Los Angeles Times

Wells places two execs on leave

The moves show that the bank is still grappling with fallout from its fake-accounts scandal.

- Times staff writer Laurence Darmiento contribute­d to this report.

Wells Fargo & Co. just can’t shake its fake-accounts scandal.

The San Francisco bank said its chief administra­tive officer, Hope Hardison, and chief auditor, David Julian, will be placed on leave and removed from the firm’s operating committee amid regulatory investigat­ions into the bank’s sales practices.

The leaves of absence aren’t related to the bank’s reported results, the bank said Wednesday in a statement — but the moves show that Wells Fargo is still grappling with management fallout from the scandal, which stems from employees creating millions of checking and other accounts without customers’ approval.

The scandal, linked to onerous sales goals, has led to a bevy of high-profile departures that started with John Stumpf, who was ousted from his job as CEO weeks after the bank announced in September 2016 that it would pay $185 million to settle with the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency and other regulators over the matter. He was replaced by Tim Sloan, a bank veteran who has since borne the brunt of the criticism.

Just this week — after already paying a $1-billion fine this year related to its mortgage and auto-lending practices — the bank paid $65 million to New York state over the accounts issue. And it still faces a bevy of related lawsuits and regulatory probes, including operating under an asset cap ordered by the Federal Reserve while it cleans up its governance practices.

The bank’s struggles to put its problems behind it have led to continued attacks from consumer groups and others. This month, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) sent a letter to Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome H. Powell demanding the bank’s growth cap remain until Sloan is ousted.

With Wednesday’s change, just three of the 10 members of Wells Fargo’s operating committee as of February 2016 remain: Sloan, Chief Financial Officer John Shrewsberr­y and Avid Modjtabai, who leads the bank’s tech-payments division. Carrie Tolstedt, who led the community bank where the unauthoriz­ed accounts were generated, left the committee and the company in 2016 along with Stumpf.

The two executives are on leave after the Comptrolle­r of the Currency’s office sent letters to each of them, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter. The Comptrolle­r of the Currency’s office said that the executives had failed to oversee problems at the bank, the newspaper reported.

Some executives under the two will now report directly to Sloan, including David Galloreese, who joined Wells Fargo in June as head of human resources and will serve on the operating committee.

Wells Fargo said Tuesday that it’s hiring a new technology executive to oversee informatio­n security and informatio­n technology. This person will also report directly to Sloan and join the operating committee. Wells Fargo also has a new chief risk officer, Mandy Norton, whom it hired this year from JPMorgan Chase & Co.

“During the past two years, we have become more customer-focused, made significan­t leadership and board changes, strengthen­ed risk management and controls, simplified the organizati­on, and invested in our team members,” Sloan said in Wednesday’s statement. Wells Fargo is searching internally and externally for a new chief auditor, and Kimberly Bordner, current executive audit director, will serve as Julian’s replacemen­t in the interim.

Wells Fargo shares closed up 3.4% to $51.86.

 ?? Justin Sullivan Getty Images ?? WELLS FARGO is still coping with fallout from its various scandals, including a bevy of suits and probes.
Justin Sullivan Getty Images WELLS FARGO is still coping with fallout from its various scandals, including a bevy of suits and probes.

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