Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Lawyers: Wells Fargo created about 3.5 million fake accounts

- By Paul Elias

SAN FRANCISCO » Lawyers representi­ng aggrieved customers suing Wells Fargo have said the bank may have opened about 3.5 million unauthoriz­ed accounts, far more than bank and regulators disclosed last year.

In a court filing late Thursday, lawyers representi­ng customers told a federal judge in San Francisco that they believe bank workers created the unauthoriz­ed accounts over the last 15 years, “based on public informatio­n, negotiatio­ns, and confirmato­ry discovery.”

The bank initially estimated about 2 million unauthoriz­ed accounts were opened dating back to 2009. Last month, the bank said the problem dates back to 2002.

Bank spokesman Ruben Pulido said Friday that the lawyers’ claim was an unverified estimate.

“The unauthoriz­ed account numbers reported in the filing are estimates made by plaintiffs’ attorneys based on a hypothetic­al scenario and have not been verified,” Pulido said. “The number of unauthoriz­ed accounts estimated in the filing do not reflect actual unauthoriz­ed accounts.”

Pulido declined further comment and said the bank has not disclosed its own revised estimate of how many unauthoriz­ed accounts were opened.

In September, Wells Fargo agreed to pay a combined $185 million fine to the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the federal Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency and the Los Angeles city attorney.

San Francisco-based Wells Fargo has seen declines in new account openings and bank traffic and has been working to restore customers’ trust since the practices came to light.

The biggest scandal in the bank’s history led to the abrupt retirement of its CEO, John Stumpf. In response, Wells has changed its sales practices, ousted other executives and called tens of millions of customers to check on whether they truly opened the accounts.

The bank initially agreed to pay $110 million to settle claims dating back to 2009. But it agreed to add $32 million to the settlement to include claims starting in May 2002.

The new estimate was based on the expanded time frame and was included as part of the customers’ lawyers request that the judge approve the proposed settlement. A hearing is scheduled for next week.

After paying attorneys’ fees, the $142 million will first go to cover customers’ losses or fees that they may have incurred due to the unauthoriz­ed accounts. All remaining money will be split among the affected customers.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lawyers suing Wells Fargo on behalf of aggrieved customers say in a court filing that the bank may have opened about 3.5 million unauthoriz­ed accounts.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lawyers suing Wells Fargo on behalf of aggrieved customers say in a court filing that the bank may have opened about 3.5 million unauthoriz­ed accounts.

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