By Karen Freifeld
NEW YORK, Feb 22 (Reuters) - The U.S. Attorney's office in
New Jersey is investigating Credit Suisse AG over
mortgage-backed securities packaged and sold by the bank,
according to people familiar with the matter.
U.S. Attorney's offices in other districts are focusing on
other banks in related investigations, said the people, who were
not authorized to speak publicly. It was unclear how many U.S.
Attorneys were involved.
The investigations show that authorities are still trying to
build cases over the alleged misconduct by banks that led to the
2008 financial crisis.
The New Jersey probe came out of a working group created by
President Barack Obama in January 2012, one of the people said.
The task force, called the Residential Mortgage-Backed
Securities (RMBS) Working Group, was supposed to coordinate a
series of federal and state investigations into shoddy loans
that were packaged and sold to investors. Those securities
spread risk throughout global markets and were a major
contributing factor to the financial crisis.
The U.S. Justice Department said early last year that it had
sent civil subpoenas to 11 financial institutions as part of its
investigation of the RMBS market.
U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman of New Jersey is examining how
Credit Suisse handled the mortgage-securitization process, step
by step, according to one of the people.
Matthew Reilly, a spokesman for Fishman, declined to
comment.
Adora Andy, a spokeswoman for the Justice Department, did
not immediately return a call for comment.
Jack Grone, a spokesman for Zurich-based Credit Suisse,
Switzerland's second largest-bank, also declined to comment.
Credit Suisse has been the target of other U.S. probes over
mortgage-backed securities. In November, the bank agreed to a
$120-million settlement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission over civil charges stemming from the bank's sale of
risky mortgage bonds to investors before the crisis.
The bank settled the SEC case without admitting wrongdoing.
Separately, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman
filed a civil lawsuit against Credit Suisse in November. The
complaint accused Credit Suisse of misleading investors who lost
$11.2 billion in mortgage-backed securities sponsored by the
bank.
Schneiderman is a co-chair of the RMBS Working Group formed
by Obama.
Schneiderman also filed a lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase &
Co in October. That case is over mortgage securities
sold by Bear Stearns, which JPMorgan acquired in a fire sale in
2008. The JPMorgan case was the first lawsuit to emerge from the
working group.
The Justice Department in Washington is also investigating
JPMorgan over allegations that Bear Stearns provided misleading
information about its mortgage products in the lead-up to the
financial crisis, as Reuters reported Wednesday.
Earlier this month, in one of its most ambitious cases tied
to the crisis, the Justice Department filed a $5 billion lawsuit
against McGraw Hill's Standard & Poor's unit. Filed in
Los Angeles, the lawsuit claims the credit rating agency schemed
to defraud investors in mortgage-backed securities that
collapsed in the financial crisis. Standard & Poor's has said
the lawsuit is "meritless."
During his 2012 State of the Union address, Obama said he
created the group investigating the packaging of risky mortgages
to "hold accountable those who broke the law" and to "help turn
the page on an era of recklessness."
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