Former
Stumpf, who retired in 2016 after the bank’s deceptions came to light, agreed to pay a $2.5 million fine to settle the allegations, the SEC said in a Friday
“If executives speak about a key performance metric to promote their business, they must do so fully and accurately,” SEC Enforcement Director
The SEC is seeking fines, disgorgement and a ban on serving as an officer or director of a public company against Tolstedt. Stumpf agreed to settle the agency’s claims without admitting or denying wrongdoing. His $2.5 million fine will be pooled with $500 million collected from an earlier settlement with the bank in a fund for harmed investors, the SEC said.
An attorney for Stumpf declined to comment. Tolstedt’s lawyer,
“We look forward to setting the record straight and clearing her name,” Mainigi said in an email statement.
Wells Fargo earlier this year
(Updates with lawyer’s comments starting in fifth paragraph)
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Gregory Mott
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