Oct
20

A lighthouse keeper in the desert sun

Thinking about the return of the Delaware/SDNY venue debate and the bankruptcy court's decision to deny appointment of a trustee in the case of bankrupt solar panel maker Solyndra, up now at Dealbook.

Oct
13

White Paper | An Evolving Foreclosure Landscape: The Ibanez Case and Beyond

The American Constitution Society for Law & Policy invites you to read: An Evolving Foreclosure Landscape: The Ibanez Case and Beyond An Issue Brief by Peter Pitegoff & Laura Underkuffler As news reports emerged today that foreclosure rates have surged, ACS releases “An Evolving Foreclosure Landscape: The Ibanez Case and Beyond,” an Issue Brief by … Read more Related posts:
  1. Adam Levitin | Ibanez and Securitization Fail
  2. NEWS FLASH | IBANEZ – BANKS LOSE PIVOTAL FORECLOSURE CASE IN MASSACHUSETTS HIGH COURT
  3. Adam Levitin on Ibanez | Loan Schedules and Trustee Liability
Oct
11

Eaton – Dividing the Mortgage Loan and Affirming the Consequent

Eaton – Dividing the Mortgage Loan and Affirming the Consequent Written by Gregory M. Lemelson Background: A post Ibanez world In January the Massachusetts supreme judicial court held in US Bank National Association vs. Antonio Ibanez that a note holder may not foreclose on a property in order to redeem a debt, if they are … Read more Related posts:
  1. Florida Judge Vacates Summary Judgement Wrongfully Obtained by Law Office Of David J. Stern for Deutsche Bank as Trustee for Securitized Mortgage Loan Trust
  2. Adam Levitin on Ibanez | Loan Schedules and Trustee Liability
  3. MORTGAGE SERVICING COMPANIES PREPARING “REPLACEMENT” MORTGAGE ASSIGNMENTS
Oct
11

UPDATED – Action Alert | JURY FRAUDCLOSURE TRIAL IN CLEVELAND OHIO POSTPONED

The trial is to commence Wed, 10/12/11 at 10 AM in Courtroom 17 C, the Justice Center, located at 1200 Ontario Street, Cleveland, Ohio 44113. The case name is Deutsche Bank v. Allen Ray, Cuyahoga County Case No. CV-09-706826, with Judge Michael Russo presiding. This case involves Deutsche Bank as a trustee, a newly found … Read more Related posts:
  1. MERS ACTION ALERT!!! | Oregon Fraudclosure “Fix” Postponed but Effort Appears in Jeopardy
  2. NEW REPORT: Foreclosing on Ohio – Big Bank Foreclosures in Cincinnati, Cleveland, and Columbus
  3. Action Alert | H. Res. 344 US Congress to Consider Fraudclosure Moratorium
Sep
28

Safe Harbors Gone Wild

Yesterday's decision from the District Court court in the Madoff-Mets litigation is yet another example of why Congress desperately needs to revisit the safe harbors which exempt a host of financial transactions from the workings of the Bankruptcy Code (in this case, the Code as incorporated into SIPA).

The opinion is available here, but briefly, Judge Rakoff blew a giant hole in the trustee's suit against the owners of the Mets, dismissing all claims based on preference and constructive fraudulent transfer, whether under the Code or New York Law. The basis? Section 546(e) of the Code, which provides 

Notwithstanding sections 544, 545, 547, 548 (a)(1)(B), and 548 (b) of this title, the trustee may not avoid a transfer that is a ... settlement payment, as defined in section 101 or 741 of this title, made by or to (or for the benefit of) a commodity broker, forward contract merchant, stockbroker...  in connection with a securities contract, as defined in section 741 (7)...  that is made before the commencement of the case, except under section 548 (a)(1)(A) of this title.

Madoff was a stockbroker, in the loose sense that he was registered as a stockbroker. We now know that he was not actually doing any stockbroker like things for his investors. The Judge does not look into the definition of stockbroker in §101(53A) of the Code -- I think there might be an argument Madoff didn't meet it -- and moves right to the analysis of whether the transactions involved securities contracts and settlement payments.

Of course, there is no real reason to apply the safe harbors to this case. Madoff's transactions are not going to disrupt the financial markets if they were subjected to avoidance actions -- there was essentially no link to the financial markets whatsoever. But the Judge went with the planing meaning of the statute, which contains no such common sense exception. Hence the need for Congress to get involved.

Sep
19

Wells sues JPMorgan over 800 mortgage loans

Wells sues JPMorgan over 800 mortgage loans (Reuters) – JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE:JPM – News) was sued by Wells Fargo & Co (NYSE:WFC – News), which seeks to force it to buy back more than 800 soured mortgage loans that it oversees as trustee. In a complaint made public on Wednesday in the Delaware … Read more
Sep
08

ATTN: PENSION FUNDS | Where does the money go when the trusts “liquidate” the homes in REO?

ATTN: PENSION FUNDS: Where does the money go when the trusts “liquidate” the homes in REO? Posted by L Here are two interesting examples: EXAMPLE ONE: One is a $420K loan in Lee County, FL that went into foreclosure, Wells Fargo as Trustee for Option One Mortgage Loan Trust 2007-CP1.  The property went back to … Read more
Aug
11

4th DCA Meenu Sasser REVERSED | La Salle Bank v. Parker – Affidavit of Diligent Search and Inquiry was Insufficient, Final Judgment Voidable

Reversal of our favorite neighborhood foreclosure judge… DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT July Term 2011 CATHERINE PAIGE PARKER, et. al., Appellants, v. LASALLE BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE REGISTERED HOLDERS OF THE STRUCTURED ASSET SECURITIES CORPORATION, STRUCTURED ASSET INVESTMENT LOAN TRUST, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES M SERIES 2003-BC8, … Read more
Aug
09

The Myth of the “Free House”

This is a great post by Katie Porter and I fully agree with her on every point. I have this discussion on a regular basis with people on all sides of this issue. First, homeowners who signed a note and borrowed money don’t deserve a free and clear house. They may even achieve that on rare occasions but they don’t deserve that. Katie is right on and her point is based on logical reasoning…. the borrower signed a note, someone has the right to the payment of that note. There is an entity that is the real party in interest. Dismissing a foreclosure case filed by a servicing institution against a homeowner does NOT in any way, give the homeowner a free and clear house. The security instrument is still a lien on the property and, like Katie discusses, the issues can be corrected in the future and the case can be re-filed.

