Looks like Widener is going to need it’s Law Students to work overtime…
The CIT Group said today that it had put on leave three top executives of its student loan unit, Student Loan Xpress, after revelations last week that stock in that company had once been held by financial aid administrators at three universities and by an Education Department official who helps oversee the federal student loan program.
“We take the allegations raised by New York Attorney General Cuomo very seriously,” said Jeffrey M. Peek, chairman and chief executive of CIT, which acquired Student Loan Xpress 2005. “The management changes announced today should facilitate CIT’s independent review of Student Loan Xpress’s student lending practices and its assessment of existing policies and procedures governing student lending.”
At Widener, the attorney general’s office said Walter Cathie, dean of the financial aid office, ran a separate company called Key West Higher Education Associates that held conferences on student loans. Student Loan Xpress paid Mr. Cathie’s company approximately $80,000 to send its representatives to the conferences, Mr. Lawsky wrote.
A spokesman for Widener said the university was looking into the matter.
I can’t help but to think this wouldn’t be a problem if our, your government had done just a little more to help out the students instead of the lenders. But what do I know, I just am stupid for thinking that GUARANTEED repayment for a loan that can NOT be forgiven in a Bankruptcy shouldn’t be suspect to sub prime rates. Ahhhhh, but I’m stupid…
viti – I guess you and I can laugh from our Wesley perch, eh?
They better not show up in tomorrow’s headline!!!
Student Loan Xpress had reimbursed the (Johns Hopkins) university’s head of financial aid, Ellen Frishberg, for more than $21,000 in tuition toward her doctorate at the University of Pennsylvania from 2002 to 2004. In addition, Ms. Fishberg received $6,000 every three months from the company from April 2004 through October 2005 in consulting fees, totaling more than $60,000, Mr. Lawsky wrote.
Ellen Frishberg responded in a written statement: “Conflict of interest? What conflict of interest? Listen, uhm… I have to run, I left a tea kettle on my stove. Call me…m’kay?”
viti – I guess you and I can laugh from our Wesley perch, eh?
A fine establishment if there ever was one!