Thread regarding U.S. Bank layoffs

Is US Bank Just As Bad As Wells Fargo?

Fake Accounts at US Bank? To meet sales goals? Come on...

https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/govt-us-bank-workers-opened-fake-accounts-for-sales-goals/2022/07/28/a84c16c2-0e85-11ed-88e8-c58dc3dbaee2_story.html

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https://archive.ph/7TiPF

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Post ID: @OP+1hWZX5dp

7 replies (most recent on top)

YES!

Stay away!

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Post ID: @6zri+1hWZX5dp

When you hire a bunch of rotten people from Wells, they take their nasty habits with them.

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Post ID: @1ayu+1hWZX5dp

The Findings Period shown within the CFPB's Consent Order is from January 1, 2010 through December 31, 2020. The problem was apparently there to be seen, just ignored much like the AML thing settled with the Fed and the OCC in 2017 and the other CFPB thing with all the add on fees to credit card accounts which was settled in 2014.

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Post ID: @1nbx+1hWZX5dp

“ For the eighth consecutive year, U.S. Bank has been named one of the World’s Most Ethical Companies by the Ethisphere Institute, a global leader in defining and advancing the standards of ethical business practices.”

Ethisphere Institute sounds real credible 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

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Post ID: @1ahr+1hWZX5dp

Given some of the things I've seen, this isn't a legacy program. It's ongoing.

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Post ID: @1jza+1hWZX5dp

Probably much worse than Wells Fargo, the Stagecoach bank is 7 or 8 times the size of USB, making the fraud easier to hide, but to callously and deliberately access credit reports to fraudulently issue credit products never requested or authorized by consumers is incomprehensible and criminal in nature.

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Post ID: @1qnk+1hWZX5dp

Gov't: US Bank workers opened fake accounts for sales goals


By Ken Sweet
July 28, 2022 at 4:43 p.m. EDT
NEW YORK — For more than a decade, US Bank pressured its employees to open fake accounts in their customers’ names in order to meet unrealistic sales goals, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau said Thursday, in a case that is deeply similar to the sales practices scandal uncovered at Wells Fargo last decade.
The CFPB alleged that US Bank accessed consumers credit reports to open checking and savings accounts, credit cards and lines of credit without their permission. Employees were encouraged to do so, in order to meet the bank’s goals of selling multiple products to each customer with the bank.
The scale of US Banks’s fake accounts scandal was not disclosed immediately by the CFPB, but the bank was forced to pay $37.5 million in fines and penalties and will have to refund customers any fees they paid for the fake accounts.
“For over a decade, U.S. Bank knew its employees were taking advantage of its customers by misappropriating consumer data to create fictitious accounts,” said CFPB Director Rohit Chopra, in a statement.
A spokesman for US Bank said the bad sales practices were a legacy issue at the bank dating back to 2016, and that the bank has made significant improvements to its sales practices since then. The consent order reached with the CFPB acknowledges that US Bank did make improvements to its sales practices in recent years, which included no longer tying pay to opened accounts and requiring customers’ consent to open new services.
“The action by the CFPB closes out a (more than five year) investigation. We are pleased to put this matter behind us,” said Lee Henderson, a spokesman for the bank.
Wells Fargo’s sales practices scandal rocked the financial world half a decade ago, when the bank was found to have encouraged employees to open millions of fake accounts to meet sales goals. The scandal ruined Wells Fargo’s reputation as a well-run bank through the Great Recession, led to billions of dollars worth of fines against the bank, and almost immediately led to the resignation of the bank’s CEO and eventually its board of directors.
Wells has been under tight supervision by the Federal Reserve since that scandal broke, keeping the bank from growing any bigger until it fixes its workplace culture. There are no signs that the Fed plans to release Wells from its regulatory leash any time soon.
US Bank, based in Minneapolis, is currently in the middle of purchasing the retail banking business of Japanese banking giant MUFG, a deal announced more than a year ago. The transaction is taking longer than expected, with both banks now expecting it to close some time in the second half of the year.
Shares of US Bancorp fell 4.3% to $46.12.
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Post ID: @bmg+1hWZX5dp

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