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Bank of America joins the infamous club of consumer abusers in the banking industry, despite the alarm bells set off by the notorious Wells Fargo case. On this week's episode of Corruption, Crime and Compliance, host Michael Volkov explores the shocking details of Bank of America's recent $250 million settlement for account fraud and abuse with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). This episode shines a light on corporate complacency, the inherent risk of ill-conceived sales incentives, and the importance of internal risk assessment in the wake of industry scandals.
You’ll hear Michael discuss:
KEY QUOTES:
"You would think that Wells Fargo's case would have sent alarm bells throughout Bank of America to take a look at their own sales practices to make sure they don't suffer from the same type of abuse of conduct. And what's clear is Bank of America just kept its head down, blinders on, and then developed their own problem." - Michael Volkov
"Bank of America employees illegally applied for and then enrolled customers in credit card accounts in order to reach sales incentive goals." - Michael Volkov
"This is a tough regulatory environment, and you would think Bank of America would try to address that through some kind of mitigation and sort of risk analysis and conducting audits to make sure that they don't run into future abuses and practices like this." - Michael Volkov
Resources:
Michael Volkov on LinkedIn | Twitter
The Volkov Law Group
By Michael Volkov4.9
4242 ratings
Bank of America joins the infamous club of consumer abusers in the banking industry, despite the alarm bells set off by the notorious Wells Fargo case. On this week's episode of Corruption, Crime and Compliance, host Michael Volkov explores the shocking details of Bank of America's recent $250 million settlement for account fraud and abuse with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). This episode shines a light on corporate complacency, the inherent risk of ill-conceived sales incentives, and the importance of internal risk assessment in the wake of industry scandals.
You’ll hear Michael discuss:
KEY QUOTES:
"You would think that Wells Fargo's case would have sent alarm bells throughout Bank of America to take a look at their own sales practices to make sure they don't suffer from the same type of abuse of conduct. And what's clear is Bank of America just kept its head down, blinders on, and then developed their own problem." - Michael Volkov
"Bank of America employees illegally applied for and then enrolled customers in credit card accounts in order to reach sales incentive goals." - Michael Volkov
"This is a tough regulatory environment, and you would think Bank of America would try to address that through some kind of mitigation and sort of risk analysis and conducting audits to make sure that they don't run into future abuses and practices like this." - Michael Volkov
Resources:
Michael Volkov on LinkedIn | Twitter
The Volkov Law Group

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