Category Archives: mortgage fraud

A.I.G. (United Guaranty) v. Countrywide Complaint Now Available

The complaint filed in federal court in Los Angeles by United Guaranty Mortgage Indemnity Co., the mortgage insurer subsidiary of A.I.G., against Countrywide Financial Corp., Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. and the Bank of New York Trust Company is posted below. … Continue reading

Posted in AIG, allocation of loss, BofA, causes of the crisis, Complaints, Countrywide, lawsuits, litigation, loan modifications, loss causation, misrespresentation, mortgage fraud, United Guaranty | Leave a comment

Plaintiffs Survive Motions to Dismiss in Major Subprime Class Actions Against New Century and Countrywide

The American Lawyer has reported that two important rulings were handed down earlier this month in the United States District Court in Los Angeles denying motions to dismiss class actions against former mortgage behemoths Countrywide and New Century. The Countrywide … Continue reading

Posted in bankruptcy, class actions, Countrywide, IndyMac, lawsuits, litigation, loss causation, mortgage fraud, motions to dismiss, New Century | Leave a comment

AMBAC Sues Bear Stearns Subsidiary For Shoddy Underwriting

Mortgage insurance company Ambac Assurance Corp. has become the latest plaintiff to bring a lawsuit against a mortgage originator for improper underwriting, suing Bear Stearns subsidiary EMC Mortgage Corp. in the United States District Court for the Southern District of … Continue reading

Posted in Ambac, Bear Stearns, broader credit crisis, Complaints, lawsuits, litigation, misrespresentation, mortgage fraud, mortgage insurers, securitization, underwriting practices | Leave a comment

Borrowers Will Be Borrowers

Despite the increased attention directed at mortgage fraud since the collapse of the subprime market, fraud continues to be a major issue in newly-originated loans, reports the Mortgage Asset Research Institute (MARI). The study showed a 42% increase in in … Continue reading

Posted in borrower fraud, incentives, MARI, mortgage fraud, overstated income, regulation, subprime | Leave a comment