银行员工曝料:伪造客户签名十分普遍

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银行员工曝料:伪造客户签名十分普遍
 0 评论加国无忧 51.CA2017年5月31日 15:06来源:本网综合作者:谈海


加拿大银行业表面上风平浪静,最近一段时间由内部员工爆料揭开许多捂得很严的盖子,最近又有员工出来爆料银行伪造客户签名现象十分普遍。

据CBC报道,一名曾在多家银行分行工作过的前CIBC金融服务代表透露,银行内部普遍存在伪造和影印客户签名、在空白文件上添加客户姓名缩写和涂抹隐瞒信息等做法,85%的银行销售团队都这么干,她工作过的所有银行,都曾伪造过客户签名,普遍程度超出人们想像。

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这名已经辞职的匿名人士透露,她的经理曾叫她在文件上伪造客户名字缩写,好让文件看起来客户在购买信用卡时同意购买保险,然后过段时间再取消。一名处理富有客户的理财顾问,多次要求她伪造保险或贷款文件上的客户签名,跟她说多收点钱,反正客户也不会注意到。

TD银行一名最近辞职的理财顾问爆料说,他自己曾按经理培训演示的那样涂掉客户信用审查文件上的日期,未经客户同意就偷偷调出客户的Equifax信用报告而不让客户知道。银行会培训你怎么做,但不会说这是他们教你这么干的。

面对这样的爆料CIBC和TD都拒绝接受采访,只在声明中说银行不会接受这种做法,一经发现立即处罚或开除当事人,同时展开严肃全面调查。

签名伪造案件上升

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加拿大互惠基金会协会(MFDA)上周公布的年度执法报告中指出,2016年130起调查案件中,签名伪造占多数,比2015年翻2倍多,是2014年的几乎3倍。报告说,理财顾问伪造客户签名现象很普遍。虽然伪造签名是刑事犯罪,不过很少有人因此坐牢或被罚款。

与银行打官司很难赢

10年前,卑诗97岁老人Harold Blanes要求理财顾问将40万退休储蓄存入GIC无风险账户,但理财顾问无视老人在文件上的仅限短期投资的选项,在文件上造了假,将钱放入互惠基金账户,且一放就是6年。结果在2008年全球金融危机中,投资打了水漂。打了几年官司后,老人终于将最初的老本拿回。目前,老人以损失13.6万利息为由,将理财顾问告上法庭。

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Harold Blanes

万幸的是Harold Blanes老人至少拿回了本金。势单力薄的小市民与财雄势大的大银行发生纠纷时对薄公堂,结果往往是胳膊拗不过大腿。

51网报道的几起案件中都以小市民失败告终。

2008年9月21日,韩霞在Yonge /Churchill街附近的TD分行存款,在柜台确认钱数无误后开出收据。然而4天后,韩霞在另一家TD分行打印最近十次存储记录。赫然发现存款由两万多变成六千多。结果银行说女职员办理存款时打错了一个零, 因此 $20 x 1037被其改为$20 x 137 , 这笔存款一下减少了18000元。韩霞说,对于现金存款,银行的收据是客户唯一的证据。然而你一走出银行,这张单据就会变成一张废纸条。

韩霞与TD银行的官司在安省小额钱债法庭打了4年败诉,除了得不到任何银行方面的赔偿,还要支付银行3000元法律费用及堂费。
 
还是应该带图章,或者按手印
 
造谣!银行普遍伪造客户签名?有这么普遍比例那还得了,造成客户损失,抗议闹事的客户肯定得跟银行急,银行每天应付抗议闹事的客户都应付不来。事实并不是如此。造谣!
 
Document forgery in financial industry more common than you'd think, past employees say
Former CIBC representative says '85% of sales staff' in her workplace forged documents, encouraged by manager
By Erica Johnson, CBC News Posted: May 31, 2017 5:00 AM ET Last Updated: May 31, 2017 2:53 PM ET

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'Signature falsification' was the primary allegation in 130 cases opened last year by the Mutual Fund Dealers Association of Canada. (Natalie Holdway/CBC)

Erica Johnson
Investigative reporter

Employees in Canada's financial industry are speaking out about falsifying documents, telling Go Public that potentially criminal acts — like forging and photocopying customer signatures, adding initials to blank documents and using Wite-Out to conceal information — are more common than most people would think.

"It was easily 85 per cent of the back sales team doing it," says a former CIBC financial services representative, speaking about the last branch in which she worked, but adding that forging signatures on documents occurred in other branches she worked as well. CBC has agreed to conceal her identity.

'You feel pretty awful knowing that you could have caused some serious harm to [customers] all in the name of profit for a bank.'- Former CIBC employee
The former employee, who left the bank last spring, says when she couldn't meet sales targets, her manager told her to forge customers' initials so it appeared that they had agreed to purchase insurance when they applied for a credit card, then cancel it a week or so later.

