- Pics and Video | Robin Hoods Storm Mortgage Banksters Conference in Chicago
- The Moat Crossing Robin Hoods Return in Chicago to Invade the Mortgage Bankers Association Conference
- I Can’t Wait to See More! | Robin Hoods Storm Mortgage Bankster’s Association Conference – This Time by Kayaking Down the Chicago River
Knock, Knock, Knockin’ on Geithner’s Door – Hundreds of “Robin Hoods” Show up at Geithner’s House
How to Strategic Default? Ask the MBA.
If you want to know how to strategic default, ask the MBA… Mortgage Banking Association.
The CEO of the powerful Mortgage Bankers Association, John Courson, has said that underwater borrowers should keep paying on their mortgage loans and “should not walk away from lawful debts”. In an interview this past year, Courson appeared genuinely concerned adding:
“What about the message they will send to their family and their kids and their friends?”
Obviously, Mr. Courson was not just speaking as a defender of financial institutions. Clearly, he was showing how much he cares for people and their personal relationships. He believes the children are our future. He thinks we should teach them well and let them lead the way. That we should show them all the beauty they posses inside. Give them a sense of pride. To make it easier… let the children’s laughter… remind us how we used to be.
Thank you John… you’re no Whitney Houston, but you’ve got me all teary eyed over here.
There’s just one little, teeny-tiny, almost insignificant smidgeon of a problem with what the Mortgage Bankers Association’s CEO was saying: He was completely full of shit.
This past week, the Co-Star Group, Inc., indicated that it had agreed to buy the MBA’s 10-story headquarters building in DC for $41.3 million. The only problem is that $41.3 million comes up a skosh shy of the $75 million first mortgage on the building that the MBA took out from PNC Financial Group way back in 2007, when they purchased the property for $79 million.
You remember 2007, don’t you John? That was the last year that all of those irresponsible homeowners, thinking real estate prices would go up forever, kept over leveraging themselves, buying properties without the traditional 20% down payment. What a bunch of irresponsible idiots, right Johnny Boy? Now that the bubble has popped, those homeowners should just be taking their medicine like men, don’t you agree John? The last thing they should do is walk away from their lawful debts, isn’t that what you said?
So I mean, what kind of message are YOU now sending to your family, your children, and your friends by walking away from your lawful $75 million debt? Are they being morally harmed by your decision to stick the bank with close to $25 million? And why aren’t you simply paying your mortgage as agreed, Mr. Courson? You’re not trying to destroy prices of commercial properties in Washington D.C. are you?
Just last year, you pointed out that defaults hurt neighborhoods by lowering property values, so borrowers would do less harm to our society were they just to repay what they owe. You know… like the responsible homeowners.
(Oh, and this just in from my favorite bankruptcy attorney and all-around thought leader, Max Gardner, the MBA also defaulted on their payments and secured a forbearance agreement, prior to the short sale. Nicely done, Johnny-O. Maybe you should open a loan mod firm and start helping homeowners.)
Well, I think I’ve got your message, Mr. Courson. I know exactly what you wanted to say to your family, your children and your friends…
Do as I say. Not as I pay.
Does that about sum it up for you, Mr. John Courson?
Yeah, I thought so.
Jackass.
Utah Foreclosure News is Based on Garbage Stats

In Utah, foreclosures in March were up 74 percent over February. In New Jersey, foreclosures in in April were up 72 percent over March. In Tampa and Chicago, foreclosures in February were up 64 and 43 percent over January, respectively.
Now, here we are in mid-May and we’re to believe that everything has changed for the better? That was then this is now, is that the idea? Poppycock.
The Mortgage Bankers Association yesterday released a report claiming that the share of Utah’s home loans at least 30 days late dropped to 7.4 percent… from 7.58 percent in the previous three months.
Well, so what and who cares? First of all, that’s just not a statistically significant difference, in fact, it would be well within the margin of error for any legitimate survey of such data. And secondly, it’s an incomplete comparison. One point being compared is presumably the “drop to 7.4 percent.” And the other point against which the dropped 7.4 percent is to be compared, is a three month average of 7.58 percent.
If the last month of the three month average was 7.o percent, then this month’s 7.4 percent was actually an increase.
The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA”) also claimed that in the first quarter of this year, six percent of loans in Utah were in default — which the association defines being at least 30 days behind on payments.
Now, and you have to read this carefully to see the deception, they’re saying that at the end of the first quarter of this year… “2.5 percent of mortgage loans in Utah were in the foreclosure process.”
What the heck does that tell us? Not a darn thing, although if you like to guess at things, here are a few things it could mean:
- Nothing has changed – That’s right, based on those two claims by the MBA, the State of Utah could still have six percent of loans at least 30 days late and 2.5 percent in the foreclosure process.
- Things have gotten worse – That’s right, based on those two claims, it’s possible that today there are more than six percent of loans in Utah more than 30 days late, and the 2.5 percent in the foreclosure process could be an increase from prior months.
- Servicers are still preparing to comply with DOJ settlement – If the 2.5 percent in the foreclosure process is lower than expected it could be… and moreover likely is, due to servicers getting ready to comply with the DOJ settlement, meaning they have to foreclose without robo-signing and the like.
The point is that reports like this one are a study in obfuscation, which means: “muddying” or “confusing,” or refers to a “smokescreen.” They don’t really tell us anything, but they’re designed to make us think something has changed, when it has not.
Why do I say that? For several reasons…
To begin with, nothing we’re dealing with is going to change that quickly. It was a huge problem yesterday… it’ll be a huge problem tomorrow. If positive trends stay constant over the course of a year… then that will be something to cheer about.
Another reason for my skepticism is that none of the underlying fundamentals have changed one bit. In fact, last month’s unemployment data was a nightmare, much worse than expected. How could things have improved so dramatically so quickly when things have otherwise been moving so slowly? Answer: They couldn’t.
And lastly, it’s the report itself. The comparison of loans “in default,” which they defined as being over 30 days late, with loans “in the foreclosure process,” which they do not define, is an attempt to set up a deceptive or fallacious argument.
At the very least it’s an “incomplete or inconsistent comparison,” meaning that either not enough information is provided to make a complete comparison, or where different methods of comparison are used in order to create a false impression of the overall comparison.
The data above also was surrounded by irrelevant comparisons that I removed to show the deceptive structure of the argument being made. In the original presentation of the data, the MBA compared the loans in default to the national average, which they claimed to be 6.9 percent, and loans in foreclosure, which they claimed to be 4.4 percent.

Why should we care about such comparisons by themselves? We shouldn’t. They tell us absolutely nothing. It’s like saying, “In recent coin tossing experiments more coins preferred heads over tails.”
RealtyTrac chimed in with other statistics designed to be both encouraging and misleading:
1. “Foreclosure starts decreased in 41 states and the rate of loans in foreclosures fell in 22 states.”
2. “Foreclosure activity in all the judicial foreclosure states combined jumped 15 percent versus April last year.”
3. “Taken together, non-judicial states saw foreclosure activity fall 29 percent.”
