wells Fargo and other large institutions would be working overtime to earn it back. Maybe they are, but the bank’s senior management also put perverse incentives in place that pushed employees to defraud customers. Wells Fargo tellers earn about 3 percent in incentive pay for sales and customer service, while personal bankers make about 15 percent to 20 percent of their total earnings from these payments, the Los Angeles Times reported in 2013. They have daily quotas to fill, and are threatened with being fired if they don’t meet them. The intense pressure to meet sales goals doesn’t just push traders and bankers who make millions of dollars a year to fudge the numbers or rip off clients, it also warps the judgment of even junior employees. This latest scandal is fraud at the lowest level ― perpetuated by poorly paid employees and felt by everyday consumers. The scandal is also a reminder that profitability or customer losses are incomplete gauges of the damage financial fraud wreaks. A bank is in the businesses of holding not just your money, but also your sensitive, personal information. Trust should be its most valuable currency. But when a bank doesn’t value trust, it’s important to have a consumer protection agency that does. It’s worth pointing out that after the LA Times called attention to Wells Fargo’s high-pressure tactics in 2013, nothing much happened. It took the CFPB finally coming in to fix the problem. Though the CFPB undoubtedly performed a public service in stopping this wrongdoing, its action will likely do little to slow down the growth of Wells Fargo. That’s just one more counterpoint to the Republican claim that the CFPB is detrimental to the growth and health of the financial industry. Ultimately, the bank won’t feel much pain from this latest development. The fine is peanuts to an institution that makes billions of dollars. As of this writing, Wells Fargo stock price has hardly changed from when the news of its wrongdoing broke.
I just don't give a rat's ass about anything the old fraud Lezzy Warren says or does. Oklahoma became a better state when she left and we are all crossing our fingers that she never comes back.
Funny, because it appears that you don't give a damn that Wells Fargo screwed hundreds of thousands of is own customers because in your world of sycophantic money worship, corporations can do no wrong...EVER!!! In this instance, Elizabeth Warren the "old fraud" seems to have put an end to this rampant fraud and corruption, but then again, that only seems to piss you off. Personally, I like it when corporations pay for their rampant and unabashed corrupt practices. The again, you support Trump and God knows that guy has made a fortune screwing hardworking people which of course you admire. I guess with such different values, you and I would never see eye-to-eye. I believe that hardworking people should be rewarded for their work while you think the people that prey on them should be running this country. What the hell is wrong with Oklahoma?
Lately? Earthquakes. Instead of treating their oil and gas drilling waste properly, they use disposal wells to pump it into the ground. They've pumped so much of that vile disgusting sludge into the ground over the years that earthquakes have become common.
Yeah, but she moved to Massachusetts, within 100 miles of me, and ruined MY neighborhood . . . thanks alot!
She used to live within a few miles of me and when her liberal views started bubbling to the surface, the stench was nearly unbearable.