Haverhill Man Pleads Guilty To Bank Robbery
A Haverhill man pleaded guilty yesterday in U.S. District Court in Boston to robbing a branch of Santander Bank in Boston.
A Haverhill man pleaded guilty yesterday in U.S. District Court in Boston to robbing a branch of Santander Bank in Boston.
Santander has agreed to a $26 million settlement with officials in two states over the bank’s role in issuing subprime auto loans to thousands of consumers who could not afford to repay them, officials said Wednesday.
With above-trend employment and wage growth, Boston’s economy should be the envy of the country, but federal immigration policy and cuts to scientific and medical research, among other things, could threaten the Bay State’s economy.
Santander briefly closed a branch inside its Boston headquarters on Monday morning after pro-union demonstrators entered the building at 75 State St.
Attorney General Maura Healey joined a multistate amicus brief arguing that debt buyers must also obey the federal fair debt collection law.
Santander is revamping its branches and expanding its hours to invite more customers into the branch on their own terms, the bank announced last week.
Outlets of Santander Bank, already under fire for lending practices, denied mortgages to women, minorities and low-income borrowers in the U.S. Northeast more frequently than nearby banks, according to an analysis by an industry reform group on Thursday.
Santander recently launched a mobile app exclusively for its business customers.