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DESCRIPTION:10/26 Rally/Press Conference At World Headquarters Of Wells Fargo\nJail The 
 Bankers NOW At Wells Fargo-They Are Not Too Big To Nail!\nExpropriate the 
 Bank and Make It A Public Bank For working people and the public and not 
 the criminal profiteers\n\nPress  Conference and Rally\nWednesday October 
 26, 2016 4:30 PM\nWells Fargo World Corporate Headquarters\n420 Montgomery 
 St near Sacramento St.\nSan Francisco\n\nThe massive criminal enterprise of 
 Wells Fargo Executive and owners to bully workers to illegally open up 
 accounts on their customers and then bilk them of fees has been exposed in 
 hearings yet the US Justice Department refuses to file criminal charges. 
 Coercing workers to commit criminal fraud is a crime that could not only be 
 prosecuted by the US Justice Department but Attorney General Kamala Harris 
 and District Attorney Gascon yet all these enforcement officials are 
 conspicuously MIA.\nAt the same time US Secretary of Labor Tom Perez and 
 Federal OSHA chief David Micheals refused to investigate complaints about 
 retaliation against Wells Fargo workers who refused to violate the banking 
 laws and illegally open accounts. They went to OSHA and the DOL and the 
 managers refused to allow investigation and prosecutions and/or referrals 
 to other agencies for prosecution. This was a further example that these 
 government agencies which are supposed to protect workers and the public 
 have been captured by the companies like Wells Fargo which they are 
 supposed to regulate.\nFormer US attorney general Eric Holder said that 
 some companies are too big to nail and apparently that applies to Wells 
 Fargo which is the 4th largest bank in the United States. At the same time 
 the State of California has broken financial ties to Wells Fargo as well as 
 other governments around the state yet Mayor Ed Lee, the SF Supervisors and 
 the San Francisco Pension Board continue to do business with Wells Fargo 
 bank despite it's criminal activity.\nThe people of San Francisco and 
 California deserve a public bank run by working people and the community. 
 The bank should be seized, the executives jailed and it should be made a 
 public bank that will work for the people and not profits for the 
 billionaires.\n\nInitial Sponsor\nUnited Public Workers For 
 Action\nwww.upwa.info\nFor more information (415)282-1908\n\nWells Fargo 
 complaints show flaws in federal whistleblower 
 program\nhttp://www.reuters.com/article/us-wells-fargo-accounts-whistleblower-idUSKCN12D2M0?il=0\n 
 Thu Oct 13, 2016 | 6:32pm EDT\nWells Fargo complaints show flaws in federal 
 whistleblower program\n\nWells Fargo scandal emboldens fight against big 
 banks\n\nBy Sarah N. Lynch | WASHINGTON\nFormer Wells Fargo & Co (WFC.N) 
 general manager Claudia Ponce de Leon filed a whistleblower complaint in 
 December 2011 with federal labor regulators, alleging she was fired for 
 telling superiors about employees opening unauthorized accounts. \n\nNearly 
 five years later, she has not been interviewed by investigators at the 
 Labor Department's Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), 
 said her attorney Yosef Peretz.\n\nHer complaint claiming retaliation by 
 Wells Fargo for reporting potential misconduct is one of several dozens 
 filed against the bank over the last 14 years, Reuters has found.\n\nTheir 
 existence shows U.S. government regulators are still not meeting targets 
 set by law -- a problem that was also flagged in a critical internal report 
 issued in September 2015.\n\nAs of Oct. 6, the agency had yet to close out 
 34 of the 91 complaints it has received since fiscal year 2002 from Wells 
 Fargo employees alleging they faced retaliation after reporting potential 
 wrongdoing, according to department data obtained through a Reuters public 
 records request. The department did not disclose details of the claims or 
 the dates they were filed, and it remained unclear how many were related to 
 the ongoing scandal involving Wells staffers opening as many as 2 million 
 accounts without customer permission. It is also unclear how those 91 
 complaints against Wells Fargo compares with other corporations. \n\nThe 
 bank last month agreed to pay $190 million in fines and customer 
 restitution in a settlement with the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau and 
 other regulators. \n\nIn late September, Reuters identified Ponce de Leon 
 and at least four other former Wells Fargo employees who reported to OSHA 
 between 2009 and 2014 that they were fired for raising concerns about the 
 opening of unauthorized accounts and credit cards. Of the five OSHA 
 complaints seen by Reuters, Ponce de Leon's case has been pending since 
 December 2011, and another 2014 case was initially dismissed by an OSHA 
 investigator on grounds that were later reversed on appeal by a Labor 
 Department administrative law judge. The bank ultimately reached a 
 settlement with the employee in 2015.\n\nThe three other complaints - one 
 in 2009 and two in 2010 - were transferred to state and federal courts, 
 respectively. \n\nOne employee of the Labor Department involved with the 
