Albuquerque Journal

Wells Fargo employee mistreatme­nt probed

Claims of harassment, firing threats spur Labor Dept. review

- BY MARCY GORDON ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Labor Department is investigat­ing possible abuses of employees by Wells Fargo in connection with the bank’s alleged efforts to open millions of unauthoriz­ed accounts to meet sales goals.

A group of Democratic senators last week asked the department to investigat­e whether Wells Fargo tellers, branch managers and customer service reps were harassed and threatened with terminatio­n in the aggressive sales push. A complete review of cases and complaints is needed to determine if the second-largest U.S. bank violated the Fair Labor Standards Act, the senators said. About 5,300 employees have been fired since 2011.

In a letter Monday, Labor Secretary Tom Perez said the department takes the senators’ concerns seriously and has started a “top-to-bottom” review of labor practices at San Franciscob­ased Wells Fargo.

“We take the concerns raised in your letter very seriously,” Perez told the senators, led by Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts. “Given the serious nature of the allegation­s … and recent media reports, I have directed enforcemen­t agencies within the department to conduct a top-tobottom review of cases, complaints or violations concerning Wells Fargo over the last several years.”

Bank spokeswoma­n Jennifer Dunn declined to comment on the Labor Department action.

The scandal over millions of deposit and credit-card accounts allegedly opened without customers’ permission has widened. The Labor Department review comes atop investigat­ions by congressio­nal committees and federal prosecutor­s.

U.S. and California regulators fined Wells Fargo $185 million earlier this month. In a feverish drive to meet sales targets, bank employees opened the unauthoriz­ed accounts, transferre­d customers’ money into them and signed people up for online banking, according to the regulators. Debit cards were issued and activated, as well as PINs created, without customers’ knowledge.

Senators of both parties heaped criticism on Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf last week as he testified at a hearing by the Senate Banking Committee, accusing the bank of fraud. He apologized for the misconduct and promised to assist affected customers. Senators told Stumpf he was scapegoati­ng legions of lower-level employees while senior executives kept their jobs and received hefty pay packages.

 ?? BEN MARGOT/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man passes by a Wells Fargo office in Oakland, Calif. The bank is being investigat­ed by the Labor Department for employee abuses.
BEN MARGOT/ASSOCIATED PRESS A man passes by a Wells Fargo office in Oakland, Calif. The bank is being investigat­ed by the Labor Department for employee abuses.

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