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FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010

United States of America
Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission

INTERVIEW OF
PATRICIA LINDSAY

Wednesday, March 24, 2010
11:52 a.m. to 1:11 p.m. EST

*** Confidential ***

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FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
--o0o--

MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, I’m going to do a little

thing we call a preamble.
MS. LINDSAY:

Okay.

MR. CUNICELLI:

This is Victor Cunicelli of

the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission.
is March 24, 2010.

Today’s date

The time is approximately 11:52 a.m.

Eastern Standard.
I’m accompanied by Tom Borgers of the FCIC and
Ms. Patricia Lindsay, L-I-N-D-S-A-Y.

We are at the

offices of the FCIC for the interview of Ms. Lindsay.
The interview will be recorded with the
consent of Ms. Lindsay.
Ms. Lindsay, could I get your verbal consent
for the record?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

Yes, I’m agreeing to be

recorded.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Thank you.

Will everyone please state your full name and
affiliation for the record, and please spell your last
name for the transcriptionist?
Tom?
MR. BORGERS:

Tom Borgers, that’s B-, as in
2

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
boy, -O-R-G-E-R-S.
MR. CUNICELLI:

And I spelled your name,

Ms. Lindsay, L-I-N-D-S-A-Y.

I didn’t spell my own.

It’s C-U-N-I-C-E-L-L-I.
Okay in the way of background, Ms. Lindsay,
the FCIC was established by statute and signed into law
by the President.
commissioners.

It is bipartisan, and consists of ten

It is charged with examining the causes

of the financial crisis and collapse or near-collapse
of major domestic and financial institutions.

The

Commission is charged with composing a report of
findings to the President and Congress by 15
December 2010.
The Commission may compel attendance and
testimony of witnesses and production of records.

I can

provide a copy of the statute by which the Commission
was formed, if you so desire.
And I can get you a copy of that, Ms. Lindsay.
It’s public -- it’s the FIEA law, Public Law 111-21,
May 20, 2009, if you so desire.
MS. LINDSAY:

Okay, that would be great.

MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, then I will -- I’ll make

a note and get that to you.
Okay, that out of the way, I’d like to get -if you could, could you give me a brief bio?

Why don’t
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FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
you start with your college education, and then just
give us a quick sketch of your work history.
MS. LINDSAY:

Okay, I have my associate in

arts in general studies from Southwestern College in
San Diego County.

I have my bachelor of arts in

physical education, health and human services, through
the California State University in Long Beach.
I grew up in the hard-money lending industry
with private lending.

My father was a hard-money

lender, so I started servicing loans about 1979, when I
was a teenager, to help my father with his loans.
I’ve held various, you know, positions
throughout my, you know, college education and
throughout my college career.
Started working as a loan officer, got my
real-estate license in, I believe, 1996.

And then I

took a job as an account executive at Beneficial
Mortgage in December of 1996.
From there, I accepted a position at New
Century Mortgage in June of 1997, where I was hired as a
wholesale underwriter.
And I remained at New Century Mortgage until
December of 2007, holding various positions throughout
the company.

My final position was vice president of

risk management.
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FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, great.

Just one follow-up question regarding your
time at New Century.
You were -- did you have any breaks in service
during those ten years with New Century?
MS. LINDSAY:

I didn’t have a break, but there

was a time that, in September of 1998, that I became
dismayed with one of my supervisors.

And I actually had

resigned -- had taken another position as an underwriter
at a different company.
And I actually didn’t leave.

The chief credit

officer found out what had happened and approached me
and created a position, or a position that they were
talking about creating and brought me in as the
corporate risk manager for the company.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay.

I’ll tell you what:

Okay, great.

Why don’t we talk

about -- for the record, New Century offered subprime,
Alt-A, and prime loans?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

And we also had a small

commercial division for a short time.
MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

Okay.

But the bulk of our business was

subprime, and the majority of our business came in the
wholesale division, which was originated by brokers and
5

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
submitted to New Century to fund.
MR. BORGERS:
was subprime?

Okay.

Approximately how much

Was it more than 60 percent?

MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, definitely.

I would say it

was probably -- at various times throughout our history,
it was -- you know, it was probably 95 percent of our
business.
And that may have changed as we acquired
different channels, but it was a huge percentage of our
business, for the bulk of our tenure.
MR. BORGERS:

And also you were acquiring

these mortgages from independent brokers?
MS. LINDSAY:

They would submit -- so the way

that wholesale would work is, independent brokers in the
country would have to become approved with New Century
to do business.

They would have to be properly licensed

in the state in which the property was located.

They

would have to sign a broker agreement, and we would do a
brief -- we would do a mark check on some of them.

And

then would become approved if there were no problems.
And then would submit their loans to New Century.
And they were also free to submit their loans
to other lenders, some of our peers or competitors, in
order to get the best -- theoretically, in order to get
the best break for their client.
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FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MR. BORGERS:

You know, a quick question on

the number of brokers.
Do you have any idea, was it more than 25,000?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, throughout -- we had -- I

mean, we had approximately -– and they weren’t all
active at the same time, but we had approved in our
system approximately 50,000 brokers.

And some would

fall off, but they weren’t all approved at the same
time.

I don’t know what the number was of having actual

approved for submitting loans at one time.
MR. BORGERS:
that front.

Now, one other quick question on

Did you have the ability to review the

performance of the broker?

To your knowledge, was that

something that New Century was doing, was looking at the
performance of these brokers?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

That was one of the things

that they were looking at, is if we had any problems
with a broker -- for example, if we had purchase
requests or if we had phone calls from a borrower or
found out that there was fraud in the file, we would go
review the broker’s pipeline.

And then if we –- the

broker was the cause of the problem or if it wasn’t
isolated, we would put them on watch, meaning, that all
of their loans had to be reviewed by a risk manager
prior to funding their loans.
7

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
If we found no more problems with them, we
found that it was isolated, then we continued doing
business.
If we found a pattern or a practice of bad
loans, fraud loans, they could be terminated.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay.

Ms. Lindsay, just so

we’re clear today, it seems like the overwhelming
majority of New Century’s business was in subprime.

But

when Mr. Borgers and myself ask you questions today, we
are chiefly interested with subprime.
MS. LINDSAY:

Okay.

MR. CUNICELLI:

So you can make an assumption

that when we ask a question, we are honing in on
subprime loans that New Century would have issued, and
not any other Alt-A or prime lines.

And if you’re going

to speak to those, please let us know.

Otherwise, we

will assume that you are speaking about subprime lines.
MS. LINDSAY:

Okay, they -- our brokers who

were approved in our subprime position also were able to
do Alt-A.

And there was no -- there was no lines to be

drawn, so to speak.

So basically, a broker who was

submitting a subprime loan, if his credit quality was a
little better, he was able to get the Alt A pricing.
As where our prime division was completely a
whole, separate division, they had their separate lines.
8

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
So when I’m talking about subprime, it’s real
hard to kind of separate that out from some of the
Alt-A.

I don’t know the numbers offhand.

But they kind

of went hand in hand.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, excellent.

You were a risk manager -- excuse me, you were
the vice president for corporate risk at New Century.
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:

When did you start that

position?
MS. LINDSAY:

I held that position for

approximately four years.
either ‘03 or ‘04.

