Business
Crime Simple and Complex
By
Phil Mattera, Dirt
Diggers Digest
Citizens
Bank will pay $18.5 million to settle CFPB allegations that it routinely
pocketed the difference when customers mistakenly filled out deposit slips for
amounts lower than the sums actually transferred. Taking advantage of the
carelessness of others added up for the bank: $11 million of the payment by
Citizens will consist of refunds, with the rest representing penalties imposed
by the CFPB under its powers granted by the industry-vilified Dodd-Frank Act.
The
under-crediting attributed to Citizens is the flip side of the overcharging
that is surprisingly common among large retailers. Whole Foods is facing a
shareholder lawsuit and sinking sales in the wake of allegations by the New York City Department of
Consumer Affairs that its local stores were systematically and egregiously
overcharging customers for pre-packaged foods.
In
February, Target paid $3.9 million to settle
allegations by half a dozen district attorneys in California that prices
charged at the register were higher than those posted in the aisles.
In
April, Wal-Mart was hit with a proposed class action
lawsuit alleging that the company overcharged customers at its vision centers
by inflating insurance co-pay amounts.
Earlier
this month, Genuine Parts agreed to pay $338,000 to settle
allegations by the San Diego District Attorney that its several of its NAPA
Auto Parts stores were overcharging customers.
Cases
such as these belie the notion that “thumb on the scale” types of simple
cheating are mainly to be found among small businesses. Large companies are
apparently inclined to engage in both simple and complex misdeeds.
Citizens
Bank symbolizes the link between the different types of misconduct. The company
is a subsidiary of the Royal Bank of Scotland, which has been deeply involved
in a variety of complex financial scandals.
Earlier
this year, it pleaded guilty to criminal charges of
conspiring to fix foreign currency rates, along with three other major banks.
RBS was fined $395 million (and another $274 million by the Federal Reserve)
and put on probation for three years. The SEC gave it a waiver from
a rule that would have barred it from remaining in the securities business.
In
2013 RBS had to pay $153 million to settle charges
that it misled investors in a 2007 offering of subprime residential
mortgage-back securities. That same year, it paid $612 million to settle civil and
criminal charges that it was involved in the manipulation of the LIBOR interest
rate index.
Whether
simple or complex, corporate wrongdoing needs to be prosecuted aggressively.