If the bank or servicer or trustee commit fraud in the process of trying to foreclose, they deserve every sanction they get for that which could and maybe should include the extinguishment of the deed of trust or mortgage. That’s for the court and jury to decide, case by case.

But this soap box argument that dismissing a foreclosure case or finding in favor of the homeowner or against the servicer is NOT the same as giving the homeowner a free and clear house. Let’s just be clear and be able to articulate this point when in court and this issue comes about because it is this exact sentiment that I believe causes judges to skew their rulings because they truly think their ruling will amount to a “free and clear” house.

 

The Free House Myth
posted by Katie Porter on CreditSlips.org

As challenges to whether a “bank” (usually actually a securitized trust) has the right to foreclose because it owns the note and mortgage become more common, rumors swirl about the ability to use such tactics to get a “free house.” There are a few instances of consumer getting a free house, see here and here, for examples, but these are extreme situations not premised on ownership, but on a more fundamental flaw with the mortgage. In general, the idea that even a successful ownership challenge will create a free house to the borrower is an urban myth. I’ll explain why below, but there is a policy point here. The myth of the free house drives policymakers to complain about the moral hazard risks of holding mortgage companies to the law and tries to set up homeowners who are paying their mortgages against those who are not. It serves the banks’ political agenda to be able to point to the “free house” as an obviously unacceptable alternative of consumers winning legal challenges. It’s key then to understand that the “free house” is largely a creature of consumers’ and banks’ over-active imaginations.

In sorting out why even a successful ownership challenge does not give homeowners a free house, it is helpful to parse some key concepts. The first one is standing, which is the right of a party to ask a court for the relief it seeks. This comes in different flavors, including constitutional standing, but in the foreclosure context, usually boils down to whether the moving party is the “real party in interest.” In re Vealthe recent decision from the 9th Circuit BAP authored by Judge Bruce Markell, mentioned previously onCredit Slips , contains a discussion of standing in the foreclosure context. At least in part, the concern of the real party in interest doctrine is to make sure that the plaintiff is the right person to get legal relief in order to protect the defendant from a later action by the person truly entitled to relief. Note that standing is a concept that only applies in court; here that means in judicial foreclosures. In states that allow non-judicial foreclosure, the issue is slightly different. Does the party initiating the non-judicial foreclosure have the authority to do so under the state statute authorizing the sale? For example, cases such as In re Salazar discuss whether a recorded assignment of the mortgage is needed, as opposed to an unrecorded assignment, to initiate a foreclosure. Under either standing or statutory authority, a “win” by the homeowner leads to the same result. The foreclosure cannot proceed.

But this win is not the same as a free house. Just because a party lacked standing or statutory authority does not mean that there is not some party out there that does have the authority to foreclosure. Nor does a win on standing mean that there cannot be action taken to give the initial foreclosing party the authority that they need, which might occur by transferring possession of the note or by executing a series of assignments, to foreclose at a later date. Unless other problems exist, there is still a valid note that obligates the homeowner to pay money due and there is still a mortgage encumbering the house. The homeowner does not get a free house. Rather, the homeowner just doesn’t lose her house today to foreclosure. These are pretty different outcomes!

This doesn’t mean that I think the standing/ownership issue is inconsequential. For homeowners, a successful challenge that results in the dismissal of a foreclosure can lead to a loan modification or the delay itself can give the homeowner the time to find another solution. For investors in mortgage-backed securities, the problems with paperwork likely increase their loss severities in foreclosure, both because of increased litigation costs and because of delay in correcting problems. (And there may be even more serious problems for investors relating to whether the transfers even succeeded in putting the homes in the trust.) But we shouldn’t confuse these issues with the idea that what is at stake in sorting out this mess is giving a “free house” to some Americans, despite the lamentations of this LaSalle Bank lawyer after a judge ruled that LaSalle as trustee lacked standing to foreclose. A fruitful discussion of these issues needs to begin with a clear understanding of the consequences of the problem, as well as empirical evidence on how widespread these problems are. The free house is political handwringing, not legal reality.

Aug
04

NY AG Unsheathes Excalibur

NY AG Eric Schneiderman came out with guns blazing in the proposed Countrywide investor settlement litigation.  It his filing intervening in the action and suing Bank of New York Mellon for breach of fiduciary duty, persistent fraud, and violations of the Martin Act (the "Excalibur" of the NY AG), General Schneiderman didn't mince words.  He explained that the loan transfer documentation for lots and lots of mortgages is FUBAR and that servicers and their vendors are trying to fraudulently paper over the problems (spiced, I might add, with a healthy dose of legalese):

One of BNYM’s primary obligations as trustee under these PSAs wasto ensure the proper transfer of loans from Countrywide to the Trusts.  The ultimate failure of Countrywide to transfer complete mortgage loan documentation to the Trusts hampered the Trusts’ ability to foreclose on delinquent mortgages, thereby impairing the value of the notes secured by those mortgages.  These circumstances apparently triggered widespread fraud, including BoA’s fabrication of missing documentation.  

And how about this one:

Any action to foreclose requires proof of ownership of the mortgage.  This must be demonstrated by actual possession of the note and mortgage, together with proof of any chain of assignments leading to the alleged ownership.  Moreover, complete mortgage files give borrowers assurance that their  properties are properly foreclosed upon.  The failure to properly transfer possession of complete mortgage files has hindered numerous foreclosure proceedings and resulted in fraudulent activities including, for example, “robo-signing.” These fraudulent activities have burdened borrowers as well as the courts with flawed foreclosure proceedings.   

