Feds Reportedly Launch Criminal Probe Into Wells Fargo Following Allegations Of Sham Job Interviews

Topline

Federal civil rights prosecutors are investigating Wells Fargo’s hiring practices, the New York Times reported Thursday, weeks after the paper revealed some Wells Fargo managers had conducted fake interviews with Black and female job applicants.

Key Facts

The probe is still in “early stages,” according to the Times, citing two unnamed sources.

Last month, the Times reported some Wells Fargo staffers were told to interview female and Black candidates for jobs the bank was already planning to give to other applicants, part of a purported effort to follow the letter—if not the spirit—of an internal policy requiring managers to consider diverse candidates for certain job openings.

The bank temporarily paused its diverse hiring policy earlier this week so staff can “fully understand how the guidelines should be implemented—and so we can have confidence that our guidelines live up to their promise,” Wells Fargo said in a statement.

It’s unclear what areas of criminal law the Manhattan-based prosecutors think Wells Fargo may have violated: It is broadly illegal for employers to discriminate against job applicants based on race or sex, but the Times notes discrimination claims are usually resolved through civil suits that often result in settlements, not criminal cases.

A Wells Fargo spokesperson didn’t comment to Forbes on the prospect of a criminal investigation, but the bank said in a statement: “No one should be put through an interview without a real chance of receiving an offer, period.”

Nicholas Biase, chief spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s office in Manhattan, declined to comment on the purported investigation or confirm its existence to Forbes.

Key Background

The Times’ investigation into Wells Fargo’s hiring practices centered on Joe Bruno, a former wealth management executive who said he was instructed to conduct sham interviews with Black candidates. More than a dozen other Wells Fargo employees and job applicants told the Times they were aware of this practice, though Wells Fargo human resources leader Bei Ling told the paper this week the issue wasn’t “systemic.” Wells Fargo has drawn federal scrutiny in the past: In 2020, the bank pledged to pay over $3 billion to resolve federal claims that employees routinely tried to meet the company’s sales goals by opening millions of phony bank accounts without customers’ permission. The same year, Wells Fargo also settled claims with the Department of Labor it discriminated against Black job applicants.

Tangent

Allegations of sham job interviews also hit the NFL earlier this year. In a lawsuit against the league, former Miami Dolphins coach Brian Flores claimed at least two teams had interviewed him for head coaching positions they had no intention of giving him, part of an attempt to abide by a league rule that requires teams to interview minority candidates.

Further Reading

At Wells Fargo, a Quest to Increase Diversity Leads to Fake Job Interviews (New York Times)

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/joewalsh/2022/06/09/feds-reportedly-launch-criminal-probe-into-wells-fargo-following-allegations-of-sham-job-interviews/