Journal Editorial Report: A big Democratic win sends Republicans a message.
Images: Zuma Press/Reuters Composite: Mark KellyThe Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a federal bureaucracy with a vast jurisdiction, is testing a novel approach to crime and punishment.
In a lawsuit against Townstone Financial, a small Chicago-area nonbank mortgage firm, the CFPB is signaling that it may attempt to punish anyone who complains about neighborhood crime.
Rather, the CFPB points to a handful of statements Mr. Sturner and other company officials made over a four-year period on the Townstone Financial Show—a weekly radio program and podcast.
These statements, according to the regulatory behemoth, discourage “prospective applicants, on the basis of race, from applying for credit.”