Santa Fe New Mexican

Navajo Nation sues Wells Fargo over alleged predatory tactics

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WINDOW ROCK, Ariz. — The Navajo Nation announced Tuesday that it’s suing Wells Fargo for allegedly engaging in predatory and unlawful banking practices that targeted and harmed tribal members.

In a statement, Navajo Nation President Russell Begaye said the tribe’s lawyer has been directed to seek restitutio­n, damages and civil penalties based on Wells Fargo’s alleged violations of federal, state and tribal law.

The tribe alleges employees at Wells Fargo branches on the vast reservatio­n “routinely misled customers into opening unnecessar­y accounts and obtained debit and credit cards without customers’ consent.”

They also allege Navajo elders “were purposely confused and deceived into purchasing products to help employees meet banking quotas.”

The lawsuit, filed in a federal court in New Mexico, said “since at least 2009 and continuing through 2016, Wells Fargo employees at branches on the Navajo Nation routinely opened unauthoriz­ed savings and credit accounts, misled customers into opening unnecessar­y accounts, obtained debit cards without customers’ consent, and enrolled customers in online banking without proper consent.”

The suit alleges Wells Fargo employees told elderly Navajo citizens who didn’t speak English that in order to have their checks cashed, they needed to sign up for savings accounts they neither needed nor understood.

The tribe also alleges Wells Fargo representa­tives stalked basketball games and flea markets to sign up consumers for unnecessar­y accounts and “opened accounts for underage Navajo citizens, going so far as to falsify birthdates to avoid obtaining necessary parental consent.”

Wells Fargo in a statement said it had received the tribe’s lawsuit, but declined comment about ongoing litigation.

Wells Fargo has five bank branches across the Navajo Nation — which covers more than 27,000 square miles over portions of northeaste­rn Arizona, southeaste­rn Utah and northweste­rn New Mexico — plus 12 other branches within a 30-minute drive of the reservatio­n.

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