CFPB accuses Castle and Cooke of running illegal bonus scheme

The CFPB has taken aim at a mortgage company accused of giving illegal bonuses for pushing customers to pricier loans

The CFPB has taken aim at a mortgage company accused of giving illegal bonuses for pushing customers to pricier loans.

The CFPB announced it has filed a complaint in federal district court against Utah-based Castle & Cooke Mortgage LLC and two of its officers, alleging the company handed out bonuses to loan officers who steered borrowers into mortgages with higher interest rates.

CFPB director Richard Cordray decried the company's alleged actions, saying that such practices "precipitated the financial crisis".

"Consumers should be able to get a mortgage without worrying about how the financial incentives of their loan officers may cause them to pay higher rates than they actually qualify for,” Cordray said.

The CFPB alleged that Castle & Cooke, through its president Matthew Pineda and senior vice president of capital markets Buck Hawkins, ran a quarterly bonus program which paid more than 150 of the company's loan officers higher bonuses when they persuaded borrowers to take on pricier mortgages, while loan officers who didn't charge consumers higher rates did not receive bonuses. The CFPB said the bonuses ranged from $6,100 to $8,700.

In addition to its complaint over the company's bonus scheme, the CFPB alleged that Castle & Cooke violated laws requiring companies to retain compliance records, claiming that the company failed to record what portion of each loan officers bonus was attributable to a particular loan. The CFPB also alleged that Castle & Cooke did not reference the quarterly bonus program in its originators' compensation agreements.