Originally published Wednesday, May 7, 2008 at 12:00 AM
Countrywide admits making mistakes
Mortgage lender Countrywide Financial, under investigation for inflating certain borrowers' fees, acknowledged Tuesday it has made errors...
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Mortgage lender Countrywide Financial, under investigation for inflating certain borrowers' fees, acknowledged Tuesday 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 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 Bailey 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 investigating the allegations.
"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 Chapter 13 bankruptcy, 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.
Schumer also said Bank of America, which agreed to buy Countrywide in January for about $4 billion, should reconsider the deal's price tag.
If the 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 a share, down from the deal's current value of $7.10 a 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 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.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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