Close Close
Popular Financial Topics Discover relevant content from across the suite of ALM legal publications From the Industry More content from ThinkAdvisor and select sponsors Investment Advisor Issue Gallery Read digital editions of Investment Advisor Magazine Tax Facts Get clear, current, and reliable answers to pressing tax questions
Luminaries Awards
ThinkAdvisor
Signage at a Wells Fargo bank branch in New York.

Regulation and Compliance > Litigation

Wells Fargo’s $1B Fake-Accounts Settlement Gets Judge’s OK

X
Your article was successfully shared with the contacts you provided.

Wells Fargo & Co.’s $1 billion settlement of a shareholder lawsuit over unauthorized customer accounts was approved by a federal judge, bringing the total amount the bank has agreed to pay to resolve claims over the scandal to nearly $5 billion.

U.S. District Judge Jennifer L. Rochon authorized the agreement following a hearing in New York Friday, more than three months after the deal was reached, lawyers for investors said in a statement. The approval couldn’t be immediately confirmed in court records.

The deal resolves claims filed in 2020 alleging that former Chief Executive Officer Tim Sloan and other bank executives made misleading statements to investors, the media and Congress that presented an overly optimistic picture of the company’s interactions with regulators after a 2016 scandal over the accounts.

Wells Fargo declined to comment on the approval. After the deal was reached in May, the bank said that it resolved a case involving several former executives and a director who had not been with the company for several years.

Plaintiffs’ lawyers said the agreement is one of the six largest securities class-action settlements of the past decade and the 17th largest of all time.

The proceeds of the settlement will go to investors who bought Wells Fargo stock from Feb. 2, 2018, through March 12, 2020. Wells Fargo previously agreed to pay $800 million to settle two lawsuits over the bogus accounts and $3 billion to resolve US investigations.

Investigators found that the company set overly aggressive sales targets that led employees to open millions of fake accounts for customers to meet goals, often by creating false records or misappropriating their identities, generating millions of dollars in fees and interest and damaging some clients’ credit ratings, according to the Justice Department.

Executive Charged

U.S. prosecutors said earlier this month that the company’s former head of retail banking, Carrie L. Tolstedt, the only executive charged with criminal wrongdoing, should spend a year in prison for impeding their probe.

Tolstedt pleaded guilty in May and agreed to a ban on working in the banking industry and to pay a $17 million penalty. She’s scheduled to be sentenced Sept. 15.

The case is In Re: Wells Fargo & Co. Securities Litigation, 20-cv-4494, US District Court, Southern District of New York.

Image: Signage at a Wells Fargo bank branch in New York.

Copyright 2023 Bloomberg. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.