Fraudclosure | Foreclosure Fraud Teach In w/ Lynn Szymoniak (VIDEO)
Fraudclosure | Foreclosure Fraud Teach In w/ Lynn Szymoniak (VIDEO)
Occupy Palm Beach Foreclosure Fraud Teach-In Sunday Jan 29 1-3pm
Foreclosure Settlement’s Value Hinges on California’s Participation
Justice Calls for Foreclosure Mediation Support
The Justice Department's project on access to justice has issued a report summarizing current research on state foreclosure mediation programs, calling for more funding and support. The report offers an excellent summary of the best available research on foreclosure mediation programs, including the very successful Philadelphia and Connecticut programs, that have participation rates as high as 60% to 70% of defendants, and whose participants achieve settlements keeping them in their home in as much as half of the cases.
The industry, led by federal bank regulator OCC and housing finance regulator FHFA, is promoting the idea that all foreclosures are hopeless, homeowners are using state law solely for the purpose of delay, and that massive foreclosures are inevitable, that most judicial foreclosures just result in default judgments, so let's get on with it. The empirical evidence from states where adequate resources are applied, and mortgage companies are compelled to evaluate each and every homeowner with an income and a desire to pay, belies this myth.
Justice now joins the Federal Reserve in advocating for fewer, not more, foreclosures.
Raleigh Homeowner Sues Mortgage Companies for Stealing His House (VIDEO)
Mortgage Fraud | Bear Stearns, Lender Processing Services, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems
Cummings Calls for Unredacted Copies of “Engagement Letters” Between Mortgage Servicing Companies and Private Consultants
NJ Law Revision Commission Agenda Proposal Limiting Foreclosures to Recorded Mortgage Interest Holders, MERS
- M E R S – Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems Foreclosure Bankruptcy Decision – This Court is Convinced that MERS had NO Interest it Could Transfer
- H.R. 4953 Miller, Ellison Introduce the Mortgage Servicing Conflict of Interest Elimination Act Bill to Address Conflict of Interest in Mortgage Companies
- Kenton Kentucky Court Order – Foreclosure Complaints Must be Accompanied by Note and Recorded Mortgage with ALL Allonges, Endorsements, and Assignments
Eaton – Dividing the Mortgage Loan and Affirming the Consequent
Unsealed Complaint | Wells Fargo, Bank of America, J.P. Morgan Chase and GMAC Mortgage, Engaged in “A Brazen Scheme to Defraud Our Nation’s Veterans”
Fraud Digest | A STATEMENT ON MORTGAGE FRAUD THAT EVERY ATTORNEY GENERAL COULD ISSUE TODAY
A “Secret Weapon” To Stop Second Mortgage And Credit Card Collections In Their Tracks
The American Arbitration Association, Credit Card Disputes and Line of Credit/Mortgage Collection Lawsuits
Increasingly, the banks and mortgage companies, particularly on second mortgages, are not filing foreclosures but are instead just filing breach of contract claims in courts across the country to collect those debts. They don’t want the property back, but they will file suit to get a judgment against you.
Problem is the banks have written a major problem into many of their own contracts that causes them MAJOR problems. If you read these contracts carefully, you will note they have a forum selection clause that mandates all disputes will be resolved through the American Arbitration Association. Problem for our bankster friends is the AAA no longer has this program running anymore, thus the banksters and the credit card companies cannot fulfill the terms of the contract they wrote.
Knowing how to use this to your advantage in any credit card or debt collection case is a great way to stop them dead in their tracks!
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Another BOMBSHELL piece of Reporting- Wash Post On David J. Stern
Hat tip to my old friend attorney Claude Walker for “breaking” the Stern story ELEVEN YEARS AGO! Click on the attachment below for a dusty old deposition taken from that case a long, long, long time ago. There’s much more to the story that is reported here in the Washington Post. Among the most profound things to consider is the fact that the catastrophes that exist in courtrooms all across the state in the form of files from the Law Offices of David J. Stern should have been predicted given the revelations contained within the prior case and the issues that are discussed in the attached deposition.
…..and now, from the Washington Post…
Fannie and Freddie, the largest mortgage companies, shaped the practices being challenged in courtrooms around the country. They picked law firms that could foreclose fast and paid them based on how many foreclosures they could process. Speed was essential because delays cost the companies money – and, after they were taken over by the government two years ago, meant losses for taxpayers, too.
Not only did the companies urge swift foreclosures, but in at least one case Fannie executives also greenlighted working with a firm that they knew firsthand had engaged in legally questionable practices, according to documents and interviews with lawyers and industry officials.
That firm was the Law Offices of David J. Stern in Florida, which built a hundred-million-dollar-plus business foreclosing on the tens of thousands of borrowers who lost their homes in the housing crash.
Don’t forget to LEAVE COMMENTS TO THE STORY, then come back here to READ THE DEPOSITION FROM A DECADE AGO.
Read: David-Stern-Bryant-Case
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This Month’s Foreclosure Numbers….Bad News Behind The Scene…
By DAVID ROYSE
THE NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA
THE CAPITAL, TALLAHASSEE, Dec. 16, 2010…Foreclosure filings dropped dramatically in Florida and around the country in November, though it was largely because mortgage companies halted much of their activity under scrutiny for processing errors, foreclosure tracker RealtyTrac reported on Thursday.
In Florida, foreclosures plunged 42 percent from October and were just under 38 percent lower than a year ago. One out of every 267 housing units received a foreclosure filing during the month, the California-based company said.
