Carlson: Bank of America Sharing Customers’ Private Information

Tucker Carlson

Fox News host Tucker Carlson claims that Bank of America has been working with the federal government to “actively, but secretly” by sharing private information “without the knowledge or the consent of its customers.”

On his broadcast of “Tucker Carlson Tonight,” Carlson said that he exclusively obtained the evidence of Bank of America’s activities.

“This show has obtained, exclusively, evidence that Bank of America, the second largest bank in the country with more than 60 million customers, is actively, but secretly, engaged in the hunt for extremists in cooperation with the government,” Carlson said. “Bank of America is, without the knowledge or the consent of its customers, sharing private information with federal law enforcement agencies. Bank of America, effectively, is acting as an intelligence agency. But they are not telling you about it.”

Carlson also claims that the bank identified 211 customers who fit all of the data points. According to Carlson,  the bank then handed over the transaction data of those customers without notifying them. “Federal investigators then interviewed at least one of these unsuspecting people. And that person, we learned, hadn’t done anything wrong and in the end was cleared,” he said.

“Imagine if you were that person? The FBI hauls you in for questioning in a terror investigation. Not because you have done anything suspicious. You haven’t,” Carlson continued. “You bought plane tickets and visited your country’s capital. You thought you could do that. You thought it was your country. Now they are sweating you because your bank, which you trust with your most private information, information of everything you buy, has ratted you out to the feds without telling you, without your knowledge.”

Carlson said his team reached out to the Bank of America and “they confirmed it actually happened by not denying it.” He read the bank’s statement that said they had “responsibilities under federal law to cooperate with law enforcement inquiries in full compliance with the law.”

“But that’s not true. Bank of America did have a choice. The bank could have resisted turning over information on its innocent customers to federal investigators. But Bank of America did not do that,” Carlson said.

“The question is, legally, what constitutes information that may be relevant to a possible crime? Buying a muffin in Washington, D.C. on January 5th? Does that make you a potential domestic extremist? According to Bank of America, yes, yes, it does,” Carlson added.

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One Thought to “Carlson: Bank of America Sharing Customers’ Private Information”

  1. Bank of America has always been a crooked bank and reeally does not like its customers

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