Money | banking Bank of America Denies Being WikiLeaks Target No proof of upcoming 'megaleak,' spokesman says By Rob Quinn Posted Dec 1, 2010 1:39 AM CST Copied "We are unaware of any new claims by WikiLeaks that pertain specifically to Bank of America," a bank spokesman said. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, file) Bank of America is firmly denying rumors that it's the target Julian Assange was talking about when he promised a "megaleak" of a financial institution's internal documents. Assange told an interviewer last year that he had "5GB from Bank of America, one of the executive's hard drives." But the bank says there has been no evidence to support the claims by the WikiLeaks founder, CNN reports. Assange says the bank documents will expose "an ecosystem of corruption" and "could take down a bank or two," although insiders doubt that much more damage could be done to banks already hit by a long series of scandals. "We already know the banks are grossly incompetent, can't manage risk and would be dead without taxpayer support," said a Wall Street money manager. "What are we going to find in these leaks—that free checking isn't really free?" Read These Next Guests find summit document on hotel printer. Putin faces unfamiliar terrain of shouted questions. This is why you never rappel down a waterfall alone. Kristi Noem is catching some flak over her new home. Report an error