Countrywide: California Piles On 6 comments
an article to
-
Font Size:
-
Print
- TweetThis
Well, that didn't take long. California attorney general Jerry Brown (yes, that Jerry Brown) has now joined Illinois in deciding to sue Countrywide. Brown's rhetorical powers have not deserted him:
Countrywide exploited the American dream of homeownership and then sold its mortgages for huge profits on the secondary market," Attorney General Brown said. "The company sold ever-increasing numbers of complex and risky home loans, as quickly as possible. Countrywide was, in essence, a mass-production loan factory, producing ever-increasing streams of debt without regard for borrowers. Today's lawsuit seeks relief for Californians who were ripped off by Countrywide's deceptive scheme.
I'm sure Tanta and others will notice that there's precious little substance to these allegations. But in a cage match between Angelo Mozilo and Jerry Brown, I'd wouldn't place any money on the man with a tan. He's going to need those legal fees that Ken Lewis is so generously paying.
Related Articles
|





















Whatever happened to common sense???
The bankers screwed up because no one was watching them???
WTF hasn't anyone understood the gross mismanagement in all of this???
As Congress and the State AG's attempt to deal with all the ineptitude, dishonesty, deception and outright fraud we are all seeing the results...Stocks crashing, higher unemployment, more homeless, etc., etc.
It reminds me of what happened in 1989-1990...only it will be worse this time.
ETHICS ANYONE !
Both sides were stupid.
If youre buying a home thats $500k and you make $45k a year do you really think you can afford that home? Or what about the people that more then 1 home...because it was a "good investment" then just walked away when it wasn't worth as much anymore?
People have to face facts and look at themselves in the mirror. Most of what happened was because of the borrower being greedy...not the loan officer writing the loan....hell if one LO didnt write the loan another LO (or broker) would.
It has nothing to do with the company!