She also says a financial adviser who handled wealthy clients asked her almost two dozen times to forge customer signatures for insurance on loans, telling her his clients would never notice extra charges.

She says she finally quit because of stress and growing remorse.

"You feel pretty awful knowing that you could have caused some serious harm to them [customers] all in the name of profit for a bank."

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This former CIBC financial services representative says a manager told staff to forge customer signatures to increase sales revenues and 'make the branch look good.' (Keon Chung/For CBC)

CIBC declined an interview request, but a spokesperson said in a statement that "the kind of behaviour described would be unacceptable and result in immediate termination. We take any allegation of this nature seriously and investigate thoroughly."

A financial adviser who recently left TD Bank says he often witnessed his manager copying customers' signatures onto documents using "signature cards" on file.

He himself would scribble over the dates on people's credit checks, and then black out the scribbles with thick felt pen so no one could tell he pulled an Equifax report without a customer's knowledge — a practice he says his manager demonstrated on a blank piece of paper.

"They were showing you [how to do it], they were teaching you. But they would never say that they told you to do so," says the former TD employee.

TD Bank also declined an interview but said in a statement that it takes the allegations "very seriously" and such behaviour "would be a significant breach of our code of conduct" subject to disciplinary action, including dismissal.

Cases of signature falsification on rise
In its annual enforcement report released last week, the Mutual Fund Dealers Association of Canada (MFDA) says "signature falsification" was the primary allegation in 130 cases opened last year — more than double the number of cases in 2015, and almost three times the number it investigated in 2014.

Financial consultants usually forged signatures for the client or consultant's "convenience," the report says, and the number of forgery cases has increased due to improved detection by compliance departments within financial firms.

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The number of cases of signature falsification has almost tripled between 2014 and 2016. (Natalie Holdaway/CBC)

The problem of forging signatures was concerning enough for the MFDA to issue a bulletin in January — an update to similar bulletins issued in 2007 and expanded on in 2015.

It listed the deceptive methods people in the industry are using and warned against them, including copying a client's name on a document, cutting and pasting a signature, photocopying to "re-use" a signature, or using correction fluid to alter information on a document without a client's consent.

Although people in the financial industry have been found guilty of falsifying documents in recent years, few have served jail time or paid hefty fines.

"Forgery is supposed to be a criminal offence," says Stan Buell, of the Small Investor Protection Association. "But you could count on the fingers of one hand the people who have been charged criminally or sent to jail. It doesn't happen."

'It's not right to cheat old people'
Ten years ago, 97-year-old Harold Blanes says he asked his financial consultant to put about $400,000 of retirement savings into GICs — a safe investment, with no risk.

"We didn't want risk," the Kelowna man says. "We wanted our money saved, so we could enjoy it and help the kids with what they needed."

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Harold Blanes, 97, says his former financial consultant doctored documents to put him in risky investments, earning her big commissions. (Gary Moore/For CBC)

Blanes says his financial consultant ignored a box he had ticked and initialled, indicating he only wanted to invest his savings for a short term. Instead, documents show that the box next to it was marked with a squiggly line — supposedly someone's initials, says Blanes — allowing the consultant to invest his money for six years.

She ended up putting it into mutual funds that tanked when the market crashed in 2008.

"She said over and over it was all in guaranteed investments," says Blanes. "And we had nothing to worry about."

After years of fighting with those managing his money, Blanes's initial investment was returned. He is now taking his financial consultant to court, estimating he has lost $136,000 in compound interest.

"It's not right at all to cheat old people out of their money," says Blanes. "I think it's disgraceful."

His son, Alan Blanes, says he thinks regulators need to crack down on financial employees who fudge documents and forge signatures.

"Dad's had 10 years of his retirement ruined by having to obsess over this case."

'They're trying to keep the genie in the bottle'
Ottawa-based lawyer Harold Geller says he is contacted by "hundreds of people a year" who say those giving them financial advice have lied, cheated and, in many cases, falsified documents and forged signatures in order to line their own pockets or boost a bank or investment firm's revenues.

Geller blames the MFDA for not taking a more aggressive approach, taking issue with the association's claim that forgery is mostly done for "convenience."

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Lawyer Harold Geller says he's heard from clients who have been 'financially devastated' by forged and falsified documents. (Doug Husby/CBC)

"The Mutual Fund Dealers Association is a conflicted regulator," says Geller. "They are run by dealers and it's not in the dealer's interest to look into this issue. If there is not a complaint, [rarely] is this sort of thing looked for or caught."

Even when shady practices are caught, Geller says it can take about two years to reach a settlement; five years if the case goes to court. Either way, he says, investors are often muzzled by a confidentiality agreement.

"I think that they're trying to keep the genie in the bottle," he says. "If more people knew about the settlements that are available, there'd be more people looking for justice."

Calls for public inquiry
In a report released today calling attention to the issue of forgery, the Small Investor Protection Association says there is "absolutely no doubt" that the practice of document falsification is widespread.

