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Wells may have opened more accounts

Wells Fargo & Co. may have opened as many as 3.5 million unauthorized checking, savings, and credit card accounts over the last 15 years, far more than the bank and federal regulators reported last year, according to a new court filing.

Wells Fargo & Co. may have opened as many as 3.5 million unauthorized checking, savings, and credit card accounts over the last 15 years, far more than the bank and federal regulators reported last year, according to a new court filing.

For months, the number of potentially unauthorized accounts bank employees may have created stood at 2.1 million - a number reported by regulators last year, based on the San Francisco bank's analysis of accounts opened and credit card applications submitted between May 2011 and July 2015.

The new filing, submitted late Thursday by attorneys who are negotiating a class-action settlement with the bank, suggests an additional 1.4 million unauthorized accounts were opened dating to 2002. That's the year, according to a recent bank internal investigation, that Wells Fargo executives first noticed the problem of employees opening accounts without customer authorization.

The higher figure is based on "public information, negotiations, and confirmatory discovery," according to the filing in U.S. District Court in San Francisco.

The filing also cautions that the 3.5 million figure could be an overestimate, though a reasonable one.