 cases has since filed his own whistleblower claim against the agency, 
 alleging his office has a history of mishandling cases. His complaint does 
 not reference the Wells Fargo complaints specifically. \n\n"It's absolutely 
 outrageous that whistleblowers contacted OSHA as early as 2009 about 
 potential fraud at Wells Fargo, and yet these government bureaucrats failed 
 to do their job," said Sen. David Vitter, a Louisiana Republican who has 
 been looking into how Wells Fargo's sales practices have impacted small 
 business owners. \n\nLabor Department Secretary Thomas Perez said last 
 month that the department has launched a "top-to-bottom" review of prior 
 Wells Fargo whistleblower complaints. \n\nAgency spokesman Jesse Lawder 
 said it is the department's policy not to comment on specific whistleblower 
 cases, but said the review aims to "ensure whistleblowers receive the 
 protections and remedies afforded them."\n\n\nFILE PHOTO -- Protestors 
 gather outside the Wells Fargo & Co corporate campus in Manhattan, New York 
 City, U.S., October 6, 2016. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo\nRichele 
 Messick, a Wells Fargo spokeswoman, could not comment on individual cases, 
 but said the bank "does not tolerate retaliation against team members who 
 report their concerns and will take measures to protect team members from 
 retaliation." \n\nFrom fiscal year 2005 through 2015, less than two percent 
 of all whistleblower complaints filed with OSHA were won on the merits, 
 federal statistics show. The rest were either settled, dismissed or 
 transferred to federal courts. Lawyers who represent whistleblowers say 
 OSHA investigators face challenges. One problem is the "crushing case 
 load," which can lead to significant delays, said attorney Jason 
 Zuckerman.\n\nOSHA, which received 3,288 whistleblower cases in fiscal year 
 2015, currently has 88 full-time investigators across the country in 10 
 regional offices.\n\nINTERNAL CRITICISM\n\nOSHA refers whistleblower 
 complaints to the relevant federal regulators to investigate. But the 
 office does not always refer them promptly, or sometimes at all, the Labor 
 Department's inspector general found last year.\n\nAn earlier audit in 
 September 2010 found that 80 percent of complaints it reviewed were not 
 properly investigated, meaning OSHA staff did not take steps such as 
 interviewing the employee, obtaining a witness list or allowing the 
 employee to refute the employer's defense. The subsequent audit in 
 September 2015 noted improvements, finding that 18 percent of complaints 
 reviewed failed to meet certain investigative criteria. Still, it also 
 found that 72 percent of all of OSHA's investigations were not performed 
 within the 30, 60 or 90-day time frames specified by various whistleblower 
 protection laws. \n\nOSHA disputed some of those findings at the time, 
 saying the audit relied on "inaccurate data" to determine how well it 
 referred cases to other regulators.\n\nLabor Department spokeswoman Amanda 
 McClure said OSHA's practice is to send copies of complaints when it 
 receives them and its findings at the conclusion of the investigation to 
 either the Securities and Exchange Commission or the CFPB, depending on 
 which federal whistleblower law applies.\n\nIt is not clear whether OSHA, 
 which received complaints of the unauthorized account openings at Wells 
 Fargo dating at least as far as 2009, referred the matters to federal 
 banking regulators, such as the CFPB and the Office of the Comptroller of 
 the Currency. \n\nThe CFPB, a new agency launched in July 2011, has said it 
 did not start investigating the issue until it received tips from 
 whistleblowers in mid-2013. \n\nThe OCC has said it first learned about the 
 issues after it received a "small number" of complaints from consumers and 
 bank employees in March 2012. Those complaints and media reports in 
 December 2013 led the regulator to step up its supervision of Wells 
 Fargo.\n\nDarrell Whitman - a former OSHA investigator in the San Francisco 
 office from 2010-2015 - was assigned to three of the five cases examined by 
 Reuters from former Wells Fargo employees alleging retaliation for 
 reporting improper sales tactics. Whitman said he only briefly dealt with 
 Ponce de Leon's 2011 case before it was transferred to another 
 investigator, and he was instructed to close the two 2010 cases because 
 they were slated to be transferred to a federal court. \n\nAnother 
 investigator assigned at one point to Ponce de Leon's case, Susan Kamlet, 
 told Reuters the case sat in a stack of other files and that her manager 
 controlled which cases had priority.\n\nNow the former OSHA investigators 
 are making their own claims of retaliation. \n\nWhitman alleges he was 
 fired for raising concerns about the agency's mishandling of whistleblower 
 complaints, and Kamlet says she was fired for supporting his accounts and 
 for raising concerns about a particular case she was 
 investigating.\n\nWhitman has since filed a whistleblower complaint of his 
 own with the Office of Special Counsel, an office that investigates 
 retaliation against federal employees. \n\nHis complaint is still pending. 
