In 2010, College Health and Investment Ltd (College Health), a family limited partnership, filed a case against Wells Fargo & Co. (Wells Fargo) in Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) arbitration. College Health accused Wells Fargo of failing to detect the theft and unauthorized transactions in College Health’s account. College Health sought $4.4 million in damages against Wells Fargo.
From 2005 until 2008, Esther Spero (Spero), a former legal secretary at a firm that represented College Health, allegedly misused the family’s financial information and embezzled around $6 million. Spero’s scheme worked by opening accounts in Wachovia (now Wells Fargo) under College Health’s name or similar names in order to appear related to College Health. By doing so, she was easily able to transfer money from one of College Health’s actual accounts into the fake account and then finally into her own account.
College Health also filed a civil suit against Spero in the Southern District Court of Florida where she was eventually found guilty of the charges. However, Spero was unable to pay College Health for the amount she had taken from the company leading College Health to bring action against Wells Fargo in FINRA arbitration.