I was promoted in January,

I can’t remember offhand.

MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, and you left in

December ’07?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:

So if you had it four years --

I guess it was roughly the beginning of ‘03 to end ‘07?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, I would say that that’s

fair.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay.

Could you tell us a

little bit about what a vice president for corporate
risk would do for a company such as New Century?
MS. LINDSAY:

My charter was primarily the

fraud detection and prevention for the company.

So we
9

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
would look at ways to mitigate fraud and losses related
to fraud.
So I was implementing tools, taking our bad
loans on the back, and worry that the request to
repurchase or were not performing sent over to us from
various entities to see how we could prevent them from
happening again.

Basically, learning from our mistakes,

we could implement tools or procedures and prevent that
from happening again.
One -- helped kind of various -- had various
duties throughout my years there.

One of them while I

was vice president of risk management was also we’d be
filling requests to repurchase.

So far, investors or an

insurance company like MGIC would request repurchase or
deny coverage on a loan, either myself or one of my
employees review the request to see if it was a valid
request.
MR. BORGERS:
for the repurchase?

Okay.

And what year was that

Were you responsible for the

repurchase?
MS. LINDSAY:

I was responsible for that until

approximately the end of 2006.

At that point, they had

developed a separate department that was overseen by the
chief credit officer specific to dealing with repurchase
requests.
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FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MR. BORGERS:

Okay.

So basically, it was from

2003 to the end of 2006 for the repurchase?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

And I also -- I had dealt

with it pretty much my entire career at New Century from
the time I became a corporate risk manager, in September
of ‘98.

Whenever there was any suspected fraud or

problems, I would be sent the repurchase request.
There weren’t a lot of them back then.
The repurchase requests that were specific to
first payment defaults or breach of our representations
and warranties would go directly to our secondary
marketing department.

So I never saw it.

I only dealt

with the ones that were suspected fraud.
MR. BORGERS:

Okay, so the first payment

defaults you did not see?
MS. LINDSAY:

Correct.

MR. BORGERS:

For the entire time?

MS. LINDSAY:

For the rest of the time, yeah.

And then I don’t remember at what point, there
was a point where we wanted to start looking at some of
the first payment defaults to see if there was fraud in
them, you know, and see what caused the first payment
default.

Is it because of, you know, some type of false

information that was created and then, you know, you had
various measures of trying to prevent the fraud, as I
11

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
spoke about earlier.
For example, if we had an overinflated
appraisal, we would no longer accept the appraiser’s
work.

If we had a victim of identity theft, we would

put their Social Security number on our stop list so we
would no longer revictimize them and help clean up their
credit or, you know, stop reporting on their credit.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Ms. Lindsay, New Century was

the third largest prime lender between 2005 and 2007 in
the United States.
What would you say was New Century’s key to
arriving at such a dominant place in the market?
MS. LINDSAY:
stuff.

We were automating a lot of our

We were trying to automate as much as possible

to get loans through faster.

And we had, as I mentioned

earlier, a very large broker network that were
submitting loans to New Century.
We had -- you know, our pricing was generally
more favorable.

We could close loans quicker than some

of our competitors, and the brokers would want to submit
their loans to us because of that.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, and you were with New

Century for ten years, ‘97 through 2007.
Did you see changes in the a marketplace,
particularly?

I guess, in the mid-2000 range as New
12

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
Century grew, did you see a changing in underwriting
standards?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, we were always changing our

products, our guidelines, was involved in some of the
policies and procedures and guidelines specific to fraud
on that end.
They were pretty consistent until I would
say -- and I don’t have the guidelines in front of me so
I don’t remember when they started changing; but it just
seemed somewhere towards the end, it just got really
lax.

We started -- I think it might have been ‘04, when

we started doing the 80/20s.

And then that product

became very, very popular.
And I have a couple of theories on that, why
it became so popular.

But that was one of our big

product changes.
And then we would also do an interest-only
product so then your payment was very low to start off
with for two years.
products.

That was one of our more popular

It was called a 2/28, fixed for two years,

and then it would turn to an adjustable-rate mortgage
after the two years.
MR. BORGERS:

Ms. Lindsay, the 80/20, are you

talking about the piggyback loans?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, yes.

So, you would have a
13

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
first mortgage that would be an 80 percent loan to
value; we would have a second mortgage that was at
20 percent loan to value, and then we had different
investors who would purchase each of those products.
MR. BORGERS:

And did you know whether or not

the person buying the first 80 would also buy the second
20?
MS. LINDSAY:
or not.

I don’t recall offhand if it was

I’m not remembering them.
But they would definitely be pooled

differently and sold differently.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, so just to recap that,

you say that underwriting was fairly consistent from ‘97
until, roughly, about 2004, at which time this 80/20
product and this interest-only 2/28 product were phased
in.
As a risk manager, were you concerned at this
change in underwriting?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

Just from my -- there was

not -- there was -- when I started noticing, we would
have, for example, a couple of fraud loans come back or
repurchase requests.

When they started trickling in, I

would bring that to the attention of executive
management.

We would talk about it.

They would go pull statistics and ask, you
14

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
know, “Is this a big problem or not?”
big problem.

Well, it wasn’t a

But it seemed like every loan that I saw,

which I only saw the bad loans, were 8/20s.

And the

reason is because that was the place where people want
to commit fraud because they had no stake in the game.
They had no -- they could get 100 percent financing on
a property, and they could easily walk away.

So they

didn’t have to bring any money to get involved in this.
MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

Okay.

But by -- I mean, when we’re

doing, you know, 25,000-plus loans a month, depending on
the year, when you have four loans come in in one month,
that’s such a small percentage, that it didn’t resonate
with anybody that this is going to be a problem.
MR. BORGERS:

I just have to stop you there,

Ms. Lindsay, for a second.
Even though there were only a few loans coming
in, those few loans were just fraud related.
Any loans that were coming in for first
payment defaults you wouldn’t know about -MS. LINDSAY:

Correct.

MR. BORGERS:

-- that were coming for the

MS. LINDSAY:

That’s correct.

80/20s?
I didn’t have

that information.
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FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MR. BORGERS:

So the 80/20s could have had --

do you have any idea how many early payment defaults
were coming in?

Did you ever see a report that could

help you identify the level of repurchases for early
payment to full in the secondary market?
MS. LINDSAY:

I had seen reports, and I know

that they progressively grew.

And that is one of the

reasons that we had to create a specific desk for
repurchase requests, because they would deal with all of
the repurchase requests in one area.

So they would deal

with first-payment defaults if any other breach.
I did see some of the reports, and I know that
that number grew significantly towards the end.

And I

don’t know at which point that number actually grew.
But I know back in early 2000 we had very few repurchase
requests.
MR. CUNICELLI:
MR. BORGERS:

Okay.

Go ahead.

Yes, so could you give us a

rough idea of how many repurchases were because of early
payment defaults on the secondary side?

Was it like

2 percent, 3 percent, 4 percent, 5 percent?
MS. LINDSAY:

I honestly don’t know.

I

wouldn’t be the best person to answer that.
MR. CUNICELLI:
MR. BORGERS:

Okay.