BNYM is putting on a brave face, but I don't see how they have a leg to stand on in this.  The last thing they really want to do is go to the mat on whether the loan documentation is up to snuff.  It ain't.  The only questions are when they settle on this, what terms the settle on, and whether they can settle by themselves, without pulling CW/BoA into the deal.  And if that happens, it sets the floor for settlements with the other major servicers.  

I should mention that this is hardly the first time the NY AG has had to clean up the mortgage trustee business.  In the 1920s and 1930s, the NY AG had to deal with mortgage guarantee certificates (an early sort of securitization) that featured rampant fraud and real estate bond houses, which again featured rampant trustee fraud (using principal payments from one bond to hide defaults on interest payments on others, etc.)  The result was eventually the Trust Indenture Act of 1939.  Guess what the TIA doesn't cover?  MBS. Maybe it's time to change that.  Rep. Brad Miller has legislation (H.R. 1783) that would do just that.  

Jul
31

Five Reasons You Need to Avoid the Luminate a LivingFibber Securitization Audit Service

This lumin-what? securitization analysis being sold out there on some well-known sites is to be avoided in my opinion. Do your own due diligence but here’s a couple cents from me… someone who actually takes the 10-15 hours to actually examine a case, all of the documents related, do my own investigation and analysis and then sit down to type the case-specific report that can actually be used in a court of law or by an attorney or homeowner in foreclosure litigation.

Why not the Luminate a LivingFib Combo Title & Securitization Audit? Because it’s none of what I just described.

  1. It’s almost 100% boiler plate language; (by the way, the Title Report is worth $150, $25-75 for hard costs and $75 for 100% profit for the attorney who’s doin that title report for you, wink wink)
  2. It’s does NOT contain the specificity and particularity required to state a real claim (based on every report I have seen thus far);
  3. It guesses almost 100% of the time on which trust you’re loan is in (based on every report I have seen thus far and if they’re guessin on your report you’ll be left guessin why the judge dismissed your claim);
  4. It is highly software-driven (based on the fact that every report sent to me was highly identical to all others and I even saw one with a different law firm and attorney’s name on it, guess old LivignFibbs is “licensing his software” you think?);
  5. It cannot produce what it’s proponents claim (ie. specific knowledge of what trust your loan is in)
It’s is not worth anywhere close to $1500 in my opinion, maybe $50 for what you really get which is a couple pdf’s of spun versions of Wikipedia on securitization and impressive words like “conveyance” and “depositor” and “cdo” and “remic”  along with a dab of conjecture and a spritz of fibbing.
If the lender/servicer/trustee has not disclosed voluntarily or involuntarily (ie. through court-ordered discovery) which specific trust your loan is in, it is impossible to confidently determine what trust your loan is in. I’d like to find the attorney relying on that guess in an evidentiary hearing! If you’re one of them… give me a call and tell me how that guess has worked you, ya right!
It would be a guess 99 out of 1000 times. There is a very rare occurrence where your loan number or SSN or property address shows up on a trust specific mortgage loan schedule which was filed with the SEC and has been indexed by Google and can thus be found through some online research, work and investigation. That’s 1 time out of every 1000 and dare I say it could easily be 1 out of 100,000.
Suffice to say it is a highly rare occurrence… so this bunk that is being sold to you by the many scammers out there that you can find out what trust your loan is in is a complete living eye…sorry, meant lie.  I’ve been in the industry folks. Don’t believe it… There is NO SECRET DATABASE that only the Wizard of Oz has access to. If you believe that I have a lot in Cape Coral I’ll sell you for a good bargain too…
If the Trust has been disclosed on a document like an assignment, or an endorsement or a sub of trustee notice or notice of foreclosure sale or one of those types of documents, then YES, you know the name of the trust your loan was ALLEGEDLY transferred and assigned to. Nearly 100% of all residential mortgage loans ever funded since the 90′s is securitized. That’s a given. Period. Portfolio lending is and was a dinosaur. Securitization is legal. Fabricating a paper trail is not. Making false or deceptive claims is not. But if no document provided, yet discovered or found in your case does NOT have the name of the alleged trust on it, then your only course of action to definitively investigate and find the specific trust is through discovery. In or out of the court of law. If you are considering paying someone around $259/month or $1550 to guess on this, I would highly advise you to go take your closest family or friends out for a really nice dinner and night out on the town. That would be a more meaningful way to spend your money vs a combo title and securitization guess-my-stinkin-pants-off audit and analysis from living fibbs.
I’ve had the unfortunate role of telling about a dozen or so people over the last 9 months or so that the report they paid about $1500 for wasn’t worth a dime really. I mean, it really didn’t luminate anything other than the report was peddled by thieves with a bar license. Respectable attorneys who haven’t fully consumed themselves with Fibbs Flavored Kool-Aid agree with me… and this all just my opinion of course but the homeowners calling me and who also sent me these worthless reports already knew [what I told them] in their gut already.
I think it’s pretty obvious to sensible people who don’t believe everything they read or hear. But it just plain angers me that there are attorneys and others out there who are taking people’s money and doing virtually nothing for them. I mean, that’s just plain wrong and I just don’t get it. Really, why does it seem like so many people these days will do anything for a buck (or 1500) including just plain lying to people, cutting corners and downright not delivering value to customers. Do this to people who are down on their luck and you’re just a P-I-G in my book. Oh… and by the way, just because someone is an attorney does NOT mean they are an expert in any way. There are plenty of (former) attorneys and other sort of fibb men in jail for all sorts of crimes and don’t think they’re above the law… ok, well at least the banks are and so are judges. Ok, I give up maybe attorneys are too, oh what the hell…..Just goes without saying I guess… there are some really good attorneys out there doing really good foreclosure defense work. There are some really bad ones and then there are some who don’t even practice and just act like an expert and pontificate in LivingFibbs land.