The first one is total junk, it is meaningless… and confusing… in fact, if you study it too long your hair will likely fall out. Foreclosure starts decreasing may just mean that banks decreased the number they started. And the same for the loans in foreclosure garbage.
Banks control how many foreclosures start and how many are in foreclosure process, not borrowers.
The last two are more devious. They are woven throughout stories in the media this week in order to make us believe that it’s the courts that are causing the foreclosure crisis to be prolonged. Bad courts. The clear implication being that if the courts weren’t in the way of the banks, we’d all be much better off, much sooner. Abigail Field wrote a fabulous piece HERE. Among many other things in her article, she wrapped up flawlessly:
Those darn courts, wrecking the housing market by slowing foreclosures and costing all of us more money.
Due Process is the Solution, Not the Problem
See where all this is going? Enough messaging like this and some states may change foreclosure laws more to the bankers’ liking. Short of that, people will target the courts as the problem instead of the bankers.
Whenever you read banker talking points embedded in news like this, remember: our Constitution guarantees Due Process for a reason. Due Process is essential to the rule of law and a fundamental check against the abuse of power. Don’t let the bankers sell you or your representatives into taking it away.
Obviously, the banking lobby would like it much more if they didn’t have to deal with things like… well, you know… like laws, for example. Courts can be a real nuisance, I completely understand.
Look, if you’re doing just fine and you want to buy a house, go for it… I don’t care one way or the other. If you’re planning on living there for a long time and you can afford the payments, what difference does it make if it goes up or down in the next so many years? It’s a house, not a stock. Buy it to live in it, not as an investment you’ll flip out of in five years.
But, of you’re struggling in this economy, at risk of losing a home, and stories like these make you feel like you’re alone in your financial misery, and that everyone is doing better while you’re not… please don’t feel that way because it’s all nothing more than one big pile of steaming freshness. I’m not seeing anything improve anywhere. In fact, I’m only seeing things worsen ahead.
So, just ignore it, and it will go away. It’s like a ghost in your closet… go back to sleep and it’ll be gone in the morning.
Mandelman out.
Ability-to-Repay Rule for Mortgages Nears CFPB Approval
- Attn Captain Obvious | Fed Proposes Rule that Would Require Creditors to Determine a Consumer’s Ability to Repay a Mortgage BEFORE Making the Loan
- Mortgage Bankers Association Letter to the Federal Reserve RE “Skin in the Game” and the Ability of Borrowers to Repay
- Mass Court May Rule on Retroactivity of some Foreclosures Tied to ‘Naked Mortgages’
Shelia Bair | Fix Income Inequality with $10 Million Loans for Everyone!
- More than 7.2 Million Loans Behind On Payments; Estimated 1 Million Properties in REO Status
- Federal Reserve Orders $85M Civil Penalty Against Wells Fargo for Steering Potential Prime Borrowers Into More Costly Subprime Loans and Falsifying Income
- Mortgage Bankers Association Sold $79 Million Headquarters for $41 Million, New Buyer Flips Building for $101 Million
Bankers Form SuperPac for ‘Surgical’ Strike at Industry’s Enemies
MM PODCAST: From Fannie Mae to FHA – Edward Pinto Wants Government Out of Housing Finance

Edward J. Pinto
Resident Fellow, American Enterprise Institute
An executive vice president and chief credit officer for Fannie Mae until the late 1980s, Edward Pinto has done groundbreaking research on the role of government housing policies in the lead-up to the financial crisis. His data have revealed striking facts about the contributions of housing policy to the mortgage crisis.
Two of his major research papers have been submitted to the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission: “Government Housing Policies in the Lead-up to the Financial Crisis: A Forensic Study,” and “Triggers of the Financial Crisis.”
Today, Ed is continuing his work on how housing policies impacted the financial crisis and researching policy considerations and options for rebuilding our housing-finance sector. He earned his B.A. at the University of Illinois, and his J.D. at Indiana University.
Ed and I first came in contact with each other a couple of years ago, and although we haven’t always agreed on everything, I have followed his work closely and have come to have a great deal of respect for his work and for him as a person.
On this Mandelman Matters Podcast, I ask Ed about the results of his extensive research into the FHA, which he refers to as the “new sub-prime,” and “the next bailout.” His extensive study of the FHA’s data in terms of leverage and default rates will flat out shock you. And when you hear him explain how the government is perpetuating the foreclosure crisis… well, to say it’s infuriating would be an understatement.
Okay, so make sure your speakers are turned up and I’d make sure you’re sitting down to avoid falling over when you hear some of the things Ed Pinto has to say.
Two of Ed’s latest articles:
Truth in Government Lending is Long Overdue
Empty promise: The holes in the administration’s housing finance reform plan
~~~
And you can SUBSCRIBE to Ed Pinto’s blog and FHA WATCH bulletins.
He can be contacted via Email at: edward.pinto@aei.org
~~~
This Mandelman Matters Podcast is presented in two parts. Part 1 is just under 60 minutes and focuses on the FHA and the big picture facts about our government’s role in housing finance, and Part 2 is about 40 minutes, and goes further into the causes of the crisis, and where Ed sees us going from here.
Like I said, you may not always agree with his conclusions or cures, but his research is always fascinating, his facts are bulletproof, his experience as an “insider”at Fannie Mae is invaluable… and I don’t think there’s any question that his motives are pure.
Just click on PART ONE below to start listening to…
From Fannie Mae to FHA – Why Ed Pinto Wants Government Out of Housing Finance
A Mandelman Matters Podcast
And Coming Soon…
Mandelman out.
MM PODCAST: From Fannie Mae to FHA – Edward Pinto Wants Government Out of Housing Finance

Edward J. Pinto
Former Chief Credit Officer, Fannie Mae
Resident Fellow, American Enterprise Institute
An executive vice president and chief credit officer for Fannie Mae until the late 1980s, Edward Pinto has done groundbreaking research on the role of government housing policies in the lead-up to the financial crisis. His data have revealed striking facts about the contributions of housing policy to the mortgage crisis.
Two of his major research papers have been submitted to the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission: “Government Housing Policies in the Lead-up to the Financial Crisis: A Forensic Study,” and “Triggers of the Financial Crisis.”
Today, Ed is continuing his work on how housing policies impacted the financial crisis and researching policy considerations and options for rebuilding our housing-finance sector. He earned his B.A. at the University of Illinois, and his J.D. at Indiana University.
Ed and I first came in contact with each other a couple of years ago, and although we haven’t always agreed on everything, I have followed his work closely and have come to have a great deal of respect for his work and for him as a person.
On this Mandelman Matters Podcast, I ask Ed about the results of his extensive research into the FHA, which he refers to as the “new sub-prime,” and “the next bailout.” His extensive study of the FHA’s data in terms of leverage and default rates will flat out shock you. And when you hear him explain how the government is perpetuating the foreclosure crisis… well, to say it’s infuriating would be an understatement.
Okay, so make sure your speakers are turned up and I’d make sure you’re sitting down to avoid falling over when you hear some of the things Ed Pinto has to say.