Did you ever see anything on
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FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
that side?
MS. LINDSAY:

You know, I’m sure I did see

some of the reports, and it’s just not sticking with me
because that wasn’t my focus, other than how can we use
those first-payment defaults to prevent on the frontend,
and how many of those are fraudulent.

So I may have

extracted some of those numbers or done some spot audits
or something.

But I just don’t remember the numbers

offhand.
MR. BORGERS:

But as a professional in the

mortgage subprime industry, if you saw -- what level
would you be very concerned about for early payment
default level?

If you were selling a pool of

$300 million worth of loans to X-purchaser, if that
pool -- early payment defaults went to 5, 8, 10 percent,
would that be significant, in your eyes?
MS. LINDSAY:
significant.

I would think it would be

But, once again, I wasn’t the person who

was dealing with those numbers.

It was secondary

marketing that was looking at those and making those
decisions.
But, yes, I -- so I don’t really -- I wouldn’t
really know what number would be -- I just know that the
number was more significant than it was in the early
2000s.
17

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay.

Ms. Lindsay, getting

back to the size of New Century and it growing, did New
Century have warehouse line relationship with various
financial institutions?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, we had several warehouse

lines with several different financial institutions.
That’s how we were funding our loans.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, did you -- who were some

of the bigger warehouse lines that you had?
MS. LINDSAY:

We had -- let’s see, who did we

have?
We had Morgan Stanley was one of them; we
had -- Morgan Stanley is the only one that’s coming to
mind.
I’m thinking of some of our investors, but I’m
not sure if we had warehouse lines with them.
Bank was our custodian.

Deutsche

I can’t remember if we had a

line with them or not.
MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

How about Citicorp?

I believe Citicorp was one of

them, yes.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay.

And how did the -- how

did the warehouse lines, as somebody who is not a
banker, maybe you could explain to me -- or a mortgage
broker, how do the warehouse lines facilitate your or
18

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
New Century writing loans?
MS. LINDSAY:

We would use it -- I guess kind

of in laymen’s terms -- kind of like a credit card,
except for the fact that when funds were -- when the
funds were wired, they would go to the warehouse lender
directly, so they would have a custodian for the
documents and they -- So they would have -- make sure
that they needed -- so rather than a credit card where
we would make the payments, you know, after the fact,
the warehouse lender would have involvement in that
piece of it.
And that’s probably not explaining it very
well, is it?
MR. CUNICELLI:

So would New Century have been

able to write the volume of loans they were writing
without these warehouse lines.
MS. LINDSAY:

No, we couldn’t have made any

loans without the warehouse lines.
MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

Okay.

So --

As a matter of fact at the end,

when our warehouse lenders shut us down, business
stopped.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay.

And I guess these are,

you know, pretty big Wall Street banks:
Citicorp.

Morgan Stanley,

So they’re providing the warehouse lines.
19

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
Did that make originators like New Century
possible, in your eyes?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, absolutely.

That’s -- we

had to have an investor -- and then we had to have a
vehicle.

So in other words, yes, we would have to have

those -- the funds in order to fund the loans up-front,
and then we would have to have a vehicle to get the
loans off of those warehouse lines within a certain
period of time.

So we had to have an outlet to sell

them to, which we did.
MR. CUNICELLI:

And the outlet, you’re

selling -- are you selling a large portion of these
loans back to that -- to like a Wall Street channel?

To

a Morgan Stanley or -MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

were sold or securitized.

100 percent of our loans

So we had -- and, once again,

I probably wouldn’t be the best person to explain
because I just have a very rudimentary knowledge of how
securities work; but we would do whole-loan sales to a
Wall Street investor, where they would pay us a
percentage or a premium for the pool of loans that
they -- you know, $100 million, $300 million pool; and
then they would put them into securities.

But our

investor would be, let’s say, Morgan Stanley, and then
they would put them into securities.
20

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

Okay.

And at one time we had, we

became a real estate investment trust where we
securitized our own loans with the help of Wall Street
investors again.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay.

And would you have

sourced loans back to Citi as well?
MS. LINDSAY:
Wall Street investors.

I believe they were one of our
I don’t know the volume.

Morgan Stanley was one of the ones that I
dealt with quite often.
MR. BORGERS:

CBASS, First Boston, XSIS -On your own securitization, what

was that called?
MS. LINDSAY:

Who are investment banker was on

it, or who -- we became a real estate investment trust,
a REIT.
MR. BORGERS:
called?

Right.

And what was that

Do you remember the exact -- I know it’s New

Century something, but -MS. LINDSAY:

I think it -- it may have been

New Century Real Estate Investment Trust.
MR. BORGERS:

Okay.

MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, I don’t know.

We had

different names for everything.
But most of our loans that were securitized or
21

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
sold on the Wall Street had the “NC” after them, and
that’s how you can identify in securities.

For example,

when I’m looking at a loan or we’re repurchasing a house
or paying off a loan, we can see who initiated that loan
based on the initials on it.
New Century always had an “NC.”

They would

have, like, the year and then it would have the
mortgage-backed security in the system goes after it,
and then it would -- for example, a BNC, like for BNC
Mortgage.

So you could kind of see who originated the

loans and were put into those securities based on some
of that information.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, Ms. Lindsay, with the

Wall Street firms giving New Century these warehouse
lines, was there a shared risk between New Century and
these companies or was most of the risk with New
Century?
MS. LINDSAY:

To my knowledge, all of the risk

was to the originator.
So we had representations and warranties that
were several inches thick that state various things.
For example, the first payment default clause, a
first-payment default could be classified within the
first 45 days or 90 days or whatever was designated.
There would be, you know, fraud information.
22

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
So if there was any fraud in the file -- I’m kind of
simplifying it -- but if there was any fraud in the
file, then we would be expected to repurchase.
There were various things so that if anything
went wrong with the loans, New Century was expected to
repurchase them.

Or if there was a loss incurred

because of that, we would be expected to indemnify them.
Now, as far as I know, the brokers -- the
Morgan Stanleys or -- and I don’t want to keep pointing
the finger at them, they’re just the only name I can
think of off the top of my head -- but they would
arrange these loans, put them into securities.

And as

far as I know, they were just a pass-through.

They had

no repurchase, no liability at all, as far as I know.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay.

In dealing with you

and others in the mortgage banking industry, I hear a
lot of mortgage banking terms, such as “front-end”
and “back-end functions” and whatnot.
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:

When you say “front-end”

or “back-end,” to what -- what type of work are we
talking about would be front-end and what type of
back-end?
MS. LINDSAY:
process of origination.

“Front-end” would be during the
So all front-end would be the
23

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
underwriting, the submission of the loan, all the way
until the loan is funded and recorded.
Once the loan is closed, so to speak, and
boarded on the servicing platform, it becomes the
back-end.
So now we have the loan that’s performing
because it has closed, the monies have all disbursed.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, well, then let me ask

you based on that, were front-end and back-end functions
of equal import at New Century?

Were they compensated

equally, and were employees in corresponding front-,
back-end functions given equal levels of authority?
MS. LINDSAY:

It was -- the front-end, the

originators, the loan officers, account executives,
basically the salespeople were the reason our loans came
in.

So they were compensated accordingly.