So, I’ll go look for some of these reports in my email history and will try to post a few here so any of you getting to this post BEFORE you waste $1500 can avoid such calamity. Call me if you have any questions.

And, while I’m at it, be SUPER-CAUTIOUS before hiring anyone who is trying to sell you a “Forensic Audit” or any such variation of that name. Anyone who calls what their doing a “forensic audit” is highly likely to be a scam artist like them there folks over at livvingfibbs.com. Seriously. There are legitimate services out there that can help a homeowner investigate their mortgage loan for predatory lending, fraud and forgery claims along with analyzing the loan for federal disclosure violations or any possible rights of rescission under common law theory or the TILA but be wise, marketing gimmicks and fibbers abound using the term “Forensic Audit” and you’d be best to just keep moving there Sally.

To see a customized mortgage loan investigation report, contact me and I’ll help you understand the real difference. It’s not hard once you can compare and see what the scammers and fibbers are trying to sell.

Jul
25

Good News on Mortgage Modifications

Isn't it about time for some good news on mortgage modifications? Here is some, in the form of a paper titled Who Receives a Mortgage Modification? Race and Income Differentials in Loan Workouts. The authors use data from the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) to assess borrower characteristics against the incidence of loan defaults and modifications on a group of more than 100,000 subprime loans.

The first two findings are depressing and not surprising: loan modifications are rare, and minority borrowers are more likely to be delinquent. The good news is that minorities are faring well in seeking modifications. As a descriptive matter, among those 60 or more days delinquent, 11 percent of blacks and 9 percent of Hispanics received a loan modification, compared to 5 percent of whites. In regression modeling that controlled for borrower, loan, and housing/labor market conditions, blacks were slightly more likely to get modifications, conditional on being delinquent, than other races. This effect persists even when researchers control for the fact (also good news in my mind) that borrowers who got a high-cost loan are more likely to get a loan modification. In further analysis, the authors find that blacks receive a similar interest rate reductions to borrowers of other races.

As with any empirical study, there are some limitations. The authors use data from only trustee (although several servicers) and examine loans originated in only three states--all Western and all non-judicial foreclosure. And, as the authors note, they cannot assess whether there are differences in loan modification denial rates. Put concretely, if blacks are applying at twice as high of a rate for loan modifications as whites, their analysis would not pick up this high rate of denial compared to applications. This paper ends with interesting thoughts on the racial disparities in loan origination, and why these patterns are not found in loan modifications. It asks whether there are lessons from HAMP or the loan modification process generally that could be useful in designing loan origination programs that reduce the longstanding racial disparity in that crucial financial transaction.

May
27

CAPACITY, CAPACITY, CAPACITY- READ THE TRANSCRIPT

bank-foreclosures

There is a major defect in almost every foreclosure case, and it continues even today, this late in the game.  We are still allowing unknown, unidentified and unauthorized Plaintiffs to appear in Florida courtrooms and ultimately take title to property.

All across this state, hundreds of millions of dollars in real property is changing hands and shifting around and back and forth between shadowy trusts, ill-defined entities and national institutions, but no one has any idea who these entities are, where they are based, how they are governed and how to track them down when things go wrong.

It all starts with a basic failure in pleading….the failure to plead capacity which is quite simply the failure to tell the court who you are and where your place of business is.  All sorts of things flow from this basic failure.  For instance many of these Plaintiffs rely on Powers of Attorney to execute documents such as Assignments of Mortgage….one of the problems is that an assignment based on a failed power of attorney is invalid and a power of attorney is not valid when the entity is a trust corporation that is not validly registered to do business.

On a more personal note, I’m trying to collect a judgment entered in my favor against “US Bank, Trustee”, capacity was never plead and now I’m having a devil of a time trying to figure out how to collect this judgment because I cannot track down, “US Bank”.  Read the documents below…

PITA – NoA, MTD, Cost Bond

CAPACITYTRANSCRIPT

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Jan
19

Investors Suing Banks Are On The Same Side As Homeowners In Foreclosure

EMC-MortgageIt’s next to impossible to get any information while you’re in foreclosure from the servicer or trustee.   Reasonable discovery requests for basic information are objected to and almost never complied with.  It’s not just homeowners receiving the cold shoulder…the investors are as well….JUST WHAT ARE THEY HIDING?

JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s EMC Mortgage, facing homeowner lawsuits over foreclosures, was sued by the trustee of a mortgage portfolio for refusing to turn over documents detailing the quality of loans bought by the trust.

Wells Fargo & Co., the trustee, is seeking access to files for more than 2,000 underlying mortgages in the Bear Stearns Mortgage Funding Trust 2007-AR2, according to the complaint filed today in Delaware Chancery Court in Wilmington.

BLOOMBERG

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Dec
11

Truly Mind Boggling Disclosures of Documentation Errors in Mortgage Loan Pools

proof-of-claimI run a tight, very organized and fairly lean organization.  In these unfortunate economic times, I could grow fast and manage a large operation, but I want to do things correctly and be able to keep my eyes on everyone and my hands in all my files.  Quite simply, I don’t want things to grow sloppy and out of control.  A major reason for this crisis is the banks and institutions failed to accurately document and close massive transactions involving billions of dollars.  Rather than do things slowly and carefully, things spun wildly out of control.

Have a long and detailed read of the document attached here that relates to a federal bankruptcy case.  It provides a sobering and sickening look into document problems for trusts that (theoretically at least) own billions of dollars in loans.  Now if I were closing billions of dollars in loans, you can be darn sure I’m going to work hard to prevent the types of errors like the ones reported in this report from occurring.

It’s very hard to digest, but read it carefully and consider the impact of all of this on the larger economy…..we’re all paying for this after all……

As of the most recent reports, there exist missing or defective loan file documents for several billion dollars in original principal amount of loans.