~~~
This Mandelman Matters Podcast is presented in two parts. Part 1 is just under 60 minutes and focuses on the FHA and the big picture facts about our government’s role in housing finance, and Part 2 is about 40 minutes, and goes further into the causes of the crisis, and where Ed sees us going from here.
Like I said, you may not always agree with his conclusions or cures, but his research is always fascinating, his facts are bulletproof, his experience as an “insider”at Fannie Mae is invaluable… and I don’t think there’s any question that his motives are pure.
Just click on PART ONE below to start listening to…
From Fannie Mae to FHA –
Why Ed Pinto Wants Government Out of Housing Finance
A Mandelman Matters Podcast
And Coming Soon…

Two of Ed’s latest articles:
Truth in Government Lending is Long Overdue
Empty promise: The holes in the administration’s housing finance reform plan
~~~
And you can SUBSCRIBE to Ed Pinto’s blog and FHA WATCH bulletins.
He can be contacted via Email at: edward.pinto@aei.org
Mandelman out.
Famous Quotes About International Bankers, The Federal Reserve and America
Florida has One-Fourth of Nation’s Foreclosures and Kathleen Passidomo Says Throw Them Out!
- Kathleen Passidomo | RE HB 213 The Florida (un)Fair Foreclosure Act “The reality is the borrower borrowed something from someone, and didn’t pay his debt”
- Action Alert | Kathleen Passidomo is in the Final Stages of Drafting the Florida (un)Fair Foreclosure Act
- Road Trip | Kathleen Passidomo to Host Town Hall Meetings Monday Oct 24th & Wed Oct 26th from 5-7 PM
Vistas Homeowner Association | 81-Year-Old Korean War Veteran Foreclosed on for a Measly $338.91
In re: DANIEL JOSEPH SUTTER | Bankers are tagged by court with “unclean hands” and mortgage is adjudicated “void ab initio”
In re: DANIEL JOSEPH SUTTER | Bankers are tagged by court with “unclean hands” and mortgage is adjudicated “void ab initio”
James Theckston | Chase Banker Speaks, with Regret, Acknowledges Bankers are Responsible for Country’s Housing Mess
Pics and Video | Robin Hoods Storm Mortgage Banksters Conference in Chicago
- I Can’t Wait to See More! | Robin Hoods Storm Mortgage Bankster’s Association Conference – This Time by Kayaking Down the Chicago River
- The Moat Crossing Robin Hoods Return in Chicago to Invade the Mortgage Bankers Association Conference
- New Bottom Line | Handcuff Cookies and Chicago Foreclosure Report Greet National Meeting of States’ Attorneys General
I Can’t Wait to See More! | Robin Hoods Storm Mortgage Bankster’s Association Conference – This Time by Kayaking Down the Chicago River
- The Moat Crossing Robin Hoods Return in Chicago to Invade the Mortgage Bankers Association Conference
- New Bottom Line | Handcuff Cookies and Chicago Foreclosure Report Greet National Meeting of States’ Attorneys General
- Make a Stand America – Chicago Family Refuses to Leave Home After Foreclosure Fraud
The Moat Crossing Robin Hoods Return in Chicago to Invade the Mortgage Bankers Association Conference
Mortgage Bankers Association No Longer Trusts MERS with its Data Standards Initiative
Mortgage Bankers Association Letter to the Federal Reserve RE “Skin in the Game” and the Ability of Borrowers to Repay
The Definition of Dichotomy
There have been times in my life when certain words gained meaning all of a sudden. Like, I knew the word before and even its definition, but then I reached a point in my life where I really knew what a certain word meant. I’ll give you an example… and I’ve said this before… I never really understood anger, joy, fear or sadness until I had my daughter. I mean, I knew what the words meant before she was born, of course, but I then again I didn’t really.
Well, yesterday I had another one of those types of experiences… no… my wife and I didn’t have another baby… actually I think the experience had been building inside and around me and yesterday it all came colliding together… and all over a sudden I understood the definition of the word, “dichotomy.”
It’s a big word… dichotomy… it means… oh, I don’t know, the word “contrast” comes to mind. It’s sort of the separation of irreconcilable things. A contradiction is perhaps the better way to define it.
I’ll tell you this though… when you run into a true dichotomy you’ll know it, that’s for darn sure. It sort of leaves you sitting there staring at the wall unsure of what to do next. The idea of screaming from the top of the tallest hill in town seems potentially gratifying at such a moment.
I’ll share my experience with you now, and see what you think about the whole… well… the dichotomy, I suppose. Here goes… just as it happened to me.
PART 1
“We are now well into the fourth year of the foreclosure crisis, and there is no end in sight. Since mid-2007 around eight million homes entered foreclosure, and over three million borrowers lost their homes in foreclosure. As of June 30, 2010, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported that 4.57% of 1-4 family residential mortgage loans (roughly 2.5 million loans) were currently in the foreclosure, process a rate more than quadruple historical averages. Additionally, 9.85% of mortgages (roughly 5 million loans) were at least a month delinquent.”
Who the heck said that? He sounds like me, don’t you think? I feel like I might be quoting myself, which is weird.
Actually, I’m flattering myself because those are the words found in Georgetown Law Professor Adam Levitin’s written testimony in provided to House Financial Services Committee, Subcommittee on Housing and Community Opportunity on November 18, 2010. The topics being covered by his testimony:
“Robo-Singing, Chain of Title, Loss Mitigation, and Other Issues in Mortgage Servicing”
“To this sad state of affairs, there now come a variety of additional problems: faulty foreclosures due to irregularities ranging from procedural defects (including, but not limited to robo-signing) to outright counterfeiting of documents; predatory servicing practices that precipitate borrower defaults and then overcharge for foreclosure services that are ultimately paid for by investors; and questions about the validity of transfers in private-label mortgage securitizations.”
The chain of title problems are highly technical, but they pose a potential systemic risk to the US economy. If mortgages were not properly transferred in the securitization process, then mortgage-backed securities would in fact not be backed by any mortgages whatsoever.
The chain of title concerns stem from transactions that make assumptions about the resolution of unsettled law. If those legal issues are resolved differently, then there would be a failure of the transfer of mortgages into securitization trusts, which would cloud title to nearly every property in the United States and would create contract rescission/put-back liabilities in the trillions of dollars, greatly exceeding the capital of the US’s major financial institutions.
These problems are very serious. At best they present problems of fraud on the court, clouded title to properties coming out of foreclosure, and delay in foreclosures that will increase the shadow housing inventory and drive down home prices. At worst, they represent a systemic risk that would bring the US financial system back to the dark days of the fall of 2008.
Okay, so you know what Professor Levitin is talking about there, right? He’s saying that we are in deep Kim chi, that’s what he’s saying. He’s saying that the loans were not properly transferred into the trusts that are now trying to foreclose on homes… and apparently, they can’t seem to come up with anything that says they own the loan… but they want to foreclose anyway.
He’s also saying that when the banksters figured out that they could come up the proper documents to conduct the foreclosure legally, they decided that the path to take… the best way to solve the problem… the optimal answer to this dilemma was… to commit forgery and fraud.
