Countrywide Admits To Making Errors

CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER | May 6, 2008 06:06 PM EST | AP


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Steve Bailey, Senior Managing Director for Loan Administration at Countrywide Financial Corporation, testifies before the Senate Subcommittee on Administrative Oversight and the Courts Tuesday, May 6, 2008, on Capitol Hill in Washington during a hearing on bankruptcy and the foreclosure crisis. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

WASHINGTON — Mortgage lender Countrywide Financial Corp., which is under investigation for inflating certain borrowers' fees, acknowledged Tuesday that it has made errors and pledged to take steps to improve its operations.

Steve Bailey, chief executive for loan administration at Countrywide, told a Senate panel that the company's employees have made mistakes "from time to time." He said the company will hire an outside auditor to review its actions in cases involving homeowners who have filed for bankruptcy court protection.

But he disputed accusations, made by hundreds of borrowers in Pennsylvania, Florida and other states, that the company has sought to collect inflated fees and other payments by filing inaccurate bankruptcy documents. The Justice Department is currently investigating the accusations.

"Servicers have also been accused of intentionally assessing inappropriate fees and costs to borrowers in bankruptcy," Bailey said. "With respect to Countrywide, these allegations are simply not true."

But Katherine Porter, a professor at the University of Iowa, testified that mortgage companies and servicers have improperly sought repayment for attorneys' fees and other costs without fully disclosing or documenting the fees.

In some cases, companies have sought to foreclose on homes even after borrowers have discharged their debts through the Chapter 13 bankruptcy process, which allows debtors to keep their homes while working out payment plans for their debts.

"The upsetting reality is that the current bankruptcy system routinely forces borrowers to pay bloated amounts and permits mortgage servicers to misbehave without serious consequence," she told the Senate Judiciary subcommittee on administration oversight and the courts.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., chairman of the panel, criticized what he called a broader "vulture mentality" in the mortgage lending industry.

"Companies have repeatedly sought to foreclose on homes where owners were current on payments, sought attorneys fees in bankruptcy court for motions that they have lost, and failed to keep even the most basic records to justify their claims in bankruptcy court," he said.

Schumer also said that Bank of America Corp., which agreed to buy Countrywide in January for approximately $4 billion, should reconsider the deal's price tag.

If the purchase price for Countrywide was "based in part on profits from these bad practices, Bank of America should demand a lower price, because these practices will not be allowed to continue," he said.

Several Wall Street analysts have said Bank of America should renegotiate the deal and pay closer to $1 per share, down from the deal's current value of $7.10 per share, due in part to Countrywide's legal liabilities.

Clifford White, director of the Justice Department's bankruptcy trustee program, said the department has stepped up its efforts to prosecute bankruptcy law violations.

The trustee program made 1,163 criminal referrals last year, which includes cases involving housing fraud, a 26 percent increase over the previous year, he said.

The "integrity of the bankruptcy system is compromised by creditors who file false financial information that inflates the amount of money due to them, or deprives debtors of the bankruptcy code's protection against foreclosure," he said.


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I love this term "errors". The make it sound like they miscalculated something when they were processing the accounts. What they did was not an "error" it was an attempt by a large financial company to screw it's customers. You had a CEO who was compensated to the tune of aver 130 million dollars in 2007. Of that figure he received almost a million a month in direct compensation and the rest in stock options which he bought and the sold the stock to make around 120 million dollars. This at a time when Countrywide was losing at least 700 million dollars. These people make fortunes when the company does well and it seems that they do as well, if not better when the company is not doing well. It is a win/win situation for the executive, but not the company. Countrywide is is a deep financial hole and it's CEO is digging the hole deeper.

replyReply favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:47 AM on 05/09/2008

I briefly worked with a company that right now has more work than it can do: it makes empty homes "look lived-in." A rather large and growing-larger team of people drive over town, shuffling the lights, mowing the lawn, and moving the ostentatious SUVs that are "inexplicably" parked in the circle out-front instead of being parked in the three-car garage.

This company wryly says that they're in the "asset protection" business, and it's true. They try to keep the homes from being looted or burned or moved-in to by "squatters." They try to keep Mister and Mrs. American Dream, who actually bought the one-or-two homes in the development that are actually occupied, from catching-on. But mostly they are well-paid by the mortgage companies and home builders who are holding a stupendous amount of unsold and ... though they would not want you to know it ... unsalable "inventory."

Tax-laws have a wonderful treatment of this thing called "inventory," which encourages you to accumulate the stuff if you can, but that's another story. The "asset protection" that these guys really do is to help uphold the banker's illusion that all this stuff actually deserves to be "collateral," and that it should be on-the-books at the "value" that has been attached to it. Those "values" are merely dew on the grass, and these guys are holding umbrellas over that grass to keep the .. truth .. away.

replyReply favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 08:56 AM on 05/09/2008

Hey, Sen. Chuck

Whatever happened to the question of the $51.1 Billion bailout to Countrywide last September

!

replyReply favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:45 AM on 05/08/2008

"Companies have repeatedly sought to foreclose on homes where owners were current on payments."

HOW CAN THEY DO THAT????

replyReply favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:29 PM on 05/07/2008



After having delt with Countrywide Funding for years, I can readily attest that this is a bottom feeding, scum sucking, corrupt Company !!

replyReply favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:12 PM on 05/07/2008

CFC = Roach Motel.

replyReply favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 PM on 05/07/2008

lollll...lovely being a business in an era when our government has been perverted into "government of the few, by the few, for the few", isn't it?

A business screws hundreds or thousands or more people, and it is a "mistake".

But if you do it, it is fraud...

replyReply favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:36 PM on 05/07/2008

But if you the consumer do it your butt is in jail fast!

replyReply favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:52 PM on 05/07/2008

Yeah, it's true. One set of rules for the elite, another for the hoi poloi. The elite hide their money in off shore accounts, we on the other hand have to pay taxes on all of ours (to the elite owned IRS). We bail out the elite banks with our tax dollars (the billions of taxes avoided by offshore accounts could have helped). Because they are all cronies and sit on each others boards, they never convict one another (they own the judges anyways). It's a big elite club and the goal is to fleece the public as bad as you can and then sit back and laugh with your buds about it all. It's a tough situation for the little guy cause complaining makes one sound like a socialist or communist. Sooner rather than later, it's going to get to the point where these elite had better not show their faces in public. When the middle class can't afford groceries, gas, education, and a paltry two week vacation a year, we'll be coming after these chosen ones. Thank God we live in America where we have the ability to challenge these pucks.

replyReply favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 PM on 05/07/2008

Where's Mozilo? Too busy spending his $130 million to testify?

replyReply favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:36 PM on 05/07/2008

Probably working on his tan.

replyReply favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:41 PM on 05/07/2008

do devils need to tan?

replyReply favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 03:04 PM on 05/07/2008

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