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Angelo Mozilo, Countrywide Ex-CEO, Settles With SEC For $67.5M

JACOB ADELMAN   10/15/10 10:15 PM ET   AP

Mozilo Sec

LOS ANGELES — Countrywide Financial Corp. co-founder Angelo Mozilo has agreed to a $67.5 million settlement to avoid trial on civil fraud and insider trading charges that alleged he profited from doling out risky mortgages while misleading investors about the risks.

Two other former Countrywide executives also settled before trial next week on charges filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission. But employment agreements that protect the men from lawsuits involving the failed lender mean Bank of America Corp., which bought Countrywide in July 2008, will pick up most of the tab.

The settlement announced Friday spares the executives the risk of a verdict that could have been used against them in lawsuits by shareholders, or by prosecutors if a criminal probe into their activities leads to charges.

It also gives the SEC the right to brag about what it said is the biggest financial penalty ever against a public company's senior executive. The agency has been criticized for doing little to prevent much of the risky behavior that led to the financial meltdown and for failing to detect Bernard Madoff's massive investment fraud.

"This settlement is a desirable result for all the parties," said Jacob Frenkel, a former SEC enforcement attorney now in private practice. "The SEC claims victory. The defendants get closure while preserving their ability to fight" lawsuits by shareholders.

The agreement requires Mozilo to repay $45 million in ill-gotten profits and $22.5 million in civil penalties. Former Countrywide President David Sambol owes $5 million in profits and $520,000 in civil penalties, and former Chief Financial Officer Eric P. Sieracki will pay $130,000 in civil penalties.

It's "the fitting outcome for a corporate executive who deliberately disregarded his duty to investors by hiding what he saw in the executive suite," SEC Enforcement Director Robert Khuzami said in a conference call with reporters.

But $25 million of Mozilo's restitution will come from an escrow fund the company set up to cover shareholder litigation and Mozilo has no obligation to pay the remaining amount, according to the settlement agreement.

The Charlotte, N.C.-based bank, through its Countrywide subsidiary, will pay that $20 million, according to a person familiar with the matter who wasn't authorized to speak publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Sambol's agreement stipulates that his entire $5 million forfeiture will come from the escrow fund.

The payments come on top of an $8.4 billion settlement Bank of America made with 12 states in 2008 over Countrywide's lending practices. The company also agreed in August to pay $600 million to end a class-action case from former Countrywide shareholders.

The penalty represents a striking turn for Mozilo, the son of a Bronx butcher who 41 years ago co-founded what grew into the nation's largest home loan originator. In 2006, Countrywide was writing one in six of the nation's mortgages, totaling more than $490 billion, court records showed.

The Calabasas, Calif.-based company spiraled into disaster as investors suddenly realized many homeowners wouldn't be able to repay mortgages that required no proof of income or down payment, and offered adjustable rates that quickly made monthly payments unaffordable.

Regulators portrayed Countrywide's massive size in court documents as the result of the three executives' single-minded pursuit of market dominance, even if it meant taking disastrous risks.

"The credit losses experienced by Countrywide in 2007 not only were foreseeable by the proposed defendants, they were in fact foreseen at least as early as September 2004," the SEC said in its filing.

The SEC accused the men of misleading shareholders about the quality of the loans on Countrywide's books. The civil complaint also accused Mozilo of acting on his inside knowledge of the company's precarious state when he sold shares between November 2006 and October 2007 ahead of its collapse, reaping more than $139 million.

Under the settlement, the three men did not admit wrongdoing.

"Mr. Sambol has agreed to settle the SEC lawsuit and put the matter behind him for the benefit of his family and loved ones," Sambol's attorney Walter Brown said in a statement.

Sieracki's lawyer, Shirli Fabbri Weiss, said in a news release that all fraud-based claims against her client had been dropped and that his civil penalty was to settle negligence-based charges.

Mozilo, who was not in court when the settlement was announced, was the nation's highest-profile defendant yet to face trial for risky business practices leading to the housing collapse that sent the country into recession.

The SEC wanted to "put his head on a pike and parade it around," said Anthony Sabino, professor of law and business at St. John's University in New York.

Under the settlement, Mozilo agreed to never again serve as an officer or director of a publicly traded company. Sambol agreed not to do so for three years.

Mozilo lawyer David Siegel did not return a message seeking comment.

The settlement talks involving Mozilo were first reported by the Wall Street Journal after U.S. District Judge John F. Walter filed a notice Thursday for trial lawyers to attend a status conference Friday.

Countrywide's lending practices are reportedly also the subject of a criminal probe in Los Angeles. Thom Mrozek, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office, declined to comment about the situation.

___

AP Business Writer Marcy Gordon in Washington contributed to this report.

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LOS ANGELES — Countrywide Financial Corp. co-founder Angelo Mozilo has agreed to a $67.5 million settlement to avoid trial on civil fraud and insider trading charges that alleged he profited fro...
LOS ANGELES — Countrywide Financial Corp. co-founder Angelo Mozilo has agreed to a $67.5 million settlement to avoid trial on civil fraud and insider trading charges that alleged he profited fro...
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mannapat
Truthiness shines a light.
08:32 PM on 11/22/2010
Martha Stewart couldn't buy her way out of trouble because she didn't steal enough, AND because she had the wrong body parts.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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04:47 PM on 11/22/2010
Just got out of the movie "Inside Job." The principle architects of the financial Ponzi scheme
perpetrated by the banking and insurance industries all all named.