Yes, it’s true. The banksters, unable to establish that they complied with just about ANY of the laws governing the transfer of property, much less the requirements as set for in a Pooling and Servicing Agreement, came up with a plan. Let’s forge them and see if we can’t defraud the court. Yeah, great idea… run with it.
From there it’s almost like they were barely trying, as if “we” are so stupid that you can fool us just as you might a three year-old. Just pick a short name and have everybody sign it. Yeah, Linda Green’s fine, I was thinking, Don Ho, but you’re right, Linda Green is better. Yep, just sign it over and over, they’ll never notice… silly humans.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again… nobody chooses “robo-signing” hundreds of thousands of affidavits and various other documents off of a list of other viable alternative solutions to your problem. When you find yourself checking “YES” on robo-signing… when you’re a bank that chooses to open a fraud and forgery department… well, something has left the building, let’s say that.
So, a lot of people have been talking about this for some time now, so what’s new?
Well, both The New York Times and the Huffington Post are reporting on state investigations into the practices surrounding the packaging of mortgage-backed securities and their brethren. And even though the bank’s response has been basically flowers in springtime, the New York and Delaware Attorneys General say they’re quite serious.
He’s saying that this could be a game changer depending on how this is handled. We could explode… or maybe implode. I’m not entirely sure. But it’s bad. The kind of thing you wouldn’t want to have to live through twice.
So, clicking around yesterday, at Huff-Po it was Shahien Nasiripour with the story… still can’t pronounce it and for that I am deeply ashamed, but it is to be expected. He wrote about the New York Attorney General “launching” an “investigation into mortgage securitization.” Heady stuff, I’m sure you’d agree.
“New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman has targeted Bank of America, the biggest U.S. bank by assets, in a new probe that questions the validity of potentially thousands of mortgage securities and their associated foreclosures, two people familiar with the matter said.
The investigation, which began quietly in recent weeks, is part of a larger inquiry that is scrutinizing whether mortgage companies and Wall Street firms took the necessary steps under New York state law when creating mortgage-backed securities, these people said, who requested anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly about the probe.
Court testimony and independent studies have raised questions over whether banks and other financial firms passed along the required documents to trusts, the independent entities that oversee securities for investors. In some cases where trusts moved to seize borrowers’ homes, judges have determined the trusts lacked legal standing due to faulty documentation.
The inquiry could prove explosive: Wall Street’s great mortgage securitization machine took millions of home loans and bundled them into securities for sale to investors. If the legal steps that guide securitization — like taking mortgage documents from one party to another, a critical step under New York law — were not undertaken, then the investors who bought the bundled loans could force the companies to buy them back, compelling them to eat enormous losses.
New York state investigators could also find that those securities aren’t valid financial instruments at all and take action under state law.
But an investigation into whether the securities these companies created are even valid represents a new front in his ongoing probe and raises fresh questions into the potential liability sellers of these mortgage instruments face.
“If mortgages were not properly transferred in the securitization process, then mortgage-backed securities would in fact not be backed by any mortgages whatsoever,” says Adam J. Levitin.
Levitin also said that the problem could “cloud title to nearly every property in the United States” and could lead to trillions of dollars in losses.”
Shahien’s “exclusive” soon had company, Gretchen Morgenson of The New York Times also ran a story saying that both the Attorneys General from New York and Delaware were conducting such an investigation into the practices surrounding and involved in mortgage-backed securities. And if you’re wondering what’s the big deal about New York and Delaware, well… I’ll tell you…
“The trusts were governed by the laws of the states in which they were set up. Roughly 80 percent of the trusts are governed by New York law with the rest by Delaware law.”
See… I told you. So, here’s how the Times described the same topic…
The investigation is being led by Eric T. Schneiderman, the attorney general of New York, who has teamed with Joseph R. Biden III, his counterpart from Delaware. Their effort centers on the back end of the mortgage assembly lines — where big banks serve as trustees overseeing the securities for investors — according to two people briefed on the inquiry but who were not authorized to speak publicly about it.
The attorneys general have requested information from Bank of New York Mellon and Deutsche Bank, the two largest firms acting as trustees. Trustee banks have not been a focus of other investigations because they are administrators of the securities and did not originate the loans or service them. But as administrators they were required to ensure that the documentation was proper and complete.
“A complex process that produced hundreds of billions of dollars in securities during the lending boom, the issuance of mortgage securities began with home loans, which were then bundled into investments and sold to pension funds, mutual funds, big banks and other investors. The bundles were created as trusts overseen by institutions such as Bank of New York and Deutsche Bank; they were supposed to make sure the complete mortgage files for each loan were delivered within a specified time and with the proper documentation.”
“The stakes are potentially high. If the trustees did not follow the rules set out in the prospectus, they may be liable for breaching their duties to investors who bought the securities. That could expose the banks to costly civil litigation.”
“Spokesmen from Bank of New York and Deutsche Bank declined to comment about the investigation, as did representatives from the offices of both attorneys general.”
Okay, so Gretchen and Shahien seem to be in a race. It seems to me that they’ve both found a bush and they want to see who can be the first to beat around it. In fairness to them, it may be their editors that hold them back, but the point is, what they’re talking about is the 800 pound gorilla in the room.
Or, another way of putting it… in the contest to see whether mortgage-backed securities either “taste great” or are “less filling,” it’s seems that “less filling” has taken the lead.
We’re talking about mortgage-backed securities without the “mortgage-backed” part. Empty securities. Like a Twinkie without the creamy filling inside. Securities fraud. Bad, very bad. The sort of thing for which one gets sued… or possibly even charged.
Once again, Professor Adam Levitin’s testimony tells it best…
“Many of the issues relating to foreclosure fraud by mortgage servicers, ranging from more minor procedural defects up to outright counterfeiting relate to the need to show standing. Thus problems like false affidavits of indebtedness, false lost note affidavits, and false lost summons affidavits, as well as backdated mortgage assignments, and wholly counterfeited notes, mortgages, and assignments all relate to the evidentiary need to show that the entity bringing the foreclosure action has standing to foreclose.
Concerns about securitization chain of title also go to the standing question; if the mortgages were not properly transferred in the securitization process (including through the use of MERS to record the mortgages), then the party bringing the foreclosure does not in fact own the mortgage and therefore lacks standing to foreclose. If the mortgage was not properly transferred, there are profound implications too for investors, as the mortgage-backed securities they believed they had purchased would, in fact be non-mortgage-backed securities, which would almost assuredly lead investors to demand that their investment contracts be rescinded, thereby exacerbating the scale of mortgage put-back claims.
Many of the problems in the mortgage securitization market (and thus this testimony) are highly technical, but they are extremely serious. At best they present problems of fraud on the court and questionable title to property. At worst, they represent a systemic risk of liabilities in the trillions of dollars, greatly exceeding the capital of the US’s major financial institutions. While understanding the securitization market’s problems involves following a good deal of technical issues, it is critical to understand from the get-go that securitization is all about technicalities.