Repurchase Claims, the Trustee asserts that, based on its information and belief regarding the mortgage loan securitization market, such claims will exist with respect to 2% to 30% of the aggregate original principal balance of the loans in the Trusts (i.e. $908,468,758 to $13,627,031,372).

Deutsche AHM POC 9189

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Dec
01

BANK OF AMERICA DEPOSITION RENE HERTZLER- I SIGN DOCUMENTS BUT DON’T READ THEM

YOU MAD YET?  WHY DON’T WE JUST TURN OVER ALL THE HOMES IN AMERICA TO THE BANKS? WHY DON’T WE ALL JUST DISPENSE WITH THE CHARADE OF COURTS OR LEGAL PROCESS AND TURN IT ALL OVER TO THE BANKS….WAIT WE ALREADY HAVE.

READ THE DEPOSITIONS IN THEIR ENTIRETY.

6 Q. And you signed this affidavit.
7 A. Correct.
8 Q. Did you read it before you signed it?
9 A. No.
10 Q. You did not.
11 A. No.
12 Q. Is there a particular reason why you didn’t
13 read it?
14 A. I typically don’t read them because of the
15 volume that we sign. And we have the Power of
16 Attorney and also the Corporate Resolution.
17 So part of the process is that we don’t
18 read them before we sign them.
19 Q. You don’t read them, meaning affidavits?
20 A. Documents.
21 Q. Documents.
22 A. Correct.
23 Q. Any documents.
24 A. Correct. We have a team of people who screen them for us and prepare them for us to sign.
2 Q. So you’re in the habit of signing documents
3 without reading them.
4 A. That’s correct.
5 Q. Including this affidavit.
6 A. That’s correct.

A. “That I am the Vice President of The Bank
13 of New York Mellon, formerly known as the Bank of
14 New York as Trustee, for the Benefit of the
15 Certificateholders, CWABS, Inc., Asset-Backed
16 Certificates, Series 2007-5ES, Series 2007-5.”
17 Q. Is that statement true?
18 A. No, but I have the Power of Attorney as a
19 vice president.
20 Q. So it’s false?
21 A. I’m a vice president of Bank of America,
22 but I have the Power of Attorney –
23 Q. I didn’t ask you if you had a Power of
24 Attorney. The statement in Paragraph 1 is you’re a
39
1 vice president of the Bank of New York Mellon. And
2 I’m asking you if that statement was true.
3 A. No, I’m not a vice president of Bank of New
4 York.
5 Q. Have you ever been a vice president of the
6 Bank of New York?
7 A. No.
8 Q. So it was false when you signed it.
9 A. Yes.

40330704-Renee-Hertzler-deposition

Countrywide_08_11 09DiMartini

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Nov
18

Investor and Institutional Lawsuits Offer Keys to Defending Homeowners in Foreclosure

countrywide-lawsuitWe all know that most, if not all, of the subprime lenders that were originating the loans we are now defending for homeowners were engaging in various degrees of widespread fraud and deceit in order to close the loans.  Our borrower clients were not sophisticated enough to catch the fraud or participate in it, but every level of the originating lenders were.  Take the attached lawsuit against filed by a mortgage insurance company against Countrywide Home Loans for instance, in it,

They admit we didn’t actually review the loans we were insuring, we trusted Countrywide and relied on our “delegated” model for reviewing. (That means we didn’t look at all at the loans, we just issued an insurance policy.) The astonishing this is that there were billions of dollars sloshing around between originating the loans with shady brokers here on the ground level to when they were packaged, insured and sold to trustee, then investors and no one was actually looking at the loans themselves. I was a broker, we made loans and we would never do a loan unless we actually looked at everything, credit, income, visit the home.

The subprime mess was caused because no one, and I mean no one was looking at anything and they were all lying to one another…every player at every step in the process. And they needed unsophisticated players like our clients to start the chain of lies that started when the loans were originated then went all the way to the White House.

There is so much pushback from the remaining servicers and lenders who are fighting and preventing even reasonable modifications from occurring.  One fascinating thing that befuddles me is the fact that if the laws on fraud and improper inducement were really followed here that might provide us with real opportunities to use proven allegations of fraud to force the hands in these modifications.

Read the lawsuit and let’s use the swarm strategies to pull all these pieces together.

countrywidelawsuit

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Nov
04

BREAKING NEWS – Law Offices of David J. Stern Lays Off “Hundreds” of Employees

November 4, 2010 – 5:15 pm

You heard it hear first folks… from a very reliable source, I have been told that the David J. Stern sent out an email today to ALL employees with a list of employees who were being laid off immediately. Oh, by the way, all employees got the email and were basically told to “look and see if their name was on the list.” Gee Dave, thanks for such a personal touch and showing that you really care!

How nice, what sensitivity from this man… really, if you work for this jerk, why would you expect anything less? But it certainly is a tragedy. Word from my source is that basically everyone at the Law Offices of David J. Stern are already looking for another job elsewhere – and I would too if I were in their shoes. Well, I don’t think I’d ever be in their shoes exactly because this is one animal I’d never work for… you know the saying… it’d be a cold day in hell before… but it appears that Stern has said that business is down a whopping 90% from norms just a few months ago. If that holds true, you can expect to see his employee level go from over 1000 down to maybe 100 and possibly less in short order.

If you have a foreclosure still active where Law Offices of David J. Stern is the Plaintiff’s attorney, rejoice. I’m betting that there will be a good many months delay while his crooked bank/servicer/trustee clients figure out what to do with all the fraud, forgery and misrepresentations made by his firm. Word is that some of his attorneys didn’t even go to hearings today once they got the notice of “you’re not needed here anymore.” Nevermind the ethical duty these attorneys are supposed to have to their client but yes, I know what you’re thinking… what ethics could they possibly have if they worked for Stern? Great question…

Anyway, just thought I’d get this news out there as I know many of my readers will relish in this news. Can’t way to see the ship truly sink. Hopefully that sinking includes jail time for the most deserving of people at his firm. A few names come to mind but I’ll let you read the depositions and come to your own “wish” list.