Both the 21 percent month-over-month decrease and 14 percent year-over-year decrease in foreclosure activity nationally were the biggest drops recorded since RealtyTrac began publishing the U.S. Foreclosure Report in January 2005.
With 32,938 properties receiving a foreclosure filing in November, Florida posted the second highest state total despite the 42 percent drop from October, RealtyTrac said. Default notices in Florida decreased 52 percent from the previous month, while scheduled auctions were down 46 percent and bank repossessions dropped 20 percent.
Big monthly drops in foreclosure activity in several Florida metro areas resulted in only one metro area in the state having a foreclosure rate ranking in the national top 10: Port St. Lucie at No. 10 with one in every 173 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing in November.
Log On Here For The Full Story
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Is Your Foreclosure Final Judgment Void or Voidable? Rally Saturday November 20, TAMPA
When I started defending foreclosures years ago there was no real defense. The homeowner did not pay, the plaintiff was suing and they were eventually going to win. My how things have changed in a short period of time. Today there are widespread and well substantiated allegations of fraud and improper practices on the part of banks, mortgage companies and the law firms and other agents working to throw Americans out into the streets. In so many cases the question is not whether your client is going to lose the case, but how many questionable things can you find in the foreclosure lawsuit.
This leads us to the emerging line of legal questioning the community of Foreclosure Defense Warriors are engaged in and that is whether previously entered judgments are Void or merely Voidable. That question looms like a 800 pound Gorrilla in courtrooms all across this state. When the full specter of issues related to flawed Service of Process is raised, we will have a real sense of how big the most glaring issues of blatantly Void judgments are. All judgments based on fraudulent service are VOID. They don’t exist, they did not happen. To the homeowner living in that new home after purchasing from the bank…..sorry, but you don’t actually own that home, your deed is worthless. To the bank that gave that mortgage to purchase that home, your lien is not valid. This line of inquiry is shaking the title industry to the core as they struggle to play a game of “Not my problem; it’s yours”…trying to pass the liability off on the lenders who foreclosed. Next, the investors are trying to hold the servicers and lenders accountable as evidenced by the recent letter from Deutsche Bank to the servicers stating, “we ain’t gonna be liable for your screw ups”. This showdown is also a focal point of investor lawsuits against the major servicers, most especially Bank of America. They’re all saying, you guys screwed this up and we’re not going to hold the bag. (Bank of America is saying “Screw You” you’re on your own. Obama is saying, “foreclosures are good, we don’t need no moratorium.)
These are not abstract questions that will have no consequences. In fact, during a recent meeting of the judges and attorneys in Florida’s Sixth Judicial Circuit, it was acknowledged that these questions are going to plague our courts for years to come, as you can read in the attached article in the St. Petersburg Times.
“Even when judgments have been entered and sales have happened, they may say, ‘Whoa, that may have been sold improperly,’ ” McGrady said. “We’re going to have title issues and all those things. And every motion, everything that’s brought to the attention of the court will require a hearing of some sort. We’re working through it, but it will take that much longer.”
This issue is part of the larger and important work of a highly specialized group of foreclosure defense attorneys who have a broad range of experiences and who meet in secret locations regularly to discuss such issues and work through the much deeper and more significantly troubling aspects of this foreclosure insanity. The JEDTIS (Jurists Engaged in Defense of Title Integrity) are a group formed by Clearwater attorney Greg Clark and include some of the brightest minds in all areas of the law. If you’re looking to determine whether you have title claims, void (or voidable) judgments or have any number of other claims related to your foreclosure suit, especially any potential appellate cases, contact me for a referral to one of the JEDTI Masters.
For those attorneys who are just beginning your inquiry into VOID or VOIDABLE judgments, please see some of the initial case law research and discussions on the issues. The following is intended to assist attorneys in reviewing and intake of cases, please forward your cases to me for review and consideration by the JEDTI masters who are standing by ready to return the rightful owners to their property after proving up that the current “owners” of homes are merely posessors of the home subject to VOID deeds.
Judgments which are void at the outset, may on motion at any time be vacated. See Fla.R.Civ.P. 1.540 (b).
Diligence to serve by publication: Wiggam v. Bamford, 562 So. 2d 389 (4 DCA 1990), Gans v. Heathgate-Sunflower Homeowners, 593 So. 2d 549 (4 DCA 1992), Hobe Sound Ind. Park v. 1st Union Nat. Bank, 594 So. 2d 334 (4 DCA 1992); Batchin v. Barnett Bank, 647 So. 2d 211 (2 DCA 1994). Forecl judgment entered where sworn statement defective on its face voids sale, even as to non-party bidder. Gans; HOWEVER, see later 4th DCA case Demars, which says it is only voidable. See also Fund Concept, Forecls V. Absentee Owners, Jan 93; and III Fla. Real Property Practice (CLE 1976), s. 5.26. Sworn statement need not set out search facts, but judgment voidable if insuffic diligence, so better practice to set out. Demars v. Village of Sandalwood LAkes, 625 So. 2d 1219 (4 DCA 1993).
