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19 Wells Fargo scandals that surfaced during the Tim Sloan era

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Wells Fargo (WFC) CEO Timothy Sloan announced his retirement suddenly Thursday afternoon, leaving the bank’s general counsel C. Allen Parker to take over as interim CEO. In the preceding months, in which Sloan was grilled by House lawmakers, the bank had been rumored to be looking for new leadership.

“It has become apparent to me that our ability to successfully move Wells Fargo forward from here will benefit from a new CEO and fresh perspectives,” he said in a statement.

Sloan stepped up from COO to replace former CEO John Stumpf, who had previously enjoyed a strong reputation leading the bank through the financial crisis. Stumpf was fired after the 2016 account fraud scandal.

After Sloan took over, scandal upon scandal continued to pop up, some of which were new and some had been past issues finally uncovered.

Wells Fargo & Company CEO and President Tim Sloan testifies before the Senate Banking Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., October 3, 2017. REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein
Wells Fargo & Company CEO and President Tim Sloan testifies before the Senate Banking Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., October 3, 2017. REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein

During that time, regulators, lawmakers, and the public continued to question the bank’s commitment to change, especially with Sloan at the helm — a 31-year company man who had been both Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer.

In January, Wells Fargo leadership, understanding that efforts to get past the company’s soiled reputation, launched a new marketing campaign changing the company logo’s colors and putting out advertisements talking about its “transformation.” This followed a 2018 ad campaign that said the bank was “re-established.”

With Sloan’s departure Wells Fargo looks to more fully turn over a new leaf, through fresh leadership without ties to the bank’s scandal-prone past.

In its press release, the bank’s board chair Betsy Duke said that “the Board has concluded that seeking someone from the outside is the most effective way to complete the transformation at Wells Fargo.”

Here’s a chronological overview of the biggest ones, starting with the fake account scandal in which millions of accounts were created without customers’ permission.

Stumpf stepped down in October 2016, so the first two events happened under his leadereship, when Sloan was COO.

September 2016: The fake account scandal

Wells Fargo’s public woes kicked off with $185 million in fines from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and the City and County of Los Angeles for the creation of 1.5 million fake deposit accounts and more than 500,000 fake credit cards, all in customers’ names and without their permission. The bank had fired 5,300 low-level employees for creating these accounts under extreme sales pressure. This kind of sales pressure was known to cause similar issues at large banks, academic research had shown.