
The chairman of the House Financial Services subcommittee with oversight of government-sponsored enterprises has accused former Fannie Mae chief executive Franklin Raines of perjuring himself before Congress. Holding a hearing on a new federal report that officially accuses the mortgage giant of accounting fraud, Rep. Richard Baker, R-La., said Tuesday that, "There seems to be clear evidence to my mind that Mr. Raines perjured himself." In the fall of 2004, a then-embattled Mr. Raines testified before Rep. Baker’s GSE subcommittee, categorically dismissing charges that the company manipulated accounting rules back in 1998 so it could meet (to the penny) an earnings-per-share goal that triggered $27 million in bonuses paid to its top executives. At times defiant, Mr. Raines told members of the subcommittee then that, "This is a serious allegation, and we strongly disagree with it." Mr. Raines was forced out by Fannie Mae’s board in December 2004.
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