Wells Fargo employee accused of stealing $88,000 found flashing cash online

A Wells Fargo employee in North Carolina has been accused by federal authorities of stealing over $88,000 cash from a bank vault and then posting the cash on Facebook.

A Wells Fargo employee in North Carolina has been accused by federal authorities of stealing over $88,000 cash from a bank vault and then posting the cash on Facebook.

A Wells Fargo employee in North Carolina has been accused by federal authorities of stealing over $88,000 cash from a bank vault and then posting the cash on Facebook.

29-year-old Arlando M. Henderson, who is believed to have taken the cash from deposits of customers 18 times throughout 2019, would adjust the books to hide the money he took, according to the Miami Herald. Henderson used the cash to pay for personal needs, which included a $20,000 down payment on a 2019 Mercedes-Benz.

Henderson, a resident of Charlotte, was arrested on December 4 in San Diego and charged with over 30 counts of financial institution fraud theft, embezzlement, money laundering and more.

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According to The Charlotte Observer, the money Henderson received from his thefts would often show up on his social media pages. On his Facebook page, (which has been removed) Henderson used the nickname “AceeyFoez” and has been seen showing off large amounts of cash in his hands or on the floor surrounding him. The white Mercedes also was present on social media, which he reportedly gave the down payment in all $100 bills.

Online he would also wear a T-Shirt with the abbreviation AWBB, in long-form “Ain’t wit being broke.”

Henderson would go on to say that while it looked easy to get the money it is not. “This shyt really a PROCESS,” he wrote online.

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It is being reported that Henderson worked the cash vault at a Wells Fargo location in Charlotte last April. The indictment says the first amount taken was $446 on June 12, he would drop down to $200 a week later, before escalating to $411 two days later. He is being accused of then going on to take amounts in four digits range and would have his one day high in July of $13,450. After taking the money he would deposit it in an ATM near work. The transactions would show amounts of $50 and $100 bills.

Henderson’s last Facebook post came with his white Mercedes behind him. Henderson is being represented by a federal public defender, Benjamin Davis, who has not provided a statement on his client.

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