If the trial judge were to find the affidavit to be defective on its face, service would be void as to the bona fide purchaser. If the trial judge finds the affidavit sufficient on its face, but were to determine that a diligent search was not performed, the foreclosure would be voidable, not void, as to the bona fide purchaser. See generally 33 Fla. Jur. 2d Judicial Sales § 13 (2009). On the face of the affidavit of diligent search before us, we find that the affidavit is sufficient for purposes of service by publication and that the trial court did not grossly abuse its discretion in so holding. In light of the necessary reliance on the public record by a bona fide purchaser, the affidavit of diligent search was sufficient on its face to establish that an adequate search had been made to locate an address for service upon Lewis prior to effecting constructive service. The resultant foreclosure sale to the bona fide purchaser cannot be set aside. First Home View Corp. v. Guggino, 10 So. 3d 164 (Fla. 3d DCA 2009) (holding that trial court errs in vacating final judgment of foreclosure in sale of property to bona fide purchaser where homeowner is constructively served by publication and affidavit of diligent search is legally sufficient to establish that an adequate search has been made prior to constructive service); Southeast & Assoc. v. Fox Run Homeowners Ass’n, 704 So. 2d 694 (Fla. 4th DCA 1997) (holding that notice by publication is adequate where affidavit of diligent search is facially sufficient and foreclosure sale to bona fide purchaser is merely voidable, and not void, and cannot be set aside)
847 So.2d 555 RINAS v.RINAS; 1D09-2170 SOUTHEAST LAND DEVELOPERS v. ALL FLORIDA SITE AND UTILITIES, INC.,; 625 So.2d 1219 18 Fla. L. Weekly D911, DEMARS v. SANDALWOOD LAKES; 168 So.2d 183 EVANS v. HYDEMAN
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The Best Nationwide Title Clearing Deposition Video Yet- Dhurata Doko
3:18- Do you know what “good and valuable consideration means? I don’t usually read the docs when I sign. I just look for my name and sign.
Is your signature put electronically into a doc? Don’t know. Has you name been scanned and put into the system? Yes. Do you know what it is used for? I don’t ask.
Like I say I never read those I just go ahead and sign them.
I just see my name and I sign.
The last and frankly the best deposition from the Foreclosure Warriors at The Forrest Law Firm these guys have blown the lid off the whole document mill process and you really owe it to your self to listen to all these depositions in their entirety.
The big question we all need to be asking after watching all these deposition is,
“If all these Plaintiffs and lenders and mortgage companies really did own all these mortgages prior to when they started this Foreclosure Holocaust, why then do we have all these robo signer activities?”
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US CONGRESSMAN GRAYSON CALLS PRESS CONFERENCE- TOMORROW 10:30 AM!
CONGRESSMAN TO DEMAND ACTION AGAINST FORECLOSURE “FRAUD FACTORIES”
Will Call Upon Officials To Investigate Escalating Abuses
WHAT: Call to officials to investigate and bring to justice foreclosure mills.
WHEN: Thursday, October 14, 2010
TIME: 10:30a.m. – 11:00a.m.
WHERE: Home of Nancy Jacobini, foreclosure abuse victim
12531 Newfield Drive
Orlando, FL 32837
(Located in the Deer Ridge section of the Deerfield subdivision, between Orange Blossom Trail and John Young Parkway)
WHO: Congressman Alan Grayson, joined by attorney and defense attorney Matthew Weidner and Nancy Jacobini, a recent victim of foreclosure abuse and fraud.
DETAILS: Congressman Grayson is putting a human face on Central Florida’s foreclosure crisis. Real people – including those negotiating in good faith with mortgage companies – are being met with fraud and abuse at the hands of greedy foreclosure factories that are BREAKING THE LAW to make a buck. The Congressman is calling for this policy of “foreclose first – ask questions later” to stop immediately. This event will have excellent visuals, including testimonials from a real victim of foreclosure abuse and an attorney who has been handling several cases in the area.
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S.E.C. Cites Asset Firm in a Fraud
when two hedge funds run by the now-defunct Bear Stearns investment bank were in trouble, ICP agreed to buy $1.3 billion in bonds from the Bear funds. ICP did not have the money to accept the bonds immediately, so it agreed to accept them later on behalf of Triaxx C.D.O.’s. ICP was supposed to obtain A.I.G.’s permission before making such an agreement, but did not do so, the complaint said.
S.E.C. Cites Asset Firm in a Fraud
By LOUISE STORY
Beginning a new stage in the government’s investigations of the mortgage industry, the Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday accused a New York firm that managed complex mortgage securities of defrauding investors and misleading the American International Group, the government-controlled company that insured some of the firm’s deals.
Two of the four mortgage deals in the S.E.C. complaint were bought by the New York Federal Reserve in 2008, in its bailout of A.I.G. Goldman Sachs and UBS, which were not named in the complaint, received payouts from the Fed for those deals.
The case involves a new type of target for the S.E.C., which has been tracing the mortgage pipeline to try to uncover wrongdoing. The commission has filed cases against mortgage companies that originated loans, like Countrywide Financial, and this spring it filed a case against Goldman Sachs over a mortgage bond the bank had created.
This latest case examines the last party in that chain, a firm that managed complex deals known as collateralized debt obligations (C.D.O.’s) after they were created by banks. The firm, ICP Asset Management, used the four C.D.O.’s, sold under the name Triaxx, like a piggy bank to enrich itself by diverting millions of dollars from investors, the commission said in the complaint, which was filed in the Southern District of New York.
In a conference call with reporters, George S. Canellos, the director of the S.E.C.’s regional office in New York, said that ICP was one of about 50 C.D.O. managers that were targets of the commission’s continuing investigation. Mr. Canellos said the agency was focusing on conflicts of interest in the mortgage C.D.O. market that sometimes pitted managers against their own clients.
“The case makes plain to investment advisers that the S.E.C. does not shy away from the most complicated corner of the financial industry,” Mr. Canellos said.
