


The state’s identity theft claims further the notion that Wells Fargo employees knowingly defrauded customers. In the affidavit requesting the search warrant, James Hirt, a special agent supervisor for California’s Justice Department, cites interviews with four customers claiming Wells Fargo “unlawfully accessed the bank’s computer system to obtain” their personal information.
One customer didn’t know a $10,000 line of credit was opened in his name, and another bounced checks and incurred fees because the bank made her reopen her accounts half a dozen times over four years, according to Hirt’s affidavit. A third noticed monthly transfers of $50 to $150 from her checking account to an unauthorized savings account, even as Wells Fargo allegedly refused to provide bank statements.
Bankers used the customers’ personal information without authorization, including a mother’s maiden name and children’s names, Hirt said. Bank employees then used the unlawfully obtained information “to commit false impersonation and identity theft in opening unauthorized accounts, credit cards, and various other products that resulted in the accumulation of fees and charges for Wells Fargo,” according to the affidavit.
Wells Fargo has said it’s fired 5,300 employees linked to the scandal. The highest-ranking official fired by the bank was an area manager, Stumpf told the Senate finance committee before he resigned. The company’s retail-banking chief, Carrie Tolstedt, left before the regulatory settlement was made public.
Bankers targeted vulnerable clients to bolster their quotas, including Spanish-speaking immigrants, Bloomberg reported. Those included Mexican nationals with consular ID cards that made adding services easier. A Wells Fargo spokeswoman said the firm had “no indication that consular card customers were disparately impacted.”
Tim Sloan, who replaced Stumpf, left analysts unsatisfied in his debut as CEO last week, citing investigations by the board as he deferred most of their questions about the abuses. The bank has apologized for breaking customers trust, vowed to make them whole and said it’s ending sales incentives that have been blamed for the abuses. Stumpf and Tolstedt are forgoing more than $60 million of unvested stock.
Damage from the scandal has already spread beyond the bank’s consumer division to its business with state and local governments.
Massachusetts is the latest municipal debt issuer to bar the bank from selling its bonds. Wells Fargo’s home state of California, which is among the biggest municipal debt issuers, plus Ohio and Illinois had earlier announced similar actions to punish the company.
Cities including Chicago and Seattle have also severed some ties.