Beazer settles $50M mortgage fraud case
Resolves allegations of improper mortgage activities. Separately, SEC alleges former exec Michael Rand manipulated the homebuilder's results.
| 30 yr fixed mtg | 5.06% |
| 15 yr fixed mtg | 4.64% |
| 30 yr fixed jumbo mtg | 5.91% |
| 5/1 ARM | 4.20% |
| 5/1 jumbo ARM | 4.75% |
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- Beazer Homes USA Inc. agreed to pay $5 million to the U.S. government and up to $48 million to private homeowners to settle allegations that it was involved in fraudulent mortgage activities, the Justice Department said Wednesday.
The settlement resolved allegations that Beazer and its mortgage unit, Beazer Mortgage Corp. (BZH), in making Federal Housing Administration insured loans were involved in fraudulent mortgage origination activities, the department said.
The Justice Department, which has focused on pursuing mortgage fraud cases during the economic downturn, said as a result of Beazer's alleged activities unqualified home buyers were "induced" to enter into FHA insured mortgages and interest rates for the loans were "improperly inflated."
The U.S. government agreed not to prosecute the company in connection with the case if the firm satisfies its obligations under the deferred prosecution agreement over the next 60 months.
In Atlanta, the company said in a statement that it has fully cooperated with the investigations by various government authorities and that it had reached a settlement.
"We deeply regret these matters and have used what we have learned to strengthen our control and compliance culture and reinforce our absolute commitment to act according to the highest standards of ethical conduct," said Ian McCarthy, president and chief executive officer.
Separately, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Wednesday accused Michael Rand, a former chief accounting officer at Beazer, of running a fraudulent scheme to manipulate the builder's results. ![]()
-
Anne Giapapas has a job in one of the 15 most overworked and underpaid professions. More
-
These 5 businesses are offering their services -- from shoes to hair cuts -- to the unemployed. More
-
These rising stars, like Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg, have great jobs to fill. Here's what they're looking for. More
-
They graduated into the worst economy in decades. Here's how 11 grads are getting by. More
-
Executives like News Corp. chairman James Murdoch raked it in. Where the other 19 rank. More
-
These 5 cities have the fastest-growing foreclosure rates. And they're not the usual suspects. More