When banks created C.D.O.’s, they worked with outside managers like ICP to reassure investors that a third party was watching out for clients’ interests and not putting itself or others first.
But the commission paints a picture of a firm that was anything but neutral. The complaint said that ICP set up trades with the Triaxx vehicles that favored the firm’s other funds, in some cases using the C.D.O.’s to pump up the market prices the other funds could claim as reasonable.
In addition, two of the Triaxx deals were partly insured by A.I.G., and one was insured by the Financial Guaranty Insurance Company, a bond guarantor. The commission said that ICP broke its agreement to obtain the insurers’ permission for certain investments and misled A.I.G. about its actions, even as A.I.G. neared collapse in 2008, prompting the government bailout.
“We at all times acted in the best interest of our clients and intend to vigorously defend these allegations,” Thomas C. Priore, one of ICP’s principals, said in an e-mail message.
A.I.G.’s involvement with ICP was organized by Goldman Sachs and UBS. Those two banks each bought the safest part of different Triaxx deals and then insured that part with a guarantee from A.I.G. Both banks received billions of dollars from the Federal Reserve in the fall of 2008 related to mortgage securities they insured with A.I.G., including their Triaxx investments.
The S.E.C. did not name either bank in the complaint. Goldman’s Triaxx deal was particularly tricky for the Fed to handle in 2008 because Goldman was not able to deliver some of the Triaxx bonds to the Fed. That meant that Goldman had insurance on some bonds that it no longer had. As a result, the Fed left part of Goldman’s deal out of its bailout.
A spokeswoman for UBS declined to comment, and a spokesman for Goldman did not provide a comment.
A.I.G. put in place safeguards in the deals it insured. But in the complaint against ICP, the S.E.C. describes several instances in which ICP did not follow its agreement with A.I.G.
For instance, in the summer of 2007, when two hedge funds run by the now-defunct Bear Stearns investment bank were in trouble, ICP agreed to buy $1.3 billion in bonds from the Bear funds. ICP did not have the money to accept the bonds immediately, so it agreed to accept them later on behalf of Triaxx C.D.O.’s. ICP was supposed to obtain A.I.G.’s permission before making such an agreement, but did not do so, the complaint said.
Shortly thereafter, ICP resold some of those Bear Stearns bonds to one of its other funds at a $14 million profit. But, the S.E.C. said, ICP canceled the trades with the Triaxx C.D.O.’s in such a way as to divert that profit to ICP’s owners, rather than giving it to the investors in the C.D.O.’s.
Mr. Priore was also named by the S.E.C., which said he had breached his duties to Triaxx’s investors in favor of investors in his other vehicles.
For instance, the commission said that in mid-2008, one of ICP’s vehicles was hit with margin calls from its lenders. To raise cash for those calls, ICP sold hundreds of millions of dollars of bonds from that vehicle to the Triaxx C.D.O.’s at inflated prices. The C.D.O.’s overpaid by about $40 million, the complaint said.
“Priore knew that the prices of sales from Triaxx Funding were substantially above prevailing market levels, yet instructed ICP employees to proceed with the sales,” the complaint said. “After several sales were executed, ICP’s portfolio manager, who felt uncomfortable following Priore’s instructions, directed ICP employees to name Priore as the trader in ICP’s books and records.”
ICP marketed the Triaxx deals when they were created in 2006 and 2007 by using A.I.G.’s name. The firm said in marketing materials that A.I.G. would serve as a “collateral manager,” approving trading by the Triaxx vehicles, according to the S.E.C.
Filed under: foreclosure
WHY VERY FEW MODIFICATIONS AND SHORT-SALES ARE APPROVED
EDITOR’S NOTES: BASICALLY IT IS ABOUT MONEY:
- Investment Banks make more money as long as the loans are non performing
- All the other intermediaries make more money while the loans are non-performing
- The details of securitization as a scheme to defraud investors and borrowers are kept under wraps
- Insurance is only paid on loans that are devalued or in default
- Credit default swap liability by counterparties in only paid when loans are in default or devalued
- Resecuritization is actually riskier for the investment bank on performing loans than non-performing loans. Nobody asks for an accounting for a loan they know is in default. Modification would convert a loan classified as non-performing, subject to write down or write-off to performing which might create a liability to return third party payments through insurance and credit enhancements.
- Servicers might lose the major part of their income, since they get paid more on performing loans. Note that deep inside the securitization documents, the servicer ends up with ultimate decision-making authority over the loan, NOT the so-called Trustee.
Lucrative Fees May Deter Efforts to Alter Loans
This week, the Obama administration summoned mortgage company executives to Washington to demand they move faster to lower payments for homeowners sliding toward foreclosure. Treasury officials called on the companies to hire and train more people quickly to field applications for relief.
But industry insiders and legal experts say the limited capacity of mortgage companies is not the primary factor impeding the government’s $75 billion program to prevent foreclosures. Instead, it is that many mortgage companies are reluctant to give strapped homeowners a break because the companies collect lucrative fees on delinquent loans.
Even when borrowers stop paying, mortgage companies that service the loans collect fees out of the proceeds when homes are ultimately sold in foreclosure. So the longer borrowers remain delinquent, the greater the opportunities for these mortgage companies to extract revenue — fees for insurance, appraisals, title searches and legal services.
“It frustrates me when I see the government looking to the servicer for the solution, because it will never ever happen,” said Margery Golant, a Florida lawyer who defends homeowners against foreclosure and who worked in the law department of a major mortgage company, Ocwen Financial. “I don’t think they’re motivated to do modifications at all. They keep hitting the loan all the way through for junk fees. It’s a license to do whatever they want.”
