[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 20 (Tuesday, February 7, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H516-H518]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HOUSING CRISIS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Ohio (Ms. Kaptur) for 5 minutes.
Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, it's over time for Wall Street megabanks,
their CEOs, speculators, and sharpies to come and scrub the floors of
homeless shelters across this country that are crammed with people who
have lost their homes. Let's make those Wall Street bankers sign up to
work with Habitat for Humanity to restore housing in neighborhoods
across our Nation. Wouldn't that be sweet justice? Once they've paid
back the billions that they owe the American people, whose homes
they've raided of equity, let's put them to work.
Wouldn't it be great to see the CEO of Goldman Sachs, I think his
name is Lloyd Blankfein, out there with buckets and scrub brushes? Come
to Toledo; come to Cleveland; come to America, the part you've hurt so
deeply. Wouldn't it be great? Let him be joined by Josh Bolten, who was
there when the Bush administration handed the toxic mortgage paper to
the people of the United States.
Well, come on down, Angelo Mozilo, from Countrywide. I think a little
hard work would help you a whole lot. How about Bank of America? How
about the CEO there? How about JPMorgan Chase? How about Jamie Dimon? I
wonder when was the last time he scrubbed a floor. How about Jim
Johnson, who headed up Fannie Mae, or Hank Paulson? Oh, I'd love to see
this.
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As I speak, coming to light are important developments in the much
anticipated settlement between the individual State governments and the
big Wall Street banks over the widespread use of fraudulent schemes and
missing paperwork that fueled the foreclosure crisis. As the press has
reported, we are seeing the possible imposition of $25 billion in
penalties against Wells Fargo, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Ally
Financial and Citigroup. Given the extent of the damage they caused,
it's a small start. Just in Ohio, the financing gap was $20 billion.
That's what it would take to stabilize the housing market in just our
State.
Most importantly, The New York Times is reporting that the deals will
``preserve the right to investigate past misdeeds by the bank.'' Not
one, not even the titans of Wall Street, should be able to buy legal
immunity for their criminal acts as millions of families lose their
homes.
It is important that we do not forget how systemic mortgage fraud has
become. In an interview given by a former executive vice president of
Countrywide Financial, a giant player in the U.S. mortgage business,
this executive who was in charge of fraud investigations at the company
related how ``Countrywide loan officers were forging and manipulating
borrowers' income and asset statements to help them get loans they
weren't qualified for and couldn't afford.'' She went on to say that,
whenever we looked through all of the recycle bins, they were full of
signatures that they had cut off of one document and put on another and
then photocopied or faxed. According to her, the fraud was systemic,
taking place in Boston, Chicago, Miami, Detroit, Las Vegas, Phoenix
and, I can tell you, Cleveland, Parma, Lorain, Elyria, Toledo, and
Sandusky.
What we cannot forget is that these stories are not isolated. The FBI
testified before Congress as early as 2004 that they were seeing an
epidemic in white collar financial crimes, and they did not have
anywhere near enough agents to go after the wrongdoers. Wasn't that
convenient? While the number of agents has increased due to
congressional pressure, the FBI needs to have more special agents and
forensic experts to properly investigate the level of accounting
corruption that is believed to exist.
This is the most basic, bipartisan concept I can think of, that
criminals cannot be allowed to get away with their crimes because our
law enforcement agencies lack the manpower to stop them.
I have a bill I hope my colleagues can support. It is H.R. 3050, the
Financial Crisis Criminal Investigation Act, that would authorize an
additional 1,000 FBI agents to take on the kinds of fraud that have
destroyed the economic futures of countless American families and so
gravely harmed our Republic. A good first step was the inclusion of
more than 200 additional agents in the last appropriations cycle. This
administration should use it to go after these Wall Street
perpetrators.
The President announced during his State of the Union address a new
working group to look into mortgage fraud. It will coordinate efforts
between the FBI, the Justice Department, and various States to go after
those on Wall Street who have perpetuated fraud in the markets, using
mortgage-backed securities, collateralized debt obligations, and lots
of other sophisticated financial tricks.
Given the seriousness of the fraud, the number of American families
that have lost their homes and savings, and the drag that that
foreclosure crisis continues to have on the economy means we need more
vigilance and let's confront Wall Street, and put the perpetrators in
jail. And let's have them scrub floors in this new year.
[From the New York Times, Feb. 5, 2012]
Deal Is Closer for a U.S. Plan on Mortgage Relief
(By Shaila DeWan and Nelson D. Schwartz)
With a deadline looming on Monday for state officials to
sign onto a landmark multibillion-dollar settlement to
address foreclosure abuses, the Obama administration is close
to winning support from a crucial state that would
significantly expand the breadth of the deal.
The biggest remaining holdout, California, has returned to
the negotiating table after a four-month absence, a change of
heart that could increase the pot for mortgage relief
nationwide to $25 billion from $19 billion.