 \n\nThe Labor Department spokeswoman and the Office of Special Counsel 
 declined to comment.\n\n(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Soyoung 
 Kim and Edward Tobin)\n\nWW 10-4-16 Bullied Wells Fargo Workers &  OSHA And 
  SEIU 1021 Contra Costa Social Workers 
 Strike\nhttps://soundcloud.com/workweek-radio/ww-10-4-16-wells-fargo-workers-and-osha-and-seiu-1021-contra-costa-social-workers-strike\nWorkWeek 
 looks at the criminal fraud at Wells Fargo and how Wells Fargo workers were 
 bullied and retaliated against for making complaints about the criminal 
 activity at the bank.\nReuters white collar crime reporter Sarah Lynch and 
 former Federal OSHA lawyer and investigator Darrell Whitman are 
 interviewed. Whitman had been assigned some of the cases of Wells Fargo 
 workers who were being bullied for refusing to engage in criminal fraud 
 being pushed by the bank.\nWhitman also discusses the culture of corruption 
 at the Department of Labor and OSHA including bullying against OSHA workers 
 and illegal systemic discrimination against workers with 
 disabilities.\nWorkWeek also looks at the strike of 1300 SEIU 1021 social 
 service and eligibility  workers who went on strike in Contra Costa County 
 against poverty wages and a 40% staff shortage.\nFor additional 
 media:\nhttp://www.reuters.com/article/us-wells-fargo-accounts-whistleblower-idUSKCN11Z1RE\nhttp://fortune.com/2016/09/29/wells-fargo-employees-sue/\nhttp://www.sfexaminer.com/wells-fargo-faces-labor-department-review-possible-workplace-violations/\nProduction 
 of WorkWeek 
 Radio\nworkweek@KPFA.org\nhttps://soundcloud.com/workweek-radio\n\nWells 
 Fargo CEO Steps Down, But for Warren It's "Not Real Accountability"\n'A 
 bank CEO should not be able to oversee a massive fraud and simply walk away 
 to enjoy his millions in retirement,' said Sen. Elizabeth 
 Warren\nhttp://www.commondreams.org/news/2016/10/13/wells-fargo-ceo-steps-down-warren-its-not-real-accountability\nThursday, 
 October 13, 2016\nbyCommon Dreams\nWells Fargo CEO Steps Down, But for 
 Warren It's "Not Real Accountability"\n'A bank CEO should not be able to 
 oversee a massive fraud and simply walk away to enjoy his millions in 
 retirement,' said Sen. Elizabeth Warren\nbyDeirdre Fulton, staff 
 writer\n\n\nIn September, Elizabeth Warren told John Stumpf: "You should 
 resign, you should give back the money you took while this scam was going 
 on and you should be criminally investigated by both the Department of 
 Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission." (Photo: AP)\nThe 
 announced retirement of Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf on Wednesday wasn't 
 enough for U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who said the top executive 
 must face more consequences for his role in the recent fake-account 
 scandal.\n\nAccording to a Wells Fargo statement released late Wednesday 
 afternoon, Stumpf had informed the company's board he was stepping down, 
 effective immediately. The bank said its president and Chief Operating 
 Officer (COO) Tim Sloan would take over as CEO.\n\nUSA Today 
 reported:\n\nWhile Stumpf doesn't receive a special retirement payout, 
 executive-pay tracker Equilar estimates he'll walk with $134.1 million. The 
 package remains that large even after Stumpf last month agreed to a $41 
 million clawback following a grilling he received from the Senate Banking 
 Committee reprimanding him for not taking responsibility. He agreed to give 
 up unvested stock, but still owns shares vested in previous years.\n\nAt 
 that committee hearing last month, Warren skewered Stumpf for what she 
 described as "gutless leadership."\n\n"This is about accountability," 
 Warren said at the time. "You should resign, you should give back the money 