Rich Miller, a governance project manager at Countrywide Financial and Bank of America before he left in January, said Bank of America had been reluctant to modify loans, which hurt the bottom line. The company has been waiting and hoping the economy will improve and delinquent customers will resume making payments, he said.
“That’s the short-term strategy,” said Mr. Miller, who oversaw training programs at Countrywide, which was bought by Bank of America. He now works as an industry consultant.
Bank of America disputed that characterization. “To think that somehow or other we would jeopardize investor relationships and customer relationships for the very small incremental income we would receive by delaying seems ludicrous,” said Robert V. James, the bank’s senior vice president for mortgage operations and insurance. “It’s not the right thing to do.”
Mortgage companies, some of which are affiliated with the nation’s largest banks, are paid to manage pools of loans owned by investors. The companies typically collect a percentage of the value of the loans they service. They extract their share regardless of whether borrowers are current on their payments. Indeed, their percentage often increases on delinquent loans.
Legal experts say the opportunities for additional revenue in delinquency are considerable, confronting mortgage companies with a conflict between their own financial interest in collecting fees and their responsibility to recoup money for investors who own most mortgages.
“The rules by which servicers are reimbursed for expenses may provide a perverse incentive to foreclose rather than modify,” concluded a recent paper published by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
Under the Obama administration’s foreclosure program, a servicer that modifies a loan for a homeowner collects $1,000 from the government, followed by $1,000 a year for each of the next three years. A senior Treasury adviser, Seth Wheeler, said these payments amounted to “meaningful incentives to servicers to help overcome the challenges and competing demands they face in considering and completing loan modifications.” He added that mortgage companies “are contractually obligated to the terms of this program, which require them to offer modifications to qualified borrowers.”
But experts say the administration’s incentives are often outweighed by the benefits of collecting fees from delinquency, and then more fees through the sale of homes in foreclosure.
“If they do a loan modification, they get a few shekels from the government,” said David Dickey, who led a mortgage sales team at Countrywide and Bank of America, leaving in March to start his own mortgage advisory firm, National Home Loan Advocates. By contrast, he said, the road to foreclosure is lined with fees, especially if it is prolonged. “There’s all sorts of things behind the scenes,” he said.
When borrowers fall behind, mortgage companies typically collect late fees reaching 6 percent of the monthly payments.
“For many subprime servicers, late fees alone constitute a significant fraction of their total income and profit,” said Diane E. Thompson, a lawyer for the National Consumer Law Center, in testimony to the Senate Banking Committee this month. “Servicers thus have an incentive to push homeowners into late payments and keep them there: if the loan pays late, the servicer is more likely to profit.”
She cited Ocwen Financial, which reported that nearly 12 percent of its income in 2007 came from fees to borrowers.
Paul A. Koches, Ocwen’s general counsel, said: “We’d prefer that to be zero. The costs associated with our delinquent loans are in every instance in excess of the late fees.”
Data on delinquencies reinforces the notion that servicers are inclined to let problem loans float in purgatory — neither taking control of houses and selling them, nor modifying loans to give homeowners a break.
From June 2008 to June 2009, the number of American mortgages that were 90 days or more delinquent soared from 1.8 million to nearly 3 million, according to the realty research company First American Core Logic. During that period, the number of loans that resulted in the bank taking ownership of the home declined to 245,000, from 333,000.
As a home slides toward foreclosure, mortgage companies pay for many services required to take control of the property and resell it. They typically funnel orders for title searches, insurance policies, appraisals and legal filings to companies they own or share revenue with.
Ocwen established its own title company, Premium Title Services, in part to keep more of the revenue from foreclosures, said Ms. Golant, who helped start it.
“It was hugely profitable,” she said. “Premium Title would charge for the title when it got transferred to Ocwen, then charge again when it got transferred to the new buyer, and then sell title insurance. It was easy money.”
Mortgage companies not only gain this extra business through their subsidiaries, but also collect reimbursement for the payments when the houses are sold.
The investors who own bad mortgages accept whatever is left. Investors typically do not notice how much they give up to the servicers, because fees are embedded in complex sales.
“It’s under the radar,” Ms. Golant said.
Ultimately, the benefits of delinquency erode incentives for mortgage companies to dispose of troubled loans quickly, say experts, allowing distressed houses to decay and fall in value — a fact of little interest to the servicer.
“At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter what the house sells for, because they don’t take that loss,” said Ms. Golant. “Meanwhile, they are collecting all these fees.”
Filed under: foreclosure
FLORIDA HOMEOWNERS TO RALLY AT THE CAPITAL THIS WEEK
FLORIDA HOMEOWNERS TO RALLY AT THE CAPITAL THIS WEEK IN TALLAHASSEE
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Foreclosure Fraud | April 17, 2010
For all of you who can not attend the Historic Rally in Tally, and still want to be part of the event, below is a press release that can be sent by email, fax, or phone to all of the media outlets in Florida. [EDITOR'S NOTE: THE RALLY SEEMS TO BE SCHEDULED FOR APRIL 21 AT 9AM AT THE STEPS OF THE CAPITAL BUILDING. THERE ARE MANY "STEPS" OF THE CAPITAL BUILDING. I SUGGEST YOU POST A MAP]
Please Help us Spread the Word!
