Almost anyone can get a car loan now — and that's not a good thing for the country
car dealership auto sales
car dealership auto sales

(Snow-covered cars at a dealership in New York in February 2009.Shannon Stapleton/Reuters)

In late 2012, Kathleen Boluch needed a new car — a drunk driver had left hers totaled — but she knew it wouldn't be easy to get.

Boluch, who lives in Massachusetts, was freelancing and wasn't making much money. She didn't have much in savings. On top of that, she had a credit score below 500, which is considered very risky.

It took visits to numerous dealerships in the Boston area before she found one that would let her finance a car.

"I remember they were on the phones and computers trying to find a bank to approve a loan for me," she told Business Insider of the people at the dealership.

The salesman asked Boluch how much she made. "I was honest and told him that I am a freelance advertising copywriter and didn't make much," she said.

"One guy shouted, 'Let's try Santander, they'll do it,'" she said.

To make it easier to get approved, the salesman told her that the dealership could hire her to do some of its advertising and that it would include that income on the loan application.

"I was naive and got tricked by these jocular car salesmen," she said.

The dealer was right — Santander Bank approved Boluch for the loan in October 2012. She drove home in a 2010 Chevrolet that cost $18,000. But she soon couldn't keep up with her monthly payments, and the dealership did not keep its promise of giving her work, she said.

When she read a story in The New York Times about subprime auto loans and fraud, Boluch sent the clipping to the office of Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey. In late March, Healey's office announced it would receive $22 million from a settlement with Santander Bank over its subprime-auto-loan securitization.

FILE PHOTO: Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey speaks during news conference in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., January 31, 2017.   REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey speaks during news conference in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., January 31, 2017. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo

(Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey.Thomson Reuters)

It said the bank knowingly bought high-risk auto loans, including Boluch's, from a group of dealers it identified as "fraud dealers." The bank bundled the loans and sold them to other investors.

The settlement was part of a broader investigation of securitization practices in the subprime-auto-loan market by Healey.

"Our industrywide investigation is ongoing," Healey told Business Insider in March. "I certainly do not think that this practice is limited to Santander or our state."

In a statement to Business Insider, a Santander representative said: "We are pleased to put this matter behind us so we can move forward and continue to focus on serving our customers."

Boluch's story is part of a bigger narrative emerging about the auto-loan market — and specifically subprime auto lending.