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    Subpoenas issued to financial firms in expanded probe

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Justice Department issued civil subpoenas to 11 financial institutions as part of a new effort to investigate misconduct in the packaging and sale of home loans to investors, Attorney General Eric Holder said on Friday.

    Holder declined to provide specifics, including the names of the firms.

    "We are wasting no time in aggressively pursuing any and all leads," Holder said at a news conference announcing details of a new working group to investigate misconduct in the residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) market, "you can expect more to follow."

    President Barack Obama said he directed Holder to create the new unit in his State of the Union speech late Tuesday, saying it was needed to "help turn the page on an era of recklessness."

    On Friday a slew of federal and state officials appeared at the news conference to provide details about the new group.

    Housed within an earlier financial fraud task force that Obama created in 2009, it is expected to be staffed with around 50 attorneys, analysts and agents, officials said.

    Some skeptics have questioned whether the new group is largely a political move because the other fraud task force already exists.

    Also, the Obama administration has received heat from left-leaning activist groups that believe a separate effort to investigate misconduct in processing foreclosures and servicing home loans may not be rigorous enough to extract a meaningful settlement.

    In exchange for providing up to $25 billion in housing relief, much in the form of cutting mortgage debt for distressed borrowers, the top U.S. banks are expected to put behind them government lawsuits about lending and servicing abuses - but not securitization claims.

    The banks involved in the discussions include Bank of America, Wells Fargo & Co, JPMorgan Chase & Co, Citigroup and Ally Financial Inc.

    Those talks have dragged into their second year as some states, including California and New York, criticized the direction of the negotiations and said the proposed settlement would release the banks from too many claims.

    The deal appears to be getting closer, with last-ditch efforts to lure the hold-out states to join.

    California has said it still has reservations about the deal, but California Attorney General Kamala Harris has met in recent weeks with federal officials in Washington to discuss her concerns about the settlement, people familiar with the matter said.

    The attorney general in New York, Eric Schneiderman, was named as a co-chair of the new working group, prompting speculation that the position was partly aimed at persuading him to join the settlement.

    In an interview with Reuters, Schneiderman said: "The releases have become narrow enough so that I'm confident a full investigation can go forward." Asked if he was signing on, he said, "Not yet," because "other issues" are still outstanding.

    MULTIPLE EFFORTS

    At the news conference, U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan also said that the multistate deal will not prevent the working group from pursuing its own claims about the securitization of home loans.

    "We would not be standing here today if we weren't absolutely confident that the releases that are being contemplated were quite narrow, focused on the conduct that was actually investigated," Donovan said.

    "There will be concrete actions taken in the next few weeks to confirm we're serious," Schneiderman added in the interview.

    Exactly what the new group will tackle is unclear, since the construction and sale of mortgage securities is already the subject of massive government and private lawsuits.

    "The simple fact is that this is an election year, and politics will inevitably play a role in every aspect of what is at its core a superfluous investigation," said Richard Gottlieb, who heads the financial industry group at the law firm Dykema.

    "Others have already done the leg work, the lawsuits have already been filed, and the courts will already be deciding these issues," said Gottlieb.

    The Federal Housing Finance Agency, for example, which oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, sued 17 large banks last September over losses on about $200 billion of subprime bonds and said the underlying mortgages did not meet investors' criteria.

    Speaking at the news conference, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission enforcement director Robert Khuzami said his agency has already reviewed 25 million pages of documents on related investigations.

    "To be clear, investigations into RMBS offerings have been ongoing at the SEC," Khuzami said.

    Holder said the Justice Department had discussed the subpoenas with the SEC, and said the new requests do not duplicate earlier efforts from the SEC.

    He also responded to criticism that federal enforcers have brought few marquee cases in the aftermath of the financial crisis. Holder said the department has brought around 2,100 mortgage-related cases.

    "The notion that there has been inactivity over the course of the last three years is belied by a troublesome little thing called facts," Holder said.

    Several top banks, including Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan, RBS Americas and Deutsche Bank, declined to comment when contacted by Reuters about the new working group's efforts.

    (Reporting By Aruna Viswanatha and Jim Vicini in Washington, D.C. and Karen Freifeld in New York; Editing by Tim Dobbyn and Matthew Lewis)

