Case: 1:22-cv-02759 Document #: 1 Filed: 05/25/22 Page 1 of 16 PageID #:1
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
EASTERN DIVISION
KATHLEEN BANKHEAD, individually and on
behalf of all others similarly situated,
Case No.:
Plaintiff,
v.
WINTRUST FINANCIAL CORPORATION; and Jury Trial Demanded
BARRINGTON BANK & TRUST CO., N.A.,
Defendants.
CLASS ACTION COMPLAINT
Plaintiff Kathleen Bankhead (“Plaintiff” or “Bankhead”), on behalf of herself and all
others similarly situated, by and through her attorneys, Stowell & Friedman Ltd., hereby files
this Complaint against Defendants Wintrust Financial Corporation and Barrington Bank & Trust
Co., N.A., (collectively “Defendants” or “Wintrust” or the “Firm”), and states as follows:
JURISDICTION AND VENUE
1. This Court has jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and
1343. This Court has supplemental jurisdiction over Plaintiff’s state law claims under 28 U.S.C.
§ 1367.
2. Venue is proper in the Northern District of Illinois pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
§ 1391(b) because the Defendants reside in this District and a substantial part of the events or
omissions giving rise to the claim occurred in this District.
PARTIES
3. Defendant Wintrust Financial Corporation is a conglomeration of banks in the
greater Chicagoland area based in Rosemont, Illinois, with total assets of over $50 billion in
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2021.1 Wintrust Financial Corporation is an Illinois corporation with its principal place of
business in Rosemont, Illinois.
4. Defendant Barrington National Bank & Trust, N.A., is a national banking
association chartered in Illinois with its principal place of business in Rosemont, Illinois, and a
subsidiary of Wintrust Financial Corporation. Wintrust Financial Corporation offers financial
products related to residential real estate such as mortgage loans, refinancing, and home equity
lines of credit through Wintrust Mortgage, which is a division of Defendant Barrington National
Bank & Trust, N.A. Wintrust Mortgage originates over $4 billion in retail mortgage loans
annually, in all 50 states.2
5. Plaintiff Kathleen Bankhead is African American and a citizen of Illinois. As
described below, Bankhead obtained a home mortgage loan from Wintrust and was
discriminated against on the basis of her race in the mortgage lending process by Wintrust.
FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
I. Wintrust Has and Is Engaged in Firm-Wide Systemic Discrimination Against
African American Borrowers
6. As stated above, Wintrust is a major financial firm based in the Chicagoland
region that offers financial products including mortgages throughout the country. Like any bank
and under clear law, Wintrust must provide mortgages, and mortgage origination and
underwriting, in a non-discriminatory manner. However, Wintrust applies residential mortgage
policies and practices that intentionally and disproportionately discriminate against and harm
Black and/or African American customers. Plaintiff, like many others, was injured by Wintrust’s
racially discriminatory residential mortgage lending policies and practices.
1
Wintrust Fin. Corp., 10-K (Feb. 25, 2022), https://d18rn0p25nwr6d.cloudfront.net/CIK-
0001015328/65a02277-54b1-424f-9418-429f5329ce22.pdf
2
Our Story, WINTRUST MORTG., https://www.wintrustmortgage.com/our-story.html
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7. Among other things, Wintrust uses a number of practices to determine eligibility
for home loans, rates, terms, and conditions, including but not limited to proprietary algorithms
and sales policies that encourage imposing high costs and fees on Black and/or African
American borrowers while providing these borrowers with low credits. These practices result in
racial redlining—denying mortgages and home purchasing opportunities to Black and/or African
American customers—and reverse redlining—extending predatory credit to Black and/or African
American borrowers on less favorable terms and with higher interest rates, costs, and fees, and
with fewer credits than Wintrust offers to non-Black, non-African American borrowers.
8. As a result of Wintrust’s uniform, nationwide policies and practices related to
mortgage approvals, interest rate determinations, fees, and costs, Wintrust approves white
applicants for home purchase mortgage loans at substantially higher rates than Black and/or
African American applicants. In 2020, for instance, according to an analysis of nationwide data
published under the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, Wintrust Mortgage originated loans to
approximately 73% of white borrowers who applied for a home purchase mortgage through
Wintrust Mortgage, compared to only 59.5% of Black and/or African American applicants.
