Losing $450,000 in three days: Hackers trick victims into big wire transfers / Fraudsters are stealing billions each year through this type of scam, which uses sophisticated hacking and wire transfers to efficiently move money overseas (Wall Street Journal by Rachel Louise Ensign / February 23, 2020)
https://www.justice.gov/usao-wdnc/press-release/file/1251356/downloadhttps://www.justice.gov/usao-wdnc/press-release/file/1251351/download
The criminal investigation into false bank records and identity theft is being resolved with a deferred prosecution agreement in which Wells Fargo will not be prosecuted during the three-year term of the agreement if it abides by certain conditions, including continuing to cooperate with further government investigations. Wells Fargo also entered a civil settlement agreement under the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA) based on Wells Fargo's creation of false bank records. FIRREA authorizes the federal government to seek civil penalties against financial institutions that violate various predicate criminal offenses, including false bank records. Wells Fargo also agreed to the SEC instituting a cease-and-desist proceeding finding violations of Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 thereunder. The $3 billion payment resolves all three matters, and includes a $500 million civil penalty to be distributed by the SEC to investors.The 16-page statement of facts accompanying the deferred prosecution agreement and civil settlement agreement outlines a course of conduct over 15 years at Well Fargo's Community Bank, which was then the largest operating segment of Wells Fargo, consistently generating more than half of the company's revenue. The statement of facts outlines top Community Bank leaders' knowledge of the conduct. As part of the statement of facts, Wells Fargo admitted the following:Beginning in 1998, Wells Fargo increased its focus on sales volume and reliance on annual sales growth. A core part of this sales model was the "cross-sell strategy" to sell existing customers additional financial products. It was "the foundation of our business model," according to Wells Fargo. In its 2012 Vision and Values statement, Wells Fargo stated: "We start with what the customer needs - not with what we want to sell them."But, in contrast to Wells Fargo's public statements and disclosures about needs-based selling, the Community Bank implemented a volume-based sales model in which employees were directed and pressured to sell large volumes of products to existing customers, often with little regard to actual customer need or expected use. The Community Bank's onerous sales goals and accompanying management pressure led thousands of its employees to engage in unlawful conduct - including fraud, identity theft and the falsification of bank records - and unethical practices to sell product of no or little value to the customer.Many of these practices were referred to within Wells Fargo as "gaming." Gaming strategies varied widely, but included using existing customers' identities - without their consent - to open checking and savings, debit card, credit card, bill pay and global remittance accounts. From 2002 to 2016, gaming practices included forging customer signatures to open accounts without authorization, creating PINs to activate unauthorized debit cards, moving money from millions of customer accounts to unauthorized accounts in a practice known internally as "simulated funding," opening credit cards and bill pay products without authorization, altering customers' true contact information to prevent customers from learning of unauthorized accounts and prevent Wells Fargo employees from reaching customers to conduct customer satisfaction surveys, and encouraging customers to open accounts they neither wanted or needed.The top managers of the Community Bank were aware of the unlawful and unethical gaming practices as early as 2002, and they knew that the conduct was increasing due to onerous sales goals and pressure from management to meet these goals. One internal investigator in 2004 called the problem a "growing plague." The following year, another internal investigator said the problem was "spiraling out of control." Even after senior managers in the Community Bank directly called into question the implementation of the cross-sell strategy, Community Bank senior leadership refused to alter the sales model, which contained unrealistic sales goals and a focus on low-quality secondary accounts.Despite knowledge of the illegal sales practices, Community Bank senior leadership failed to take sufficient action to prevent and reduce the incidence of such practices. Senior leadership of the Community Bank minimized the problems to Wells Fargo management and its board of directors, by casting the problem as driven by individual misconduct instead of the sales model itself. Community Bank senior leadership viewed negative sales quality and integrity as a necessary byproduct of the increased sales and as merely the cost of doing business.
[B]etween 2012 and 2016, Wells Fargo publicly touted to investors the success of its Community Bank's "cross-sell" strategy - selling additional financial products to its existing customers - which it characterized as a key component of its financial success. The order finds that Wells Fargo sought to induce investors' continued reliance on the cross-sell metric even though it was inflated by accounts and services that were unused, unneeded, or unauthorized. According to the order, from 2002 to 2016, Wells Fargo opened millions of accounts of financial products that were unauthorized or fraudulent. Wells Fargo's Community Bank also pressured customers to buy products they did not need and would not use. The order finds that these accounts were opened through sales practices inconsistent with Wells Fargo's investor disclosures regarding its purported needs-based selling model.
In 2019, the Wells Fargo Foundation launched a new philanthropic strategy anchored around unlocking economic opportunity for people and communities by addressing housing affordability, small business growth and financial health. The Foundation invested $455 million in grants in the last year, funding national organizations to deliver programs at scale and nonprofits that specifically address the needs of local markets.
