ABSTRACT

In the early 1990s, the First National Bank of Keystone in West Virginia began buying and securitizing subprime mortgages from all over the country, and quickly grew from a tiny bank with just $100 million in assets to over $1.1 billion. For three years, it was listed as the most profitable large community bank in the country. It was all a fraud. All of the securitization deals the bank entered into lost money. To hide that fact, bank insiders started cooking the books, and concealing that they were also embezzling millions of dollars from the bank. This was all hidden from the bank's attorneys and auditors, federal bank examiners, and even the board of directors of the bank. To keep the examiners at bay, the bank insiders did everything possible to avoid giving them access to documents they were entitled to see, documents they knew would sink their scheme. The head of the bank even went so far as to bury four large truckloads of documents in a ditch on her ranch.</p><p>Robert S. Pasley explores the failure of the First National Bank of Keystone, the intrigue involved, and the lessons that could have been learned and still can be learned about how banks operate, how federal banking regulators supervise financial institutions, how agencies interact with one another, and how such failures can be avoided in the future.</p>

chapter 1|8 pages

Burying the Documents

chapter 2|14 pages

J. Knox McConnell and the Rise of the Bank

chapter 4|16 pages

Death of Knox McConnell

chapter 5|32 pages

A Train Wreck A Comin’

chapter 6|34 pages

The Examinations of the Bank, 1990-1997

chapter 7|12 pages

1998 Examination

chapter 8|38 pages

The Last Year of the Bank

chapter 9|28 pages

The Criminal Cases

chapter 10|16 pages

The Civil and Administrative Cases

chapter 11|10 pages

The Case Against the Attorneys

chapter 13|12 pages

The Sad Story of Gary Ellis

chapter 14|10 pages

Aftermath of the Failure of the Bank

chapter 15|14 pages

Harbinger of the 2008 Financial Crisis

chapter 16|8 pages

Lessons Learned

chapter 18|2 pages

Conclusion