One last thought… how ironic would it be for some of Stern’s employees to go through foreclosure now that they’re laid off and likely will have a very hard time finding another law firm to hire them? My goodness, wouldn’t that just be heavenly justice being meted out?

You know, I might just start a new category on the blog: Foreclosure Mill Failures – what do you think?

Peace out.

Sep
19

WATCH OUT~ Keep your eyes out for this interesting development!

WatchOut-foreclosure

It’s been some time since I talked about Capacity, so I want to do a new post here on the subject.  The bottom line is this, hundreds of thousands of foreclosure judgments are being entered based on complaints that lack one of the most basic elements of EVERY SINGLE OTHER LAWSUIT FILED IN THIS COUNTRY. The critical piece of information I’m speaking about is the identification of the parties to the lawsuit.  Now in most cases, the borrower defendants are known and identified.  They’re easy because the live in the home.  The second lienholders are never properly identified and they are almost always only served through MERS, so it is questionable whether the real owner of the debt obligation secured by the second mortgage is notified, but that’s a subject for another blog.

Today I’m talking about the failure to specifically and accurately identify who or what the plaintiff corporation is, where they are located and under what authority they assert the capacity to sue.  Now in this Twilight Zone world of mortgage foreclosures, our judges have no idea what the answers to those questions are so all across this state our judges are busy transferring millions of dollars in judgments and property to entities with long, confusing, abbreviated, obfuscated, mutilated, desecrated (whatever) names.  Just last week a client came in with a JP Morgan as trustee for 123 trust in its capacity as receiver for XYZ bank, trustee or some such nonsense.  Problem with that is no one could even pretend to know who or what was responsible for trying to throw a neighbor onto the street, but left unchallenged a judge somewhere will just grant that shadow entity a judgment.

Look carefully at the names that are listed on the attached documents that are registered with the Secretary of State.  You think you recognize those names don’t you….Well Look Very Carefully at the owner’s name.  Now I want to know what legitimate purpose a person would have for registering the names that are indicated there.  I can certainly think of several improper reasons for having such names, but I cannot think of a single legitimate purpose.  Look carefully at the names there people, then consider how that could come into play in our courtrooms across the state and in the current state of this mortgage environment.

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Sep
11

INSIDE CHASE and the Perfect Foreclosure

“JPMorgan CHASE is in the foreclosure business, not the modification business’.”  That, according to Jerad Bausch, who until quite recently was an employee of CHASE’s mortgage servicing division working in the foreclosure department in Rancho Bernardo, California.

I was recently introduced to Jerad and he agreed to an interview.  (Christmas came early this year.)  His answers to my questions provided me with a window into how servicers think and operate.  And some of the things he said confirmed my fears about mortgage servicers… their interests and ours are anything but aligned.

Today, Jerad Bausch is 25 years old, but with a wife and two young children, he communicates like someone ten years older.  He had been selling cars for about three and a half years and was just 22 years old when he applied for a job at JPMorgan CHASE.  He ended up working in the mega-bank’s mortgage servicing area… the foreclosure department, to be precise.  He had absolutely no prior experience with mortgages or in real estate, but then… why would that be important?

“The car business is great in terms of bring home a good size paycheck, but to make the money you have to work all the time, 60-70 hours a week.  When our second child arrived, that schedule just wasn’t going to work.  I thought CHASE would be kind of a cushy office job that would offer some stability,” Jerad explained.

That didn’t exactly turn out to be the case.  Eighteen months after CHASE hired Jared, with numerous investors having filed for bankruptcy protection as a result of the housing meltdown, he was laid off.  The “investors” in this case are the entities that own the loans that Chase services.  When an investor files bankruptcy the loan files go to CHASE’S bankruptcy department, presumably to be liquidated by the trustee in order to satisfy the claims of creditors.

The interview process included a “panel” of CHASE executives asking Jared a variety of questions primarily in two areas.  They asked if he was the type of person that could handle working with people that were emotional and in foreclosure, and if his computer skills were up to snuff.  They asked him nothing about real estate or mortgages, or car sales for that matter.

The training program at CHASE turned out to be almost exclusively about the critical importance of documenting the files that he would be pushing through the foreclosure process and ultimately to the REO department, where they would be put back on the market and hopefully sold.  Documenting the files with everything that transpired was the single most important aspect of Jared’s job at CHASE, in fact, it was what his bonus was based on, along with the pace at which the foreclosures he processed were completed.

“A perfect foreclosure was supposed to take 120 days,” Jared explains, “and the closer you came to that benchmark, the better your numbers looked and higher your bonus would be.”

CHASE started Jared at an annual salary of $30,000, but he very quickly became a “Tier One” employee, so he earned a monthly bonus of $1,000 because he documented everything accurately and because he always processed foreclosures at as close to a “perfect” pace as possible.

“Bonuses were based on accurate and complete documentation, and on how quickly you were able to foreclosure on someone,” Jerad says.  “They rate you as Tier One, Two or Three… and if you’re Tier One, which is the top tier, then you’d get a thousand dollars a month bonus.  So, from $30,000 you went to $42,000.  Of course, if your documentation was off, or you took too long to foreclose, you wouldn’t get the bonus.”

Day-to-day, Jerad’s job was primarily to contact paralegals at the law firms used by CHASE to file foreclosures, publish sale dates, and myriad other tasks required to effectuate a foreclosure in a given state.

“It was our responsibility to stay on top of and when necessary push the lawyers to make sure things done in a timely fashion, so that foreclosures would move along in compliance with Fannie’s guidelines,” Jerad explained.  “And we documented what went on with each file so that if the investor came in to audit the files, everything would be accurate in terms of what had transpired and in what time frame.  It was all about being able to show that foreclosures were being processed as efficiently as possible.”

