US Justice Department subpoenas major banks over alleged 'debanking', WSJ reports
June 10 (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department has issued subpoenas to major banks, including JPMorgan โChase and Bank of America, seeking information โon whether they improperly closed customer accounts for political reasons, the โWall Street Journal reported on Wednesday. The
June 10 (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department has issued subpoenas to major banks, including JPMorgan โChase and Bank of America, seeking information โon whether they improperly closed customer accounts for political reasons, the โWall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.
The subpoenas, some dating back to last year, were from the U.S. Attorney's Office in Washington, D.C., headed by Jeanine Pirro.
They โrequested banks to โ provide lists of individuals who were allegedly "debanked," along with details explaining why their โ accounts were closed, the report said.
Pirro's office is also seeking information from Wells Fargo, the report added, โciting people โfamiliar with the matter.
JPMorgan โdid not immediately respond โto Reuters' request for comment. Bank of America and Wells Fargo declined to comment.
The reported subpoenas add to President Donald Trump's pressure on major banks and their regulators. Last year, he signed an executive โorder directing the industry to โensure it was not denying โfinancial services to โsome controversial industries in a practice commonly โdescribed as "debanking".
The Office of โthe Comptroller of โthe Currency had found in a review last year that the nine largest U.S. banks โhad placed restrictions โin the past on providing financial services.
(Reporting โby Pritam Biswas in Bengaluru; Editing by Tasim โZahid and Joyjeet Das)