This letter is submitted on behalf of our client, Wells Fargo & Company (the "Applicant," "WFC," or the "Company" and, together with its subsidiaries, "Wells Fargo"), in connection with a cease-and-desist order to be entered against the Applicant pursuant to Section 8A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Securities Act"), and Sections 15(b) and 21C of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange Act" and, such cease-and-desist order, the "Order"). On behalf of Wells Fargo, we hereby respectfully request, pursuant to Rule 506(d)(2)(ii) under the Securities Act, a waiver of any disqualifications that will arise as a result of the Order under Regulation D with respect to Wells Fargo and any of the issuers described below.
. . .The Applicant understands that the Order, if entered, would disqualify it and certain other issuers from relying on the exemptions provided by Regulation D absent the waiver requested here. Specifically, the Applicant understands that, as the beneficial owner of 20 percent or more of an issuer's outstanding voting equity securities or a person deemed to act in any other capacity described in Rule 506(d)(1) of Regulation D (a "Covered Person" with respect to an offering), the Applicant and other issuers of which the Applicant is the beneficial owner of 20 percent or more of its outstanding voting equity securities would be prohibited from relying upon these offering exemptions when issuing securities. The Commission has the authority to waive these disqualifications upon a showing of good cause that such disqualifications are not necessary under the circumstances. . . .
Based on the facts and representations in the request for a waiver of disqualification submitted by Wells Fargo, and assuming that Wells Fargo complies with the Cease and Desist Order, the Commission has determined that Wells Fargo has made a showing of good cause under Rule 506(d)(2)(ii) of Regulation D that it is not necessary under the circumstances to deny reliance on the Regulation D exemptions by reason of the entry of the Cease and Desist Order. . . .
"SEC Whistleblower Program Is A Black Hole Of Despair" (BrokeAndBroker.com Blog / April 9, 2015)
https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-16-18/s71618-4239056-172917.pdf /"SEC Seeks To Reform Its Whistleblower Process" (BrokeAndBroker.com Blog / July 3, 2018)
http://www.brokeandbroker.com/4059/sec-whistleblower/
"More Whistleblowers Sue SEC for Delays in Receiving Award" (DoddFrank.com by Steve Quinlivan / May 2, 2019)
http://dodd-frank.com/2019/05/02/more-whistleblowers-sue-sec-for-delays-in-receiving-award/
Chong is ordered to pay disgorgement of $151,957 with prejudgment interest of $1,523.73, and a civil penalty of $17,000
Lu is ordered to pay disgorgement of $144,772.20 with prejudgment interest of $3,049.52
Wong to pay disgorgement of $67,965.20 with prejudgment interest of $1,431.64
Chan, Fan, Lu, and Wong are each ordered to pay civil penalties of $189,427
[T]he defendants-traders from China, Singapore, and Malaysia-attempted to manipulate the market for MDDT stock by entering matched orders to buy and sell MMDT at substantially the same times, sizes, and prices. The SEC alleged that trades involving these five seemingly unrelated individuals from three different countries accounted for 70% of the volume in MDDT over the period in which they traded. As described in the complaint, IP records show that at least three of the defendants' brokerage accounts were likely accessed by the same user or users while trading MDDT.
Firms and individuals whose FINRA registration has been terminated, suspended, cancelled, or revoked, or who have been expelled from FINRA are generally referred to as "inactive," and are no longer FINRA members or associated with a FINRA member, although they may continue to operate in another area of the financial services industry where FINRA registration is not required. Firms and individuals can become inactive prior to an arbitration claim being filed, during an arbitration proceeding, or subsequent to an arbitration award, and this status can be caused by FINRA action, such as when a firm or individual is suspended for failing to pay an award, or by the firm's or individual's own voluntary action.
Current FINRA arbitration rules provide options to a customer when dealing with those members or associated persons that are inactive either at the time the claim is filed or at the time of the award. For example, when a customer claimant first files an arbitration claim, FINRA alerts, by letter, the customer claimant if the respondent, whether a member or an associated person, is inactive. FINRA also informs the claimant that awards against such members or associated persons have a much higher incidence of non-payment and that FINRA has limited disciplinary leverage over inactive members or associated persons that fail to pay arbitration awards. Thus, the customer knows before pursuing the claim in arbitration that collection of an award may be more difficult. In addition, upon learning that the member or associated person is inactive, a customer may determine to amend his or her claim to add other respondents from whom the customer may be able to collect should the claim go to award.
Proposed Rule ChangeFINRA is proposing to amend the Customer Code to expand further the options available to customers in situations where a firm becomes inactive during a pending arbitration, or where an associated person becomes inactive either before a claim is filed or during a pending arbitration. In particular, FINRA is proposing to amend the Code to allow customers to amend pleadings, postpone hearings, request default proceedings and receive a refund of filing fees if the customer withdraws the claim under these situations.
One of these commenters stated that the proposal "fails to address the major problem faced by victims of thinly capitalized broker-dealer firms: that judgements against them are often rendered valueless" and recommended FINRA establish a national recovery pool. . . ."