3 ex-U.S. Bank employees tried to lure affluent clients, lawsuit alleges
This story was originally published on Banking Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Banking Dive newsletter.
U.S. Bank has sued three former wealth managers for allegedly trying to lure dozens of affluent clients – and their nearly $700 million in managed assets – after they simultaneously quit last month to join RBC Wealth Management.
Bankers James Kirk, Darcy Frederickson and Jason Beumer primarily serviced clients with between $10 million and $75 million in assets, and some clients worth far in excess of that, according to the lawsuit.
But after they all quit April 15 to work at Royal Bank of Canada, U.S. Bank allegedly discovered that the three had 'aggressively pursued' their U.S. Bank customers 'to induce them to leave U.S. Bank or otherwise to solicit their business,' according to a lawsuit filed in Minnesota on April 30.
Kirk, Frederickson and Beumer had each signed contracts, as a condition of their employment, restricting their use of confidential information belonging to U.S. Bank or its customers, and also agreeing not to solicit U.S. Bank clients after their employment.
In an email to U.S. Bank, the bankers' attorney, Stevens & Lee partner Thomas Lewis, told a representative of the bank that Kirk, Frederickson and Beumer had 'deleted all US Bank client info from their phones before they joined RBC,' and assured the representative that his clients were complying with their restrictive covenants.
Through its own investigation, however, U.S. Bank found that the trio contacted 24 customers on or soon after April 15. One such customer contacted by Frederickson told U.S. Bank that Frederickson had offered to move the customer's relationship to RBC Wealth Management, 'and tried to persuade the client to do so by stating that the client's new Portfolio Manager at RBC Wealth Management would be the former boss of their current Portfolio Manager at U.S. Bank.'
The customer told U.S. Bank that Frederickson disparaged the bank, allegedly claiming that the direction U.S. Bank was going was 'bad' for customers.
At least one of the 24 customers has informed U.S. Bank that he would be moving his relationship to RBC Wealth Management, to work with Kirk and Beumer. He had been a U.S. Bank customer since 1992, several years before Kirk, Frederickson or Beumer began working at the bank.
'For the 24 customers that have verified they were solicited by one or more of the Defendants thus far, these customers account for combined assets under management of nearly $700 million and $4 million in annual revenue,' U.S. Bank wrote in court documents.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Associated Press
6 hours ago
- Associated Press
8 now arrested in North Carolina house party shootings and more attempted-murder charges are filed
NEWTON, N.C. (AP) — Eight people have now been arrested and charged in connection with last weekend's shootings at a western North Carolina house party where a barrage of gunfire ended with one person dead and 11 others injured, authorities said. Five defendants whose arrests were announced Thursday or early Friday by the Catawba County Sheriff's Office made court appearances Friday. Four of the five were facing one count each of attempted first-degree murder. A judge ordered two of those four to remain in jail without bond, according to the Catawba County Clerk of Court's office. But late Friday, the sheriff's office announced that 10 additional counts of attempted first-degree murder had been filed against each of the four who already faced one similar count. All four were jailed pending scheduled court appearances early next week, according to an office press release. A prosecutor handling the defendants' appearances Friday said in court that the shootings were gang-related, and the sheriff's office agreed, news outlets reported. 'Gang motives were a part of this tragedy,' sheriff's Maj. Aaron Turk told WSOC-TV. 'We are still unraveling that as part of our larger investigation.' Investigators have said both adults and young people were among the scores of attendees at the house party in a residential neighborhood roughly 55 miles (88.5 kilometers) northwest of Charlotte. Another defendant arrested earlier in the week also is charged with one count of attempted first-degree murder. The two others were charged with helping underage youth possess alcoholic beverages — the sheriff's office identified them as planning and promoting the house party. Authorities have said over 80 shots were fired shortly after midnight June 1 in a crime scene that spanned several properties. The shootings began with gunfire coming from an elevated area in a yard neighboring the house, the Catawba sheriff's office has said, with shots later around the home, the home's front yard and by a road. Shawn Patrick Hood, 58, of Lenoir, was killed. He was the oldest of the victims, who ranged in age from as young as 16, the sheriff's office said. Most of the people injured were shot, Turk has said. As of Friday, no one had been specifically charged for Hood's death. Turk told reporters this week that investigators needed to account for every shot that had been fired at partygoers 'before we can discern who might be responsible for the homicide.' FBI agents had been at the crime scene this week examining bullet trajectories.
