‘I Don’t Want My Client to Be Blindsided’: Executives and Their Lawyers Brace for Rep. Katie Porter's Questions
Katie Porter
Katie Porter

Rep. Katie Porter, D-California (Photo: Diego M. Radzinschi / ALM)

When her turn came to question Wells Fargo CEO Tim Sloan last week, freshman Rep. Katie Porter, D-California, quickly made clear that she had done her homework.

She identified statements Sloan made in the months after Wells Fargo’s fraudulent account scandal made headlines, in which he’d said the bank was committed to restoring customers’ trust. Sloan's language, Porter said, struck her as “vague” and, perhaps, “obscure, empty promises” from an executive well-versed in corporate speak. “Do those statements mean something to you, Mr. Sloan?” Porter asked. Sloan responded: “They do."

Porter soon revealed what she had been setting up. Reaching down behind the dais, she retrieved a poster featuring blown-up text from a court filing in which Wells Fargo’s lawyers at Sullivan & Cromwell dismissed Sloan's statements as "paradigmatic examples of nonactionable corporate puffery, on which no reasonable investor could rely.”

Why were Wells Fargo’s lawyers making that argument? Porter asked Sloan, the Wells Fargo chief executive since 2016. “I don’t know why our lawyers are arguing that,” he replied.

The exchange went viral—and it wasn't the first time. Porter, serving on the House Financial Services Committee, grilled Equifax's CEO Mark Begor in February about why his company's lawyers were arguing that a 2017 data breach had not caused any harm to consumers. Begor said it was “hard to comment” on the activities of Equifax’s lawyers.









Porter’s distinctive style, drawing on her experience as a law school professor, has forced white-collar defense lawyers who specialize in congressional hearings to grapple with how to prepare clients for questioning that uses a company’s own legal arguments against its top executive. Her repeated, effective use of that approach promises to make her a starring figure in preparations that have been known to include mock hearings, with lawyers playing the part of lawmaker during rehearsals.

“This tactic is a new and particularly effective example of what has long been the risk for a corporate executive, the face of a company, testifying in Congress," said O’Melveny & Myers partner David Leviss, a former senior investigative counsel for the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. "Regardless of the subject matter of the hearing and the facts at hand, members of Congress will make you the face of the company and make you defend whatever statements or actions they can attribute to the company—fairly or unfairly."

Justin Shur, a partner at MoloLamken LLP, said Porter’s novel approach has shown that lawyers need to dig deep into a company's litigation stance as they prepare an executive to appear before a congressional committee.

“I might not have necessarily pulled the docket and scrubbed all the filings to make sure I’m familiar with all of the substance of everything that’s been filed. Because of this line of questioning, it’s become prudent to incorporate that into your preparation," Shur said. "There might be some nugget in some filing, in some footnote that a particular member is going to hone in on, and I don’t want my client to be blindsided by it.”

Sloan’s experience underscored how arguments made in court, by lawyers, can backfire in the court of public opinion.

Porter highlighted an argument Wells Fargo raised in San Francisco federal court against a securities class action alleging that the bank made misleading public statements and failed to disclose the full extent of consumer abuses that brought it continued regulatory scrutiny.

In describing past statements as “puffery,” Wells Fargo’s defense team at Sullivan & Cromwell employed a term carrying a specific meaning in the context of securities class actions. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has described puffery as “exaggerated advertising, blustering and boasting upon which no reasonable buyer would rely.”