Wells Fargo has fired more than 100 employees, saying they personally defrauded a coronavirus relief program from the U.S. Small Business Administration.
In a memo sent Wednesday and obtained by NPR, the company said it had identified employees that it believes made false representations in applying for relief funds through the SBA's Economic Injury Disaster Loan program.
The employees' actions were outside of their work responsibilities, the company said.
"We have terminated the employment of those individuals and will cooperate fully with law enforcement. These wrongful actions were personal actions, and do not involve our customers," wrote David Galloreese, head of human resources at Wells Fargo.
"We have zero tolerance for fraudulent behavior and will continue to look into these matters. If we identify additional wrongdoing by employees, we will take appropriate action," he added.
The number of employees who have been fired is between 100 and 125, a Wells Fargo employee with knowledge of the situation told NPR. Wells Fargo initiated the investigation and took action when the fraud was identified, the employee said. The investigation is ongoing.
Wells Fargo isn't the first bank to find apparent abuse of government programs among its staff. Last month, JP Morgan Chase found that more than 500 of its employees had received assistance from pandemic relief programs, including dozens who had done so improperly, Bloomberg
reported
The SBA's
Economic Injury Disaster Loan
The abuse of such programs is certainly not limited to employees at banks – but unlike other employers, banks are able to see whether relief funds have been deposited into their employees' accounts,
as Bloomberg reported
In July, the SBA's inspector general issued
a memo
In August, Bloomberg Businessweek analyzed SBA data and found at least
$1 billion in suspicious payments
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