Mortgage Probe Could Lead To Action Soon
Probe Under Increasing Pressure To Deliver
By Jennifer Liberto
POSTED: 8:01 am MDT August 15, 2012
UPDATED: 9:54 am MDT August 15, 2012
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- A
joint federal and state probe into mortgage-backed securities fraud is
close to "significant action," with a possible announcement in coming
weeks or months, according to a source familiar with the probe.Despite
last week's announcement that the Department of Justice was closing a
criminal investigation into Goldman Sachs' role in the financial crisis,
members of a mortgage probe convened by the president say they're still
investigating big banks that packaged and sold bad mortgages in the
years leading up to the financial crisis.Members of the
Residential Mortgage Backed Securities working group, which includes
attorneys from the Justice Department, the Securities and Exchange
Commission and the New York Attorney's General's Office, declined to say
who or what they've been investigating, citing the sensitive nature of
ongoing investigations.
But officials at all those agencies say progress is under way."Work
is being done right now by state and federal working group members
across the country on active investigations," said Justice spokeswoman
Adora Andy. "Although these complex cases can be time consuming and
challenging, the resources, enthusiasm and organization brought by the
members of the RMBS Working group have already resulted in substantial
strides toward that goal."One source familiar with the mortgage
probe suggested an announcement could come soon, cautioning the time
line was uncontrollable due to different agencies involved.The
mortgage fraud probe is under increasing pressure to deliver, especially
since President Barack Obama touted the group would "hold accountable
those who broke the law, speed assistance to homeowners, and help turn
the page on an era of recklessness that hurt so many Americans," during
his State of the Union address in January.The mortgage probe is a
coalition of many of the same agencies that have been working together
since the Obama administration created its first mortgage fraud task
force in 2009.During a January press conference, Attorney General
Eric Holder said this new and improved mortgage probe would benefit by
sharing resources, documents and jurisdictions with New York State
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman -- allowing agencies to take
advantage of New York state laws that are tougher on Wall Street
financial fraud than the federal government's.Since then, there's
been near silence about the group, other than a May press release from
the Justice Department touting a two-day meeting at the SEC and the
hiring of coordinator Matthew Stegman, an assistant U.S. attorney in
California. Calls to Stegman were not returned.Last week, a
coalition of progressive groups renewed their call on regulators, state
attorneys general and investigators to hold Wall Street banks
accountable for crimes that caused the collapse of the housing market."Six
months into the investigation, there's little publicly discernible
progress on the investigation," said Brian Kettenring, director of the
Campaign for a Fair Settlement, which represents liberal and progressive
groups that are pushing for relief for homeowners. "It's hard to know
what's going on behind the scenes. We're not seeing the signs we'd want
to see."But officials representing federal agencies warn that
these securities cases are complicated and take time to sift through.
They say they've issued 300 subpoenas and have collected millions of
pages of documents on mortgage-backed security contracts, spread among
more than 200 attorneys and investigators."In the RMBS world,
there are large numbers of transactions and players that need to be
investigated," said Robert Khuzami, director of the Division of
Enforcement at the SEC and a co-chair of the working group. "This takes
time, but no one should infer from the absence of charges to date that
there hasn't been real and substantial progress."
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