9. When evaluating statistical disparities like the one described above, statisticians
use a measurement called the “standard deviation” to assess the likelihood that the disparity is
due to chance. The higher the standard deviation, the more the observed result deviates from the
expected result and the less likely the disparity is due to random chance. Courts and statisticians
consider a disparity “statistically significant”—that there is a level of confidence that random
chance did not cause the disparity—at 1.96 standard deviations. In this case, the difference in
approvals for Black and/or African American applicants compared to approvals for white
applicants yields a difference in excess of 10 standard deviations.
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10. Wintrust is also substantially more likely to deny Black and/or African American
customers’ applications for home purchase loans outright.3 Nationwide, in 2020, Wintrust
Mortgage denied 12% of Black and/or African American borrowers’ applications outright,
compared to only 5.5% of white applicants. The difference is again statistically significant at
over 9 standard deviations.
11. When Wintrust approves Black and/or African American customers’ home
purchase loan applications, it does so on substantially worse terms than offered to non-Black,
non-African American borrowers. Wintrust imposes a significantly higher cost of lending on
Black and/or African American borrowers than white borrowers. In 2020, Black and/or African
American borrowers nationwide had to spend, on average, 3.3% of their Wintrust Mortgage loan
value on costs and fees, versus 2.9% for white borrowers. The difference is again statistically
significant at over 4 standard deviations.
12. Finally, as a result of Wintrust’s uniform, nationwide policies and practices
related to mortgage approvals, interest rate determinations, fees, and costs, Wintrust charges
Black and/or African American borrowers higher interest rates than non-African American
borrowers for home purchase loans. In 2020, for instance, the national average interest rate
Wintrust Mortgage charged to Black and/or African American borrowers for home purchase
loans was 3.31%, versus 3.21% for white borrowers. The difference is statistically significant at
over 5 standard deviations.
13. Wintrust also discriminates against Black and/or African American customers in
refinancing. In recent years, with historically low interest rates, homeowners have had the
3
The data include six potential actions taken: (1) loan originated; (2) application approved but
not accepted; (3) application denied by financial institution; (4) application withdrawn by the
applicant; (5) file closed for incompleteness; or (6) loan purchased by financial institution. Thus,
some applications are neither approved nor denied.
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opportunity to refinance their mortgage loans, which occurs when a homeowner applies for
credit related to their residential real estate to change the terms of an earlier loan. Over the last
two years, U.S. homeowners refinanced almost $5 trillion in mortgages, generating untold
savings.4 This could have been an opportunity for Black and/or African American homeowners
to build wealth and secure their families’ futures.
14. But as it does with home purchase mortgages, Wintrust discriminates against
Black and/or African American borrowers in refinancing. According to an analysis of 2020
Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data, Wintrust Mortgage approved 56% of refinancing
applications from Black and/or African American applicants, compared with 68.7% from white
applicants. This disparity is statistically significant at approximately 11 standard deviations.
15. Wintrust Mortgage denied Black and/or African Americans borrowers’
refinancing applications outright 5.6% of the time, versus 3.2% of the time for white borrowers.
This disparity is statistically significant at over 5 standard deviations.
16. And just as it does with home purchase loans, Wintrust imposes higher costs on
Black and/or African American customers who obtain refinancing. In 2020, the average cost of
borrowing for a Wintrust Mortgage refinancing was 2.1% of the loan value for Black and/or
African American customers versus 1.7% for white borrowers. This disparity is statistically
significant at over 11 standard deviations.
17. In sum, Wintrust disproportionately refuses to lend to Black and/or African
Americans. But when it does, it charges Black and/or African American borrowers more costs
and fees for less credit on worse terms than non-Black, non-African American borrowers,
disproportionately excludes Black and/or African American borrowers from refinancing their
4
https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2022-wells-fargo-black-home-loan-refinancing/
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higher-interest loans, and even when it allows them to refinance, charges them higher costs and
fees.
18. The racially discriminatory policies and practices at Wintrust are uniform and
nationwide in scope. Wintrust has created artificial, arbitrary, and unnecessary barriers to fair
housing opportunities for Black and/or African American borrowers. Wintrust’s policies have
discriminatorily extracted an enormous amount of wealth out of Black and/or African American
households through higher costs, fees, and interest rates than charged to non-Black, non-African
Americans. Class members who applied for and received loans at Wintrust offices across the
country and were harmed by these same policies and practices are relying on Plaintiff to protect
their rights. Wintrust’s policies and practices are implemented with discriminatory intent and
cause an unlawful disparate impact on Black and/or African Americans borrowers.
