Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDwayne Hopkins Modified over 9 years ago
1
The Credit Crunch: What’s Crime Got to Do With It?
2
Singin’ The PL Blues MODERATOR: Edward G. Gallagher, Esq., General Counsel, Surety & Fidelity Association of America PANELISTS: Christopher Cavallaro, RPLU, Managing Director, ARC Excess and Surplus, LLC Phyllis Chechile, Managing Director, Frank Crystal & Company David T. DiBiase, Esq., Managing Partner, Anderson, McPharlin & Conners LLP Melissa Mailman Schwartz, Assistant Vice President, Liberty International Underwriters John Wallace, MBA, Director, Product Executive, CUNA Mutual Group
3
Agenda Role of Mortgage Fraud Pre-existing Losses Potential Insurance Coverage Fraud Enabled by the Crisis and New Technologies Impact on the Fidelity Market
4
Role of Mortgage Fraud
5
The Mortgage Meltdown
6
The SAR Activity Review, May 2006, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (Fin CEN)
7
2006 Mortgage Fraud Report “Year in Review”, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
8
If we jump from 2006 to today, the signs are still troublesome. SAR Activity Review, Fin CEN, July 8, 2009
9
2008 Mortgage Fraud Report “Year in Review”, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
10
Mortgage Loan Applications
11
Fraud/Forgery Covered Under a Financial Institution Bond? Or….????
12
Bad Lending Practices?
13
Loan Application Inflated, exaggerated or even fabricated income? Lies re assets/net worth? Untruth re owner occupied intended use? Forged signature on application? Falsehood re source of down payment? False / inflated appraisal?
14
Mortgage Loan Purchase and Sale Agreements Generally with recourse Reps and warranties include good title no undisclosed liens or claims compliant with HUD notes are “genuine…legal, valid and binding…” Buyer’s recourse seller must remedy any defects OR repurchase the loan
15
Cause and Effect RBC Mortgage Company v. National Union Fire Ins Co of Pittsburg, PA., 812 N.E. 2 nd 728 (Ill.) “…RBC losses were derived…from RBC’s breach of the warranty contained in the brokerage agreement. Had there been no contractual liability…for the fraudulent loan packages, RBC would not have incurred monetary losses.
16
Cause and Effect Tri City National Bank v. Federal Insurance Company, 674 NW2nd 728 (Wisc.) “…the employees were dishonest by permitting financially inappropriate people to obtain mortgages from other entities…the bank initially lost nothing…It was only after the…mortgages defaulted…and the mortgage companies sued Tri City that ‘losses’ resulted.”
17
Cause and Effect Ohio Savings Bank v. Progressive Casualty Insurance Co, 521 F.3d 960 (8 th Cir. 2008) “A banker’s blanket bond is not intended to ensure (sic) the bank against losses from its normal lending activities….”
18
Cause and Effect Vons Companies v. Federal Insurance Co, 212 F.3d 489 (9 th Cir. 2000) “Direct means direct…”
19
Pre-existing Losses
20
Madoff Cases by Type
21
Stanford International Cases by Type
22
Potential Insurance Coverage
23
Fraud Enabled by the Crisis and New Technologies
24
Impact on the Fidelity Market
25
Financial Institution Fidelity Limits
26
Questions & Answers
27
Many thanks to … Edward Gallagher Christopher Cavallaro Phyllis Chechile David DiBiase Melissa Mailman Schwartz John Wallace
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.