The former servicing manager of U.S. Mortgage Corp./CU National Mortgage has pleaded guilty to conspiring to defraud credit unions and Fannie Mae in the $140 million mortgage scandal. Leroy Hayden, 47, was convicted of conspiracy to assist U.S. Mortgage/CU National president Michael McGrath in his scheme to fraudulently sell Fannie Mae mortgages that the company was servicing on behalf of credit unions. "Frauds of this magnitude don't happen without someone to cook the books and push the paper," said U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman of Newark, N.J. "Leroy Hayden had to decide whether to go along with his boss' fraud or alert law enforcement to the scheme. Unfortunately, he made the criminal choice." Hayden told authorities he provided numerous reports to credit unions falsely stating that loans that had been sold were still in the credit unions' portfolios, and falsified records, at McGrath's direction, to conceal these fraudulent sales. Hayden also admitted that he modified data in U.S. Mortgage's servicing system to help carry out the scheme. As many as 28 credit unions in the Mid Atlantic states stand to lose as much as $125 million in the case and are frantically negotiating with Fannie Mae for the return of their mortgages. Several of the credit unions are also in litigation with their insurer, CUNA Mutual Group's CUMIS Insurance Society over coverage of the fraud. McGrath pleaded guilty last June and is scheduled to be sentenced in July.
-
The combination adds to a wave of broader merger and acquisition activity that includes an ongoing bidding war over RoundPoint Mortgage owner Two Harbors
1h ago -
More mortgage firms are suing their counterparties over buyback demands.
1h ago -
Mordor Intelligence expects the manufactured homes market size to expand from $28.5 billion in 2025 to $30.5 billion this year, its latest report found.
May 1 -
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's support for the market lessened the impact, as could bank capital reform, and the company's normalized results outperformed.
May 1 -
Even as they continue to press for additional changes, banks get some wins from the revised Basel capital framework and a ballpark estimate of their capital outlook for the next few years.
May 1 -
More than three-quarters of brokers are using popular AI platforms, but application of lender-specific software lags considerably, according to AD Mortgage.
May 1










