The California Department of Insurance on Tuesday accused San Francisco-based Wells Fargo of improper insurance sales practices that led to insurance products being purchased for customers without their knowledge.
The accusation is the result of a department investigation that found that between 2008 and 2016, Wells Fargo customers were issued about 1,500 insurance policies and charged premiums without their knowledge or permission.
The state Department of Insurance is now seeking to suspend or revoke Wells Fargo’s licenses to transact personal insurance in California.
In a statement, Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones said that companies with such licenses have an obligation to act with integrity:
Department officials said that Wells Fargo is expected to file a Notice of Defense in response to the accusation.
This is not the first time Well Fargo has found itself in hot water. Just last year, the company paid $185 million to government regulators to settle claims that it opened more than 3 million fraudulent deposit and credit card accounts since 2009.
Wells Fargo said in a statement:
According to the Department of Insurance, Wells Fargo employees opened the unauthorized accounts as part of an incentive compensation program that indirectly encouraged improper sales practices and was not adequately overseen by bank management.
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