Another important potential backer, Attorney General Eric
T. Schneiderman of New York, has also signaled that he sees
progress on provisions that prevented him from supporting it
in the past.
The potential support from California and New York comes in
exchange for tightening provisions of the settlement to
preserve the right to investigate past misdeeds by banks, and
stepping up oversight to ensure that the financial
institutions live up to the deal and distribute the money to
the hardest-hit homeowners.
The settlement would require banks to provide billions of
dollars in aid to homeowners who have lost their homes to
foreclosure or who are still at risk, after years of failed
attempts by the White House and other government officials to
alter the behavior of the biggest banks.
The banks--led by the five biggest mortgage servicers, Bank
of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally
Financial--want to settle an investigation into abuses set
off in 2010 by evidence that they foreclosed on borrowers
with only a cursory examination of the relevant documents, a
practice known as robo-signing. Four million families have
lost their homes to foreclosure since the beginning of 2007.
As recently as two weeks ago, with federal officials hoping
to complete a deal that President Obama could cite in his
State of the Union address, California's attorney general,
Kamala Harris, made it clear she was not on board, terming
the plan inadequate. But in the last few days, differences
have narrowed in negotiations that one participant described
as round the clock, with California officials in direct
communication with bank representatives for the first time in
months.
``For the past 13 months we have been working for a
resolution that brings real relief to the hardest-hit
homeowners, is transparent about who benefits, and will
ensure accountability,'' Ms. Harris said in a statement. ``We
are closer now than we've been before but we're not there
yet.''
The settlement has been hamstrung by one delay after
another over the last year. Winning California's support now
would represent a major win for the White House in this
election year.
``I am encouraged by the conversations we've had with many
states in the last few days,'' said Shaun Donovan, the
secretary of housing and urban development. ``This will be
one of the most significant steps in the recovery of
homeowners, neighborhoods and the broader housing market from
the worst collapse since the Depression.''
``My fundamental point is that it's a first step,'' he
added, citing measures like Mr. Obama's proposal last week to
lower interest rates for homeowners who are still current on
their mortgages.
Officials involved in the negotiations cautioned that
broader state support could still be days away. And although
the timing of any announcement is subject to last-minute
maneuvering, as it stands now the deal would set aside up to
$17 billion specifically to pay for principal reductions and
other relief for up to one minion borrowers who are behind on
their payments but owe more than their houses are currently
worth. The deal would also provide checks for about $2,000 to
roughly 750,000 who lost homes to foreclosure.
Those figures are contingent upon the number who respond to
the offer, which is likely to go to people who lost their
homes between Jan. 1, 2008, and Dec. 31, 2011. In addition,
said Patrick Madigan, the Iowa assistant attorney general,
homeowners who participate in the settlement will still have
the right to sue the banks for improper behavior in the
foreclosure process.
California has been focused on measures that would benefit
individual homeowners, while New York has been most
interested in preserving its ability to investigate the root
causes of the financial collapse.
Another critical issue for California is narrowing the
amnesty given to banks because under the state's False Claims
Act, state officials and huge pension funds like Calpers
would be able to collect sizable monetary damages from the
banks if they could prove mortgages were improperly packaged
into securities that later soured. What is more, California's
participation would result in having more money available for
many other states, including an estimated $500 million in
additional money for Florida.
But the agreement's terms do not guarantee minimum
allocations of mortgage relief by state.
Mr. Donovan added that there had been numerous discussions
with individual states that had specific concerns.
California officials and other veterans of the foreclosure
crisis are haunted by the failure of past attempts to alter
the behavior of the big banks, including a 2008 deal with
Countrywide Financial, the subprime giant now owned by Bank
of America, and a more recent agreement last April between
federal regulators and the biggest mortgage servicers.
The backers of the latest deal insist their plan has more
teeth, with a powerful outside monitor to oversee enforcement
and heavy monetary penalties if banks fail to live up to
commitments. While the past agreement with Countrywide gave
banks credit even if their offers to modify the interest rate
of the mortgage or write down principal were not accepted by
borrowers, this deal counts only what banks actually do for
homeowners.
If banks fall short of the multibillion-dollar benchmarks
set out for principal reduction and other benefits for
homeowners, they
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will have to pay the difference plus a penalty of up to 40
percent directly to the federal government, according to Mr.
Madigan.
The depressed housing market continues to pose a drag on
the halting economic recovery. RealtyTrac, which analyzes
housing data, predicts two million more foreclosures over the
next two years. Some 11 million families owe more on their
houses than they are worth.
The settlement, if all states participate, will also
include $3 billion to lower the rates of mortgage holders who
are current. Banks will get more credit for reducing
principal owed and helping families keep their homes, and
less for short sales or taking losses on loans that were
likely to go bad, like those that were severely delinquent.
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