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Countrywide Home Loans - Tell Us Your Countrywide Story Due to the OVERWHELMING amount of Countrywide Home Loan stories, issues and problems, we at Loan Safe thought it would be best to have an entire forum dedicated to tracking what Countrywide is doing to HELP struggling homeowners and how they are treating their customers. Good or bad, let your voice be heard and your story be known.

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Another CW PROBLEM UGGGGGHHHHH
  #1 (permalink)   IP: 71.108.105.227
Old 08-08-2008, 07:51 PM
cookiefrmcali cookiefrmcali is offline
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Another CW PROBLEM UGGGGGHHHHH

Hello Everyone,

I Am At A Loss And Stunned About This.

I Just Received A Letter From Countrywide Home Loans Indicating That The A Countrywide Home Loans Employee Was Selling Personal Information About Me To A Third Party. They Apologized And Gave Me A Free Membership With Experian For Two Years. Also, They Sent Another Notice On What I Need To Do With The Rest Of The Two Credit Bureaus.
They Also Have A Special Hotline I Can Call To Get In Touch With Someone To Assist Me.

The Employee Was Terminated. This Is All That This Letter Stated. This Person Should Have Charges Be Brought Against Him/her.

This So Frustrating!!!!! Did Anyone On Here Get A Similar Notice And/or Heard About This Employee???
This Is Seriously Too Much!!!!

Cookie

Last edited by cookiefrmcali; 08-08-2008 at 07:54 PM.
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Re: Another CW PROBLEM UGGGGGHHHHH
  #2 (permalink)   IP: 67.177.243.104
Old 08-08-2008, 07:59 PM
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Cat Damiano Cat Damiano is offline
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Re: Another CW PROBLEM UGGGGGHHHHH

Countrywide insider stole mortgage applicants' data, FBI says
The former employee and a suspected accomplice are arrested. As many as 2 million customers' information was allegedly targeted.
By E. Scott Reckard and Joseph Menn
Los Angeles Times Staff Writers

August 2, 2008

The FBI on Friday arrested a former Countrywide Financial Corp. employee and another man in an alleged scheme to steal and sell sensitive personal information, including Social Security numbers, of as many as 2 million mortgage applicants.

The breach in security, which occurred over a two-year period though July, was one of the largest in years, experts said.

The insider was identified as Rene L. Rebollo Jr., 36, who had worked as a senior financial analyst at Full Spectrum Lending, Countrywide's subprime lending division. He was arrested at his home in Pasadena and charged with unauthorized access to a financial institution's computers.

Authorities also arrested Wahid Siddiqi, 25, at his home in Thousand Oaks. Authorities alleged that he was a reseller of Countrywide data.

"Some, perhaps most, and possibly all the names were being sold to people in the mortgage industry to make new pitches," U.S. attorney's spokesman Thom Mrozek said.

Rebollo's attorney, Michael V. Severo of Los Angeles, could not be reached for comment. Rebollo appeared in court Friday afternoon and was released on $80,000 bond.

Siddiqi was being held on a fraud charge pending a court appearance Monday, and prosecutors did not know whether he had a lawyer.

In an affidavit filed in federal court, the FBI said Rebollo had voluntarily described the scheme. Rebollo said he would charge $400 or $500 for batches of thousands of "leads" -- personal and account information that presumably would help outside loan agents solicit new mortgages from the Countrywide applicants, some of whom had been denied loans by the Calabasas company.

Authorities said they didn't know whether any of the information had been used for outright fraud, such as identity theft.

Rebollo would copy information on about 20,000 customers at a time on Sunday nights by using a Full Spectrum computer that did not have the same security features that other machines in the office had, according to the affidavit by FBI Special Agent Richard P. Ryan.

At that rate, the U.S. attorney's office said, Rebollo would have compromised up to 2 million customer profiles for about 2.5 cents each -- an astonishingly small amount considering the importance of the material. Mortgage leads are among the most expensive for sale because of the potential payoffs to intermediaries when loans are made.

In April, online mortgage broker LendingTree Inc. filed a suit claiming that two of its former employees gave prospective brokers unauthorized access to information on potentially millions of clients. The FBI is investigating that case as well, but authorities said the two were unrelated.