II. Plaintiff Was Subjected to and Injured by Wintrust’s Unlawful Conduct
19. Plaintiff Bankhead is a well-qualified African American home borrower and well-
respected member of her community. She served with distinction for more than two decades as
an Assistant State’s Attorney in the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office before she was
appointed to serve as Independent Juvenile Ombudsperson for the Illinois Department of
Juvenile Justice. She earned a J.D. from the Chicago-Kent College of Law and a B.S. in Criminal
Justice from Bradley University.
20. In 2020, Plaintiff engaged with a Wintrust loan originator to obtain a mortgage
loan with the lowest rate and most favorable terms in connection with her purchase of residential
real estate in a majority-Black neighborhood in Chicago.
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21. Although Wintrust purported to find the “best rates” for Plaintiff, Wintrust instead
offered Plaintiff a higher interest rate with less favorable terms and conditions because of her
race and because she was purchasing property in an area that was majority-minority.
22. Consistent with its nationwide policies and practices, Wintrust made unfavorable
interest rate determinations and assessed unreasonable and unnecessary fees and costs against
Plaintiff while extending her few credits.
23. For example, Wintrust offered Plaintiff a mortgage loan with an interest rate of
3.25%, which was higher than the market rate that Wintrust charged to non-African American
customers. Wintrust further pressured Bankhead into obtaining a “rate lock,” which would force
her to maintain that rate even if interest rates decreased.
24. Although Wintrust advertised credits that would have reduced Plaintiff’s closing
costs, Wintrust instead required Plaintiff to apply those credits to extend the “rate lock,”
effectively eliminating the credit.
25. Although Wintrust dangled the prospect of a free “float down,” which would have
allowed Plaintiff to receive a lower interest rate if market interest rates decreased, Wintrust
refused to provide Plaintiff a “float down” option without a significant additional fee.
26. Furthermore, consistent with its nationwide pattern or practice of discrimination,
Wintrust not only insisted that Plaintiff remain locked into the inflated rate beyond the expiration
of the rate lock but also demanded several hundred dollars in fees to extend the rate lock.
27. Wintrust’s actions ultimately forced Plaintiff into a mortgage loan with a higher
interest rate, higher costs and fees, and fewer credits than Wintrust charged to similarly situated
non-African American borrowers.
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28. Because of Wintrust’s conduct, Plaintiff lost substantial funds in closing and
origination costs and has been required to pay higher monthly mortgage payments than similarly
situated non-African American borrowers, which continues to the present.
CLASS ALLEGATIONS
29. Plaintiff brings this action pursuant to Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure on behalf of herself and a class of Black and/or African Americans who applied for
and/or received credit related to residential real estate from Wintrust or Wintrust Mortgage.
Plaintiff seeks certification of a liability and injunctive and declaratory relief class under Rule
23(b)(2) and 23(c)(4), and/or certification of a class under Rule 23(b)(3). All requirements of
class certification are met by the proposed class.
30. The class of Black and/or African American customers who applied for and/or
received credit related to residential real estate from Wintrust or Wintrust Mortgage is so
numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable. Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a)(1).
31. There are questions of law and fact common to the class, and those questions can
and should be resolved in a single proceeding that furthers this litigation. Fed. R. Civ. P.
23(a)(2).
32. The claims alleged by Plaintiff are typical of the claims of the class. Fed. R. Civ.
P. 23(a)(3).
33. Plaintiff will fairly and adequately represent and protect the interests of the class.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a)(4).
34. The issue of determining liability regarding whether Defendants have engaged in
race discrimination and maintain policies and practices that are intentionally discriminatory
and/or have an unlawful disparate impact on Black and/or African American customers is
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appropriate for issue certification under Rule 23(c)(4). Other common issues are also
appropriate for certification.
35. Defendants have acted or refused to act on grounds that apply generally to the
class, so that final injunctive relief or corresponding declaratory relief is appropriate with regard
to the class as a whole. Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(2).
36. The questions of law and fact common to the members of the class predominate
over any questions affecting only individual members, and a class action is superior to other
available methods for the fair and efficient adjudication of the controversy. Fed. R. Civ. P.
23(b)(3).