 you took while this scam was going on and you should be criminally 
 investigated by both the Department of Justice and the Securities and 
 Exchange Commission."\n\nIn a series of tweets and a statement on Wednesday 
 night, Warren noted that only one of those objectives had been 
 achieved.\n\n"Wells Fargo was caught in a massive, years-long scam that 
 cheated thousands of customers while senior bank executives made millions 
 of dollars," the senator wrote on Facebook. "As I said at the hearing last 
 month, Mr. Stumpf should resign, return every nickel he made while this 
 scam was going on, and face an investigation by the Justice Department and 
 SEC. So far, he's one for three."\n\n"If Mr. Stumpf is leaving with all of 
 his ill-gotten millions, that's still not real accountability," Warren 
 continued. "A bank teller would face criminal charges and a prison sentence 
 for stealing a handful of 20s from the cash drawer. A bank CEO should not 
 be able to oversee a massive fraud and simply walk away to enjoy his 
 millions in retirement."\n\nThis echoed a letter Warren signed onto earlier 
 this month, in which a group of Democratic and Independent senators 
 demanded the Justice Department, as part of its probe into the scandal, 
 investigate whether Wells Fargo top brass should face criminal 
 charges.\n\nNot doing so, they warned, could reinforce "the notion that the 
 wealthy and powerful have purchased a higher class of justice for 
 themselves."\n\nIndeed, as Public Citizen president Robert Weissman said 
 Wednesday, Stumpf's forced retirement "is essentially an admission of 
 wrongdoing that only reinforces the need to continue tough criminal 
 investigations of the actions of Stumpf as well as other top 
 executives."\n\nBeyond that, Weissman declared: "Americans are beyond sick 
 and tired of Big Banks and their executives escaping accountability. With 
 Stumpf removed, attention will now turn to the U.S. Department of Justice 
 to see if it will do its job. Of course, individual accountability is not 
 enough: this too big to manage bank must be broken up."\n\nMeanwhile, 
 Dealbreaker reported Wednesday on how the appointment of Sloan to take 
 Stumpf's place was not exactly reassuring.\n\nAccording to his bio, 
 Dealbreaker noted, Sloan has been at Wells Fargo longer than Stumpf and 
 served as boss to Carrie Tolstedt, the former executive who ran the 
 fraudulent program. Indeed, as Reuters reported, "he had oversight over 
 Wells' retail division, where employees opened up to 2 million accounts 
 without customers' knowledge, some of them during his tenure as 
 COO."\n\n"Promoting a guy that had arguably closer ties to the creation of 
 at least 2 million unauthorized accounts, and then acting like it's a 
 symbol of institutional change, is the kind of thing that makes Elizabeth 
 Warren salivate with righteous rage," Thornton McEnery wrote at 
 Dealbreaker.\n\n"Wells Fargo's problems go from top to bottom," Khalid 
 Taha, a former Wells Fargo personal banker who left the bank in July after 
 suing them over sales pressures, similarly told Reuters. "Sloan is part of 
 that problem. I can't see him as a solution."\n\nCalifornia State Treasurer 
 Sanctions Wells Fargo, Suspends Business 
 Relationships\nhttp://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/California-State-Treasurer-to-Make-Big-Announcement-on-Wells-Fargo-in-San-Francisco-395086211.html\nCalifornia 
 is the nation's largest issuer of municipal bonds.\n\nBy Stephanie Chuang 
 and  Lisa Fernandez\n\nCalifornia’s State Treasurer on Wednesday 
 sanctioned Wells Fargo and ordered the suspension of business relationships 
 between his office and the bank for one year after a scandal that has 
 rocked the nation over the opening of two million fraudulent bank accounts. 
