Originally published November 10, 2010 at 10:11 PM | Page modified November 11, 2010 at 7:22 AM
Comments (0)
E-mail article
Print
Share
FDIC warns of legal action against officers of failed banks
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) has told dozens of former bank officers and directors that it has drawn up lawsuits accusing them of misdeeds such as fraud and breach of fiduciary duty.
Los Angeles Times
For former insiders at some of the several hundred banks that collapsed during the financial crisis and in its aftermath, a day of reckoning has arrived.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) has told dozens of former bank officers and directors that it has drawn up lawsuits accusing them of misdeeds such as fraud and breach of fiduciary duty. The federal agency is seeking damages to help offset losses in the nation's deposit insurance fund.
It's time, the FDIC warns these officials, to sit down and work out settlements — or head to court to decide the matters there.
The letters being sent by the agency are "very detailed," said Jeffrey Tisdale, a Los Angeles lawyer for former officials of five banks targeted by the agency.
"I mean eight to 10 single-spaced pages of purported misdeeds," he said.
The showdowns follow FDIC probes that typically take well over a year.
"We're only doing this after careful investigation. We don't bring suit every time a bank fails," said Richard Osterman, the FDIC's acting general counsel.
The FDIC board has authorized suits seeking to recover more than $2 billion from more than 80 former bank officials, up from about 50 a month ago, Osterman said. The number could multiply as the agency works through its investigative backlog.
The agency could end up suing or settling with former insiders of about one-quarter of the more than 300 banks that have failed since the start of 2008, officials say.
"This is only the first wave," Tisdale said. "I've got my next five-year professional plan laid out pretty well."
Although the FDIC says it will try to settle the cases, officials expect to file a significant number of suits. Criminal charges could result in a few cases.
"We are investigating [criminal] bank fraud and related cases in many different parts of the country, including in California," said Fred Gibson, deputy inspector general at the agency.
![]()
So far only two civil suits have been filed. The first, filed in July, accuses four executives of Pasadena's defunct IndyMac Bank of negligence in granting construction and development loans that the suit says were unlikely to be repaid. The defendants are contesting the suit, which seeks $300 million in damages.
Last week, the FDIC sued 11 former insiders at defunct Heritage Community Bank in Glenwood, Ill. Calling the case "regrettable and wrong," defense lawyers said in a statement that their clients, in failing to foresee the economic meltdown, were no different from Wall Street and the FDIC itself.
Tisdale concurs that the FDIC is going after people for failing to accurately predict the future.
"The economy is the real culprit here," he said. "There was no way to plan for real-estate values dropping 30 percent to 50 percent throughout California, Nevada and Arizona."
But Darren Robbins, a San Diego lawyer who specializes in filing investment-fraud suits, says the FDIC has plenty to work with just by looking at what banks said about their assets toward the end of the boom.
"It's our belief that in places like Illinois, Georgia, California and Arizona there was an inordinate amount of game-playing with financial statements in '07 and '08," said Robbins, whose firm has fraud suits pending against several casualties of the bust, including PFF Bancorp, the former parent company of Pomona's PFF Bank & Trust, which failed in November 2008.
In targeting the former officials, the FDIC typically also has its eyes on insurance companies that would be on the hook for damages stemming from alleged misconduct by the bankers. In many cases, the FDIC formally gave notice of possible litigation months ago, just before the expiration of the relevant insurance policies, to ensure that the coverage would apply.
Some policies covering directors and officers don't apply to actions by the FDIC. In such cases, the agency is going after bank officials only if they have sufficient assets to justify the expense and risk of litigation, Osterman said.
The FDIC's litigation strategy borrows from a playbook the agency used after the savings-and-loan meltdown of about two decades ago. From 1986 through 1996 the FDIC recovered $5.1 billion from former insiders at failed banks and savings-and-loans, Osterman said. That's a small fraction of the eventual cost of the S&L crisis.
UPDATE - 09:46 AM
Exxon Mobil wins ruling in Alaska oil spill case
UPDATE - 09:32 AM
Bank stocks push indexes higher; oil prices dip
UPDATE - 08:04 AM
Ford CEO Mulally gets $56.5M in stock award
UPDATE - 07:54 AM
Underwater mortgages rise as home prices fall
NEW - 09:43 AM
Warner Bros. to offer movie rentals on Facebook
More Business & Technology headlines...

Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
general classifieds
Garage & estate salesFurniture & home furnishings
Electronics
just listed
More listings
POST A FREE LISTING
- McNerney: Boeing will squeeze suppliers and cut jobs
- Percy Harvin already impressing Seahawks teammates, coaches
- Turmoil surrounds program to help prostitutes
- Sinking Mariners lose sixth straight game; changes ahead?
- Immigrant to compete for Miss Seafair crown
- Mexico cartel dominates, torches western state
- Brave woman tried to reason with London attackers
- No question: Russell Wilson's in charge now
- Bridge collapse will cause holiday travel headaches
- Jesus Montero's days as Mariners catcher are over
- Is Catholic Church taking over health care in Washington?
370 - Official: Treasury played no role in IRS targeting
321 - Vote on gay Scouts comes at emotional moment
174 - Businesses refuse service to gays
168 - Bridge collapses on Interstate 5 over Skagit River; cars in the water
153 - Mariners option Jesus Montero to AAA, all but ending catching career
137 - McNerney: Boeing will squeeze suppliers and cut jobs
132 - Mariners veterans call team meeting after getting routed again
87 - Official bowl schedule released
80 - First shoe drops: Montero headed to Tacoma
56
- McNerney: Boeing will squeeze suppliers and cut jobs
- Is Catholic Church taking over health care in Washington? | Danny Westneat
- Amazon’s plan for giant spheres gets mixed reaction
- Careers carved at wood-tech center
- Catholic schools update to compete with charter schools
- Doctors save Ohio boy by ‘printing’ an airway tube | Close-up
- UW Medicine, Catholic health system to have ‘strategic affiliation’
- Food-video site launched by Bellevue consumer-research firm
- China’s wealthy paying cash for Eastside luxury homes
- Council panel OKs zoning for big pot-growing operations

News where, when and how you want it
All newsletters Privacy statement