When a homeowner applies for a loan modification, Jerad would receive an email from the modification team telling him to put a file on hold awaiting decision on modification.  This wouldn’t count against his bonus, because Fannie Mae guidelines allow for modifications to be considered, but investors would see what was done as related to the modification, so everything had to be thoroughly documented.

“Seemed like more than 95% of the time, the instruction came back ‘proceed with foreclosure,’ according to Jerad.  “Files would be on hold pending modification, but still accruing fees and interest.  Any time a servicer does anything to a file, they’re charging people for it,” Jerad says.

I was fascinated to learn that investors do actually visit servicers and audit files to make sure things are being handled properly and homes are being foreclosed on efficiently, or modified, should that be in their best interest.  As Jerad explained, “Investors know that Polling & Servicing Agreements (“PSAs”) don’t protect them, they protect servicers, so they want to come in and audit files themselves.”

“Foreclosures are a no lose proposition for a servicer,” Jerad told me during the interview.  “The servicer gets paid more to service a delinquent loan, but they also get to tack on a whole bunch of extra fees and charges.  If the borrower reinstates the loan, which is rare, then the borrower pays those extra fees.  If the borrower loses the house, then the investor pays them.  Either way, the servicer gets their money.”

Jerad went on to say: “Our attitude at CHASE was to process everything as quickly as possible, so we can foreclose and take the house to sale.  That’s how we made our money.”

“Servicers want to show investors that they did their due diligence on a loan modification, but that in the end they just couldn’t find a way to modify.  They’re whole focus is to foreclose, not to modify.  They put the borrower through every hoop and obstacle they can, so that when something fails to get done on time, or whatever, they can deny it and proceed with the foreclosure.  Like, ‘Hey we tried, but the borrower didn’t get this one document in on time.’  That sure is what it seemed like to me, anyway.”

According to Jerad, JPMorgan CHASE in Rancho Bernardo, services foreclosures in all 50 states.  During the 18 months that he worked there, his foreclosure department of 15 people would receive 30-40 borrower files a day just from California, so each person would get two to three foreclosure a day to process just from California alone.  He also said that in Rancho Bernardo, there were no more than 5-7 people in the loan modification department, but in loss mitigation there were 30 people who processed forbearances, short sales, and other alternatives to foreclosure.  The REO department was made up of fewer than five people.

Jerad often took a smoke break with some of the guys handing loan modifications.  “They were always complaining that their supervisors weren’t approving modifications,” Jerad said.  “There was always something else they wanted that prevented the modification from being approved.  They got their bonus based on modifying loans, along with accurate documentation just like us, but it seemed like the supervisors got penalized for modifying loans, because they were all about finding a way to turn them down.”

“There’s no question about it,” Jerad said in closing, “CHASE is in the foreclosure business, not the modification business.”

Well, now… that certainly was satisfying for me.   Was it good for you too? I mean, since, as a taxpayer who bailed out CHASE and so many others, to know that they couldn’t care less about what it says in the HAMP guidelines, or what the President of the United States has said, or about our nation’s economy, or our communities… … or… well, about anything but “the perfect foreclosure,” I feel like I’ve been royally screwed, so it seemed like the appropriate question to ask.

Now I understand why servicers want foreclosures.  It’s the extra fees they can charge either the borrower or the investor related to foreclosure… it’s sort of license to steal, isn’t it?  I mean, no one questions those fees and charges, so I’m sure they’re not designed to be low margin fees and charges.  They’re certainly not subject to the forces of competition.  I wonder if they’re even regulated in any way… in fact, I’d bet they’re not.

And I also now understand why so many times it seems like they’re trying to come up with a reason to NOT modify, as opposed to modify and therefore stop a foreclosure. In fact, many of the modifications I’ve heard from homeowners about have requirements that sound like they’re straight off of “The Amazing Race” reality television show.

“You have exactly 11 hours to sign this form, have it notarized, and then deliver three copies of the document by hand to this address in one of three major U.S. cities.  The catch is you can’t drive or take a cab to get there… you must arrive by elephant.  When you arrive a small Asian man wearing one red shoe will give you your next clue.  You have exactly $265 to complete this leg of THE AMAZING CHASE!”

And, now we know why.  They’re not trying to figure out how to modify, they’re looking for a reason to foreclose and sell the house.

But, although I’m just learning how all this works, Treasury Secretary Geithner had to have known in advance what would go on inside a mortgage servicer.  And so must FDIC Chair Sheila Bair have known.  And so must a whole lot of others in Washington D.C. too, right?  After all, Jerad is a bright young man, to be sure, but if he came to understand how things worked inside a servicver in just 18 months, then I have to believe that many thousands of others know these things as well.

So, why do so many of our elected representatives continue to stand around looking surprised and even dumbfounded at HAMP not working as it was supposed to… as the president said it would?

Oh, wait a minute… that’s right… they don’t actually do that, do they?  In fact, our elected representatives don’t look surprised at all, come to think of it.  They’re not surprised because they knew about the problems.  It’s not often “in the news,” because it’s not “news” to them.

I think I’ve uncovered something, but really they already know, and they’re just having a little laugh at our collective expense… is that about right?  Is this funny to someone in Washington, or anyone anywhere for that matter?

Well, at least we found out before the elections in November.  There’s still time to send more than a few incumbents home for at least the next couple of years.

I’m not kidding about that.  Someone needs to be punished for this.  We need to send a message.

Mandelman out.

Aug
23

Max Gardner’s Top Reasons for Wanting a Pooling Servicing Agreement

EDITOR’S NOTE: Lest people think I invented this whole field of law just because I’m loudest about it, here is a post from Max Gardner, who only a few days after I started this blog had already figured out everything I had figured out and was already doing something about it.

