- Finance and investment-related court cases
Lies about being in contact with clients were the real reason the whisteblower was fired, according to a defendant and key witness for the bank.
November 2 -
The mishandling of the two former employees’ complaints, detailed in documents and by former OSHA officials, raises questions about the government’s treatment of whistleblowers throughout the financial services industry.
August 14 -
The agency plans to split the award between just two people who reported the bank’s product-pushing tactics.
July 19 -
The regulator now has punished just one known person associated with the bank's admitted nationwide fiduciary violation: the RIA who flagged abuses.
April 12 -
Payment of back wages is ordered as well as reinstatement. A second reinstatement may also be in the works, Financial Planning has learned.
April 9 -
Organization takes the case "to put a spotlight on a bank that may have engaged in misconduct more significant than Wells Fargo's."
February 9 -
OSHA supports ex-broker Johnny Burris’ firing because he allegedly faked company letterhead. Burris says the bank approved the altered letter years before.
January 12 -
The decision vindicates ex-broker Johnny Burris, but also supports the move to fire him. However, a bank document obtained by Financial Planning casts doubts on the reason for his termination.
January 12 -
Former Department of Labor officials allege systemic breakdown of whistleblower protection; two also handled Wells Fargo cases that went nowhere.
December 9 -
The regulator has filed a complaint against whistleblower Johnny Burris, who has filed multiple cases against one of its largest member firms, JPMorgan.
September 22