Trump says he’ll pursue Wells Fargo fraud fines
WASHINGTON – President Trump promised Friday to pursue banks found to have committed fraud against their customers, disputing reports that his administration would backtrack on a $100 million fine levied against banking giant Wells Fargo.
“Fines and penalties against Wells Fargo Bank for their bad acts against their customers and others will not be dropped, as has incorrectly been reported, but will be pursued and, if anything, substantially increased,” he tweeted. “I will cut Regs but make penalties severe when caught cheating!”
Trump’s statement follows a report by Reuters news agency, quoting three anonymous officials, that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was reconsidering the $100 million fine levied against the San Franciscobased bank.
The consumer watchdog agency is undergoing an upheaval after its Obama-appointed director, Richard Cordray, resigned to run for Ohio governor last month.
Trump installed his budget director, Mick Mulvaney, as the agency’s acting director.
Mulvaney is a longtime critic of the agency, complaining that it was set up by Congress to be unaccountable to elected officials.
But on his first day at the CFPB last month, he said he was also committed to enforcing the law.
“I was disturbed by what’s happening with Wells Fargo,” Mulvaney said. “CFPB gets a lot of credit for fining Wells Fargo. My question is, why did they miss it?”
In September, the CFPB fined the nation’s third-largest bank for secretly opening new accounts for customers, often charging them fees for products they never ordered or agreed to.
The agency found that the illegal sales practices began in 2011.