Warren slams Wells Fargo
over arbitration position
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[November 29, 2016]
By Suzanne Barlyn
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - Massachusetts Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren on
Monday criticized Wells Fargo & Co's <WFC.N> decision to require
customers affected by its unauthorized accounts scandal to go through
arbitration rather than allowing them to sue.
The San Francisco-based bank last week asked a U.S. court to uphold
contract clauses that mandate arbitration, something financial firms
often use to protect against litigation. Wells Fargo's situation is
unusual, though, because it opened accounts without customers'
permission, calling into question whether the contracts and their
clauses are legitimate.
In a Facebook post on Monday, Warren, a frequent critic of the banking
industry, said Wells Fargo's promise to treat customers better in light
of the scandal is "meaningless" as long as it is pursuing arbitration.
"After dozens of Wells Fargo customers sued the bank to recover fees
they were charged from these fake accounts, Wells Fargo tried to boot
the claims from court and into the closed-door, industry-friendly
arbitration process," Warren said.
"Unfortunately, there's a real chance a court will let Wells Fargo
shuffle these claims off to die in arbitration."
A Wells Fargo spokesman said the bank has an arbitration clause in its
customer account agreements.
"In cases where customers have received a product that they did not want
or authorize related to our recently-announced settlements, we are
providing free mediation through an impartial third-party," the
spokesman said.
Last year, The bank successfully argued in another lawsuit that
arbitration agreements customers signed when opening legitimate accounts
extended to the unauthorized ones.
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U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) shows company documents to
Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf during his testimony before a Senate
Banking Committee hearing on the firm's sales practices on Capitol
Hill in Washington, U.S., September 20, 2016. REUTERS/Gary Cameron
Warren also used her Facebook post to advocate for a rule proposed by
the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau that would eliminate mandatory
arbitration.
Before being elected to Congress, Warren was a vocal proponent of such
an agency being created as part of the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform
law. Some Republican lawmakers in newly powerful positions following the
2016 elections have pledged to eliminate it.
(Reporting by Suzanne Barlyn in New York; Writing by Lauren Tara LaCapra;
Editing by Alan Crosby and Gopakumar Warrier)
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