Cheronda Guyton and her family reportedly partied and stayed at a bank-owned $12 million beach house (pictured above) in the exclusive Malibu Colony. The house had been foreclosed on as a result of the Bernie Madoff scam.
Certainly the former owners, Lawrence and Linda Elins didn't need insult added to injury, did they? Cheronda Guyton's actions are another example of how high-profile Wall Street and financial industry executives consider themselves privileged and entitled.
If nothing else, at least those of us in the general public can picture the look on her face when Cheronda Guyton was told not just that she was getting the boot from her 3,800 square foot home (which wasn't hers anyway), as well as from her job. Sweet.
Wells Fargo Bank issued the following statement, and confirmed the executive involved as Cheronda Guyton.
"We deeply regret the activities that have taken place as they do not reflect the conduct we expect of our team members. We continue to place the highest value on honesty, trust and integrity to guide our team members in making business decisions each day."Honesty, trust, integrity? Those words can't be applied to these execs, can they? At least, not in the case of Cheronda Guyton.
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