Congress Seeks Fannie Deal With CU Victims of Mortgage Fraud

A senator from New York where several credit unions were victims of the $140 million U.S. Mortgage/CU National Mortgage fraud is calling on Fannie Mae's regulator to engineer a settlement on the disputed claims. In a letter to Edward DeMarco, director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, Democrat Charles Schumer urges the agency and Fannie Mae to "work with the affected credit unions to come to a fair resolution of this dispute that does not threaten the viability of the credit unions." Schumer noted, "Ultimately, I am concerned about the fiscal well-being of thousands of my constituents who may suffer adverse financial impacts" because of U.S. Mortgage Corp. "The magnitude of this potential loss will have a significant adverse impact on these credit unions and their members, some of whom are employees of the U.S. government, as well as state and local governments." Schumer declined requests for further comment. The congressional intervention comes as Fannie Mae has begun mediation with several of the credit unions aimed at settling the dispute. Several New York credit unions, including Suffolk FCU, Sperry Associates FCU and TCT FCU, were among 28 credit unions that had their mortgages fraudulently sold to Fannie Mae by CU National president Michael McGrath. McGrath has pleaded guilty to the fraud and is scheduled to be sentenced next month.

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