Now Mozilo and the band of thieves are buying their way out with the money they stole from us!
When does the screw-job end?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2DRm5ES-uA
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FreedomFreedomFreedom
Its A Choice Between Fear And Love
03:18 PM on 11/22/2010
"But $25 million of Mozilo's restitution will come from an escrow fund the company set up to cover shareholder litigation and Mozilo has no obligation to pay the remaining amount, according to the settlement agreement."

Did everyone miss this paragraph? Outrageous! He is under NO OBLIGATION TO PAY THE REMAINING AMOUNT. So only if he feels like paying it? When are the criminal charges going to be filed. This is Corporate America at it's worst. A two-tiered Justice System where the REAL CRIMINALS, the bankers, Wall Streeters and hedge fund crooks get away with MURDER.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wikwox
So there I was, playing the piano....
02:18 PM on 11/22/2010
The moneys nice but he's got alot more, jail would have been better and sent a stronger message to Wall St. and all banks in general. Once again in America you can buy anything if you've got enough money.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DARK STAR
One small step for Man...
07:12 AM on 11/21/2010
Thievery is ok if you can can pay the bill or get your employer to do so? SEC can actually BRAG? ABOUT WHAT?

THIS PERSON SHOULD BE IN JAIL, PERIOD.

PAYING A FINE IS NOTHING.
11:14 AM on 10/20/2010
Would never put a dime in BOA!!
11:06 AM on 10/20/2010
Mozilo & Sambol should both be in jail and they should have had a much bigger settlement to pay....for them to say they want to put it behind them for their family and loved ones, think of the families and loved ones they took advantage of that are left with nothing....I am all for what the SEC wanted to do with their h@ads on a pike!! Disgusting Greedy, Greedy little men!!
thebigbike
ran away to be a cowboy
02:40 PM on 10/19/2010
The vital unanswered question here is what is Mr. Mozilo left with, is it over $100 million, over $50 million, over $1million? somehow I suspect the number is well over $10 million. Ya think he'll have to live on his social security check? BWAAAAH HAHAHAHAHAH !!!!!! That's something to make you spit milk out of your nose from laughing at the absurdity
05:13 PM on 10/20/2010
He's worth 600 million, Bank of America paid 45 million of his fine, so he ended up paying 22.5 million and kept the rest. Instead of being in jail and giving the money back to the people he stole it from, he'll be in the Bahamas on his yaght next week.
10:19 AM on 10/19/2010
It's a drop in his overflowing bucket of money - he should be prosecuted and sent to jail, next to Madoff.
BraveWarrior
The truth will set you free, like it or not
04:10 PM on 10/19/2010
Oh but the presodent is going to get him, but the right way. Be patient and quit your whining.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
McKeaton
12:42 AM on 10/19/2010
The united plot of corporate mobsters, under bush deregulation....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JPETERB
06:12 PM on 10/18/2010
This is Old Money Country Club justice for Countrywide New Money Criminals. No trial. Peanuts to the public in a penny on the dollar settlement. No criminal record. No crime at all. Undercuts private lawsuits seeking redress for fraud and criminal negligence. The ruling class easily wins yet another battle in a destructive war against everyone else.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
McKeaton
12:33 AM on 10/19/2010
THe day for final pay is comming...the wave started in ....France....
05:14 PM on 10/20/2010
I agree. We may need a revolution to get these fat cats to give all the money back. Cut off their heads too???
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dogdave
05:40 PM on 10/18/2010
considering the home loan crisis is the biggest fraud in world history
it is really strange not one person has been criminally indicted
not the loan lenders, the banks, the rating agencies--Nothing-Nobody
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
2garen
12:53 AM on 10/19/2010
What is wrong with that picture?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sammi 56
01:07 PM on 10/20/2010
There is no Justice-- mind blowing! And here we sit unable to do a thing. but we have to raise hell over this foreign $$ coming to the New York Chamber of Commerce- thats a start!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
2garen
04:47 PM on 10/18/2010
Pretty good rate of return pay a 67.5 mil fine and the overall was 650 million.
Who says crime doesn't pay?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
McKeaton
12:35 AM on 10/19/2010
Same thing said the monarch ....before Bastille fell...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blueken
Finger Picking blues man
03:46 PM on 10/18/2010
What a load of BS. He goes free, Countrywide shells out some chump change and the whole thing is droped? Is this justice? All his assets should be siezed as part of a criminal conspiracy and he should go to jail. Countrywide is on your side, yeah, right. Look for them to change their name.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
McKeaton
12:38 AM on 10/19/2010
The problems are deeeeeep to the root: former adminitstration.
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Totto
"Not 'Noise' One Round: *Music*
12:46 PM on 10/18/2010
Far too much sun and surgery!
11:09 AM on 10/20/2010
Waaaay too much....he looks like a pumpkin!