Monday, September 27, 2010

Will Your Mortgage Loan Originator's Criminal Record Prevent Him From Getting Licensed?

The SAFE Act requires all mortgage loan originators (MLOs), also known as loan officers, to create a record that will become part of the Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System (NMLS) registry. Part of the record deals with disclosures about an MLO’s criminal background. To verify the information that the MLO is providing in his NMLS record, the SAFE Act requires criminal background checks for all loan officers.

The questions asked in the NMLS MU4 record concern criminal convictions for a felony, pleading no contest to a felony, pleading guilty or no contest to a misdemeanor involving a financial-services crime, fraud, theft, perjury, forgery, or having control over an organization that pleaded guilty or no contest to these dishonesty crimes.

Questions come to me from loan officers who have been pleaded guilty to drunk driving, to issues when they were stockbrokers, to juvenile crimes that have or have not been expunged from the record. These loan officers ask me what to do and whether these past issues are now a current problem.

I cannot counsel anyone who is not my client so I will not give specific answers in this blog. My general advice is, when in doubt, disclose and explain. Many times criminal convictions that should have been expunged will somehow show up in a criminal database. If you decide not to disclose and the conviction or no contest plea shows up, you look like you are trying to hide something. I always fall on the side of honesty and disclosure.

When you disclose your conviction or no contest plea, the licensing reviewer may have some discretion to still approve your license application, depending on the type of crime and when the conviction or no contest plea happened. The SAFE Act has explicit disqualifiers for license approvals. The SAFE Act prohibits the licensing of an MLO if the applicant has ever been convicted of a felony involving an act of fraud, dishonesty, breach of trust, or money laundering, or convicted of any felony in the seven year period before filing an application for a license. If you are outside of the seven year period, you should be fine.

Contact Robin Gronsky at Robin@Mortgagelicensesolutions.com if you need help with your licensing (company or MLO). I’ll keep what you tell me confidential but I cannot give you any specific legal advice until you become a client of the firm. This is done by written agreement only.

2 comments:

Tony Gates said...

Hi,
I agree with the view, There should be maintained record ,will tell Originator's criminal record.
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Christina said...

That makes sense, there should be a way to see the criminal record.
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