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Carrie L. Tolstedt is an ousted American banking executive and former head of the community banking division at Wells Fargo, [1] from which she retired in 2016 before the company's account fraud scandal came to light. In 2017, Wells Fargo retroactively fired Tolstedt for cause. In 2023, she would plead guilty to obstructing a bank examination.
“Defendants’ failures resulted in millions of complaints about Zelle fraud at (JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America and Wells Fargo) alone, including complaints of over $290 million in fraud ...
(Reuters) -The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau said on Friday it filed a lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Wells Fargo for failing to protect consumers from alleged ...
The lawsuit charged that more than $360 million in losses associated with Zelle-related fraud hit 420,000 Chase customers; some 210,000 Bank of America customers complained that they lost $290 ...
Wells Fargo's sales culture and cross-selling strategy, and their impact on customers, were documented by the Wall Street Journal as early as 2011. [5] In 2013, a Los Angeles Times investigation revealed intense pressure on bank managers and individual bankers to produce sales against extremely aggressive and even mathematically impossible [7] quotas. [8]
Charlie Javice (born March 14, 1993) [1] is an American woman indicted for fraud in relation to Frank, a student financial aid application assistance company she founded.In January 2023, she was accused of fraud relating to the sale of her company to JPMorgan Chase for $175 million. [2]
Bank of America, in its own statement, said that "more than 99.95 percent of transactions across the Zelle network go through without incident. When a client has an issue, we work directly with them."
The foreclosure crisis was extensively covered by news outlets beginning in October 2010, and several large banks—including Bank of America, JP Morgan, Wells Fargo, and Citigroup—responded by halting their foreclosure proceedings temporarily in some or all states.