Acting Director of OFHEO Calls For Fannie Mae Restitutions

LOCKHARTJames Lockhart, acting director of  the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, called for restitution of the enormous bonuses that were paid to the executives of Fannie Mae. These bonuses were paid on information that  was manipulated fraudulently by Chief Executive Franklin Raines and his executives.

While the odds of this happening are slim, Washington is such an incestuous place. Odds are there will a great deal of bluster followed by a window of enforced silence when they determine that it will not be politically viable to force Franklin Raines to give up his ill gotten gains.

“The first line of defense is that the board of Fannie Mae should go after these individuals and try to get restitution” of some of the bonus money, Lockhart testified. The directors owe the shareholders no less, he said, and if they fail to do so his agency will pursue the executives.

RainesLockhart did not name any current or former Fannie Mae executives. But at a hearing Tuesday by a House panel, he blamed ousted former Chief Executive Franklin Raines by name and other senior company officials for the massive accounting failures and reported manipulations designed to enrich executives.

Raines, a prominent Washington figure who was a White House budget director in the Clinton administration, earned more than $90 million from 1998 to 2003, according to the report. via AZ Central

Related posts:
  1. Fannie and Freddie Fail To Meet Low Income Lending Goals
  2. Fannie Mae Looking For Another Bailout And More Social Activism
  3. Fannie Mae Loosens Lending Standards
  4. Renting A Fannie Mae Held Property? No Worry About Evictions
  5. Japan Ditching Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Model

There Is 1 Response So Far. »

  1. Our legal system is really out of whack if a company executive can steal millions of dollars from a company and there is no means of recovering it for the shareholders. Bank robbers are sentenced to prison for 20 years for taking $5,000 when there is no weapon used. Apparently executives know that the penalty for their misdeeds will be minor, especially when they can receive a huge life-time pension which transfers to the spouse upon the death of the executive. Is our system set up to make only the criminals without influence, money or power to be held accountable?

Post a Response

« Back to text comment
  • Popular

    Most Comments

    Search

    Tags

    Archives

  • Recent Comments

    • Although I agree on most points, I would like to point out that most of the banks that are being ...
      Portland Real Estate | 20Nov09 | More
    • The question is when are they going to release them on the market. Las Vegas leads the nation in ...
      Tony Sena | 19Nov09 | More
    • I keep seeing mentions of Florida's market getting better in multiple blogs. I'm increasingly under the assumption that at least ...
      Cary NC Homes for Sale | 19Nov09 | More
    • I would like to know more about it. I need to know how you file for it. Please let me ...
      Kala | 19Nov09 | More
    • Great blog, keep the great content coming!
      NickWaltersRE | 19Nov09 | More
    • If you want to succeed, do not say "we can prevent this in the future." Live in reality. ...
      Stephen Davis | 19Nov09 | More
    • Don't worry. Bail out number 2 on the way!
      Stephen Davis | 19Nov09 | More
    • The price of the property depends on its quality and the deal between the management. Good and wise choices are ...
      beaumont houses for sale | 19Nov09 | More
    • This is a sign that the real state industry is about to rise again maybe not on its peak but ...
      houses in beaumont | 19Nov09 | More
    • I don't have experience at actualy working in tha automotive bussinnes, but have experience working in a warehouse invironment. ...
      paula schmidt | 19Nov09 | More
  • Statistics

  • Friends

  • Recent Friends Visiting

  • Subscribe





    Get Updates Delivered Daily By E-Mail:

    Delivered by FeedBurner