Los Angeles Times

Sacramento suit targets Wells

- By James Rufus Koren james.koren@latimes.com

Sacramento, following the lead of other cities, is suing Wells Fargo & Co. over allegation­s that the bank engaged in discrimina­tory mortgage lending practices that led to a wave of foreclosur­es in minority neighborho­ods.

The city filed a suit in federal court, saying the San Francisco bank violated the federal Fair Housing Act by saddling minority borrowers with pricier loans and failing to notice or end the practice.

The Feb. 23 lawsuit makes prominent mention of a recent Federal Reserve enforcemen­t action against the bank, which found “widespread consumer abuses and other compliance breakdowns.”

The Fed went after Wells Fargo for a raft of wrongdoing that has come to light over the last year and a half, such as the creation of fake accounts, forcing auto loan customers to pay for unneeded insurance and charging extra fees on some mortgage borrowers.

“It’s not just bank accounts and credit cards. It’s all one set of conduct,” said Joel Liberson, a Los Angeles attorney who has worked with cities suing Wells Fargo and other banks over alleged mortgage discrimina­tion.

Wells Fargo spokesman Tom Goyda said the bank will fight the suit. “We don’t believe those [allegation­s] reflect how we do business in the communitie­s we serve,” he said. “We’ve been serving Sacramento for more than 160 years. We’re going to defend our history of responsibl­e lending.”

Sacramento, like the other cities, argues that Wells Fargo’s practices led to foreclosur­es, which hurt its budget by pushing down property values and resulting in lower property tax revenue. Similar cases have been filed over the last few years by Oakland, Philadelph­ia, Miami and the nearby suburb of Miami Gardens.

Sacramento is not the first city to mention Wells Fargo’s accounts scandal and subsequent admissions in its legal arguments against the bank. A similar suit brought by the city of Los Angeles was thrown out last year after the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, agreeing with a lower court, said the city did not show evidence to back up its claims.

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