Boston Herald

TRUMP: WELLS WILL PAY UP

Prez: Bank won’t benefit from change at CFPB

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WASHINGTON — President Trump weighed in on an investigat­ion into scandal-plagued Wells Fargo, tweeting Friday that fines and penalties against the bank would not be dropped, and may actually be “substantia­lly increased.”

Trump’s statement comes a day after Reuters reported that Mick Mulvaney, the president’s budget director and now acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, was weighing whether the bank should have to pay tens of millions in fines already levied against it for mortgage lending abuses.

Wells Fargo, the nation’s largest mortgage lender, has offered refunds to customers this year after acknowledg­ing that its mortgage bankers unfairly charged them fees to lock in interest rates on mortgages. It’s just one of a number of legal problems the San Franciscob­ased bank is facing, most notably a scheme in which bank employees opened more than 3 million fake accounts in order to meet sales quotas. Wells Fargo employees also tacked on insurance for auto loan customers who did not need it, in some cases leading to defaults and repossessi­ons.

The CFPB under previous director, Richard Cordray, was considerin­g additional fines and penalties against Wells Fargo, but the investigat­ion was frozen last month after Cordray resigned from the federal watchdog agency, and Mulvaney took over.

“I’m looking at those (investigat­ions) on an individual basis,” Mulvaney told reporters last week.

Trump tweeted that the fines and penalties for the bank’s “bad acts against their customers ... will not be dropped, as has incorrectl­y been reported, but will be pursued and, if anything, substantia­lly increased.”

The mortgage scandal affected about 100,000 customers, which is substantia­lly fewer than the number of customers who were given fake accounts, or who were stuck with unneeded auto insurance.

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