US | California California Says Bank Fleeced Pension Funds State seeks $200M from State Street Bank of Boston By Nick McMaster Posted Oct 20, 2009 5:11 PM CDT Copied California Attorney Jerry Brown announces a lawsuit against State Street Bank and Trust on Tuesday, Oct. 20, 2009, in Oakland, Calif. (AP Photo/Noah Berger) California sued a Boston bank today and accused it of ripping off $56.6 million from two state pension funds. It wants all that money back, plus another $150 million in penalties. Attorney General Jerry Brown accused State Street Bank of "unconscionable fraud" and called it "just the latest example of how clever financial traders violate laws and rip off the public trust." Brown says State Street overcharged the pension funds over eight years while conducting currency trades, reports the LA Times. It would set its fee based on the highest exchange rate of the day, not at the time of transaction—and pocket the difference. A bank spokesman denied any wrongdoing. Read These Next Husband of the Coldplay 'Kiss Cam' woman breaks his silence. Amy Coney Barrett weighs in a possible third Trump term. Wall Street is getting twitchy over falling lumber prices. Trump rips Tom Hanks after West Point cancels award ceremony. Report an error