Arrests
as Occupy slams mortgage bankers in San Francisco
RT,
25
April, 2012
Hundreds
of people took to the streets of San Francisco to vent their anger
against unfair foreclosures. Police were standing by, and detained 24
people.
Over
five hundred protesters staged a heated demonstration outside the
building where an annual meeting of Wells Fargo shareholders was
underway.
The
activists brought a huge inflated rat with dollar bills sticking out
of a pocket, and held signs saying “99 percent take over, topple
the 1 percent” and “Up with the people, down with the bankers.”
Demonstrators
sought to vent rage over foreclosures and executive compensation, and
called on Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf to resign.
Stumpf
is reported to have received $19.8 million in compensation last year,
despite the fact that Wells Fargo has been the recipient of dozens of
billions of dollars in taxpayer bailouts since many of its bets went
south in the 2008 financial crisis.
The
Occupy activists also said Wells Fargo should halt foreclosures,
pending investigation and reform.
“Wells
Fargo is one of the largest and most corrupt Wall Street banks and
has foreclosed on hundreds of thousands of homes,” Charles
Davidson, an organizer with Move On East Bay. “I think it's really
important that we stand up to this, or the economic crisis will
continue.”
Hundreds
of demonstrators stood on the street chanting “Let us in! Let us
in! Let us in!” A number of smaller Wells Fargo shareholders also
joined the protest, waving their stock certificates and demanding to
be let into the meeting.
“Let
my hard-earned money speak for itself,” said shareholder Ralanda
King, as quoted by ABC. “I expected to be let in, as my right as a
shareholder. I came over 2,000 miles to come to this meeting only to
be held back.”
Earlier,
a protest group called 99 Per Cent Power had launched a campaign to
stage demonstrations at 36 shareholder meetings, beginning with Wells
Fargo.
Wells
Fargo is the largest US mortgage originator and servicer. It managed
to emerge from the financial crisis and even expanded across the
United States, buying the North Carolina-based Wachovia Corporation
in 2008.
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