scorecard
  1. Home
  2. stock market
  3. Wells Fargo employees on the front lines say they were so stressed, they were chugging hand sanitizer and having anxiety attacks

Wells Fargo employees on the front lines say they were so stressed, they were chugging hand sanitizer and having anxiety attacks

Rebecca Harrington   

Wells Fargo employees on the front lines say they were so stressed, they were chugging hand sanitizer and having anxiety attacks
Stock Market2 min read

Wells Fargo

Rick Wilking/ Reuters

The Wells Fargo scandal ousted its CEO John Stumpf, drew Congressional ire, and resulted in a $185 million settlement with federal regulators.

But employees who say they were forced to open the 2 million accounts to hit quotas were deeply affected, too. Five of them told their stories to The New York Times on Thursday, sharing the pressure they were under and how stressed it made them.

Angie Payden, a banker in Hudson, Wisconsin, from 2011 to 2014, said she was so worried about coercing customers to open accounts they didn't need that she started drinking hand sanitizer as a way to cope.

"One morning, before meeting with a customer, in which I knew I was going to have to sell unneeded services, I had a severe panic attack. I went to the bathroom and took a drink of some hand sanitizer," she told The Times. "This immediately reduced my anxiety. From that point, I began drinking the hand sanitizer all over the bank. In late November 2012, I was completely addicted to hand sanitizer and drinking at least a bottle a day during my workday."

Payden said she had to leave the bank to seek treatment.

Scott T., a teller in Galesburg, Illinois, in 2009, told The Times that he spent time in the bathroom crying because he was so stressed.

"It got so bad that one day I left work to go to the emergency room because I thought I was having a heart attack. It turns out it was an anxiety attack," he said. "I thought I was going to have a heart attack or stroke if I stayed any longer."

Julie Miller, a banker and manager in Allentown, Pennsylvania, from 2005 to 2013, said she was telling her story to help other employees who may have felt as agonized as she was.

"I filed a wrongful termination lawsuit," Miller told The Times. "They gave me some small compensation to shut up and go away. The reason I'm not shutting up is that I've realized how many employees were in the same position as me."

Read the full New York Times story here»

NOW WATCH: Former Wells Fargo employees say they were fired after reporting fraudulent activity

READ MORE ARTICLES ON


Advertisement

Advertisement