Wells Fargo Must Pay Consumers $203 Million in Overdraft Case

Modbert

Daydream Believer
Sep 2, 2008
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Wells Fargo Must Pay Consumers $203 Million in Overdraft Case - Bloomberg

A judge ordered Wells Fargo & Co. to stop manipulating debit-card transactions without consumers’ knowledge to increase revenue from overdraft fees while ruling the bank should pay about $203 million to customers because of the practice.

U.S. District Judge William Alsup in San Francisco sided with three customers who sued in 2007 on behalf of thousands of Californians charged overdraft fees. In a ruling yesterday, he agreed that the practice was unfair, deceptive and fraudulent.

In 2001, Wells Fargo, the largest U.S. home lender, changed the way it treated daily debit transactions and cash withdrawals so that transactions with the highest dollar amount posted first, rather than in the order they occurred, according to the complaint. The practice, allegedly intended to boost revenue from overdraft fees, led to customers overdrawing accounts by small amounts multiple times a day, according to the complaint.

Wells Fargo “went to great lengths to bury the words deep in a lengthy fine-print document and the words selected were too vague to warn depositors, as even the bank’s own expert conceded,” Alsup wrote

Thoughts USMB?
 
Bankers stealing from their clients?!

Say it ain't so!

Next you'll probably try to tell me that Credit Card Companies aren't entirely on the up and up, too.
 
I fukked my bank for $100,000.00 on one of my properties. I'm proud of it and like the James Brown song sez.......(umphhh! I f-e-e-e-el GOOD! Better to be the fucker than the fuck-eee.....).
 
Granny says, "Dat's right - give dem cars back an' money fer gas too...
icon_grandma.gif

Wells Fargo to Pay $24M for Improper Repossession of Troops' Cars
Sep 30, 2016 | WASHINGTON -- The reputation of Wells Fargo & Co. took another blow Thursday when it agreed to pay $24.1 million for the improper repossession of cars owned by members of the U.S. military.
The bank agreed to pay $4.1 million to settle a Justice Department investigation into the repossession of 413 cars without the necessary court order from 2008 through the middle of last year in violation of a federal law designed to provide financial protections to active-duty military members. The bank also was fined $20 million by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency for violations dating to 2006. The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act requires a court order to repossess a vehicle if the service member took out the loan and made a payment before entering military service. "We all have an obligation to ensure that the women and men who serve our country in the armed forces are afforded all of the rights they are due," said U.S. Attorney Eileen M. Decker of the Central District of California. "Wells Fargo failed in that obligation."

News of the settlement and fine came as Wells Fargo Chief Executive John Stumpf was testifying at a House Financial Services Committee hearing about the scandal involving bank employees creating as many as 2 million accounts without customers' authorization. "It appears the company just can't make it through this congressional hearing without us learning more and more information about what is going on at Wells Fargo," said Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif. The Justice Department settlement stems from Wells Fargo's 2013 repossession of a 2011 Ford Escape from Army National Guardsman Dennis Singleton, who was living in Hendersonville, N.C., at the time.

Singleton was preparing to deploy to Afghanistan when the used car was repossessed without a court order, the Justice Department said. He served in Afghanistan from Nov. 17, 2013, to the end of August 2014. After Singleton's car was sold at auction, Wells Fargo tried to collect more than $10,000 from him to cover the difference between what was owed on the vehicle and what it had sold for. As part of the Justice Department settlement, Wells Fargo agreed to pay $10,000 to each of the affected service members, along with any lost equity in the vehicle, plus interest. The bank sent the payments last month, the Justice Department said. The bank also will pay a $60,000 civil fine and try to locate additional victims.

Wells Fargo to Pay $24M for Improper Repossession of Troops' Cars | Military.com
 

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