 Stephanie Chuang reports. (Published Wednesday, Sept. 28, 
 2016)\nCalifornia’s State Treasurer on Wednesday sanctioned Wells Fargo 
 and ordered the suspension of business relationships between his office and 
 the bank for one year after a scandal that has rocked the nation over the 
 opening of two million fraudulent bank accounts.\n's move is unprecedented; 
 he is the first state treasurer to issue such measures.\n	• Wells Fargo 
 Fined $185M for Opening Millions of Unauthorized Accounts \nIn what he 
 previewed would be a “big announcement,” Chiang, who is running for 
 governor in 2018, spoke outside San Francisco City Hall, announcing his 
 sanctions. They include suspending investments by the Treasurer's Office in 
 all Wells Fargo securities, not using Wells Fargo as a broker-dealer for 
 buying investments, and ceasing to employ Wells Fargo as a managing 
 underwriter on negotiated sales of California state bonds where the 
 treasurer appoints the underwriter.\n"I have a duty as a leader in the 
 financial marketplace to take action aimed at helping you understand that 
 integrity and trust matter," Chiang wrote to Wells Fargo. "How can I 
 continue to entrust the public's money to an organization which has shown 
 such little regard for the legions of Californians who have placed their 
 financial well-being in its care?\nChiang said the sanctions will take 
 place immediately and remain in place for 12 months.\nVenoo Kakar, an 
 economics professor at San Francisco State University, said the state's 
 message will resonate with all the big banks, especially if the monetary 
 fines seem weak.\nCalifornia is the nation's largest issuer of municipal 
 bonds. Wells Fargo was the second-largest underwriter of municipal debt in 
 California in the first half of the year, according to data compiled by 
 Bloomberg.\nIn a statement, Wells Fargo spokesman Ruben Pulido said: "We 
 regret and take full responsibility for the incidents in which customers 
 received a product they did not request, as that is consistent with the 
 values and culture we strive to live up to every day."\nPulido added, "We 
 are very sorry and take full responsibility for the incidents in our retail 
 bank."\nChiang serves as the state's banker, overseeing nearly $2 trillion 
 in annual banking transactions. He manages a $75 billion investment pool 
 and is the nation’s largest issuer of municipal debt. He also sits on the 
 governing board of the nation’s two largest public pension funds: the 
 California Public Employees’ Retirement System and the California State 
 Teachers’ Retirement System.\nThe New York Times noted the move could 
 cost Wells Fargo millions of dollars in banking fees because California is 
 the largest issuer of municipal debt in the country.\nThe Times also 
 pointed out that the move is symbolically hurtful for Wells Fargo, which 
 has a large presence in California, particularly in San Francisco, where 
 the bank's headquarters are on Montgomery Street.\nBefore Chiang made his 
 announcement, Wells Fargo had already agreed to pay the national Consumer 
 Financial Protection Bureau $185 million and the bank’s CEO, John Stumpf, 
 also agreed to forfeit $41 million.\n"We have already taken important 
 steps," Pulido said in his statement. "And will continue to do so, to 
 address these issues and rebuild your trust."\nMore locally, on Sept. 22, 
 Wells Fargo shareholder William Sarsfield sued Wells Fargo in San Francisco 
 County Superior Court.\nThe complaint alleges Wells Fargo's senior 
 management allowed the bank to commit a major fraud on consumers, which 
 "resulted in serious harm to the bank."\nAnd last week, San Francisco 
 removed Wells Fargo from a banking program for low-income residents, 
 Bloomberg noted.\nAll the angst stems from an investigation by the Consumer 
 Financial Protection Bureau, which found that Wells Fargo sales staff 
 opened more than two million bank and credit card accounts that may have 
 not been authorized by customers. Money in customers' accounts was 
 transferred to these new accounts without authorization. Debit cards were 
 issued and activated, as well as PINs created, without telling customers. 
 In some cases, Wells Fargo employees even created fake email addresses to 
 sign up customers for online banking services.\nOf the $185 million 
 settlement that the bank agreed to pay: Wells Fargo will pay $100 million 
 to the CFPB; $35 million to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency 
 and $50 million to the City and County of Los Angeles. It will also pay 
 restitution to affected customers.\nIn its statement, Wells Fargo added 
 that the bank has donated $53 million to support schools and nonprofits in 
 California in the last year alone.\nThe Associated Press contributed to 
 this report.\nPublished at 5:50 AM PDT on Sep 28, 2016 | Updated at 5:30 AM 
 PDT on Sep 29, 2016\n\n\nSource: California State Treasurer Sanctions Wells 
 Fargo, Suspends Business Relationships | NBC Bay Area 
 http://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/California-State-Treasurer-to-Make-Big-Announcement-on-Wells-Fargo-in-San-Francisco-395086211.html#ixzz4MHa7vCa2 
 \nFollow us: @NBCBayArea on Twitter | NBCBayArea on Facebook\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2016/10/18/18792429.php
SUMMARY:Jail The Bankers NOW At Wells Fargo-They Are Not Too Big To Nail! Expropriate the Bank
LOCATION:Wells Fargo World Corporate Headquarters\n420 Montgomery St near Sacramento 
 St.\nSan Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2016/10/18/18792429.php
DTSTART:20161026T230000Z
DTEND:20161026T233000Z
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