Wells Fargo gets regulatory questions after data breach

Recent data breach began with a financial spat between two Wells Fargo brothers over less than $1 mn

Laura J Keller | Bloomberg 

Wells Fargo
Regulators have started asking questions about the breach, after the data was mistakenly provided to an attorney as part of a lawsuit involving two brothers, one a Wells Fargo employee and the other a former employee | Photo: Reuters

& Co, already in the regulatory spotlight because of last year’s fake-account scandal, is drawing renewed scrutiny after a lawyer’s unauthorised release of sensitive client details for tens of thousands of belonging to wealthy of its unit.

Regulators have started asking questions about the breach, according to a person with knowledge of the matter, after the data was mistakenly provided to an attorney as part of a involving two brothers, one a employee and the other a former employee. A person briefed on the matter said has determined the were all from one branch in the Northeast.

Representatives of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority informally contacted at least one of the attorneys involved in the dispute for about how the breach occurred and how failed to detect it, said the person, who asked not to be identified because the matter isn’t public. Lawyers for the are taking steps to contact regulators about the data breach, according to another person with knowledge of the matter. The person didn’t specify which agencies.

Ray Pellecchia, a spokesman for Finra, which licenses and supervises Wall Street workers including financial advisers, didn’t have an immediate comment. Representatives for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Securities and Exchange Commission didn’t immediately respond to messages seeking comment.

While this latest black eye may not rise to the level of the retail-debacle, it further calls into question Wells Fargo’s ability to manage its people and

takes the security and of our customers’ very seriously," the said in a statement.

"We are currently taking action to ensure the additional data is not disseminated, and we are requesting its rapid return. We continue to thoroughly investigate this matter and will take the proper steps, including corrective action, based on the outcome of our investigation.”

The bank’s latest troubles come just 10 months after regulators disclosed that employees had been opening potentially millions of in its retail banking division without customers’ permission over a half decade. The bank’s stock valuation and reputation were tarnished, and has spent at least $520 million on fines, remediation, and since then, including a near-final $142 million to consumers who accused the of creating bogus

Insufficient Oversight

The OCC, the bank’s main regulator, said in September had "failed to provide sufficient oversight" of its programs and didn’t adequately monitor employees in its retail Part of the consent order the OCC forced the to carry out afterward included beefing up internal controls and

The recent began with a financial spat between a pair of brothers over less than $1 million. Gary Sinderbrand, a former managing director at Advisors, is engaged in two actions against his older brother Steven Sinderbrand, a managing director at the bank, one in and one in New Jersey.

Lawyers for Gary Sinderbrand received client names, Social Security numbers and account balances earlier this month for 50,000 accounts, the Times first reported, including one file with details on the holdings of a "well-known hedge fund billionaire" with at least $23 million invested.

Protective Order

The trove of confidential client data was sent by attorney Angela A. Turiano of law firm Bressler, Amery & Ross, who’s representing in both of the disputes. Turiano sent the without a protective order or confidentiality agreement between the parties.

Turiano, who indicated that an outside vendor was involved in the breach, asked the be returned when Gary Sinderbrand’s attorneys informed her of the breach this week, the Times reported. Turiano didn’t return messages for comment on Saturday.

Gary Sinderbrand’s lawyers had been seeking documents related to a squabble over allegedly unpaid fees for a consulting arrangement with his brother. Sinderbrand alleges knew about and approved of a verbal arrangement that he provide risk-management and client-retention coaching to his brother Steven, while Gary Sinderbrand took a two-year sabbatical from managing wealthy clients’ money.

The dispute is over what Gary Sinderbrand alleges is roughly $870,000 more he’s owed from 50 percent of fees his brother made managing their joint book of client business over a period of about two years.

Andrew L. Miller and Aaron Zeisler, attorneys for Gary Sinderbrand, either declined to comment or didn’t immediately return messages on Saturday. The brothers didn’t return messages seeking comment.