They were

compensated very well.
The underwriters who would basically put
conditions on the file to see if the loan qualified, to
see if the borrower qualified, a lot of times they were
given a hard time if they didn’t approve something.

So

they took a lot -- and the same thing with the
appraisers.

If the appraisers cut a value, they were

not very well favored by a lot of the salespeople.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay.
24

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MS. LINDSAY:

The back-end was a lot easier

because then we had proof that, for example, a loan was
bad.

And it was a lot easier to be on the back-end and

show the facts and say, “Look, this went bad because of
this.”

It was more tangible.
But front-end was more intangible because

unless we had fraud.

For example, if we had proven

fraud, it was easy.

You would just close it down and

nobody would argue with that.
If it was something that was considered a
business decision, the underwriters and other people who
were looking at these loans would really be given a hard
time.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, I guess the second part

of that question was the authority, you know, the sales.
I guess you’re kind of using sales for frontend.
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, yes, sales was front-end,

correct.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Right.

Were salespeople given

basically higher levels than people in corresponding
assignments on the back-end, such as underwriting or
risk?
MS. LINDSAY:

Higher levels pay scales or

higher -25

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MR. CUNICELLI:

Higher -- titles, higher

authority, plus higher pay?
MS. LINDSAY:
salespeople.

They were commission-driven, the

And I don’t know exactly how the structure

worked as far as their managers and up.
But, for example, a front-line salesperson who
would be open with the broker -- and I’m talking more
about wholesale than I am retail because that was the
bulk of our business.

But so the AEs would go out and

they would get the business.
to sign off on anything.

But they had no authority

So they would hand the file

off to an underwriter, and then the underwriter was
basically -- we had different compensation structures.
They were basically salaried employees.

And at

different times, they would get -- they may get a bonus
per file or there were different structures throughout.
But basically, the AEs, salespeople, and in the sales
chain of command, they would make a lot of –- a lot more
money than, let’s say, an underwriter or funder.
MR. CUNICELLI:
said “AE.”

Just to follow-up, you

Is that “account executive”?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, and AEs, these account

executives, so they would have a salary portion of their
income, and they would have an incentive portion?
26

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MS. LINDSAY:

It was basically incentive.

And I’m not sure -- I know -- I don’t know if
they had a small base salary or not.

I know some did,

but I wasn’t really involved in that piece.

But I do

know that they were -- the bulk of their income was
commission.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, they were

commission-based?
And so they could -- their incentive income
could be affected by their individual performance?
MS. LINDSAY:

It was directly impacted by

their individual performance.
MR. CUNICELLI:

And so more sales of loans,

more income?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:

And you, for instance, or

people on the back-end, risk underwriting that’s -- or
excuse me, risk appraisal.
Were you able to affect your set -- your bonus
structure on an individual basis?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, I couldn’t really speak for

the appraisers because they -- it may have had a
different structure, and I don’t know what their pay
structure was.
But, for example, the risk managers, we were
27

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
paid -- and a lot of the executives in the company were
paid a salary plus bonus.

And the bonus was based on

the performance of the company.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, so that was basically a

group-based incentive, based on the company’s
performance?
MS. LINDSAY:

Correct.

I could not influence

my income based on what I did.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Did you ever attempt to get

individual incentive measures put on your pay?
MS. LINDSAY:

I did.

I had actually asked at

one point, when I was the only corporate risk manager, I
asked, “Can I get compensated for all the fraud loans I
stopped?”

And they said, no, that that wouldn’t work.
MR. BORGERS:

Okay.

So just to give us a

little comparison between the front-end account
executive, I think you told us in a prior discussion
that you’ve heard that some account executives were
getting a million dollars or more?
MS. LINDSAY:

A year?

Absolutely, yes.

Some

of them were getting several hundred thousand dollars a
month.

The wholesale account executives.
MR. BORGERS:

Okay.

MS. LINDSAY:

Because they would go out, and

they would have their brokers.

And depending on how big
28

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
the brokers were and how many people they had within
their companies, they could make a lot of money.
MR. CUNICELLI:
for me?

Could you clarify something

Could -MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:

Could I have been hired, for

example, as an account executive with little banking
background, and in a year, have been earning that sort
of income on commission?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:

And so you had maybe -- did

the account executives tend to have less experience than
the back-end people?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

And in all fairness, I

mean, their sales -- they were there to get sales.

And

they did not have the authority to underwrite the file
or to make decisions.

Although if they were a

high-producing AE, then they seemed to have little more
power because then they would scream if they didn’t get
some of their loans through.
MR. CUNICELLI:
up “screaming.”

Well, now, you bring

Was there a tense relationship at times

between sales and some of the back-end personnel when,
say, an appraisal didn’t appraise or risk questioned a
loan?
29

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MS. LINDSAY:

Absolutely.

They would look at

it as basically affecting their income or killing their
sales or making their brokers angry, were their brokers
to take all their business up through [inaudible].

So

they held a lot of power in that respect because they
were -- they were driving the company.

Our sales were

what was made our company successful.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Did sales have a term that

they referred to back-office people?

Kind of a

dismissive term?
MS. LINDSAY:

I had heard a couple of terms,

so…
I was called a “loan Nazi.”
MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

“Loan Nazi”?

Yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, you were called that by,

I guess, somebody front-end, somebody sales?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, by a salesperson.

MR. CUNICELLI:
mean, did it escalate?

How ugly could this get?

I

Did sometimes sales managers

overrule or override risk or appraisal decisions?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

Some of the sales managers

did have that authority to make a business decision.

As

long as it was not confirmed fraud, they could override
it.
30

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
And I would like to say that those people, as
far as I know, there weren’t a lot of them.

I’d like to

say that most of the people at New Century were good,
hard-working, honest people.

I would like to think that

the few that I knew about, the sales managers who would
make poor business decisions were far and few between.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, okay.

Was -- I mean, so

I guess there seems to be a problem if somebody in sales
could overrule a decision from another department.
Was there a balance in the corporation towards
sales, so that if risk or appraisal had made a decision,
that sales was kind of equipped to overrule or override?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, some of our sales managers

in the sales side up to the -- and I don’t remember
offhand what their titles were –- but some of the senior
people on the sales side had the authority to basically
override anything, except for fraud.

Like I said,

everything was considered a business decision unless it
was confirmed fraud.
MR. CUNICELLI:
provable fraud?

Okay, and it had to be

It couldn’t be, you know --

MS. LINDSAY:

Correct.

MR. CUNICELLI:

-- you had a maintenance

mechanic who was allegedly making $200,000 a year.
That’s not provable?
31

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MS. LINDSAY:

Correct, yes.

Unless he came in

with full documentation with two years’ tax returns.
And if we were to execute the Form 4506 which goes to
the IRS and prove that the stuff he submitted was
fraudulent, that would be confirmed fraud.
If he stated the income, then it was not
provable, and that could be -- it would be considered a
business decision.
MR. CUNICELLI:

You were an executive in New

Century, a tenured individual.

You had ten years with

the company.
In your last year there, if you’re
comfortable, what was your base salary?
MS. LINDSAY:

It was in the low six figures.

MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, and your bonus, what

would your bonus have been, a percentage of that?
MS. LINDSAY:

My bonus would have been -- so I

had my base salary and my bonuses were about 50 percent.
MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

Almost.

MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

Okay.
40 percent, maybe.

Okay.

So another 40 percent on top of

the base.
MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

Okay, so --

And that’s based on how much my
32

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
last couple of quarters went at the company.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Right.

And was that the highest year of salary for
you?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, the last -- yes, the last

couple of years were, ‘05-06.
MR. CUNICELLI:
MR. BORGERS:

Okay.

Just getting back to the

salespeople and how the sales or revenue people were the
driving force.

Do you have any knowledge of if -- how

often they asked for exceptions on the underwriting side
or appraisal side?
MS. LINDSAY:

You know, I don’t, because I was

more -- I was very, very busy in my department, so I
didn’t see a lot of that.

Every once in a while, I

would get a complaint, from one of the local risk
managers who was seated within the department, where a
sales manager -- a sales manager would, you know, kind
of talk them into changing something or tell them that
they were wrong; that they were going to override,
anyway.

So I would get a few frustrated calls from some

of the local risk managers who had to deal with it on a
daily basis.
But that was the only time I really heard
about that.

Because I was not on the front line, I
33

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
rarely had to deal with that.

And if it was escalated

to me, I would call the sales manager, and I would, you
know, talk to them.
I actually went up and did some training with
a couple of different sales managers in a couple of
different divisions to show them why these were bad
loans, why we can’t do these kind of loans.

This is how

you make a good business decision.
They didn’t seem to be able to make good
business decisions.
talk to them.

So I would kind of educate them and

There were two specific ones in two

different regions that I went and actually met with and
kind of tried to bridge the gap to say, “Look, we’re all
in this together.

This is what we need to do in order

to stay in business.”
MR. CUNICELLI:

You know, it seemed like at

some point, I think you mentioned earlier about 2004
things started to really escalate.

The underwriting

seemed to change and lax -- and got more lax.
I guess could a lot of this be brought back to
about that time, that it became a volume business
and then -MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

I would say as soon as it

became a volume business -- you know, the senior
management and the executive management, they would talk
34

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
about if this is a loan that will pay or is it a loan we
can sell.

It seemed that we’re going towards if we

could sell it -- even though -- executive management
would follow the charts and follow our reports and, you
know, see how loans were performing.

They wanted to

make sure the loans were performing.
The problem with that is, we didn’t get the
information on a majority of our loans because we didn’t
have that information.

They were sold and moved on.

So

we didn’t know about that until down the road.
So it became -- we didn’t know how a lot of
these loans were performing.
salability.
them?

So it became a question of

You know, are they paying or can we sell

Well, you know, we’re selling them because we

don’t know if they’re paying.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay.

And let me ask you, you

have a long history in the banking industry.

And I

think you told Mr. Borgers and myself about the three
C’s of lending.
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:

Could you run over that for

me?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, we would have -- we would

look at basically credit, collateral, and capacity.

And

then back in the old days, in the seventies, we would
35

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
also look at the fourth C, which would be character.
Well, you kind of eliminate the character because we’re
not face-to-face with these people to try to determine
the type of character they are.

So we look at their

credit to try to help determine their character.
So the credit is –- and since we’re subprime,
we knew they were not great credit risks, so we
compensated by charging slightly higher interest rates.
We would look at their credit.
We would look at the capacity.
the ability to repay the loan.

Do they have

And the capacity would

be how long were they on the job, what kind of income do
they make.
And then the third would be the collateral,
which is the policy that we loaned on.
there?

Is the value

Do we have a good piece of property?

Does it

meet our guidelines, basically.
MR. CUNICELLI:

I guess maybe we should ask

then my next question, pre-2004 and post-2004.
Pre-2004, you know, was there a balance in the
three C’s at New Century?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, from what I’m remembering,

we didn’t do any 100 percent financing, that I can
remember.

I think our highest loan to value was

95 percent.
36

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
We -- you know, we did have some stated income
loans, but that wasn’t the biggest majority of our
loans.
Now -- so we had layered risk.

Basically,

we -- so we don’t have any of these components as we
kind of go on.
We’re expanding our market.

So it appears to

me that, you know, Wall Street was very hungry for our
product.

We had our loans sold three months in advance,

before they were even made, at one point.

And so they

were always trying -- and I don’t know who created the
product.

I don’t know if it was Wall Street.

But

basically, I know that, you know, we needed to create
more product to get more volume.
And during that time, we –- it changed
somewhere along the way to interest-only.
have -- so now the payments are low.

Now, we

So the capacity is

there, but then we -- prices -- housing prices started
going up, we started seeing more and more stated income
loans because people’s true income probably didn’t
qualify.
So we just -- we had these -- so now we have
100 percent financing, we have people with better credit
scores overall, but they didn’t have a depth of history,
so we would look at the FICO scores or the credit scores
37

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
to see their ability to repay, which most of them hadn’t
been homeowners before, so they really didn’t show any
capacity to repay.
Then we had the interest-only, so their
payments are lower.

And it just – it seemed that we

kept adding the risk on.
MR. BORGERS:

I just have a question about

just a little clarity here.

You said that New Century

never did more than 95 percent.

But, however, they did

have the 80/20’s, which is -MS. LINDSAY:

That was later, that was later,

MR. BORGERS:

Oh, okay.

MR. LINDSAY:

We didn’t have 100 percent

yes.

financing.

And I don’t remember when that changed.
It was early 2003’ish or 2004.

when the 80/20’s were created.

I don’t know

But we -- we would

always require that there was some type of a down
payment.

And like I said, we have some 90 percent

loan-to-values.

But we didn’t have -- the products

became more aggressive.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Right.

Yes, and I asked that

pre- and post-2004, you were giving me pre-?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:

And I think you said that
38

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
post-2004, you guys, New Century basically started
layering risk?
And when you say you “layered risk,” you mean
you’re adding to maybe a low credit score or FICO score
the added risk of questionable capacity and -MS. LINDSAY:

Right.

MR. CUNICELLI:

-- and questionable

collateral?
MS. LINDSAY:

Right.

And I say it’s

questionable collateral because values of homes,
especially in some of the hotter areas, like California,
Florida, Arizona, Las Vegas, Nevada, were increasing in
crazy numbers.

So you have a good piece of property,

but now it’s increasing 10, 15, 20 percent a month, in
some cases.

Now, your collateral is kind of -- so now

not only do you have somebody who has no -- no stake in
the game, they have no money into it; they can’t prove
their income, so they may or may not make that money.
They do sign this under penalty of perjury
that it’s true and correct.

You know, some lie.

Some

don’t even pay attention to it or notice it.
And then you have the interest-only.

So you

start with the low teaser rate, so you can make the
payment for the first few years.
So as time goes on, you have these people who
39

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
are struggling to make their interest-only payment, they
have no equity in their property, and then values start
going down.
And so now the interest rate pops up because
they’re no longer on their two-year fixed.

They’re now

either fully amortized or they have to start making
principal payments, too.

And then they find out that

their values have gone down and they have no equity and
no stake in the game, and so then they walk away.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, okay.

You -- I think

you told us a little earlier in response to a question
about repo, that for a long time, you handled repo other
than early-pay defaults.

But I guess when, like two

thousand -- the end of 2006 the volume got too big,
so -MS. LINDSAY:
started before that.

