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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Metropolitan Mortgage

In January 2004, Metropolitan Mortgage declared bankruptcy, taking down with it the fortunes of many investors who placed their trust in the decades-old Spokane company.

News >  Business

Sandifur, SEC settle

Disgraced Metropolitan Mortgage & Securities Co. figure C. Paul Sandifur Jr. will pay about $151,000 to settle allegations that he masterminded fraudulent commercial real estate deals that backfired into an accounting scandal. The collapse of Metropolitan and its group of companies was the biggest corporate failure in Spokane history. Thousands of investors were left holding $470 million in unsecured bonds. Another $131 million in preferred shares were rendered worthless by bankruptcy. Hundreds lost their jobs.
News >  Spokane

Met’s Turner gets 2 years

SEATTLE – A federal judge sentenced former Metropolitan Mortgage & Securities Co. executive Thomas Turner to prison for two years, saying that Turner shouldn't be held solely accountable for the Spokane company's collapse. "I feel blame cannot be limited to Mr. Turner," U.S. District Judge John Coughenour said during the sentencing hearing. "But on the other hand, he's the only one before me today."
News >  Spokane

Met figures agree to deals

Key figures in the Metropolitan Mortgage & Securities Co. accounting scandal have reached deals to settle costly lawsuits filed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Among them: C. Paul Sandifur Jr., owner of the Metropolitan group of companies, whose stubborn leadership style and questionable business acumen have been blamed for the collapse of the $2.3 billion financial conglomerate.

News >  Business

Adelphia deal may hearten Met creditors

A settlement requiring auditing firm Deloitte & Touche to pay $167.5 million to a special trust recovering money for Adelphia Communications Corp. creditors provides some buoyancy to the difficult task of recovering money from two large firms that audited Spokane's bankrupted Metropolitan Mortgage & Securities Company Inc. A trust established to collect all possible sources of cash for thousands of Metropolitan investors is now engaged in arbitration with Ernst & Young, and has sued PriceWaterhouseCoopers in U.S. District Court in Spokane.
News >  Spokane

Turner convicted in Met case

SEATTLE – A federal jury convicted former Metropolitan Mortgage & Securities Co. executive Thomas Turner of three felonies Friday morning. It took the jury several hours to reach its guilty verdict in a complicated case that boiled down to whether they believed Turner was an honest dealmaker for Metropolitan. They didn't and convicted him of lying to and hiding information from Metropolitan's outside auditors, Ernst & Young LLP.
News >  Business

Trial of ex-Met exec goes to jury

SEATTLE – Former Metropolitan Mortgage executive Thomas Turner is either a scapegoat for shoddy and negligent auditing work, or a sophisticated white-collar criminal.
News >  Spokane

Turner says he obeyed his boss

SEATTLE – Former Metropolitan Mortgage & Securities Co. executive Thomas Turner testified in his criminal trial Wednesday that he was only doing the bidding of his boss, C. Paul Sandifur Jr., when he signed off on a controversial real estate deal that helped bring the company down. Turner, 56, said Sandifur and another Metropolitan executive, former Controller Robert Ness, as well as the outside accounting team of Ernst & Young LLP, knew the details of the troubled 2002 real estate deal that exploded into an accounting scandal in the weeks leading up to Metropolitan's bankruptcy. Yet only Turner has been charged with crimes.
News >  Spokane

Former auditor grilled by ex-Met executive’s lawyer

SEATTLE – Metropolitan Mortgage & Securities Co.'s former auditor Jack Behrens once told the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that he thought just about everyone in the defunct Spokane company was untrustworthy. Lawyers defending former Metropolitan Mortgage executive Thomas G. Turner seized upon Behrens' statements from 2004 to tell a jury that he was trying to deflect all blame for a major accounting scandal from his firm, Ernst & Young LLP.
News >  Spokane

Auditor testifies Metropolitan needed ‘extra attention’

SEATTLE – Ernst & Young LLP charged Metropolitan Mortgage & Securities Co. a hefty $1 million each year for auditing services, betting its reputation that it could handle a firm that was losing money and known for risky business dealings. The accounting firm also charged the Spokane financial conglomerate for tax advice and business consulting services.
News >  Spokane

Met Mortgage auditor says exec misrepresented sale

SEATTLE – Metropolitan Mortgage & Securities Co.'s financial auditors counseled executives of the Spokane company again and again about special accounting rules designed to prevent financial fraud, one auditor testified Wednesday at the criminal trial of Met's No. 2 executive. Yet one of the executives allegedly brushed aside the advice, orchestrated a questionable property sale, lied about it and got caught, according to federal prosecutors and the Ernst & Young auditor, a key witness in the trial.