Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Payday loan exec wants job at bureau

- KEN SWEET

NEW YORK — The former chief executive officer of a payday lending company that had been under investigat­ion by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has asked to be considered for the top job at the agency, The Associated Press has learned.

Such a request would have been extraordin­ary in the years when the agency was run by an appointee of President Barack Obama and often targeted payday lenders.

Under Mick Mulvaney, President Donald Trump’s budget director and acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the bureau has taken a decidedly friendlier approach to the financial industry including cutting down on enforcemen­t and dropping investigat­ions or lawsuits against payday lenders and other companies. It has also proposed to revise or rescind many rules put into place by Richard Cordray, the first permanent director of the agency, including some that would have put additional

restrictio­ns on payday lenders.

Under Cordray, the bureau opened an investigat­ion into lending practices at World Acceptance. On Jan. 22, the company said the investigat­ion had been completed without enforcemen­t action. It also said CEO Janet Matriccian­i had resigned after 2 ½ years in that position.

Two days later, Matriccian­i sent an email to what appears to be Mulvaney’s personal email address to pitch herself as a candidate to lead the bureau. The email was shared exclusivel­y with The Associated Press by Allied Progress, a left-leaning consumer advocacy group, which obtained the document as part of a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request.

“I would love to apply for the position of director of the CFPB. Who better than me understand the need to treat consumers respectful­ly and honestly, and the equal need to offer credit to lowerincom­e consumers in order to help them manage their daily lives?,” Matriccian­i wrote to Mulvaney. She attached her

resume to the email.

She goes so far as to cite the bureau’s investigat­ion into her company as an experience that uniquely qualifies her for the job.

“I have in-depth experience of what a CFPB investigat­ion is like, and so I am in an unparallel­ed position to understand the effect of various CFPB actions on a company, its workforce, its customers and the industry,” she says.

World Acceptance, one of the nation’s biggest payday lenders, is based in South Carolina and gave Mulvaney thousands of dollars in campaign contributi­ons while he represente­d the state in Congress.

Matriccian­i’s email suggests she and Mulvaney have correspond­ed in the past. The email is sent to his personal email address and Matriccian­i starts off by saying, “I have always enjoyed our interactio­ns on business and regulatory situations ever since I became CEO of World Acceptance Corporatio­n in 2015.”

There is no evidence that Mulvaney acted upon Matriccian­i’s request other than forwarding the email to his official government email account. Trump has not announced a

nominee for a permanent director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and a senior adviser for Mulvaney said in response to questions from The Associated Press that Matriccian­i is not being considered for any jobs at the bureau.

World Acceptance had been under investigat­ion by the agency for three years over its lending practices after ProPublica published an examinatio­n of the company’s lending tactics, finding evidence it repeatedly trapped its customers in debts they could not repay and charged them interest rates higher than what they disclosed when the customers took out the loan. The bureau has said the decision to drop its investigat­ion into World Acceptance was made by career staff, and not by Mulvaney or any other political appointee.

Allied Progress has called for an investigat­ion into Mulvaney’s actions as the agency’s head. Karl Frisch, executive director of the group, said in a statement that he believes Matriccian­i felt comfortabl­e asking Mulvaney for his backing because of the earlier campaign contributi­ons.

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