Yes, I would say it probably

The volume, I think, started

creeping up and they started noticing the problem, or at
least I started hearing about it maybe the end of ‘05,
the beginning of ‘06, when they were talking about
creating repurchase desk, and who would run it and who
were the best fit for that department.
I had actually talked about possibly being the
person to run it at one point, and I felt that it was
more than I could take on because of my fraud piece I
40

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
was doing.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay.

So it basically -- the

number of repos that were coming back to you kind of
swamped you and necessitated another position being
created?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:
MR. BORGERS:

Okay.

Can you give us any rough

estimate about what numbers are we talking about?
loans?

Two

A thousand loans?
MS. LINDSAY:

of loans.

Yes, more like maybe two pages

And I don’t want to put a number out because

I honestly don’t know.
Yes, it was more than two loans.

It was

probably like two pages of loans, plus.
MR. BORGERS:

And two pages of loans to daily

MS. LINDSAY:

Not daily.

or…
Probably -- I would

say that, you know, it started off per month, and then
it probably increased per week.
MR. BORGERS:

So you’re going from a

handful -- let’s say, ten or 15 loans prior to 2005, to
then it’s growing to what’s on a page 50, 100?
MS. LINDSAY:

Probably 50.

MR. BORGERS:

I’m sorry.
41

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, probably 50 to a page,

MR. BORGERS:

And then it was getting even

maybe.

beyond that, and then your group couldn’t handle it
anymore.
And did you have -- do you have any idea how
far that was growing?
MS. LINDSAY:

You know, I don’t.

I’ve done reports, and I just -- I honestly
looked through the reports, and we would pull the
statistics and put them in the reports.
remember any of those numbers offhand.

And I don’t
You know, I

would have to see the report to refresh my memory.

And

I left everything at the bank.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Ms. Lindsay, what was the

process that you went through to repo those loans, just
real briefly?
MS. LINDSAY:

For repurchases?

MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

We get investor requests.

So

the investor, usually the Wall Street investor would
hand us a list of loans and what the repurchase price
was.
Basically, we’d have to, you know, pay the
principal, the interest.

And they had paid the premium
42

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
for it like 1 or 2 percent, or whatever it was, we would
have to repay that.

And then we had a certain amount of

time in which we’re supposed to do that.

And then we

would -- it goes through the -- you know, we would wire
them the funds and then we would forward the loans to
whoever -- you know, if we were going to service them,
we would forward the loans back on our servicing
platform.
And then a lot of times, I know that those
loans were put in what’s called “scratch-and-dent
pools,” meaning, that they were non-performing loans.
So rather than us taking those back on to our warehouse
lines, we would resell them.

So we would pay our loss

almost immediately and not get them back on our books.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay.

And a question for you:

Were you asked -- as these volumes of repos started to
come in, were you asked by management to do anything
different with the repo loans in the way of timeliness?
MS. LINDSAY:

At the end, the end of ‘06, the

beginning of ‘07, we were told to just notify the
investors of fraud loans.

As with before, we would

automatically put them on our purchase list.
Apparently, money got very tight at the end.
Executive management, obviously, knew we had a bigger
problem than I knew about.

And we were told just to
43

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
notify the investors of fraud, and then let them come
back.
As where before, it was an automatic process.
We would automatically buy those loans back so we could
deal with them.

And then that changed at the end of

‘06, the beginning of ‘07.
MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

Okay, here --

And then also we found -- and

then also we found -- one of the things that I noticed,
too -- and I can’t remember the time, I’m guessing it
was the end of ‘06, maybe even the middle of ‘06 -getting some of the loans repurchased was very -- was
a very slow process.

We would ask, “When is this loan

going to be bought back?”

And sometimes they were

bought back quickly; other times they weren’t.
And I don’t know if that was a hang-up with
New Century or if it was the investment banks.
I do know that early on, when I was the only
one with repurchases in early 2000, I had -- we had a
fraud loan, and I had called the investment banker and
said, “Look, we have this identity-theft loan.

We need

to buy it back.”
And he said, “Are you kidding?

You want me to

take one loan out of this $100 million pool and sell it
back to you?”

He goes, “Do you know how hard that is to
44

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
do?”

And that was my first real realization that this

was not our old lending standards from, you know,
20 years ago.
MR. BORGERS:

I have something in your area.

Now, your area over – started from 2003 or so,
was really fraud as opposed to early payment defaults,
and you might classify that early payment defaults is
gross negligence or negligence.
But tell us how, specifically, your area grew
as fraud was concerned.

You know, give us, you know,

not specific numbers, unless you have it, you know, in
your computer or whatever.

But how did your area grow

from 2004, ‘05, ‘06, and ‘07, as far as the numbers are
concerned?

You know, be as specific as you can.
MS. LINDSAY:

I had -- well, I grew my staff.

I’m trying to think how many staff I had at one point.
I had -- I had -- let’s see, one, two, three, four,
five, six, seven, eight -- I think ten employees pretty
much at one time, as where that had grown from just
having, I think, two employees.
So throughout the years -- and I don’t know
when that all started growing -- but -- and I honestly
don’t -- I just know that all of a sudden we realized my
staff couldn’t keep up with all of the allegations of
fraud.

We would have -- it seemed like fraud was coming
45

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
out from everywhere.

We would have borrowers calling in

who were victims of identity theft.

We would have

just -- we would have our servicing department who would
send us over loans because we were servicing the loans,
and they would find fraud.

So they would refer those

over to us, and it just -- and it really grew.
don’t know the number.
MR. BORGERS:

And I

I apologize for that.
This is real important that we

have to identify, get some idea of what -- so your staff
grew to about ten.
MR. CUNICELLI:

And those are direct reports

to you, but you had -MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

-- staff in the field?

Yes.

And at one point, I had

the production risk manager rolling up to me.

She had

three managers who those three managers had about 65
employees throughout the country who were in the front
lines.
MR. BORGERS:

And those risk people, they

reported to you, too?
MS. LINDSAY:

For a short time, yes.

MR. BORGERS:

How -- what window of time?

MS. LINDSAY:

That was the end of ‘06, for

about -- probably about three months.

And then we
46

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
reorganized again.
MR. BORGERS:

I just want to drill down.

Trying to trigger your memory.

As I’m an old-time

reviewer, it’s difficult for me to focus on numbers.
But we try -- you know, if we can back into
the numbers on how the number of loans that your group
was reviewing on the fraud side, so that we can get some
rough idea of how serious the mortgage fraud was growing
at New Century.
MS. LINDSAY:

Right.

MR. CUNICELLI:

And if we could just kind of

trigger your memory here about rough numbers of how that
was growing into many millions of dollars.
$50 million?

Or was it

$100 million?

MS. LINDSAY:

Yeah, it was probably the low --

I’m trying to remember because we did do several
reports.

$10 million, maybe.
I’m trying to think how we -- I’m trying to

think back to when we were actually doing the reports
and we did all our charts and our graphs.
Yes, I remember, for example, that the
largest -- you know, the bulk of our pie chart, the bulk
of them were 80/20’s.