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
BMO hires BofA vet Levine
This story was originally published on Banking Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Banking Dive newsletter. Bank of America veteran Aron Levine will become group head and president of BMO U.S., effective July 7, the Canadian bank said Thursday. Levine's role is a new position at BMO, a bank spokesperson said. Levine left BofA in April, after spending more than three decades in various roles at the bank. Additionally, Ernie (Erminia) Johannson – who has led BMO's North American personal and business banking group since 2020 – intends to retire from BMO in early 2026, the bank said. She will become a senior adviser at the company. During Levine's nearly 32 years at Bank of America, he led units within consumer banking, global wealth and investment management, and commercial real estate. Most recently, he was president of preferred banking at the Charlotte, North Carolina-based lender. With his new role, Levine will join the executive committee of BMO Financial Group and the U.S. management committee. He'll be based at BMO's U.S. headquarters in Chicago, leading personal and business banking, commercial banking and wealth management businesses in the U.S. He'll report to BMO CEO Darryl White and BMO U.S. CEO Darrel Hackett. Levine's appointment was one of a number of changes disclosed Thursday amid a broader executive reshuffling, along with Johannson's retirement. Johannson has been at Toronto-based BMO since 2012. Prior to that, she served at Fidelity Investments and spent 13 years at CIBC, according to her LinkedIn profile. Additionally, Nadim Hirji will be appointed vice chair of BMO's commercial banking segment. Hirji has led BMO's North American commercial banking business since March 2023, the bank said. 'Today's announcement reflects BMO's deep strength in talent development and planning, and our ability to attract exceptional leaders to serve our clients,' White said in the news release. 'This next step supports the rebuilding of our ROE, including optimizing our U.S. structure by combining our U.S. Personal & Business Banking, Commercial Banking, and Wealth Management businesses to deliver for our clients,' White said. 'These experienced leaders bring the capabilities that will help us accelerate our performance through greater collaboration, integration of AI, data and cloud computing for faster, more innovative work, and personalized client advice and service.' The reshuffle detailed Thursday is aimed at supporting the bank's growth goals across Canada and certain U.S. markets and bolstering client service, BMO said. Sharon Haward-Laird, BMO's general counsel, will become group head of Canadian commercial banking and North American shared services. Mat Mehrotra, chief digital officer and head of Canadian products, will become group head of Canadian personal and business banking. Haward-Laird, who joined BMO in 2000, and Mehrotra, who's been at the bank since 2010, have also been named co-heads of Canadian personal and commercial banking. Haward-Laird will remain on the lender's executive committee, and Mehrotra will join it. Paul Noble will become general counsel and group head of legal and regulatory compliance and join the bank's executive committee. Noble has been at the bank since 2003 and serves as corporate secretary in the enterprise legal department. Mona Malone, the bank's chief human resources officer, will also take the chief administrative officer title, and remain on the bank's executive committee; she's been at BMO since 1996. Deland Kamanga will remain group head of wealth management and on the executive committee, but has been tapped as the committee's sponsor for initiatives designed to deepen and expand client relationships across BMO's businesses. All of the changes take effect July 7. BMO is the seventh-largest bank in North America by assets, with $1.4 trillion, and serves 13 million customers across Canada, the U.S. and certain international markets. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


San Francisco Chronicle
a day ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Officer who used excessive force allowed to plead guilty to misdemeanor after felony conviction
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A Los Angeles sheriff's deputy will serve four months in prison on a misdemeanor conviction for using excessive force after the new Trump-appointed U.S. attorney offered an unusual plea deal despite a jury convicting him of a felony. The victim's attorney asked a federal appeals court to reinstate the felony conviction, but the court declined to do so on Thursday. Deputy Trevor Kirk was recorded tackling and pepper-spraying an older woman while she filmed a man being handcuffed outside a supermarket in June 2023. A federal jury in February found Kirk guilty of one felony count of deprivation of rights under color of law, a crime that carries a prison sentence of up to 10 years. Felony convictions also prevent law enforcement officials from continuing to serve or owning a gun. But when U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli took office a few months later, federal prosecutors offered Kirk a plea deal — a dismissal of the felony if Kirk pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor, and a recommendation of one year of probation. A judge agreed to the lessened charge but sentenced Kirk to four months in prison on Monday. Essayli said in a video posted online that prosecutors also offered Kirk a misdemeanor plea agreement under the prior administration, which he turned down. 