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
HOMEOWNERS TO RALLY AT THE CAPITOL THIS WEEK
TALLAHASSEE – Almost overnight homeowners from around Florida have organized and are set to voice their concerns directly with lawmakers this coming week in Tallahassee.
It began with a group of Florida consumer attorneys looking to meet with legislators to persuade them into rejecting a proposed and profoundly bad anti-consumer law threatening to put the entire foreclosure process in the hands of mortgage companies without any involvement by the courts. Homeowners and consumer advocates learned about the effort and have organized to oppose any new laws that threaten Florida consumers.
Lawmakers immediately began receiving calls from consumers around Florida voicing their opposition to the pending legislation, known as House Bill 1523 and Senate Bill 2270. The opposition was completely effective as legislators responded by listening and siding with consumers. The proposed law has been defeated for now thanks in large part to the collective efforts of consumers, advocates and attorneys who represent homeowners in foreclosure in Florida courts every day.
“It restores faith in our legislative process when lawmakers listen and respond favorably to homeowners voicing their concerns during this economic crisis”, says Matt Weidner, an attorney from Pinellas County who represents homeowners in foreclosure.
On the heels of this victory on Wednesday, April 21st hundreds of homeowners, consumers and other advocates from all across the State of Florida are driving, flying, taking buses (maybe even a horse or two) into Tallahassee with a powerful message: DO NOT TAKE AWAY VALUABLE CONSUMER PROTECTIONS. WE WANT TO WORK TOGETHER TO SOLVE THE CURRENT CRISIS. Leaders from both houses have graciously agreed to meet with their voters and with the group of consumer attorneys.
Chip Parker, a Jacksonville attorney who represents homeowners in foreclosure, encourages everyone who cares about Florida’s economic recovery to support this effort. “This isn’t about just laws that relate to foreclosure, it’s about preserving a balance that protects families during economic times like these. This is the worst time to be considering any laws that take away important consumer protections and that favor the banks”.
The attorneys also oppose the new laws because the changes would negatively impact the courts, judges and their staff because the changes would eliminate nearly 25% of the judiciary budget. This would make worse what is already a difficult situation for judges and their staff currently buried under thousands of foreclosure cases. “We need to ensure our courts are properly funded so that every litigant can have their day in court” says Weidner. Consumer advocates share this view in large part because they see how little time is currently devoted to hearing cases due to the high case loads.
The rally is scheduled to begin at 9:00am in Tallahassee at the steps of the Capitol and is open to attendance by all. Check the following websites for caravan and contact information!
http://www.lawyersforhomeowners.com
http://www.foreclosurehamlet.org
4closureFraud
1-561-880-LIES
Filed under: foreclosure
Credit Card Companies geting tougher? FIGHT BACK with securitization defenses!
See the thing about the arrogance of these non-bank and bank financial institutions is they are rushing to get under the wire before the truth is revealed: they are not the creditor and they never were. Send your debt validation letters and don’t let them sue without filing a motion to dismiss the same as the foreclosure actions. They have nothing. They are just pretender lenders just like the mortgage companies.
Filed under: bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, currency, foreclosure, GTC | Honor, Investor, Mortgage, securities fraud Tagged: bailout, credit cards, disclosure, Federal reserve, fraud, Lender Liability, mortgage meltdown, pretender lender, securitization
John Crandall — Litton Mortgage — Promiss Solutions
If you have documents signed by John Crandall, here is some information on him that might assist in determining whether he was truly authorized to execute any documents. His close association with Litton indicates to me that he would be incapable of providing, knowing or even having access to a full accounting from the creditor although he might have information on the identity of the creditor in your loan. Note also the connection between Litton and Promiss Solutions. Depending upon the exigencies of the moment they either present themselves as independent or as agent for each other.
John.Crandall@littonloan.com. Litton Mortgage c/o Prommis Solutions. Brad Norwood. 770-
643-7288 Tel. 1-866-480-4949 Fax. Bradlv.Norwood@Prommis.com …
www.btruelaw.com/Loss%20Mitigation%20Contacts.pdf - Similar
Nov 29, 2008 … Litton Mortgage Loss Mitigation Department Randy Reynolds
rreynolds@litton.c-bass.com 713-966-8985. John Crandall John.Crandall@littonloan. …
myvesta.org/articles/articles/177/1/Mortgage-Lender…/Page1.html
setstats.
portfoliojc.com/ – Similar
713‐793‐4304 john.crandall@littonloan.com. Litton Mortgage. Reynolds, Randy. 713‐966‐
8985 rreynolds@litton.c‐bass.com. Litton Mortgage c/o Prommis Solutions …
www.ch13edky.com/LossMitContactList%2011-24-08.pdf – Similar
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat – Quick View
May 14, 2009 … Litton Mortgage. Randy Reynolds rreynolds@litton.c-bass.com. 713-966-
8985. John Crandall. John.Crandall@littonloan.com. 713-561-8211 (phone) …
www.las13.com/forms/LossMitigationContactList5-14-09.pdf – Similar
El Paso, TX information and business listings such as John Crandall Appraisal Svc. … Home
Builders (2). Home Inspectors (1). Mortgage Companies (4) …
elpaso.bestoftexas.com/real…/John-Crandall-Appraisal-Svc-El-Paso/ – Cached
John Crandall sat at his office desk and thought the situation over. …. and I don’t care to
mortgage what I have and pay a high rate of interest when, …
www.classicreader.com/book/2579/20/ – Cached
Elder John Crandall of Rhode Island And His Descendents … Mortgage discharged in 1777.
