Tavis, You Got Some 'Splainin' to Do…

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Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

A suit filed by the attorney general of Illinois claims Tavis Smiley and others were used to okey doke folks into high-risk Wells Fargo loans. From the Washington Independent:

As the housing market began booming in mid-2000, Wells Fargo & Co. teamed up with prominent African American commentator and PBS talk show host Tavis Smiley and financial author Kelvin Boston, the host of โ€œMoneywise,โ€ a multicultural financial affairs show, to host something called โ€œWealth Buildingโ€ seminars in black neighborhoods.

Smiley was the keynote speaker, and the big draw, according to Boston and Keith Corbett, executive vice president of the Center for Responsible Lending, who attended two of the seminars. Smiley would charge up the audience โ€” and rattle the Wells Fargo executives in attendance โ€” by launching into a story about how he hated banks, and how they used to refuse to lend him money for his real estate projects in Compton, Calif., and elsewhere. After Hurricane Katrina, Smiley also emphasized the importance of building assets and wealth, saying those who had done so were able to leave New Orleans, while people with nothing had to stay behind, Boston said.

โ€œMy spiel was the financial planning process, how you want to be able to save and invest for the future, and to have a plan of action,โ€ Boston said. โ€œThen Tavis talked about his experiences with the banks, and how people should be thinking about some real estate.โ€

The seminars in some cities drew standing room only crowds, with numerous Wells Fargo representatives on hand, seated at carrels to meet one-on-one with potential borrowers who lined up after the speeches, which were usually held in hotels. The free, day-long events were heavily advertised in the black media, and launched in eight cities, including Baltimore, Chicago, Richmond, Va., and San Francisco.

But what appeared on the surface as a way to help black borrowers build wealth was actually just the opposite, according to a little-noticed explanation of the โ€œWealth Buildingโ€ seminar strategy, contained in a lawsuit recently filed by Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan.

Get the full scoop here.

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