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Wells Fargo fires 4 senior employees for ties to fake account scandal

Wells Fargo has fired four senior employees amid an ongoing probe into the bank’s illegal sales practices. The company announced Tuesday that it fired fou...
Wells Fargo

Wells Fargo has fired four senior employees amid an ongoing probe into the bank’s illegal sales practices.

The company announced Tuesday that it fired four employees who either work or used to work in that community banking division that’s at the center of last year’s scandal.

Wells Fargo admitted last fall that it created as many as 2 million fake accounts between 2011 and 2015.

In the following months, stories emerged depicting a toxic sales culture and employee mistreatment. Some former employees told CNNMoney they were subject to retaliation after they tried to stop the sales tactics.

Related: Wells Fargo admits to signs of worker retaliation

Since the scandal came to light, Wells Fargo has been under investigation by the Department of Justice, Congressional committees, state attorneys general and prosecutors offices. Customers, employees and shareholders have also launched class-action lawsuits against Wells Fargo.

The company’s board of directors also opened an independent investigation into the practices. In a news release Tuesday, Wells Fargo said that investigation is expected to finish before the bank’s annual shareholder meeting in April.

Wells Fargo identified the four employees it fired as:

– Claudia Russ Anderson, former community bank chief risk officer.

– Pamela Conboy, Arizona lead regional president.

– Shelley Freeman, former Los Angeles regional president.

– Matthew Raphaelson, head of community bank strategy and initiatives.

Related: I called the Wells Fargo ethics line and was fired

The executives won’t receive a 2016 bonus, and the company says they will forfeit all of their unvested equity awards as well as any vested outstanding options.

Wells Fargo fired 5,300 workers for creating millions of fake accounts.

In October, embattled company CEO John Stumpf retired suddenly, and forfeited $41 million in stock awards.

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