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Discrimination claims and data breaches are just some of the issues the industry has faced this year.
July 29 -
The complaint is the most recent in a spate of litigation this year over talent and theft of trade secrets.
July 25 -
The lawsuits have heated up since April with the inclusion of a high-profile lawyer and plaintiffs, a public war of words and scrutiny from city and federal lawmakers.
July 20 -
The mortgage giant said departing employees accounted for approximately 81% of the volume achieved by its New York operations in the past year.
July 15 -
At least 300 workers were told they were terminated in a videoconference last week that ended abruptly and they were not given information about severance, according to the lawsuit.
July 11 -
The court found the sale of a property held by a limited liability company violated bankruptcy-related restrictions because a resident with a Chapter 7 petition was involved.
July 7 -
The declaration comes less than a week after the firm laid off 471 workers, or over 75% of its staff, because of significant operating losses and cash flow challenges.
June 30 -
Talks between original holders and a law firm over potential securities fraud litigation did not pan out, and trustee UMB NA has canceled all the bonds.
June 14 -
Federal prosecutors in Manhattan are investigating the bank over allegations that it conducted so-called fake interviews with nonwhite and female job applicants, The New York Times reported Thursday.
June 9 -
The opinion heightens the need for servicers to be careful about billing communications, particularly when a distressed loan or foreclosure is involved.
June 7 -
A Salem, Massachusetts, man was found guilty by a federal jury in Boston of a scheme that led to more than $3.8 million in losses to lenders, the U.S. Attorney's Office announced.
June 3 -
A former account executive sued the company claiming it did not follow its own "Firm 40" policy.
June 2 -
The misdemeanor plea deals for three co-defendants do not add to troubles for an upstate New York developer facing federal felony charges in what once was called a "wide-ranging mortgage fraud scheme."
April 7 -
Wells Fargo won an early round in a lawsuit accusing the bank of running a predatory mortgage lending scheme in the Atlanta area before the 2008 financial crisis and continuing to discriminate against minorities for more than a decade afterward.
March 29 -
The New Jersey-specific case could be a sign of how the combined effect of federal debt-collection rules and state regulations may further complicate a compliance-sensitive environment for the industry.
February 24 -
The U.S. Treasury Department defeated a blue-state challenge to a rule that exempts buyers of high-interest loans from state interest rate caps.
February 8 -
The Conference of State Bank Supervisors abandoned a lawsuit against the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency that had challenged the San Francisco fintech's effort to become a national bank without deposit insurance. The company recently amended its application to drop that controversial element.
January 14 -
The ruling overturns a summary judgment in a class action lawsuit filed by refinance customers between 2004 and 2009 in West Virginia over alleged inflated property values.
January 12 -
Mary Mack testified last week about the cultural problems she encountered after joining the bank's consumer unit in 2016. Recalling small group meetings she held with employees, she said: "People would stand up, and they were fearful."
November 1 - LIBOR
The Federal Reserve told a judge not to scrap Libor as requested by consumers in a lawsuit because it would pose a risk to financial stability and undermine years of global planning for a transition to a new benchmark for borrowing rates.
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