Thursday, March 13, 2008

Will The First American Corporation Split in time...

OR Will it be driven into bankruptcy beforehand?
Source: International Oxford Analytica 03.12.08, 6:00 AM ET
A Think tank group reported on NY’s Attorney General: “Cuomo's investigations … tend to target conflicts of interest whereby companies have allegedly exploited consumers … and reflect a more proactive approach to the subprime crisis.”
“Last November, Cuomo filed a lawsuit against mortgage lender First American (nyse: FAF - news - people ) for allegedly conspiring with Washington Mutual (nyse: WM - news - people ) to inflate its real estate appraisals.”
“Cuomo believed fraudulent real estate appraisals were a key factor in artificially inflating real estate values and contributed to the subprime crisis.”
Obviously this case, with international implications, has potential crippling financial consequences for FAF.

If Cuomo and his helpers who are pursuing this case aggressively prove to be right,
The First American Corporation could well face claims running into hundreds of millions of dollars from defrauded parties.
Because Cuomo's office lacks the resources to mount intensive investigations of subprime legal violations, much of the heavy lifting in multiple ongoing probes is now being done by the Securities and Exchange Commission, The U.S. attorney's offices in Manhattan and Brooklyn and the FBI. Cuomo and other state attorneys general--in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts and Ohio--are playing an unofficial watchdog role, informally overseeing the activities of federal officials.
If Cuomo prevails in time, First American may well be stopped from splitting and find itself driven into bankruptcy instead.

Note that in my personal case, The First American Corporation did not hesitate to engage into fraud and to accept an overly inflated appraisal from my crooked partner. Like in the WAMU case The First American Corporation did so, solely in the hope of future business! See Jerome Lasky’s opinion (Moses & Singer, NY.) as disclosed previously on www.lleclezio.blogspot.com

In the light of the above it would appear that fraud spanning many years is systemic at The First American Corporation. Hopefully, this time, James J. Dufficy will not succeed to corrupt his old work pals at the FBI and get them to squash the case!

In any event, those touting Jan ’09 calls at $50 are nothing but paid FAF shills wearing a variety of hats to best serve the corporation and further defraud the public. Their orchestrated punch and counter punch tactic is a well thought out psychological strategy. It emanates from a common boiler room and it is solely designed to influence buy and sell modes of the public in order to suit the corporation’s long term ambitions.

Oxford Analytica is an independent strategic-consulting firm drawing on a network of more than 1,000 scholar experts at Oxford and other leading universities and research institutions around the world.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi...I'm trying to find the International Oxford Analytica report from March 12 regarding the FAF bankruptcy but don't see it. Can you possibly post a link to the report or direct us to it?

Thanks so much - very informative blog on FAF!

Louis Leclezio said...

Thank you for your kind comment.

Precision! Oxford Analytica was only the source of the comments reported in Forbes.com

Link: http://www.forbes.com/2008/03/11/spitzer-cuomo-litigation-cx_0312oxford.html?partner=yahootix

That article led me to question: ‘Will The First American Corporation Split in time OR Will it be driven into bankruptcy beforehand?’

Other than my personal opinion and the cited comments, Oxford Analytica has no article so entitled to my knowledge.

Anonymous said...

Very interesting!