Securitization is the legal apotheosis of form over substance, and if securitization is to work it must adhere to its proper, prescribed form punctiliously. The rules of the game with securitization, as with real property law and secured credit are, and always have been, that dotting “i’s” and crossing “t’s” matter, in part to ensure the fairness of the system and avoid confusions about conflicting claims to property.
Close enough doesn’t do it in securitization; if you don’t do it right, you cannot ensure that securitized assets are bankruptcy remote and thus you cannot get the ratings and opinion letters necessary for securitization to work.
Thus, it is important not to dismiss securitization problems as merely “technical;” these issues are no more technicalities than the borrower’s signature on a mortgage. Cutting corners may improve securitization’s economic efficiency, but it undermines its legal viability.”
So… any questions about that? It’s a big deal. A really big deal. The banking industry associations say it’s not, but it quite obviously is. You know, there are reasons we have the laws we do governing the transfer of property rights, it’s not like such laws were created on a whim. And the pooling and service agreements, or PSAs, govern how loans are to be transferred into the REMIC trusts are some 500+ pages long, in most cases, and call me crazy, but compliance with such a document doesn’t sound like a trivial matter either.
So, now the Attorneys General from New York and Delaware are investigating in order to find out whether trillions of dollars in loans were seriously mishandled and therefore are not in the trusts, as the banksters said they were. The IRS is investigating too. And at least two large investors have already filed lawsuits alleging that they were sold “empty trusts.”
Here’s an excerpt from a real lawsuit lawsuit filed this past April 21st by the Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston, an investor in mortgage-backed securities, against just about everyone you’ve ever heard of in the financial, services industry, from Aurora to Wells Fargo… you’ll find it on page 28 of the complaint, item ‘f’.
“In order for a mortgage to be enforced, basic steps need to be taken to validly assign the mortgage and mortgage loan to the trust and ensure that the trustee has the proper papers. These basic steps, and the representations made about these steps, were critical to investors because if a mortgage cannot be enforced, then the mortgage loans and the certificates dependent on these loans, are worthless. The Offering Documents failed to disclose that in fact basic steps regarding the transfer of mortgages and mortgage loans were not followed – mortgage loans were not validly assigned, and papers necessary to ensure enforceability of the mortgage were never transferred to the trustee.”
Have I made my case yet? It’s important stuff, right? The New York Times and the Huffington Post write about state Attorneys General investigating trustees about the issue, Professor Adam Levitin testifies in Congress about the issue, and the Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston files a lawsuit that incorporates the issue into its 575-page complaint.
So, you agree, right? It’s a serious issue, how loans are transferred into trusts as part of the securitization process. Right? Right.
Okay, so here’s PHASE TWO of yesterday’s news:
FADE IN: We’re in the United States Bankruptcy Court, Northern District of California, in front of The Honorable Edward D. Jellen, a United States Bankruptcy Judge. We’re watching an Evidentiary Hearing on Debtor’s Objection to Proof of Claim, which is another way of saying that the homeowner is saying there’s something wrong with what the bank is claiming he owes.
The homeowner’s name is Felipe Zulueta, Jr. and he’s representing himself in these proceedings… pro per, or pro se… I can never figure out which is which or why to use one over the other. The point is that he doesn’t have a lawyer… he’s representing himself.
It is 9:35 AM on November 3, 2010 when the Clerk says…
The Clerk: All rise.
This is the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of California, The Honorable Edward Jellen presiding.
Be seated.
Mr. Chun: Thank you, Your Honor.
Mr. Zulueta: Thank you, Your Honor.
The Court: This is the matter of Zulueta. May I have the appearances, please?
Mr. Zulueta: Felipe Zulueta, Jr. Your Honor, Debtor.
The Court: Okay.
Mr. Chun: Joseph Chun representing the secured creditor.
The Court: All right. Mr. Zulueta, are you going to be presenting any evidence to show that they don’t have standing?
Mr. Zulueta: Actually, Your Honor, I was going to address the exhibits that they’re going to present today.
The Court: Yeah. My question was, do you have an evidence of your own…
Mr. Zulueta: No.
The Court: … that shows…
Mr. Zulueta: No.
The Court: All right. Mr. Chun, according to your trial brief, you have exhibits, is that correct?
Mr. Chun: That’s correct, Your Honor.
Mr. Zulueta: Your Honor?
The Court: Yes.
Mr. Zulueta: I just wanted to clarify, Your Honor, if counsel is representing One West Bank or Deutsche Bank National Trust Company as trustee for the mortgage loan trust.
Mr. Chun: We’re representing One West Bank, the servicing agent – who’s the servicing agent for Deutsche.
Mr. Zulueta: Okay, so I just wanted to find out, Your Honor, if One West Bank has the proper authorization from Deutsche Bank to authorize them, because I don’t see any power of attorney presented.
The Court: All right. Well, you know, the bottom line is you’re not getting a free house.
Mr. Zulueta: I’m not asking for a free house, Your Honor. I just want to make sure that the proper paperwork is in place so I can pay the right creditor.
LATER THAT SAME MORNING…
Mr. Zulueta: Okay, so the first thing I want to point out, Your Honor, is, number one, on the bottom of the page of the recorded document, there’s a handwritten scribble on the bottom after the signature of the notary that says, a notary on the basis within capacity under – which means that this is not a true and correct copy.
The Court: What difference does it make?
Mr. Zulueta: Well, it does make a difference, Your Honor, because I’m trying to establish a pattern here of the fact that this document appears fraudulent.
The Court: Do you have any evidence that it’s fraudulent? I mean, whether it’s recorded or not doesn’t make any difference.
Mr. Zulueta: Well, it does, Your Honor, because all of the exhibits that counsel is presenting today, there is a system of how my loan is supposedly deposited into the trust, and since they’re representing the trust, I want to make sure that they’re the proper creditor for my loan.
The Court: All right. Who do you think is the proper creditor?
Mr. Zulueta: Right now, Your Honor, it’s a mystery. I mean, after my research…
The Court: All right. But you don’t get a free house.
Mr. Zulueta: I understand, Your Honor.
So, how about that? And I’m not making any of that up, by the way… in fact, I didn’t even change a single word from the court transcript. And you don’t even have to take my word for it, because the link to the court transcript can be found at the bottom of this post.
According to April Charney, of Jacksonville Legal Aid, this case goes before the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals next week. Any guesses as to what will happen? I don’t really care whether the documents are all fraudulent. I don’t really care how many laws were broken, or whether the REMIC trust is as empty as my wallet on December 26th… I only want to know one thing…
Will Mr. Zulueta get a “free house?”
Are you getting what I’m trying to say here? Because we have here is a true “dichotomy,” wouldn’t you say? It’s dichotomous, if you’re an adjective person.
That’s only two of the contrasting stories I had to work with that day. At the same time, Fannie Mae announced that it would not participate in Hawaii’s new mediation program. Why? Because they don’t want to have to prove standing… that the servicer is foreclosing on behalf of the trust that actually owns the note… as is required by Hawaii’s new mediation program.
