Warren Asks for Answers About Vanished Wells Fargo Complaint Website

WASHINGTON (Los Angeles Times/TNS) —

Sen. Elizabeth Warren wants the acting Labor secretary to explain why a website for complaints from Wells Fargo & Co. employees disappeared after President Donald Trump took office, and she has requested an update on the department’s investigation into the bank’s unauthorized-accounts scandal.

The site was created in September after former Labor Secretary Tom Perez began a “top-to-bottom review” of how the bank treated employees as it pushed aggressive sales quotas that led to the creation of as many as 2 million accounts opened without customers’ consent.

Warren, D-Mass., and seven other senators asked Perez for an investigation after Wells Fargo agreed to pay $185 million to settle investigations by Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer and federal regulators into the unauthorized accounts.

The senators cited allegations that the bank failed to pay overtime to tellers and other employees who worked late nights and weekends to meet sales quotas.

The website — www.dol.gov/wellsfargo — is no longer active. It was working as of Jan. 20, Warren said.

“Taking down this website enables Wells Fargo to escape full responsibility for its fraudulent actions and the department to shirk its outstanding obligations to American workers,” Warren wrote Thursday to Edward Hugler, a deputy assistant secretary and 39-year department veteran who has been acting secretary since Trump took office on Jan. 20.

“It is imperative that current and former Wells Fargo employees retain access to information on their rights under federal labor law and their ability to file a complaint if their rights are violated,” she wrote.

Trump’s nominee for Labor secretary, Andy Puzder, the chief executive of CKE Restaurants Inc., is scheduled for a Senate confirmation hearing next week.

A Labor Department spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Warren asked Hugler if the department will “continue all ongoing investigations” into Wells Fargo’s treatment of employees and reinstate the complaint website. If violations were found by the Labor Department, Wells Fargo employees could be provided back pay.

Warren also asked Hugler about a Wall Street Journal report on Jan. 6 stating the Labor Department accused an outside attorney for Wells Fargo, Tammy McCutchen, of hampering the investigation by denying records and interviews. When pressed by a Labor Department investigator, McCutchen reportedly said Trump was taking over in a few weeks and she might land an administration job.

In her letter, Warren requested that Hugler notify Congress if McCutchen or any other attorneys that represented Wells Fargo are nominated to serve in the department, and asked that they recuse themselves from investigations of the bank if they take office.

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