That was the biggest group that

came in.
And I’m remembering around $10 million in
47

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
volume as time had gone on, maybe ‘05, ‘06 numbers.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Ms. Lindsay, do you still have

access to data from your time at New Century or -MS. LINDSAY:

I don’t, no.

The trust has

that, Century Trust.
MR. BORGERS:

Okay, the trust of the

bankruptcy trustee?
MS. LINDSAY:

The bankruptcy, yes, correct.

MR. BORGERS:

Okay.

MS. LINDSAY:

They have all of that.

When I left New Century, I purposely left
everything there.

I just -- you know, just left

everything and was done, so…
MR. BORGERS:

So was that $10 million a month?

MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, that’s probably about

MR. BORGERS:

So roughly --

MS. LINDSAY:

You know what?

right.

You know what?
report.

I think we were doing our quarterly

So that was probably actually quarterly.
MR. BORGERS:

quarter.

You know what?

So $10 million a month -- or a

So let’s say the average home is $200,000.
MS. LINDSAY:

Uh-huh.

MR. BORGERS:

So we’re only talking about a

handful of loans, right?
48

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MS. LINDSAY:

It was a really -- that was the

problem, is when we would talk about these -- the fraud
loans, they’d say, “Well, what percentage?”

And the

percentage, based on our volume, was minuscule, was -and I don’t even know if I can quantify it by saying
one-tenth of 1 percent.
it.

I don’t even know if that was

It was a very miniscule amount compared to the

number of loans we were funding every month.
MR. BORGERS:

I’m --

MR. LINDSAY:

But you have to remember that

these are the ones that were starting to come to our
attention.

And there were a lot of that didn’t come

back to us, that the Wall Street investors either didn’t
realize they were fraud or were observing the losses and
never bothered coming back to us.

Or -- you know, and

so it was just a matter of time as we were growing.
MR. BORGERS:

Now, I --

MS. LINDSAY:

And some of them, not immediate.

I mean, you would get some from a couple of years prior.
So those would start creeping back in as they were going
back in to doing due diligence and realizing, “Hey, can
we recapture some of our losses on these?
there’s fraud from 2004.

Well, look,

Let’s go back to New Century

and they can indemnify us now.”
MR. BORGERS:

I think coming to understand
49

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
this -- and, you know, I was a mortgage banker many,
many, many, many years ago -MS. LINDSAY:

Uh-huh.

MR. BORGERS:

-- I think it just hit me on how

we can look at this and get a little bit more clarity
for the record.

And as my associate said a number of

times, he said -- and you also -- well, you commented -and here’s the thing, is that you would get all these
loans per day, per week, per month, whatever.

And only

unless it was blatant fraud or provable fraud did you
put it in your report as fraud.
MS. LINDSAY:

Correct.

MR. BORGERS:

So if you were just missing

documentation, if there was -- if there was no
verifiable income, or whatever, that would -MS. LINDSAY:
area, yes, absolutely.

That would fall in a different
We didn’t have anything to do

with all of the other pieces.
MR. BORGERS:

So, now –

MS. LINDSAY:

If they were missing

documentation if they were out of compliance, if there
was a lawsuit, whatever, I didn’t see those.
MR. CUNICELLI:

And was that a bone of

contention sometimes between you and sales, that, you
know, “They’re saying show us the numbers,” and you’re
50

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
saying, “There’s a problem,” and they’re saying,
“There’s no problem.

Show us in the numbers”?

MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

It was very frustrating,

probably more so for me than it would have been for
somebody else just because I grew up in the hard-money
lending where you would have equity in the property or
you would have some other way to regain or not take as
large of a loss.
a problem.

And these, I would be saying, “There’s

I don’t understand how it cannot be a

problem.”
And basically, if I could not show them the
numbers, the argument was lost.

So sales would continue

to go.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Well, two follow-ups on that.

You were a member of -- you were on the board of MARI?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, I was on the MBA MARI

advisory committee.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay, now, like MARI has a SAR

report that’s like a SAR –MS. LINDSAY:

Correct.

MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

-- but it’s separate, right?

Yes, that’s correct.

MR. CUNICELLI:

Now, a lot of SAR activity,

that’s reported immediately, correct?
MS. LINDSAY:

We didn’t use SAR because we
51

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
were not federally regulated.

And we had actually had a

meeting to discuss what the benefits of SAR would be
after looking at how to report and all of that, we felt
that MARI was the best vehicle for us to use.
So whenever we had fraud, we would report to
MARI.

And then everybody who would subscribe to MARI

would be able to get that information.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Right, right.

But, now, standard SARs, most of the time it’s
observed conduct, so it’s reported kind of
contemporaneously.
But mortgage fraud would that be reported
contemporaneously or would there be a lag, sometimes
years?
MS. LINDSAY:

Sometimes there would be a lag

of years, depending on when it came to our attention.
And then once again, it was a staffing issue if we -you know, for example, if we really did a lot of due
diligence and we had a lot of information, that would be
stacked up on the person’s desk who is reporting to
MARI.

He would go in and do his daily reports.

And so,

you know, sometimes if we would do an audit that went
a couple years back, I mean, there was a lot of
information that probably didn’t surface.

And if we

were still in business, we would probably have a lot
52

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
more information now, you know, that would be pretty
interesting.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Right.

And one other thing, you said that it was
frustrating for you because you had kind of the
old-world banking values -- you know, the three C’s and
whatnot.
MS. LINDSAY:

Right.

MR. CUNICELLI:
else at New Century?

Was it frustrating for anyone

You know, did you commiserate --

MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, I think a lot of the people

were on the -- you know, the quality-assurance side, who
were on that end were a lot more frustrated.

People who

had a lot more experience seeing risk, seeing the
results of the risk.
I think the salespeople never had experienced
losses, and yet they were the ones who were able to -people learn from their experiences, people learn of
their mistakes.

And I think most of the salespeople had

never experienced a loss or had seen the fraud, and so
they didn’t know any better, that they were able to make
some of the decisions.

I know there were a lot of

people who were very frustrated, who knew the
ramifications, who knew that, you know, this could
potentially harm our company.
53

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MR. CUNICELLI:

I guess going on what you said

earlier, they tended to be sales, the newer employees,
so maybe they hadn’t been through a business cycle like
some of the –MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

go ahead.

Yes, that’s exactly what it was.

That’s exactly what it was.
I think that there were a lot of younger, less
seasoned, people.

They may not have ever been in the

mortgage industry before.

They didn’t understand

anything to do with why this is a risk -- that was part
of my job, is having –- as soon as we identify the areas
where these people didn’t understand it, I would go
train them, and I would go talk to them.
We even had some underwriters and some funders
who didn’t understand fully.

And, you know, so then

that was part of my job, is to go out and train them and
show them why this is bad.

And, you know, some of them

had no idea that we had representations and warranties
to our Wall Street investors.

That it would be like,

“No, once this is sold, it’s not gone.
back.”

It can come

And I think a lot of people didn’t have that

understanding.
MR. BORGERS:

Okay, and, now, just getting
54

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
back to the numbers and the flow of the product.

So if

a loan is coming back and it was not paid -- it was an
early payment default immediately, that loan would not
go through to you or pass through you to the secondary
desk?

It would go directly to the secondary desk,

right?
MS. LINDSAY:

That’s correct yes.