     
    • Recovering Republican  •  Warren, Ohio  •  26 days ago
      The sub-prime market was filled with scammers from top to bottom. The incentive was to close the loan for all parties, all of whom were paid at the closing....no closing, no payday. This included seller, buyers, real estate agents, mortgage brokers, fund managers, appraisers, inspectors, insurance sales people etc. There aren't enough prisons to hold all of the scammers involved in this gigantic crime.
    • JamesW  •  26 days ago
      You want to prosecute people for the financial crisis? Here is a list you can start with:
      Phil Gramm: Author of The Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999 and The Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 1999
      Angelo Mozilo: Countrywide, the #1 subprime lender
      Alec Litowitz: Magnatar Captial; for structuring CDOs to intentionally fail
      Alan Greenspan: keeping interest rates too low, for too long. And for encouraging deregulation.
      William Donaldson: Chairman of the SEC 2003-2005
      Christopher Cox: Chairman of the SEC 2005-2009
      Donald Powell: President FDIC 2001-2005
      Martin Gruenberg: President FDIC 2005-2006
      Kathleen Corbet: President Standard and Poors 2004-2007
      Andrew Huddart: President Moody's 2004-2007
      Ameriquest, the #2 subprime lender
      New Century, the #3 subprime lender
      Fremont investment and loan, the #4 subprime lender
      Every person who flipped a house from 2003-2007
      Every homeowner that cashed out equity on their homes and spent it on consumer goods.
    • 2012  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  26 days ago
      After destroying millions of American lives, ruining our economy and having tax payers pay for their mistakes it is a disgrace that not one single person has had to pay for their crimes. The question is who in Washington is protecting these people.
    • Lou  •  Collinsville, Illinois  •  26 days ago
      The congress is getting nervous. Some of the rats are already leaving. More will go to.
    • Lou  •  Collinsville, Illinois  •  26 days ago
      If the borrowers were the addicts the loaners were the dealers! We used to call them loan sharks. Same old racket just the names have been changed to protect the guilty.
    • Sharon  •  26 days ago
      Close down the cushie prisons and put the theives in general population. They are the same as any other citizen of the USA, who commited a crime and just because they have money, does not mean they are any different. Guilty is guilty....
    • Mike  •  Salem, Oregon  •  26 days ago
      Smoke and mirror not a single person will go to jail, watch and see. Election year #$%$What about Corzine, why is he still free?
    • Steve  •  San Jose, California  •  26 days ago
      But what about the rest of us who have lost tens if not hundreds of thousands of dollars in equity as our neighbors defaulted? What did we do wrong to bear that burden? Personally my home has dropped over 200k in value. I pay my bills but no longer have that to fix it up. With that loss also comes a loss of purchasing power so I don't do anything to help the ponzi scheme called the American economy to keep running. So it contracts and then the world economy contracts until we have a depression and the whole house of cards comes tumbling down. Fix the US housing market, empower the middle class again and watch it all come roaring back. How about home loans at 1.5%? after all the government takes our money (7 to 35% in taxes), turns around and loans it to banks at 0.25% who then charge us 4 to 7% and skim the profits into their bosses hands. They then give it to the politicians as "contributions" but do nothing to help the majority
    • Jane  •  26 days ago
      I prepare bankruptcy petitions for a living. I have seen many a grown man cry. The middle class is shrinking and the wealthy are sucking the money right out of our pockets. When bank assets go south they get a bail-out, when yours go south, you get kicked out. Only sound monetary policy can reverse the shrinking of the middle class and restore American values. We no longer reward hard work in America, we reward shrewd market manipulation and crony capitalism.
    • Royal Ron  •  Pleasanton, California  •  26 days ago
      All the banks the government bailed out are involved in criminal activities. Time these corrupt banks pay for their crimes!
    • mad  •  Irvine, California  •  26 days ago
      One big slap on the wrist coming up
    • One Man  •  Newark, New Jersey  •  26 days ago
      Is it just me or doesn't this seem like it should've been done like 4 years ago. Talk about slow. sheesh. :/
    • Lion_Heart  •  Dallas, Texas  •  26 days ago
      Yep, no one went to jail, Holder. No one! 2100 cases have been brought by DOJ? I haven't heard of anyone being convicted and going to jail. Big banks and their management have gotten away scott free.
    • Mike  •  26 days ago
      When will there be an investigation of misconduct of all officials in Washington, elected and appointed? They should be held accountable for thier own unlawful dealings. I do believe the fox is guarding the hen house.
    • ROBERT  •  26 days ago
      Should include Freddie and Fannie and those in the Congress committee that oversees them.
    • Dar  •  26 days ago
      "Misconduct?" Was there rudeness? Did somebody not leave a tip? Was it talking on the phone in the hallway?

      The real concern is fraud. Is there fraud? Then throw the book at them. If not, then stop spending taxpayer's money.
    • well wisher  •  Logan, Utah  •  26 days ago
      Bankster's always get away with crime.
      The old saying of "if you want to rob a bank own one".
      Less than 1% of these banksters will be held respondsible in any way.
      For criminals those are really great odds. Even the drug cartels get caught more often at 10% . So the banksters just keep on over charging on their fee's and forecloseing on the HORRENDOUSLY BAD LOANS THEY CREATED AND WROTE UP AND OFFERED THE PUBLIC. THEN BET ON THE BAD LOANS THAT THEY WOULD FAIL. THEN SOLD THEIR BAD LOANS TO FANNIE AND FREEDIE, WHICH PAID OFF THE LOANS TO THE BANKS.
      BANKSTERS ALSO GOT KICK BACKS OF 1% OF ALL LOANS THEY SOLD TO FREDDIE AND FANNIE.
      BANKSTERS WILL NEVER PAY FOR THEIR CRIMES.
    • Murray  •  Norfolk, Virginia  •  26 days ago
      Good move, but why did it take so long...these bums should have been investigated 4 years ago!!! Must justice wait for elections?
    • .  •  26 days ago
      This effort should only be taken seriously if the current administration also stops pressuring states to settle - otherwise they could simply disband this so-called task force after public pressure subsides, thereby letting criminals walk free.
    • DaMan  •  26 days ago
      "We are wasting no time in aggressively pursuing any and all leads," Holder said

      Well that's bull, you've wasted 3 years. And these should be criminal, not civil, charges.
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