And this afternoon, a lawyer in Hawaii told me that he has learned that title insurance companies are refusing to write title insurance on non-judicial foreclosures in Hawaii. And why in the world would that be, do you suppose?
Meanwhile, in Utah, a judge apparently granted Quiet Title to Scott Harvey, a homeowner, who promptly sells his now free and clear house after no one shows up to contest the matter. Someone want to explain that one to me?
Harvey v Garbett, Quiet Title Case in Draper Utah
Oh, and Bank of America’s being accused of obstructing a federal investigation by HUD investigators in Arizona and now that fact has been added to the lawsuit filed by the State of Arizona against Bank of America less than a year ago, I believe. So, go figure.
My Conclusion…
This is a mess. A real mess. And I see only one way out… follow the laws of our land.
Ours is a country built on laws, and forged by lawyers. It is our laws that have held us together for over 200 years, and only adherence to our laws will get us through this mess.
Did Wall Street’s bankers screw up the securitization of millions of loans? Well, obviously the answer is yes. Does that mean that the REMIC trusts are going to collapse? Yes it probably does at that. Will that be the end of the world? No, I don’t think it will. Answers will be found… equitable answers. And we will go on.
Want to know what won’t work… what will ultimately destroy us? What we’re doing now. The path we’ve been on for the last two years has been disastrous for tens of millions of Americans and we cannot stay on that path much longer. The cost will simply be too great.
Whatever the answer the answer is, I’ll tell you what it is not… it’s not fraud and forgery… it’s not turning our country into a class society where the mega-rich live behind gates and the rest of us… well, eat cake… and it’s not free houses either.
We are only here because the bankers have proven themselves untrustworthy and abusive. That’s right… that’s why we’re here, no other reason. The anger is rising and palpable. The banks continue to lie to homeowners every day. They have already gone too far and will pay a huge price for years to come, but that price is going up every day, and someone has to find a more equitable path.
I think I can help. I leave for Hawaii this coming Monday. I’m meeting with members of the legislature and numerous others. Wish me luck. Pray for us all.
Mandelman out.
ZULUETA Answer Brief Deutsche Bank
Elizabeth Warren Battles With GOP Over CFPB
I have to say something about what’s going on in Congress these days, because it’s repulsive on an entirely new scale, and that’s saying something for our politicians.
As you’ve probably already heard, at a hearing of the House Oversight Committee yesterday, chaired by Rep. Patrick McHenry (R-NC), the House GOP showed themselves for what they are: paid for lackeys for the banking industry, nothing more.
McHenry, for example, the jackass that accused Professor Warren of “lying,” when he tried to hold her over the agreed to time for her testimony, spent the entire time trying to make her and the CFPB look bad. Even before the hearing, McHenry went on CNBC and accused Warren of “lying” to congress, saying that she had misrepresented her role in advising the state attorneys general who are seeking a multi-billion dollar settlement with the country’s largest mortgage servicers.
McHenry pointed to a leaked internal document, prepared by the CFPB that presented the AGs with different settlement scenarios, which he said went beyond the giving of “advice,” as she had told congress she would be doing at her last visit to Capitol Hill.
In March, Professor Warren had readily admitted that the CFPB, at the request of the Treasury Department, had provided such advice. At yesterday’s hearing, she said: “We’ve given advice when asked for advice.” And from there, the elected morons in the House started debating the meaning of the word “advice,” with the large television screens in the hearing room showing the Merriam-Webster definition: to give [someone] a recommendation about what should be done.
Now, I don’t care what your views are about politics…this is just plain STUPID and McHenry looked like what he obviously is… a pantload.
I can’t imagine that it’s a coincidence that McHenry has received very generous donations this year from large banks and industry trade associations that oppose the CFPB, including $1,000+ checks from the American Bankers Association, Mortgage Bankers Association, American Express, American Financial Services Organization, Cash America International, JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley and the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.
And in 2009-10, commercial banks gave him $91,975… the American Bankers Association kicked down another $20,000, and Wells Fargo Bank was his single largest campaign contributor at $15,550. Don’t believe me? (Look it up HERE if you want.)
How can anyone vote for this guy? The State of North Carolina would be better off just leaving his congressional seat empty.
It’s hard for me to imagine, but the Republicans have accomplished something I would not have thought even remotely possible… they have made me grateful for President Barack Obama.
Considering that I have never been so disappointed in a president in my lifetime, so much so that I cannot bring myself to watch his speeches, or even think about his inattention to the foreclosure crisis, it’s truly striking to think that I am thankful that he is in office and that he is certain to win again in 2012. It’s truly an unbelievable condition.
How can ANYONE support today’s Republicans in the House of Representatives or United States Senate? How can they think anyone will after seeing their behavior related to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (“CFPB”)?
The only possibility I can come up with is that they’re just totally sure that their constituents aren’t paying any attention at all to what they’re doing. What else could it be? I mean, they might as well be caught on camera dining and dancing at a lavish affair hosted by Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, Citibank and Bank of America, at which they are all presented with checks for a million dollars apiece.
This isn’t about “the right” and “the left,” or conservatives v. liberals. This is simply about “RIGHT v. WRONG.”
The CFPB is the only bureau in our government with a mission to protect the interests of consumers… that’s you and me… regular middle class working people. After what we’ve just been through in terms of the financial meltdown, how could anyone possibly make the case that we shouldn’t have even one federal bureau out of… I don’t even know how many… that is dedicated to watching out for consumers?
It would be like saying that we should continue to allow passengers to bring box cutters onto commercial aircraft following 9-11. That’s not an exaggeration, that’s exactly what it would be like.
I recently had the opportunity to meet face to face with Professor Warren. I wanted to ask her how I… and my readers… could help her cause, and then I wanted to ask for her advice as to how I should go about attacking the foreclosure crisis. But before I asked her about either of those things, I told her that I found it stunning that there was anyone on the opposite side of the arguments she makes in her role at the CFPB.
So, I started our conversation by asking her: “When you says consumers should know how much a mortgage costs, or what risks are involved, or the interest rate on a credit card… does someone stand up on the other side of the table and say, “No! Consumers must not be told either of those things?”
She responded by saying, and I’d prefer not to quote her exact words in this instance, that I was quite right… there was no other side to those arguments. Of course, consumers should be made aware of such things.
I told her I couldn’t believe that the financial industry even opposed such things and that it was shocking to see the industry go after her the way they have… and do. And she said something to the effect of (again, I would prefer not to quote her exact words for fear of them being taken out of context by the House GOP):
When they go after me, the best they can do is to say that I’m too confrontational with the bankers. So, since when do we ask bank robbers what they think of the new laws for punishing bank robbers?
The day I met Professor Warren, she explained why she thought so few have been punished as a result of the financial crisis:
“With Enron you had Enron. One company that had caused the problems. With this financial crisis, there are so many they can barely be counted. And we have multiple regulators in the Fed, the OCC, the OTS, the FDIC. And none of these are agencies came to the crisis with the perspective of the American consumer.
