Friday, April 18, 2008
Stemming The Surge of Fraud And Corruption
A day after warning the Senate about a “tremendous surge” in the FBI’s mortgage fraud investigations, Director Robert Mueller talked in more detailed terms about the growth in both corporate fraud and public corruption cases at the annual conference of the American Bar Association’s Section of Litigation in Washington, D.C.
Despite limited resources, Mueller said that the FBI’s corporate fraud cases have grown more than 80 percent since 2003. Last year, we had more than 490 corporate and securities fraud convictions.
He predicted that the problem will only worsen because of the “ripple effect of the sub-prime crisis and its impact on the credit market.” The FBI, he said, has already “identified 19 corporate fraud matters related to the sub-prime lending crisis … targeting accounting fraud, insider trading, and deceptive sales practices.” And, we’re currently investigating more than 1,300 mortgage fraud matters.
Mueller believes part of the problem is “rampant conflicts of interest in the corporate suites.” He said that FBI investigations “further emphasize the need for independent board members, auditors, and outside counsel. Shareholders rely on the board of directors to serve as the corporate watchdog. ... [But] board members are often beholden to the executives they are expected to oversee.”
Acknowledging recent FBI missteps resulting from inadequate internal controls—and a new Office of Integrity and Compliance to identify risks before they become problems—Mueller said, “As we all understand, it is better for a company to self-report and remediate its own wrongdoing before the FBI and the Department of Justice become involved. Executives who let the situation escalate to the point of a sudden restatement—and a resulting loss of shareholder confidence—often do greater harm to the companies they are trying to protect than if they had exercised early intervention.”
Mueller said that in his days as a defense counsel, he “met a number of executives who could rationalize every bad decision,” warning that “it is a slippery slope from behavior that skirts ethical or legal boundaries to behavior that crosses the line completely.”
The FBI also works to combat corruption in the public sector—our top criminal priority—because, as the Director pointed out in his remarks, “democracy and corruption cannot co-exist.”
Currently, the FBI has more than 2,500 open public corruption cases, an increase of more than 50 percent since 2003. During the past two years alone, more than 1,800 public officials have been convicted.
“The FBI,” Mueller said, “is uniquely situated to address public corruption. We have the skills to conduct sophisticated investigations. But more than that, we are insulated from political pressure. We are able to go where the evidence leads us, without fear of reprisal or recrimination.”
In the end, Mueller said, “it does not matter if the corruption is national or local … if it is millions of dollars or merely hundreds. There is no level of acceptable corruption.”
mortgage fraud
more than “18,000” public officials have been convicted?? WRONG. he said “1,800”.
Posted by on 04/20 at 09:46 AM
If they are looking to stop corruption I would love to talk to them.
You have no idea of what this type of thing does to you if you’re not a victim.
Posted by on 04/20 at 05:12 PM
WELL,WHAT DO KNOW ABOUT THAT!!! IF AS MR MUELLER SAYS,THAT IT MATTERS NOT THE AMMOUNT INVOLVED THEY WILL BRING THESE SCAMERS TO JUSTICE WHY DID THE FBI NOT DO THIS WHEN ALL THE EVIDENCE WAS GIVEN TO THEM ABOUT PROPERTY FLIPING AND FALSE APPRAISALS IN HARRIS COUNTY TEXAS???? MR. GEORGE UBER US RETIRED
Posted by on 04/21 at 07:23 AM
I filed my complaint with the FBI in regard to mortgage fraud in late 06, early 07. It wasn’t of much interest because the fraud issue had not come to the surface and mine was a lone complaint, and inexpensive (the FBI likes numbers in the millions before they will investigate). I am glad to know it finally is becoming something someone it trying to get a handle on. - a lot of people need to go to jail.
Posted by on 04/21 at 11:24 AM
Post a Comment
The trackback URL for this entry is:
Trackbacks:
|

|
Some Sources require Registration.
Real Estate Fraud Widespread, Insider Q&A Told
Orange County Register- California
As head of the California Department of Real Estate, it’s Davi’s responsibility to oversee the licensing and regulation of real estate agents and to investigate complaints.
Complaints Against Ohio Real-Estate Agents Rise
Cincinnati.com - Cincinnati, OH
Some of the most common complaints involve buyers upset over undisclosed property problems and agents not doing the marketing they had promised. There's also been an increase in mortgage fraud and criminal allegations.
Millions At Risk Of Foreclosure Fraud
Inland Empire News - Riverside, CA
The reason Carter, 55, is facing eviction, she says, is that she fell for a high-stakes scam that’s sweeping the nation, preying on the 1 in 11 consumers who are either behind on their mortgage payments or already in foreclosure.
Florida Comes Clean, Allowed Criminals to Enter Mortgage Industry, Prey on Consumers
By The Liput Group
In a stinging critique of the state's oversight of the mortgage industry, top Florida investigators found that state regulators failed to alert police agencies to crooked mortgage brokerages, ignored citizen complaints and allowed hundreds of people with criminal histories to peddle loans.
FBI's Mortgage Fraud Caseload Grows To 24
Toronto Star - Ontario, Canada
The FBI is investigating 24 cases of potential corporate fraud related to mortgage lending, up from 21 cases disclosed by the bureau in July, bureau director Robert Mueller told Congress yesterday.
Convicted Appraiser Nicolo Back In Custody
MPNnow.com - Rochester, NY
John Nicolo, who was convicted in a widespread kickback scheme involving Eastman Kodak Co. and a former Monroe County assessor, is back in police custody after he allegedly violated the conditions of his release.
Mortgage Crisis Leads To An Increase In Scams
WSBT-TV - South Bend, IN
When it comes to perpetrating a scam or a fraud some tools used are a gun, or a fist, or a knife,” Zultanski said. “Mortgage is another avenue to commit a fraud.”
Mortgage Firm Countrywide, In Response To Alleged Data Breach, Offers Free Credit Monitoring
Los Angeles Times - CA
Countrywide Financial Corp. is offering two years of free credit monitoring to customers whose sensitive personal information, including Social Security numbers, allegedly was stolen from the home lender's computer files.
Caught in ID Theft's 'Horrible Web'
Columbian - Clark County, Washington
A woman took Carpenter's professional identity as a real estate appraiser, using Carpenter's name and license number. She even appraised commercial and million-dollar properties that Carpenter, a residential appraiser, isn't licensed to do.
Top 10 Riskiest Areas for Mortgage Loans
U.S. News & World Report - Washington, DC
First American CoreLogic recently released a study that ranks America's top 10 riskiest areas in which to make a home loan.
Previous Articles
|
|
|
|
|
|
|