06
Aug
08

Not JUST internal controls……

 
Ex-Countrywide Employee Charged With Selling Customer Data

Former mortgage group analyst grabbed personal information and saved it on USB flash drives

AUGUST 5, 2008 | The FBI has busted a former Countrywide Home Loan worker who is suspected of downloading the personal data of some 20,000 customers a week over a period of two years and selling it to third parties.

 

Rene Rebollo Jr., 36, a former senior financial analyst with Countrywide Home Loan’s subprime mortgage division, who allegedly stored the data on USB flash drives, and Wahid Siddiqi, who allegedy purchased the data from Rebollo, were both arrested on Friday on charges related to the sale of the identities of Countrywide customers.

The FBI and investigators with Countrywide Finanical said in a criminal complaint that Rebollo, who was terminated from the company last month, had access to a Countrywide database with sensitive customer information. Rebollo told FBI agents that he had been selling the data outside the firm for two years and made about $70,000, according to the complaint.

Rebollo told the FBI that he got requests from other people to grab specific types of data from the Countrywide database. Siddiqi, 25, meanwhile, was caught in an FBI sting after ordering personal data for cash.

According to the FBI, Rebollo is charged with exceeding authorized access to the computer of a financial institution, which carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison. Siddiqi is charged with fraud and other illegal activity with access devices, and could face 15 years in prison. According to a published report, the data may have been sold to companies that wanted to offer their own loans to the Countrywide victims. Up to 2 million Countrywide customer names were “run and sold,” according to the report. Phil Neray, vice president at Guardium, says Countrywide’s breach was caused in part by a lack of proper internal controls. “The lack of internal IT controls is just another example of this, and is perhaps indicative of a corporate culture that was less focused on internal controls than other objectives,” Neray says.

To say this was a problem with a lack of internal controls is a gross understatement.  Things like this generally don’t happen unless the “tone at the top”  is something that is not exactly one of honesty and integrity.  The poor schmucks in this article just got caught…………

Although it does sound like there were a lot of knuckleheads in management that were sloppy and not watching the store.


2 Responses to “Not JUST internal controls……”


  1. 1 Concerned Victim
    August 8, 2008 at 12:01 am

    I have learned that the KamberEdelson Law Firm (http://www.kamberedelson.com) is investigating allegations relating to the compromise of millions of account records at Countrywide. If anyone would like to assist because they have additional info or believe they may have been impacted they should contact countrywide@KamberEdelson.com

  2. September 30, 2008 at 11:00 pm

    Regarding the comment referring to our firm’s involvement in the Countrywide privacy class action litigation and encouraging interested consumers to contact us–we would appreciate it if you would kindly take down the comment or, in the alternative, post this message. The comment could be viewed as a promotional message, which would be against our policy and, probably, your own. In addition, while the poster appears to have been well meaning, the decision to engage legal counsel is a serious one that we believe should not be made based on anonymous comments. Thank you.

    Regards,
    KamberEdelson, LLC
    11 Broadway, 22nd Floor New York, NY 10004, 212.920.3072
    53 W. Jackson Blvd., Ste. 550 Chicago, IL 60604, 312.589.6370
    http://www.kamberedelson.com
    This communication is not intended as legal advice, an attorney-client communication, or an offer to enter into an attorney-client relationship.


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