The competition between the OCC and OTS was designed to create under-regulation. If the OCC was too tough the financial institution could reclassify itself as a thrift and be regulated by the OTS.”
A little later she also said:
“The number one retirement plan in this country was to pay off the house and live on one’s Social Security and presumably whatever pension or additional savings one had accumulated over one’s working years. That has been robbed from the American people by the financial sector.
The CFPB is the opportunity to begin to change that. It won’t solve everything and there is much work to be done, but it represents our only hope.”
Finally, she seemed a bit dismayed when she said:
“I thought we had the fight last year and we won. And we got the agency that would have the mission of protecting consumers. But we now see that the fight is not over. There are bills in the legislature today that threaten the agency’s very existence by proposing to defund or defang the new agency.”
People, how in the world can anyone say that we didn’t need some consumer protections in place in light of the bankers having caused the worst economic meltdown in 70 years? We had mortgage companies putting people into loans who couldn’t read. Stockton, California was targeted because it has the lowest literacy rate in the state, for God’s sake.
First Premier Bank out of South Dakota offers a credit card with a 70.9 interest rate… but don’t worry ’cause it only applies to poor people, so f#@k ‘em? Is that someone’s position out there? Predatory lending is important because poor communities need loan sharks, is that the deal?
And even forgetting all of that… the CFPB is ONE bureau… one solitary bureau in a literal sea of federal agencies… with the responsibility to watch out for the consumers’ best interests… can’t we even have one? Call me crazy, but shouldn’t the banks themselves even be in favor of consumers having one federal bureau… after all, they do have all of the others?
It’s like finding out that there’s someone who opposes a parking lot having a couple of spaces up front for the handicapped… when they have the other 700 spaces available in the lot.
McHenry was way out of line in the House Oversight Committee meeting with Professor Warren, and everyone knew it. Well, maybe not the House GOP, but who cares? They’ve shown us all, loud and clear, that they are in the pockets of the bankers, even more than the Democrats have… and that’s no easy task.
CLICK HERE – SEND A LETTER IN SUPPORT OF
ELIZABETH WARREN TO LEAD THE CFPB
And that’s all I have to say about that…
Mandelman out.
Below is the video of the hearing of the House Oversight Committee in its entirety, and below is a link to just the heated moments when McHenry was at his worst.
LINK TO THE WORST OF REP. PATRICK McHENRY
Paula Pennypacker – An Arizona Republican Conservative Finds Mandelman Matters
Paula Pennypacker is the founder Just for Redheads Beauty Products. She has also been a political activist for two decades. She hosted a political talk show on WSPD Radio in Toledo before moving to Arizona, and she’s run for office on several occasions, in Ohio and once she moved to Arizona with her husband in 1998.
Today, she writes a Republican conservative blog, of all things, on azcentral.com. Well, she’s found Mandelman Matters and joined the group of Americans who know the foreclosure crisis must be stopped.
Over the past so many weeks, she has written numerous posts about what’s been happening in the Arizona legislature… you remember… the disappearing Senate Bill 1259… and who could ever forget Rep. Carl Seel and his $100k principal reduction? Not me, certainly.
Well, Paula may be a self-proclaimed conservative Republican, but she also has a brain… and a heart. And I’d encourage others… especially those that live in Arizona… to visit her blog and see what she has to say. Because, I think it was the last time she ran for public office that she lost to Michelle Reagan, the senator who allowed SB 1259 to disappear and the foreclosure crisis to go on for another year.
You never know… maybe we can get Paula to run again in the next election so Arizona will have someone in the legislature who’s committed to doing what’s best for the state, and not for the banking lobby. I readily admit that I do not know everything about Paula Pennypacker’s politics… but I don’t need to know everything… I know enough.
Her post “The Seel Deal,” can be found here: PPENNYPACKER BLOG
And what follows is my reply to her blog post, after she sent me this email:
I decided to follow your advice as a resident who is NOT facing foreclosure to advocate for principal reductions for those in desperate need of a loan mod like Rep Seel got. Paula
Hey, Hey Paula… (Sorry, I couldn’t help that.)
Well, I just have to say that you make me both proud and hopeful, as did the people of Hawaii a few weeks ago. After 2 1/2 years, you’re here… someone who has come to realize that WE have to stop the foreclosure crisis, because if WE don’t, WE are headed over the falls too. All of us… and I do mean every last one of us. Consider the following:
- According to the latest Zillow Report, U.S. homeowners have lost $9 trillion in home equity since 2006, and $1.7 trillion of that amount was in 2010 alone. And we know 2011 will be even worse still… analysts might argue about whether it will exceed $2.0 trillion or not, but that’s about it.
- That same report showed that residential property values dropped 63% MORE in 2010 than in 2009. And worse still the pace is accelerating. Between January to June 2010, the housing market lost $680 billion, but in the second half of 2010, losses topped $1 trillion.
- In January of this year, CNN/Money published forecasts made by Moody’s Analytics and Phoenix housing prices aren’t forecasts to return to pre-crash levels until… 2034, and that’s without adjusting for inflation. If we adjusted her forecast for inflation, it’d likely be 2064.
- Both Zillow and Core Logic show that U.S. housing prices have fallen 57 MONTHS in a ROW, and the end is nowhere in sight. We have already blown through the record for housing price decline set between 1929-1933, when the national average was 25.9% . We just hit 26% as of a national average.
- Standard & Poors forecasts that U.S. home prices will fall 7-10% in 2011. But the cold hard truth is that we don’t have any idea of how far prices have already fallen or how far they will fall, because we don’t have a real estate “market”. There are an estimated 7 million homes in the “shadow inventory,” meaning that the banks have taken them back but not put them on the market. A few months ago I checked Maricopa County’s “shadow” numbers… there were about 6,500 homes on the market, but there were 68,000 REO properties.
- Financing is becoming increasingly difficult to obtain. Freddie and Fannie are about to bring down their limits from $729,000 to $625,000 in so-called high-priced markets, and to $417,000 in lower cost metro markets. And the AVERAGE credit score for a Fannie Mae loan for the last two years is 769… yes, that’s AVERAGE.
- Almost 30% of homeowners NATIONWIDE are now “underwater,” and one third of the respondents in the latest Trulia/Realty Trac survey now report knowing someone affected negatively impacted by the foreclosure crisis. And today, there are 45 TIMES more mortgages over 60 days delinquent than there are homes in foreclosure.
Unfortunately, I could go on and on… and on my blog where I’ve written hundreds of articles, I already have. Next, let’s understand the LIE we were all told when they said it was “irresponsible sub-prime borrowers” that caused the crisis.
Stan Leibowitz is a professor of economics who is the director of the Center for the Analysis of Property Rights and Innovation at the management school at the University of Texas, Dallas. He conducted the authoritative study on the housing crisis analyzing a database of 34 million mortgages. Here’s are his own words from his published study:
“… the focus on sub-primes ignores the widely available industry facts (reported by the Mortgage Bankers Association) that 51% of all foreclosed homes had prime loans, not sub-prime, and that the foreclosure rate for prime loans grew by 488% compared to a growth rate of 200% for sub-prime foreclosures. (These percentages are based on the period since the steep ascent in foreclosures began — the third quarter of 2006 — during which more than 4.3 million homes went into foreclosure.)
