On January 7, 2025, the United States Department of Justice (the “DOJ”) announced that a non-depository mortgage lender has agreed to pay $1.75 million in connection with allegations that it engaged in a pattern or practice of lending discrimination by redlining predominantly Black and Hispanic neighborhoods.

The DOJ filed its underlying complaint in the Southern District of Florida alleging that the lender violated the Fair Housing Act and Equal Credit Opportunity Act by failing to equitably provide access to mortgage lending services to majority-Black and Hispanic neighborhoods and high-Black and Hispanic neighborhoods in the Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, Florida, Metropolitan Statistical Area (“Miami MSA”). According to the DOJ, the lender set up offices in predominantly white neighborhoods and made insufficient efforts to market their services or develop their network in Black or Hispanic neighborhoods, which resulted in the company generating mortgage loan applications within such neighborhoods at rates far below peer institutions.

The DOJ’s proposed consent order, if entered by the court, will require the lender to take certain measures to rectify its practices, including:

Putting it into Practice: This settlement follows a series of other recent redlining settlements by the CFPB and DOJ (previously discussed herehere, and here). It is also the third involving a non-depository institution. With the upcoming change in administration this month, regulators may remain eager to pursue settlements of pending fair lending investigations.

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