15 Nov.1770 deeds land to Samuel Button, Jr. 8 Feb. …
www.myancestrallegacy.com/crandall/pafg54.htm – Cached
Title: Senior Mortgage Banker; Company: 1omni.com; Job History: 2 jobs. Jamar Crandall …..
John Crandall. Title: Manager of Public Power Finance Group …
www.spoke.com/info/index-person/cp-c%7B-173 – Cached
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat – Quick View
defraud National City Mortgage Co. and National City Bank, … John Crandall. Christopher
Crandall. Yelitza Crux’ Roman. Colleen Curr. Lee Davis …
www.mortgagefraudblog.com/images/uploads/VTMullaneyIndictment
Filed under: bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, currency, Eviction, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, GTC | Honor, HERS, Investor, Mortgage, securities fraud Tagged: 713-561-8211, 713-966-8985, 713‐793‐4304, 770- 643-7288, 866-480-4949, Brad Norwood, Bradlv.Norwood@Prommis.com, documents, foresnic analysis, HERS, John Crandall, John.Crandall@littonloan., Litton Mortgage, Loss Mitigation Department, mortgagefraudblog.com, myvesta.org/articles/articles/177/1/Mortgage-Lender, National City Bank, National City Mortgage Co., Promiss Solutions, Randy Reynolds, rreynolds@litton.c-bass.com, TILA audit, VTMullaneyIndictment, www.btruelaw.com/LossMitigationContacts.pdf, www.las13.com/forms/LossMitigationContactList5-14-09.pdf
Foreclosure activity falls for fourth month
The number of homeowners on the brink of foreclosure fell in November, the fourth straight monthly decline, as mortgage companies evaluated whether borrowers were eligible for help.
Foreclosure – Mortgage – Business – Real estate – Investing
Bankruptcy Judges & DOJ Rip Mortgage Companies
Below is another story about Servicer abuses… At least some judges see the issues and are not allowing personal viewpoints or prejudices to cloud their assessment of how terrible the situation is for a homeowner in mortgage hardship or distress.
The servicers are also the main players in the massive foreclosure fraud that is occurring around this country.
One would think that at some point, the legal system is going to stop the train of abuses justice suffers because of the systemic fraud that is committed by servicers trying to foreclose on homes they have no financial stake in.
Bankruptcy Judges & DOJ Rip Mortgage Companies
by Karen Weise, ProPublica
“Systemic abuse.” “Extraordinary incompetence.” “Reckless.” In a growing body of legal cases, judges and the Justice Department are breaking from legal jargon to starkly chastise mortgage companies.

As mortgage delinquencies rise, more and more homeowners are learning the central role that mortgage servicers play in their lives. The legal cases show that role can be distressing. Judges have found that major mortgages servicers regularly mess up basic accounting, improperly credit payments and charge unwarranted fees. They’ve “not done a very good job of keeping the records,” said Judge Samuel Bufford of California.
Mortgage servicers — typically either bank subsidiaries or independent companies — handle the day-to-day work with homeowners, ranging from collecting monthly payments to determining when to modify or foreclose. Problems with servicing often, but not always, occur once homeowners start having trouble making payments.
Complaints to the government about mortgage servicers have soared in recent years. They’ve risen from 31 percent of the complaints that the Department of Housing and Urban Development received in 2006 to 78 percent in 2008, according to HUD spokesman Lemar Wooley.
Problems Exposed in Bankruptcies
Many homeowners in bankruptcy have legal representation and must settle claims with servicers. As a result, the process has revealed and documented a slew of servicer problems.
In many rulings, judges have shown frustration and even outrage. They’ve ruled that servicers have attempted to collect unjustified fees, charged homeowners for unnecessary insurance, failed to properly credit homeowners’ payments and failed to provide evidence to back up fee requests. In most cases, judges demand that servicers fix the problems and unwind the unjustified fees; sometimes, judges award damages and attorneys’ fees. In one extraordinary case, a judge issued $750,000 in emotional and punitive damages. (We’ve compiled five sample cases and rulings for you to see here.)

Take the case of Donald and Phyllis Moffitt of Arkansas. In June 2008, bankruptcy Judge Audrey Evans issued a restraining order against America’s Servicing Company, a division of Wells Fargo, saying it must stop attempting to collect payments that the Moffitts did not owe. In a 41-page ruling (PDF), the judge wrote:
“The evidence supports the premise that ASC’s servicing procedures, as exemplified by the Moffitts’ account, are not organized to assure accuracy and accountability. … ASC misapplied these payments, failed to record the correct information even though Mrs. Moffitt constantly called and talked to ASC’s agents, failed to follow her written instructions, failed to communicate with the Moffitts, sent mortgage statements that were incomprehensible and frightening, began collection calls, and engaged in a litany of mismanagement of the Moffitts’ loan.”
Wells Fargo did not respond to a call for comment.
A 2007 study looked at a majority of Chapter 13 bankruptcy filings in 2006 and found that in 70 percent of the cases studied, mortgage companies claimed homeowners owed an average of $6,309 more on their loans than homeowners believed.
Problems with servicing are not limited to families filing for bankruptcy, Katherine Porter, an author of the study and an associate professor at the University of Iowa’s law school, testified before Congress last year. She said servicers commonly foreclose when they do not have the legal right to do so, impose unwarranted or illegal fees, and miscalculate how much families owe.
