Atty. General Brown Forces Settlement with Citibank: Investigation Reveals Bank Was Stealing From Its Customers
Atty. General Brown Forces Settlement
with Citibank: Investigation Reveals Bank Was Stealing
From Its Customers
SAN FRANCISCO- California Attorney General Edmund G. Brown
Jr. today announced that he has reached a settlement with
Citibank after a three-year investigation into the
company’s use of an illegal “account sweeping” program.
Nationally, the company took more than $14 million from
its customers, including $1.6 million from California
residents, through the use of a computer program that
wrongfully swept positive account balances from
credit-card customer accounts into Citibank’s general
fund.
“The company knowingly stole from its customers, mostly
poor people and the recently deceased, when it designed
and implemented the sweeps,” Attorney General Brown said.
“When a whistleblower uncovered the scam and brought it to
his superiors, they buried the information and continued
the illegal practice.”
Between 1992 and 2003, Citibank employed a computerized
“credit sweep” process to automatically remove positive or
credit balances from credit-card customer accounts. An
account could show a credit balance if a customer
double-paid a bill or returned a purchase for credit. The
credit sweeps were done without notifying the customer and
without regard for whether the customer had any unpaid
balances or other charges owed to Citibank.
The credit sweeps targeted more than 53,000 customers
nationwide. All of the affected accounts were in a
recovery status, which includes accounts of customers who
have died, sought bankruptcy protection, or been the
target of litigation or other collection efforts by
Citibank.
In July of 2001, a Citibank employee uncovered the
practice and brought it to the attention of his superiors.
The employee was later fired for discussing the credit
sweeps with an internal audit team. In the words of a
Citibank executive, “Stealing from our customers is a
business decision, not a legal decision.” The same
executive later said that the sweep program could not be
stopped because it would reduce the executive bonus pool.
The Attorney General launched its investigation of
Citibank in 2005 to determine whether the company violated
the California False Claims Act by filing false holder
reports with the California State Controller that omitted
any reference to the swept funds. The 3-year investigation
led to today’s settlement.
The settlement includes:
• Permanent injunction – Citibank will be permanently
prevented from re-initiating the credit sweeps.
• Refunds to victims – Citibank will refund all improperly
swept funds to customers who were victimized by the
sweeps. Citibank will also pay California customers 10%
interest on the amount taken.
• Penalties – Citibank will pay $3.5 million in damages
and civil penalties to the State of California.
• Compliance audit – After Citibank’s refund process is
complete, an independent auditor will review Citibank’s
work to ensure that it has lived up to its obligations.
Citibank has affirmed that it can identify most of the
victims of the credit sweeps and has begun the process of
reviewing archived account data and refunding the
improperly swept funds going back to 1992.