Social Security numbers alone generally fetch dollars, not pennies, since they can be used to open new bank accounts.

"It's the potential for new-account fraud that arises when Social Security accounts are compromised," said Beth Givens, director of the nonprofit Privacy Rights Clearinghouse. "That's the most serious kind of financial identity theft," because large amounts can be involved and the fraud is more difficult to detect than it is on preexisting accounts.

"This guy obviously didn't do his homework. He doesn't know the value of these on the black market," she said.

Givens said the breach was among the 10 largest involving sensitive information in the last 18 months.

A January 2007 breach at retailer T.J. Maxx exposed 45 million credit card numbers. Six months later, Certegy Check Services Inc. lost information on 8 million accounts to an insider. In March, the Hannaford Bros. supermarket chain reported the theft of data on more than 4 million accounts.

In the most recent case, Countrywide detected the breach and alerted federal authorities, according to Suzy Martin, a spokeswoman for the company, which was acquired by Bank of America on July 1.

On July 15, Rebollo voluntarily turned over to the FBI a flash drive he used to download the information and a personal computer, according to Ryan. The agent said in his affidavit that he pulled up about 40 spreadsheets at random from the flash drive.

"I observed large quantities of names associated with several columns of numeric data," Ryan wrote. "These columns contained telephone numbers, addresses and Social Security account numbers. Each spreadsheet contained several thousand lines of data."

Rebollo's attorney later called to say Rebollo had revoked permission for the FBI to search the drive and computer, and the searches stopped "pending further discussions regarding Rebollo's potential cooperation in the investigation," Ryan said.

A criminal complaint against Rebollo said that he earned about $65,000 a year at Countrywide and had opened a personal bank account for holding what he estimated to be up to $70,000 in proceeds from Countrywide data sales.

The complaint said Siddiqi sold computer discs containing data on Countrywide customers to a witness working for the FBI, taking in $4,000 for about 38,000 customer profiles.

During the housing boom, Countrywide was the nation's largest mortgage lender and competed in all segments of the home-loan business, including subprime loans for high-risk borrowers. Subprime lenders aggressively courted these borrowers, hoping to persuade them to refinance their mortgages and replace them with new loans that featured low initial "teaser" interest rates.
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Re: Another CW PROBLEM UGGGGGHHHHH
  #3 (permalink)   IP: 72.220.118.52
Old 08-08-2008, 10:52 PM
faith faith is offline
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Re: Another CW PROBLEM UGGGGGHHHHH

Oh my goodness!!!

These crooks need to be prosecuted and be put in jail for the rest of their lives.

I have not checked my credit history because I did not want to see what CW
put in my credit and I didn't want to see how many points they've lowered my score. Now, these crooks did these horrible thing. Don't they have compassion to people?

Don't they(CW and lenders) check backgrounds and criminal history before they hire and put their employees to a very confidential and delicate matter?

For the love of money, how much money Rebolla saved doing this crooked thing, $70k but he has to pay $80k for his bond and probably spending more money, lawyer fees, courts, unable to look for a job and he's facing jail time and I hope that the Judge will give them the maximum punishment, maybe lifetime or lethal injection.

Thanks for that information

Faith
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Re: Another CW PROBLEM UGGGGGHHHHH
  #4 (permalink)   IP: 71.108.105.227
Old 08-08-2008, 10:57 PM
cookiefrmcali cookiefrmcali is offline
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Re: Another CW PROBLEM UGGGGGHHHHH

Thanks Cat for the article. I guess for the next few weeks, I'll be busy trying to monitor my credit reports. This is soooo unbelievable.
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Re: Another CW PROBLEM UGGGGGHHHHH
  #5 (permalink)   IP: 71.108.105.227
Old 08-09-2008, 01:50 PM
cookiefrmcali cookiefrmcali is offline
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Re: Another CW PROBLEM UGGGGGHHHHH

I hope everyone check their credit reports. Please do so. I got my letter yesterday. The letter was dated 8/2/08. A day after they arrested these crooks.

I live in a new housing tract, which the builder required that the home buyer be approved through Countrywide. I will also let my neighbors know about this, as well. Please spread the word about this nightmare!!!!!
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