Wells Fargo & Co was sued on Friday by Cook County, Illinois, which accused the largest US mortgage lender of targeting black, Hispanic and female borrowers with predatory and discriminatory lending in the Chicago area.
The lawsuit is the latest accusing major banks of biased mortgage lending that harmed major American cities, such as Los Angeles, Miami and Baltimore, and prolonged the nation’s housing crisis. These lawsuits have had mixed success.
According to a complaint filed in the US District Court in Chicago, which is part of Cook County and the third-most populous US city, Wells Fargo has for more than a decade discriminated against minority and female borrowers in the region, with a goal of maximising profit.
The 152-page complaint said the bank targeted borrowers from the time loans were made through foreclosure through “equity stripping’’, which includes the imposition of inflated or unnecessary rates and fees, as well as penalties to refinance.
Cook County said Wells Fargo’s “deliberate’’ and “egregious’’ activities affected at least 26,000 borrowers, eroded the county’s property tax base, and forced the county to spend more to combat blight from abandoned properties. It said damages may total $300 million or more.
The county is seeking a halt to Wells Fargo’s alleged wrongful practices, as well as compensatory and punitive damages. Its lawsuit also targets practices at the former Wachovia Corp, which Wells Fargo bought at the end of 2008.
Chris Hammond, a Wells Fargo spokesman, declined to comment. The San Francisco-based lender is also the fourth-largest US bank by assets.
Cook County has filed similar lawsuits against Bank of America Corp and Britain’s HSBC Holdings Plc.
Los Angeles, the second most populous US city, brought cases against Wells Fargo, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase & Co and Citigroup Inc.
The case is County of Cook, Illinois vs Wells Fargo & Co, US District Court, Northern District of Illinois, No. 14-09548.