In several instances, judges have taken broad action to address persistent problems with a servicer. This May, Judge Elizabeth Magner in Louisiana said her review of multiple cases involving Ocwen Loan Servicing had shown the servicer regularly acted in “bad faith.” The judge said Ocwen had charged improper fees and attempted to collect bankruptcy-related fees after the court closed a case. In one of the cases, Ocwen took 10 months to provide a full accounting of fees.
The judge wrote that Ocwen’s “systematic abuse” required more than monetary sanctions, which had not stopped the behavior in the past, so Magner issued an order (PDF) forcing Ocwen to follow specific accounting procedures. (We’ve noted before that Ocwen’s servicing procedures have raised eyebrows in the past). Ocwen’s general counsel, Paul Koches, said the company disagrees with the ruling and is pursuing an appeal in U.S. District Court.
Justice Department Takes Action
The Justice Department’s United States Trustee Program is a watchdog over the bankruptcy process. Its 21 regional offices oversee more than 1,300 private trustees who mediate between debtors and creditors in individual bankruptcy cases.
The Trustee Program’s annual report said combating servicer abuse (PDF) was a top priority last year. The program initiated 68 actions (PDF) against what it calls “systemic abuse” by mortgage servicers, including 25 large servicers such as Countrywide, HSBC and JPMorgan Chase, according to public documents (PDF) and speeches (PDF). The Trustee Program has sued Countrywide in at least six states.
Countrywide, now owned by Bank of America, is the largest participant in the federal Making Home Affordable program to modify troubled mortgages. A recent analysis by the Associated Press found that at least 30 of the 38 mortgage companies that have signed up for the program have been sued over their servicing practices.
In response to one U.S. trustee’s suit in Ohio, Judge Marilyn Shea-Stonum ruled in May (PDF) that Countrywide had charged fees with “no factual basis” and wrote: “Countrywide’s system is reckless. It appears to me designed to allow each actor in the process to act with indifference to the truth, and to rely solely on the limited information made available at each step. … [The errors in this case] evidence Countrywide’s disregard for diligence and accuracy.”
The judge is currently determining monetary and other sanctions. Countrywide spokeswoman Shirley Norton said, “We are reviewing the ruling and considering our options.”
Private trustees have sued servicers as well. Debra Miller, a private trustee in Indiana, has been active in litigation where servicers haven’t complied with federal regulations. Typically, she said, private trustees try to obtain settlements that are more about changing practices than monetary compensation. “Our job is to force mortgage companies to improve their systems,” she said.
Both the Justice Department and private trustees have stepped in to fill what they see as a regulatory void covering mortgage servicers, according to Andrea Celli, a private trustee in upstate New York.
Future Oversight Under Debate
Currently, a hodgepodge of agencies oversees mortgage servicing. HUD, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Office of Thrift Supervision, the Federal Trade Commission and the Federal Reserve all have partial authority.
Concern over mortgage servicing was part of the early discussions about the proposed new Consumer Financial Protection Agency, according to Eric Stein, the Treasury Department’s deputy assistant secretary for consumer protection. The CFPA, as proposed by the Obama administration, would be the primary watchdog for servicer abuses.
Servicers are resisting the new consumer agency. Paul Leonard, a lobbyist for the Financial Services Roundtable, said his organization’s members believe that there should be better coordination among regulators and that existing agencies can handle the responsibility.
Tara Twomey, a lecturer at Standford Law School who co-authored the large study of bankruptcy cases, says that more regulation would help, but it would only be a “Band-Aid.” “The more fundamental problem is one of market structure,” she said. “Borrowers don’t get to choose their servicer.”
Taylor Bean Suspended From FHA Lending
This is no surprise. These guys were horrible to deal with and they’ve treated customers terribly. TBW is going down… Colonial Bank looks to be next along with Guaranty Bank. We’ll be on top of it for you… Check back frequently for automatic updates.
From the Wall Street Journal
By JAMES R. HAGERTY and LINGLING WEI
The Federal Housing Administration Tuesday suspended Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp. from making loans insured by the federal agency, knocking out one of the biggest FHA lenders at least temporarily.
The FHA said the Ocala, Fla.-based lender failed to submit a required annual financial report and to disclose to the FHA “certain irregular transactions that raised concerns of fraud.” Taylor Bean has 30 days to appeal the suspension.
Taylor Bean was the 12th largest U.S. mortgage lender in the first six months of this year, according to Inside Mortgage Finance, a trade publication. Among originators of FHA loans, Taylor Bean was the third largest in May, with a market share of 4%, according to the publication. Only Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co. were larger.
Taylor Bean’s woes are a major blow for hundreds of brokers and smaller mortgage banks that sell the loans they originate to the privately owned company. Those small mortgage companies will have to scramble to find new partners if they are to remain in the booming FHA lending business.
FHA loans have surged in popularity over the past two years as other sources of mortgage funding have dried up.
Lee B. Farkas, chairman of Taylor Bean, said in response to questions that he was unaware of the FHA action.
Ginnie Mae, a government agency that guarantees payments to holders of securities backed by FHA loans, said Taylor Bean is also barred from issuing securities backed by Ginnie. Ginnie said it will take control of nearly $25 billion of mortgage securities issued by Taylor Bean.
The moves came a day after federal agents raided the Florida offices of Colonial BancGroup Inc. and Taylor Bean. Taylor had been leading a group of investors that proposed to shore up Colonial by taking a stake in the Alabama-based bank but that transaction fell through last week amid heavy losses at Colonial.
Write to James R. Hagerty at bob.hagerty@wsj.com and Lingling Wei at lingling.wei@dowjones.com