MR. BORGERS:

Okay, after those loans, how

did you get your loans?

Were they being put back,

repurchased, and then that’s the reason it was brought
to your group?

Any -- all repurchases would be going

through your group, and then you would determine whether
or not there was gross negligence or some other reason,
other than fraud; and then you would refer to another
group?
MS. LINDSAY:

No, actually, how that would

work is, occasionally, I had built a rapport with
different people, some folks at MGMC.

So I would get,

you know, some of their letters directly, the investment
bankers I’d work with, occasionally I’d get their
letters directly.

And especially if I had written

letters to them or responded, they would automatically
pick up on me as the contact.
But generally, we would get a good
spreadsheet.

That would automatically go to secondary
55

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
marketing.

And then there would be comments in

the “comments” section why they’re being repurchased.
If it was simply a first payment default.

And sometimes

they wouldn’t -- there could be multiple problems with
these files, but they picked the easiest, fastest one
because they didn’t want to spend a lot of time on it.
So they would come back and say, “First payment
default.”

And then we would be required to repurchase

it.
But there would also be ones where there was
fraud, and they would identify those.

All the ones that

were identified as fraud would be extracted and sent to
my group.

So that’s how I would get the repurchase

requests.
MR. BORGERS:
$50,000 question:

Okay, and here’s the -- the

You would get, let’s say, from the

secondary market group that list of a hundred loans, or
whatever it might be.
MS. LINDSAY:

Right.

MR. BORGERS:

And your guidelines for fraud is

very -- it had to be provable fraud.

So you get --

MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, it was very [inaudible].

MR. BORGERS:

-- so that hundred loans, you

might -- let me just go through this whole example -might be just ten loans that were provable?
56

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MS. LINDSAY:

Right.

MR. BORGERS:

The other 90 loans, they were

not in compliance or they were missing documentation -MS. LINDSAY:

Right.

MR. BORGERS:

-- and you probably had to buy

the loan back?
MS. LINDSAY:

Right.

And that would be part

of my job, is refuting their requests.

If they said

that there was fraud, we would go in and we would look.
And if we could not prove the fraud, we would deny their
claim and say, “No, it’s not fraud.
other clause.”

Come back with some

So, I mean, we were -- you know, if it

was a bad loan for whatever reason, they would have to
find out, identify what the reason for the bad loan was
in order for us to be required to repurchase it.
So if they didn’t do a good job, if they
didn’t know how to identify that, they would be stuck
and the securitization would take the loss.
MR. BORGERS:

So if they were missing critical

documentation, like if the deed was not there or
recorded deed, or whatever it might be, or if it was a
verifiable loan and the verification wasn’t there, those
loans, even though they might have been negligence and
that you could not prove fraud, you would just say,
“Listen, there’s no blatant fraud here”?
57

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
MS. LINDSAY:

Right.

If they were missing

documentation or whatever, that would actually go to our
compliance department.
Our compliance department would try to then
comply with whatever the missing documentation was.
And if there was some reason we couldn’t get
the documentation but it was a breach, those loans would
generally be sold in a scratch-and-dent pool and moved
on.
MR. CUNICELLI:
for a second.

Ms. Lindsay, let’s circle back

I’m looking at something you said, I

guess when we talked to you prior, that you had maybe
70 front-end risk managers around the country?
MS. LINDSAY:
MR. CUNICELLI:

Yes.
Now, front-end there, these

are risk managers who were looking at loans before
they’re written or -MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

So we had -- what we were

trying to do, is we were trying to take as many
preventative measures as possible.

So what we did is,

we had daily reports based on different things.

Like,

for example, the brokers on watch, that I had mentioned
earlier, if we had a problem.

All the brokers on watch,

the risk managers would get a daily report of loans that
they needed to look at.

So then the risk managers would
58

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
look at those loans and make a determination whether
there was a problem or not.
database.

They would note this in our

And if there was confirmed fraud with those

loans, they would be locked and it means that they could
not proceed and the loan was declined.
MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

Was this something --

Now, if they couldn’t prove

anything, they would document the findings, and then the
sales manager or whomever could go ahead and approve
that loan.
MR. CUNICELLI:
rubber hit the road?

Right.

And this is where the

This is where those front-end risk

managers really caught some grief?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay.

And these are the

stories that would sometimes come to you?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. CUNICELLI:
MR. BORGERS:

Okay.

And why was -- and you only held

this position for about three months?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, I worked hand-in-hand with

them.

But they only rolled up to me for a really short

time.

And it was just -- I didn’t feel the model was

working, having them roll it to me.

I felt I was more

effective if they worked alongside me, reporting to
59

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
somebody else.

I felt that I lost a little bit of my

power or my influence by having them report up to me.

I

didn’t seem to feel as effective.
MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

Well --

Because if I was on the back-end

separate from them, I would almost feel like a separate
person coming in, talking to the sales manager, you
know, discussing the issues and problems, versus
defending one of my employees.
MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

I really felt the difference

when they rolled up to me, and I requested that -- I
asked the chief credit officer if she could move them
back to somebody else.
MR. CUNICELLI:
MS. LINDSAY:

Was part --

And she did.

MR. CUNICELLI:

Was part of the loss of

authority, that they reported up through the front-end,
through sales, so that their decisions could be
overruled by sales?
MS. LINDSAY:

They actually -- no, they

actually never did report to sales.
They reported up -- but they were sitting in
the department with sales.
isolated person.

So they were kind of an

They would be kind of the defense
60

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
mechanism, but they were subject to those people day-in
and day-out.
You know, so it was harder for them because
they would -- they were right there.

And they were, you

know, maybe personality conflicts and, you know, I think
it was easier if there was more salespeople and one risk
manager, it was a little easier for them to gang up on
them.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Right.

And ultimately, their

decisions could be reversed at that level by the sales
manager?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. BORGERS:

Now, that’s a number of people

around the country, 65.
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes.

MR. BORGERS:

And how many problems do they

handle every day?

I mean, you know, their concerns were

very serious about, you know, whether or not there was,
you know, serious problems with these loans.

It might

not be fraud but it might be serious problems of any
type of risk, right?
MS. LINDSAY:

Yes, and there were.

And some

of the risk managers had better relationships with the
sales departments.
And like I said, you know, some of the sales
61

FCIC Interview of Patricia Lindsay, March 24, 2010
managers were great.

They were smart, they were very

businesslike, they understood the business, and they
were very reasonable.
Others -- you know, like there was a small
group of them that were just very -- didn’t get it.
So the risk managers who had good
relationships with the sales managers would sit and
discuss their concerns.

And the good sales managers who

really, you know, knew what they were doing and
understood the risk if there was a problem, would take
that to heart and they would usually listen to the risk
managers.
So it was a very individual thing.

Some risk

managers got along great in their divisions and others
had conflicts.
MR. CUNICELLI:

Okay.

Ms. Lindsay, I’m going

to probably wrap things up here.
We’d ask you to keep what you and we say here
confidential, as we ask anybody that has business before
the Commission to do, okay?
MS. LINDSAY:

Okay.

MR. CUNICELLI:

All right, I’m going to turn

off the recorder.
The time is 1:11 p.m. Eastern Standard.
(End of interview with Patricia Lindsay)
62