COUNT I
EQUAL CREDIT OPPORTUNITY ACT
15 U.S.C. § 1691 et seq.
(Class)
37. Plaintiff, on behalf of herself and all those similarly situated, realleges each and
every paragraph above and incorporates them by reference as though fully stated herein.
38. The Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1691 et seq., makes it unlawful
for a creditor to discriminate against any applicant with respect to any aspect of a credit
transaction on the basis of race.
39. As described above, Defendants are creditors because they regularly extend,
renew, and continue credit, and Plaintiff was an applicant for credit.
40. Defendants maintained a nationwide set of uniform, discriminatory mortgage loan
origination and underwriting practices and engaged in a pattern or practice of systemic race
discrimination against Black and/or African American mortgage loan and refinancing applicants
and recipients that constitutes illegal intentional race discrimination and unlawfully disparately
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impacts Black and/or African American customers in violation of the Equal Credit Opportunity
Act.
41. Plaintiff and all those similarly situated were subjected to and harmed by
Defendants’ systemic and individual discrimination.
42. Defendants’ unlawful conduct resulted in considerable harm to Plaintiff and all
those similarly situated.
43. On behalf of herself and the class she seeks to represent, Plaintiff requests the
relief set forth below.
COUNT II
RACE DISCRIMINATION IN VIOLATION OF
42 U.S.C. § 1981
(Class)
44. Plaintiff, on behalf of herself and all those similarly situated, realleges each and
every paragraph above and incorporates them by reference as though fully stated herein.
45. Under 42 U.S.C. § 1981, persons of all races are guaranteed the same right to
make and enforce contracts, regardless of race. The term “make and enforce” contracts includes
the making, performance, modification, and termination of contracts, and the enjoyment of all
benefits, privileges, terms, and conditions of the contractual relationship.
46. Defendants maintained a nationwide set of uniform, discriminatory mortgage loan
origination and underwriting practices and engaged in a pattern or practice of systemic race
discrimination against Black and/or African American mortgage loan and refinancing applicants
and recipients that constitutes illegal intentional race discrimination in the making and
modification of contracts in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1981.
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47. Plaintiff and all those similarly situated were subjected to and harmed by
Defendants’ systemic and individual discrimination.
48. On behalf of herself and the class she seeks to represent, Plaintiff requests the
relief set forth below.
COUNT III
RACE DISCRIMINATION IN VIOLATION OF
42 U.S.C. § 1982
(Class)
49. Plaintiff, on behalf of herself and all those similarly situated, realleges each and
every paragraph above and incorporates them by reference as though fully stated herein.
50. Under 42 U.S.C. § 1982, all citizens are guaranteed the same right to inherit,
purchase, lease, sell, hold, and convey real and personal property, regardless of race.
51. As set forth above, Defendants maintained a nationwide set of uniform,
discriminatory mortgage loan origination and underwriting practices and engaged in a pattern or
practice of systemic race discrimination against Black and/or African American mortgage loan
and refinancing applicants and recipients that constitutes illegal intentional race discrimination
and disparately impacts African Americans in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1982.
52. Plaintiff and all those similarly situated were subjected to and harmed by
Defendants’ systemic and individual discrimination.
53. On behalf of herself and the class she seeks to represent, Plaintiff requests the
relief set forth below.
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COUNT IV
RACE DISCRIMINATION IN VIOLATION OF
THE FAIR HOUSING ACT OF 1968
42 U.S.C § 3601 et seq.
(Class)
54. Plaintiff, on behalf of herself and all those similarly situated, realleges each and
every paragraph above and incorporates them by reference as though fully stated herein.
55. The Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. § 3605(a), prohibits any entity whose business
includes engaging in residential real estate-related transactions from discriminating against any
person in making available such a transaction on the basis of race.
56. Defendants’ business includes engaging in residential real estate-related
transactions.
57. As set forth above, Defendants maintained a nationwide set of uniform,
discriminatory mortgage loan origination and underwriting practices and engaged in a pattern or
practice of systemic race discrimination against Black and/or African American mortgage loan
and refinancing applicants that constitutes illegal intentional race discrimination and unlawfully
disparately impacts African Americans in violation of the Fair Housing Act of 1968.
58. Plaintiff and all those similarly situated were subjected to and harmed by
Defendants’ systemic and individual discrimination.