'After reviewing this case extensively and thoroughly and carefully reviewing the facts and the law, I made the decision to re-extend the misdemeanor plea agreement to Deputy Kirk,' Essayli said. In court filings signed off by Essayli, prosecutors wrote they believed that Kirk's actions fell on the lower end of the excessive force spectrum, the woman did not suffer 'serious bodily injury," and that the case was prosecuted improperly. Some former prosecutors and police conviction experts called the step highly unusual, especially without any indication of prosecutorial misconduct, ethical violations or new evidence in the case. It follows President Donald Trump's vow to 'protect and defend" law enforcement officers from prosecution and his efforts to assert greater control over the U.S. Justice Department. 'It's very unusual to offer a plea deal after a conviction,' said Jeffrey Bellin, a former federal prosecutor from Washington, D.C., who is now a law professor at William and Mary Law School. In cases where it could happen, there's usually new evidence of innocence, 'not just the same evidence from a different perspective,' he said. Kirk's attorney, Tom Yu, said they filed a motion for acquittal that was denied but planned to appeal the decision. The encounter Caree Harper, who represents the woman Kirk injured, said in court filings that the federal government changed its account of the incident to make Kirk's actions seem justified. In the original indictment, prosecutors wrote Kirk 'violently' threw the woman to the ground. In the new plea agreement, the government alleged the woman 'swatted' at Kirk and 'resisted,' Harper wrote, which she said was not proven in the criminal trial nor testified to in civil litigation. She said her client did not commit a crime, had no weapon, and did not try to flee or resist. She suffered from a black eye, a fractured bone in her right wrist, multiple bruises, scratches and significant chemical burning from the pepper-spray. Harper said the plea agreement sent a 'dangerous message' that law enforcement officials could be convicted of a felony and still 'cut a backroom deal after the trial.' Philip Stinson, a former police officer and attorney who studies police misconduct, said the plea deal offered to Kirk was 'seemingly without precedent' in federal court cases prosecuting police officers for their on-duty crimes, according to his search of an internal database of more than 24,000 arrest cases in the last 20 years involving sworn law enforcement officers. LA County Sheriff's Department spokesperson Nicole Nishida said Kirk will remain employed with the agency but relieved from duty while it conducts an internal investigation to determine if any policy or procedures were violated. A new approach by federal prosecutors Kirk's case is the latest showing the Trump administration's plan to take a lighter hand in the federal government's traditional role in prosecuting police misconduct. Trump's April executive order on policing promised the 'unleashing' of law enforcement and support for their legal defense. The Justice Department announced in May it was canceling proposed consent decrees reached with Minneapolis and Louisville to implement policing reforms in the wake of the killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. The department also announced it would retract its findings in six other sweeping investigations into police departments that the Biden administration had accused of civil rights violations. Trump-appointed federal judges have also played a hand in dismissing cases against police officers, including murder charges against a former Atlanta police officer who shot and killed an unarmed man hiding in a closet in 2019. Experts say the reliance on the federal government to perform this policing oversight comes from the close relationship between local prosecutors and police officers, who regularly work together to investigate crimes. 'We are often looking at the federal government to serve as a check and balance for local law enforcement officials who are accused of really egregious activity toward the public,' said Devin Hart, a spokesperson for the National Police Accountability Project. All four members of the original prosecutors withdrew from the case after the new plea deal was presented, and at least one resigned from the office, according to court filings. Two others took the buyout offered to federal employees, spokesperson Ciaran McEvoy confirmed.