“Sharing the blame in the popular imagination are other loans where lenders were largely at fault — such as “liar loans,” where lenders never attempted to validate a borrower’s income or assets.”
The simple fact is that irresponsible borrowers had nothing to do with causing this crisis, for one thing there just could never be enough of them. Wall Street’s bankers caused this crisis… they were the “irresponsible borrowers” who gorged themselves on CDOs and CDSs, and then leveraged themselves… meaning they borrowed against their assets just like taking out a second mortgage… by 40:1 and HIGHER.
Did some people take loans they shouldn’t have… it’s a silly question… because it depends on what happened next. If someone took out an adjustable rate loan assuming they could refinance in the future if rates started going up, that was not an unreasonable assumption because it has always been true in tis country. No one saw The Great Depression Part 2 around the corner.
And besides, the worst of the loans have long since gone the way of foreclosure… the people losing homes today are losing them not because they borrowed too much, but because of the free fall that’s taken place ever since. The banking P.R. machine, however, wants us blaming each other… looking in each other’s garages to see if a neighbor has a jet ski… instead of looking at what we’re all about to see courtesy of the federal government’s investigations, the AGs, and numerous lawsuits… or, in other words… AT THEM.
AND EVEN IF YOU OVERLOOK THAT AND MORE… We can’t afford this anymore.
I am NOT at risk of losing my home anytime soon… But I never say never… who knows what would happen to me… or you… or anyone, for that matter… in 2-3 years if things are allowed to continue to fall. Our home once appraised for $925,000… we’ve owned it for 20 years, bought it for $340,000. A few months ago, a home eight doors down on the same side of the street sold for $360,000… it was the first home to sell on our block in two years, and it was an REO, the only one on our block.
So, what happens in two more years of this… with no equity… if I get sick or injured? What if things get worse economically? I don’t know, but I certainly won’t be able to sell it, so foreclosure could conceivably be my only option. That applies to almost anyone… don’t kid yourself… and if it doesn’t apply to you… big deal… you’ll be all alone on your block.
So, we need to stop blaming each other for decisions made during a bubble created by Wall Street, during a credit crisis and economic meltdown created by Wall Street… and we need to start placing the blame where it’s deserved… on Wall Street. We need to demand that our government DO SOMETHING to stop the free fall in housing prices and that means stopping the flood of foreclosures that’s been allowed to continue unabated for 4.5 YEARS. ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!
The ship is sinking right in front of our eyes and some of you seem more interested in blaming your neighbors than getting to the lifeboats and fast. And you, me and everyone else is going to go down fast and far, years after year… while we fight over whether someone should have bought their home in 2005. Democrat… Republican… Conservative… Liberal… WHO CARES.
I’ve personally lost more than a million in equity, and at 50 years old next week… I can’t afford to lose any more. It the people can’t come together soon, there will be people like me that just start walking away. And then there’ll be no stopping anything.
Stop buying the banker’s BULL… you see what the bankers are really like, don’t you people of Arizona? They’ve corrupted your legislature… I’m the guy that broke the story about SB 1259 and Rep. Seel… ME… I’m the guy. The banking lobby has so destroyed your democracy that a bill that passed the senate 28-2 was made to disappear once weekend without a word to anyone.
Then a second attempt to get an amendment passed ended up with Rep. Seel accepting a bribe… or, rather a principal reduction, and your state’s Mortgage Lenders Association bragged that they accomplished both of these feats… they bragged that they were responsible for the blatant corruption of your own legislature.
What will you do about that? If you would do nothing, allow me to remind you of a famous poem:
First they came for the communists ,
And I didn’t speak out because I wasn’t a communist.
~~~
Then they came for the trade unionists,
And I didn’t speak out because I wasn’t a trade unionist.
~~~
Then they came for the Jews,
And I didn’t speak out because I wasn’t a Jew.
~~~
Then they came for me.
And there was no one left to speak out for me.
~~~
LAST POINT: For those that believe that you are helpless against the awesome power of the banking lobby and corrupt politicians… this is from my article just a few weeks ago:
it was only last November when a group of homeowners in Hawaii, with the support of Faith Action for Community Assets (“FACE”), whose members are predominately churches of various denomination and non-profit community groups, embarked on a grass roots effort to bring meaningful change to the process homeowners were being forced to endure when faced with the prospect of losing their homes to foreclosure.
Their dialog about the foreclosure crisis began when several ministers began talking openly about there being no dignity for the families trying to save their homes from foreclosure by banks.
With the next legislative session scheduled to begin in January of 2011, key members of the team, wasted no time finding out as much as possible about the foreclosure process, in order to begin drafting a proposed bill that would be strong enough to be effective.
I’m quite proud to be able to say that members of the group in Hawaii read my articles throughout the process, and used them with others… and the bill passed. They beat the banking lobby… 49-2 and 28-2 in the House and Senate respectively.
Want to know what helped push it over the edge… and I didn’t know this until after it had happened… YOUR CORRUPTION HELPED HAWAII PASS THE BILL because I wrote about what was going on in Arizona and they saw it and, horrified… met with others in the legislature and said they must not let that type of corruption visit their islands.
And when the banking lobbyists showed up two weeks before the vote thinking that they would kill the bill like they did here, people didn’t want to see them… because of what they had just done in Arizona!
PEOPLE OF ARIZONA… THIS CRISIS COULDN’T BE MORE IN YOUR FACE.
THE PEOPLE OF HAWAII DID IT… CAN’T YOU EVEN TRY? NOT ONLY CAN YOU TRY, YOU CAN WIN. JUST SAY THE WORD AND I’M ON MY WAY TO PHOENIX.
Mandelman out.
Arizona Residents… Please Visit Paula Pennypacker here: PPENNYPACKER BLOG
Pinellas County, Florida’s Sixth Judicial Circuit- Old School in the Fraudclosure Fight.
As questions over servicers and ownership of notes and mortgages have now made their way into the public discourse, I’ve been looking backwards, deconstructing these arguments and tracing the roots of the arguments and the very real questions which are being debated around the world and the admissions which are now part of the Congressional record.
Some of the earliest serious questioning of the issues now raised in our world centers of economic powers actually occurred right here in Pinellas County. As these issues continue to bubble and froth and the toxic pot of title stew continues to boil, I predict that we will eventually circle back and ask the question….
“What if we had listened to the good judge and stopped all of this in 2005?”
It really is interesting to read the article…a nice historical perspective….
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OH GOD- HILARIOUS JON STEWART VIDEO ON STRATEGIC DEFAULT!
| The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
| Mortgage Bankers Association Strategic Default | ||||
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And for more hilarity, fast forward to 3:40 to hear my client’s story….it would be funny if it were not so scary true.
| The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
| Foreclosure Crisis | ||||
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JON STEWART ON BANKERS BREAKING INTO MY CLIENT’S HOME
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