Convicted of 10 cent theft in 63 - fired in 29012

Goober

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 23, 2009
24,691
116
63
Moving
Convicted of 10 cent theft in 63 - fired in 29012
Wells Fargo Fires Employee Who Committed 10-Cent Fraud in 1963 | NewsFeed | TIME.com

The truth always comes out. If it takes half a year or half a century, the truth always comes out.

So 68-year-old Richard Eggers really should have known that the sordid details of his dark, criminal past would eventually creep into the present and jeopardize his career. In 1963, the Iowa resident gave new meaning to the term “money laundering” when he tried to insert a cardboard cutout of a dime into a laundromat machine. Local law enforcement caught wind of the stunt and arrested him for fraud.

(MORE: Wells Fargo Mails Statements to Wrong Customers)

Eggers, who was a teenager at the time of his arrest, turned his life around and until recently worked as a customer service representative at Wells Fargo bank. But under new federal employment regulations, Wells Fargo fired Eggers upon learning of his criminal record, ABC affiliate WOI-TV reports. The regulations were instated to weed out workers with histories of fraud and identity theft to better protect the company’s customers.

But wait, you might be thinking, aren’t these rules meant to weed out senior executives whos missteps can cost customers millions of dollars — not customer services reps guilty of decades-old pranks?Good question. But apparently, a rule’s a rule. As Wells Fargo spokesperson Angela Kaipust told WOI-TV:

“We don’t have discretion to grant exceptions in situations like this. Once we find out someone has a criminal history of dishonesty or breach of trust we can no longer employ them.”
Eggers said he plans to apply for a waiver to be exempt from the law and reverse the company’s decision — but that process could take months. In the meantime, he’s seeking the assistance of a lawyer and hunting for a new job.

MORE: Should Cities Have to Patronize Small, Local Banks?

Read other related stories about this:
Wells Fargo Fired This Man For A 10-Cent Stunt He Pulled 49 Years Ago Business Insider
Man Fired 50 Years After Laundromat Fraud WOI-TV


Read more: Wells Fargo Fires Employee Who Committed 10-Cent Fraud in 1963 | NewsFeed | TIME.com
 

gerryh

Time Out
Nov 21, 2004
25,756
295
83
obviously, wells fargo is brain dead as are those employees/officers that chose to enforce this "law".
 

Goober

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 23, 2009
24,691
116
63
Moving
The fault lies with the Dumb Fuks that wrote the law- The Dumb Fuks in the Financial industry - that had input-

See any of those Bankers that laundered money for Iran going to jail-
 

PoliticalNick

The Troll Bashing Troll
Mar 8, 2011
7,940
0
36
Edson, AB
The fault lies with the Dumb Fuks that wrote the law- The Dumb Fuks in the Financial industry - that had input-

See any of those Bankers that laundered money for Iran going to jail-

There are many execs in AIG, Morgan-Stanley etc that should be in jail for a long time for their part in the collapse of 2008. They were committing major fraud, paying off rating agencies so they could sell off mortgage funds, lying about actual and projected revenue etc etc etc. Instead of prosecution they got millions in bonuses with bail-out money. Actually jail is far to good for those bast*rds, a firing squad or slow public hanging maybe!
 

shadowshiv

Dark Overlord
May 29, 2007
17,545
120
63
50
Wow! Their priorities are seriously out of whack. What a pathetic ruling!