59. On behalf of herself and the class she seeks to represent, Plaintiff requests the
relief set forth below.
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COUNT V
PROMISSORY ESTOPPEL
(Individual)
60. Plaintiff realleges each and every paragraph above and incorporates them by
reference as though fully stated herein.
61. Defendants unambiguously promised that they would offer Plaintiff the lowest
available interest rate, favorable terms and conditions, and a free “float down” should market
rates decrease.
62. Defendants did not offer the lowest available rates, extend favorable terms and
conditions, or allow Plaintiff to “float down” her interest when market interest rates were
significantly reduced.
63. Defendants, through their mortgage originators, did and should have expected that
Plaintiff would rely on their promises.
64. Plaintiff reasonably relied on such promises to her detriment.
65. By the above conduct, Defendants breached their promises to Plaintiff, causing
Plaintiff substantial harm.
COUNT VI
FRAUDULENT INDUCEMENT
(Individual)
66. Plaintiff realleges each and every paragraph above and incorporates them by
reference as though fully stated herein.
67. Defendants falsely stated the material facts that they would offer Plaintiff the
lowest available interest rate, favorable terms and conditions, and a free “float down” should
market rates decrease.
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68. Defendants knew or believed that these statements were false at the time they
made the statements, and Defendants did not offer the lowest available rates, extend favorable
terms and conditions, or allow Plaintiff to “float down” her interest when market interest rates
significantly fell.
69. Defendants made these statements with the intent to induce Plaintiff to agree to a
“rate lock” and mortgage with Wintrust.
70. In reliance on the truth of Defendants’ statements, Plaintiff agreed to a “rate lock”
and mortgage with Wintrust.
71. Plaintiff was damaged by her reliance.
72. By the above conduct, Defendants breached their promises to Plaintiff, causing
Plaintiff substantial harm.
COUNT VII
BREACH OF CONTRACT
(Individual, in the Alternative to Count V)
73. Plaintiff realleges each and every paragraph above and incorporates them by
reference as though fully stated herein.
74. Plaintiff and Defendants entered into valid and enforceable oral and written
promises and agreements under which Defendants would offer Plaintiff the lowest available
interest rate, favorable terms and conditions, and a free “float down” should market rates
decrease.
75. Plaintiff performed under these contracts and agreements.
76. Defendants breached the contract by failing to provide the lowest available
interest rate, favorable terms and conditions, or a free “float down” when market rates decreased.
77. Plaintiff was damaged by Defendants’ breaches.
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PRAYER FOR RELIEF
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff respectfully requests that this Court find in favor of her and
the class she seeks to represent and against Defendants as follows:
a. Certify this case as a class action;
b. Designate Plaintiff as a Class Representative and designate Plaintiff’s counsel of
record as Class Counsel;
c. Declare that Defendants’ acts, conduct, policies and practices are unlawful and
violate the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1982, and the
Fair Housing Act;
d. Declare that Wintrust engaged in a pattern and practice of racial discrimination
against Blacks and/or African Americans;
e. Order Wintrust to offer mortgage loans at non-discriminatory rates to Plaintiff and
all others similarly situated, and otherwise make Plaintiff and all others similarly
situated whole;
f. Order Wintrust to institute additional programmatic relief, including but not
limited to policies and practices to avoid racially discriminatory approvals,
rejections, interest rates, fees, costs, credits, terms, conditions and other policies;
g. Award Plaintiff and all others similarly situated compensatory and punitive
damages;
i. Award Plaintiff and all others similarly situated prejudgment interest and
attorneys’ fees, costs and disbursements, as provided by law;
j. Award Plaintiff and all others similarly situated such other make whole equitable,
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injunctive and legal relief as this Court deems just and proper to end Defendants’
discrimination and fairly compensate Plaintiff and all others similarly situated;
and
k. Award Plaintiff and all others similarly situated such other relief as this Court
deems just and proper.
DEMAND FOR A JURY TRIAL
Plaintiff hereby demands a jury trial as provided by Rule 38(a) of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure.
Respectfully submitted,
STOWELL & FRIEDMAN, LTD.
By: /s/ Linda D. Friedman
Linda D. Friedman
Suzanne E. Bish
George Robot
STOWELL & FRIEDMAN LTD.
303 W. Madison St., Suite 2600
Chicago, Illinois 60606
Phone: (312) 431-0888
Lfriedman@sfltd.com
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