"The truth is Canadians are losing billions of dollars of their savings every year due to systemic fraud and wrongdoing by the regulated investment industry," the report reads.

Buell says SIPA wants a government inquiry into investor protection.

"And they have to talk to the victims — not just the industry and regulators, and people who've done studies," he says. "Forgery is indicative of the behaviour of the investment industry."

Meanwhile, the former CIBC employee who routinely forged signatures says she's relieved to have left banking.

"But I actually feel fear for some of the new people entering the industry," she says. "Because there's a very big chance that they have no idea about what they are about to walk into."
 
我在Td也有Teller当我面试图偷钱的经历。她把钱拿出我视线数,回来说不是我告诉她的钱数。
我让她再数一遍,她还坚持我给她的少。我一度都信了她了,后来坚持让她当面数,这已经第三遍,她心虚了,说我给的对了。但是还嘴很硬,说她数错也没关系,以后后台发现多了会还我Bla Bla,真太不要脸了。一长的不错的白妞。
 
我在Td也有Teller当我面试图偷钱的经历。她把钱拿出我视线数,回来说不是我告诉她的钱数。
我让她再数一遍,她还坚持我给她的少。我一度都信了她了,后来坚持让她当面数,这已经第三遍,她心虚了,说我给的对了。但是还嘴很硬,说她数错也没关系,以后后台发现多了会还我Bla Bla,真太不要脸了。一长的不错的白妞。
谢谢提醒!没存过现金,现在的teller敢当面干这种事情,还是第一次听说。
 
我在Td也有Teller当我面试图偷钱的经历。她把钱拿出我视线数,回来说不是我告诉她的钱数。
我让她再数一遍,她还坚持我给她的少。我一度都信了她了,后来坚持让她当面数,这已经第三遍,她心虚了,说我给的对了。但是还嘴很硬,说她数错也没关系,以后后台发现多了会还我Bla Bla,真太不要脸了。一长的不错的白妞。
违法的事肯定有。但说很普遍肯定夸张了。
现在看新闻必须了解一个背景: 在网络媒体的压力下, 记者编辑天天生活在裁员的压力下。不经常制造些抓眼球的料,很可能丢饭碗。所以抓眼球是第一位的, 真实性是第二位的, 新闻道德??? 那是上个世纪的事了!
 
银行从业人员素质不高是事实。
前台Teller估计就是赚最低工资的,然后看钱进出就眼红,有机会就想下手。
 
银行从业人员素质不高是事实。
前台Teller估计就是赚最低工资的,然后看钱进出就眼红,有机会就想下手。
我干了5年银行,只见过一次前台“怀疑”偷钱被抓开除的, 收银台没有盲点几个摄像头对着的,打开自己手提包都怕误会,要在那里偷钱真的等于去警察局打劫!!teller 工作是收入不高,但是是很多日后工作的垫脚石, 现在进银行差不多两个月等过security check, 后台金库那么多钱,要真冒着自毁前程的危险偷,何必冒险偷客人那一点点。多不划算啊!
 
最后编辑:
现在最时兴暴料。
郭文贵是此行业当之无愧的老大。
 
我干了5年银行,只见过一次前台“怀疑”偷钱被抓开除的, 收银台没有盲点几个摄像头对着的,打开自己手提包都怕误会,要在那里偷钱真的等于去警察局打劫!!teller 工作是收入不高,但是是很多日后工作的垫脚石, 现在进银行差不多两个月等过security check, 后台金库那么多钱,要真冒着自毁前程的危险偷,何必冒险偷客人那一点点。多不划算啊!
没学历没教养的白妞不会象你想那么多,人家能干一票是一票,没被发现就继续,发现就走人。人家会管那么多?
 
我干了5年银行,只见过一次前台“怀疑”偷钱被抓开除的, 收银台没有盲点几个摄像头对着的,打开自己手提包都怕误会,要在那里偷钱真的等于去警察局打劫!!teller 工作是收入不高,但是是很多日后工作的垫脚石, 现在进银行差不多两个月等过security check, 后台金库那么多钱,要真冒着自毁前程的危险偷,何必冒险偷客人那一点点。多不划算啊!
偷金库的钱是与雇主银行做对,她们没愚蠢到那个程度,而且她根本没机会下那个手。偷客户的钱,尤其现金,当面,那成本多低,最多被发现就说弄错了。客户投诉就跟经理说是客户冤枉她。她这个手法还是很熟练的,肯定不是第一次干。
 
我干了5年银行,只见过一次前台“怀疑”偷钱被抓开除的, 收银台没有盲点几个摄像头对着的,打开自己手提包都怕误会,要在那里偷钱真的等于去警察局打劫!!teller 工作是收入不高,但是是很多日后工作的垫脚石, 现在进银行差不多两个月等过security check, 后台金库那么多钱,要真冒着自毁前程的危险偷,何必冒险偷客人那一点点。多不划算啊!
年轻高中生过Security很容易。年纪小,还没时间犯什么事呢。
 
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