Justice Department probes mortgage fraud claims against Lisa Cook of
Federal Reserve, AP source says
[September 05, 2025]
By ERIC TUCKER and PAUL WISEMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department has begun examining mortgage
fraud allegations against Lisa Cook, the Federal Reserve governor who is
challenging a Trump administration effort to remove her from her job in
a move she says is designed to erode the central bank's independence.
Investigators have issued subpoenas as part of an inquiry into Cook that
was spawned by a criminal referral from the country's top housing
regulator, according to a person familiar with the matter who was not
authorized to discuss the probe and spoke on condition of anonymity to
The Associated Press.
A Justice Department spokesperson declined to comment on the probe,
which was earlier reported by The Wall Street Journal.
“Predictably and recognizing the flaws in challenging their illegal
firing of Governor Cook, the administration is scrambling to invent new
justifications for its overreach. This Justice Department — perhaps the
most politicized in American history — will do whatever President Trump
demands,” Cook's lawyer, Abbe David Lowell, said in a statement.
News of the investigation comes amid a high-stakes legal fight over
President Donald Trump's announcement last month that he was ousting
Cook, an action she has said is being undertaken so that he can seize
control over a central bank that is typically shielded from political
pressure and tasked with making decisions about whether to raise or
lower interest rates.
Trump moved to fire Cook on Aug. 25 after one of his appointees alleged
that she committed mortgage fraud related to two properties she
purchased in 2021, before she joined the Fed.

Bill Pulte, who made the criminal referral in his capacity as director
of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, has asserted that Cook had
claimed two primary residences, in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and Atlanta, in
2021 to get better mortgage terms. Mortgage rates are often higher on
second homes or those purchased to rent.
The Justice Department inquiry is centered on those two properties,
according to the person familiar with the matter. It is being
coordinated with U.S. Attorney offices by Ed Martin, the director of the
Justice Department’s Weaponization Working Group, who is also pursuing
mortgage fraud investigations into perceived Trump adversaries,
including Sen. Adam Schiff of California and New York Attorney General
Letitia James, both Democrats. Both have vigorously denied any
wrongdoing.
Pulte dodged questions in a CNBC interview Thursday about whether he was
similarly scrutinizing Ken Paxton, the Texas attorney general who is
friendly with Trump and is running for Senate in his state’s Republican
primary. Paxton took out mortgages on three properties that were all
identified as his primary residence. He said he wouldn't comment on any
specific situation that has not been made public.
[to top of second column]
|

Norm Eisen, attorney of Lisa Cook, a governor on the Federal Reserve
Board, arrives at the federal courthouse in Washington, Friday, Aug.
29, 2025. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

Cook's lawyers have also insisted that she did not engage in fraud.
“The questions over how Governor Cook described her properties from
time to time, which we have started to address in the pending case
and will continue to do so, are not fraud, but it takes nothing for
this DOJ to undertake a new politicized investigation, and they
appear to have just done it again,” Lowell said.
Separately, on Thursday, the Justice Department urged a federal
judge in Washington to allow for Cook's immediate removal while she
fights to keep her job, dismissing as “baseless” Cook’s claim that
the president is attempting to fire her so that he can seize control
of the Federal Reserve.
Cook’s lawyers have argued that the firing was unlawful because
presidents can only fire Fed governors “for cause,” which has
typically meant inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance while
in office. They also said she was entitled to a hearing and a chance
to respond to the charges before being fired, but was not provided
either. Attorneys said in the court filing that Cook never committed
mortgage fraud.
The Justice Department says the president has the discretion to fire
Cook for cause and that his decisions cannot be reviewed by the
courts.
The case could become a turning point for the nearly 112-year-old
Federal Reserve, which was designed by Congress to be insulated from
day-to-day political influence. Economists prefer independent
central banks because they can do unpopular things, such as lifting
interest rates to combat inflation more easily than elected
officials.
Trump has repeatedly attacked Fed Chair Jerome Powell and the other
members of the Fed’s interest-rate setting committee for not cutting
the short-term interest rate they control more quickly.
Many economists worry that if the Fed falls under the control of the
White House, it will keep its key interest rate lower than justified
by economic fundamentals to satisfy Trump’s demands for cheaper
borrowing.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
 |