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Wells Fargo To Pay $110 Million To Settle Fake Account Lawsuit

LOS ANGELES (CBSLA/AP) — Wells Fargo has agreed to pay $110 million to settle a class-action lawsuit over up to 2 million accounts its employees opened for customers without getting their permission, the bank announced Tuesday.

It's the first private settlement that Wells has reached since the company paid $185 million to federal and California authorities late last year.

Authorities said bank employees, driven by high-pressure sales tactics, opened the bank and credit card accounts without customer authorization.

The settlement will include customers who had accounts opened without their permission, or were signed up for a product they did not agree to, going back to Jan. 1, 2009.

Business and gallery owner Ken Wallman in Mar Vista is a little wary and more than a little worried after he got caught in the Wells Fargo phony accounts scandal.

Last fall, he showed CBS2 a hill of bank statements from 16 accounts opened in his name without his consent, racking up hundreds of dollars in low balance, overdraft and other charges.

"The feeling that you get from not being able to trust the bank. They should pay for that. That should be part of it," Wallman says. "That's not good for your psyche to have to worry about your bank where you're putting your money."

He says he doesn't expect or even necessarily want a big payout. He is just glad there's a settlement. To him, the damage is beyond dollars and cents.

CBS2 legal consultant Steve Meister says as many as nine federal agencies are still investigating, along with whistleblower lawsuits and a criminal probe.

"There's pressure on the feds now to find somebody to throw in the clink over this. I don't know if they're going to find somebody, who actually committed criminal wrongdoing at a high level in the bank. But I know they're looking," Meister says.

Wells Fargo says it believes this settlement, which is subject to court approval, will resolve the 11 other pending class-action lawsuits filed against it over the accounts.

Notably, Wells said it is waiving its right to take customers into what's known as third-party arbitration, which lets the bank take complaints to a private mediator instead of a court of law.

The practice has been a source of controversy for the bank, and customer advocates and politicians had been pressuring Wells to give up its right to use arbitration.

"We believe this is an outstanding result obtained for the benefit of a proposed nationwide class, notwithstanding Wells Fargo's effort to block the class action with an arbitration clause," said Derek Loeser, a partner with Keller Rohrback, one of the firms that filed a class-action suit against the bank.

After paying attorneys' fees, the $110 million will first go to cover any customers' out-of-pocket losses or fees that they may have incurred due to the unauthorized accounts. All remaining money will be split among the all impacted customers.

San Francisco-based Wells Fargo has seen sharp declines in new account openings and bank traffic, and has been working to restore customers' trust since the practices came to light. The biggest scandal in the bank's history led to the abrupt retirement of its CEO, John Stumpf.

In response to the scandal, Wells has changed its sales practices, ousted other executives and called tens of millions of customers to check on whether they truly opened the accounts in question.

"This agreement is another step in our journey to make things right with customers," Wells Fargo CEO Tim Sloan said in a prepared statement. Sloan took over as CEO in October.

Wells Fargo's board of directors is conducting an investigation into the bank's sales practices, a report that is expected to be out in April ahead of the annual shareholder meeting. The board has already cut bonuses to major executives.

(TM and © Copyright 2015 CBS Local Media, a division of CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE logo TM and copyright 2015 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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