Max Gardner’s Top Reasons for Wanting a Pooling Servicing Agreement

Monday, November 5th, 2007

Every time I file a civil action against a mortgage servicer the very first document I want is a copy of the “Pooling and Servicing Agreement.”  This is the legal document that creates the securitized trust of mortgage loans and also strictly provides for the duties of all entities who are assigned the responsiblity of servicing loans for the Trust.

For all “public placements” or “public offerings,”  the Pooling and Servicing Agreement is always filed on Form 8-K with the Securities and Exchange Commission.  All such documents can be found by conducting a search of the SEC’s website through an internal search engine known as “Edgar.”  But, what is a PSA?  Why do I want to see it? What can be found in the PSA?  Kevin Byers, a forensic accountant, who works with me on these cases, has assisted me in developing the following list of reasons why any consumer must have the PSA.  The reasons are as follows:

Pooling and Servicing Agreements (PSA)Top Twenty Reasons to Request ProductionKevin Byers and O. Max Gardner III

In no particular order, these are some of reasons you need to request through formal discovery in any mortgage-related case the PSA Agreement and why it is relevant:

1.     It is a contractual document naming the parties to any given securitization, important for standing issues.  The document will list the Sponsor, the Trustee for the Securitized Trust, the Master Servicer, and all primary and secondary servicers.

2.     It provides address for all necessary parties including “notice” addresses for the service of legal process. 3.     It outlines the specific duties of the Servicer and/or the Master Servicer as well as the Trustee on behalf of a respective trust. 4.     It contains the representations and warranties of all parties to the agreement, including the Servicer and/or Master Servicer.

5.     It includes all representations provided by the Depositor of the loans into the trust as the same relate to important consumer protection issues related to the underwriting and origination of the loan, such as conformity with anti-predatory lending laws, full-file credit reporting, title insurance coverage, and validity and content of individual loan files.

6.     It gives the conditions under which a prepayment penalty may be waived or modified by the Servicer and/or Master Servicer. 7.     It oftentimes will outline specific loss mitigation and foreclosure avoidance measures available to the Servicer, including, for example, forbearance and loan modification, principal reductions, interest reductions and interest changes.

8.     It defines a “defective mortgage loan” and describes the circumstances and process by which the lender must repurchase a loan.

9.     It establishes the rights of the Trustee under the Trust to force the Depositor/Originator of any loan to repurchase a loan under the recourse provisions. 10.    It describes the specific process by which a delinquent loan can be charged off and the subsequent servicing party and procedures that apply to such charged-off loan. 11.    It provides guidelines on loan-level advances that must be paid by the servicer. 12.    It provides details regarding the mechanics of how the Servicer must go about foreclosing on property, what documents need to be requested and/or recorded and what authorizations need to be granted to foreclose, and in whose name the foreclosure must be filed. 13.    It provides guidance on the fees a Servicer may retain as compensation in the administration of the loans, for example, NSF fees, late fees, loan modification or assumption fees.

14.    It will contain the Mortgage Loan Schedule, important to verify the ownership of the loan on behalf of the Trust.

15.    It details the requirements for mortgage assignments and when these will or will not be recorded and the implications of the failure to record such assignments. 16.    It details the specific loan documents contained in each loan file that will be delivered to the Trustee or Document Custodian on behalf of the trust, establishing who holds the original Note and where it may be found.

17.    It describes the credit enhancements that have been deployed to enhance the rating of the most secure certificates of investment in the Trust.

18.    It provides rules and procedures for the rights of the Master Servicer or the Primary Servicer to accept a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure or a short sale of the property so as to avoid a foreclosure.

19.    It describes the rights the Originator/Depositor may retain the Residual Value of the Trust and the extent to which the residuals may be used as credit enhancements.

20.    It will name a default servicer and describe when a loan is considered to be in default and outline the process for the transfer of servicing rights.

O. Max Gardner IIIHistoric Webbley House


Filed under: bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, Eviction, evidence, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, Pleading, securities fraud, Servicer, STATUTES, trustee Tagged: discovery, Master Servicer, MAX GARDNER, Pooling and Servicing Agreement, PSA, trust
Aug
21

Strategies Compared by Nilson

August 20, 2010 by Barry Nilson:

Sometimes when trying to understand an issue, I make a chart of comparing different angles, or in this case, I’ve captured/summarized the essence of what I think are 3 litigation methods, and 1 administrative method.  I don’t know if April Charney or Matt Weidner’s method can be summarized succinctly or not. I’m sure there are more methods.  If either of you come across one, please add it to this list.  I love comparing and contrasting views from all sides.  I’m sure they could probably be further broken down into Judicial and Non-judicial states.  Barne’s method below for example is specifically for non-judicial states.
The common thread I find always is that the Servicers/Trusts can not, or more importantly, will not comply with discovery and accounting.  Given that all of these things are indeed moving targets and confusing, I kind of like Krieger’s or the UCC aggressive and offense method focusing on the claim to the house and putting the servicer/trustee on the defensive.
I’ve ordered the full securitization work up on one of my houses from Neil Garfield, but I wonder if chasing all the PSA and location of note is a goose chase.  In the end, the enemy’s behavior is always the same.  I suppose if you can catch them red-handed that may be effective and I suppose knowing the enemy’s rule book is always good.  Maybe the strength here is their willingness to let the house go out of fear of exposure to a felony, or huge taxable event on the mortgage pool by clever discovery of their accounting fraud.  I can’t stand Maher Soliman’s cryptic explanations, but his warnings about violations of FASB 140 and accounting threats have been confirmed by UsedKarGuy and I think are part of what you (Alina) are getting at.
But most of all I really like Krieger’s pragmatic posts and focus on simplicity.  ANONYMOUS has always been my favorite but now Krieger is with ANONYMOUS in second place, as far as Livinglies.
Methods:
1)    The Jeff Barnes, TRO – Preliminary Injunction – litigation method:
From Jeff’s Post on FDN:
As those of you who follow this website are aware, the “nonjudicial” foreclosure states require the borrower to institute litigation in court to challenge a Trustee’s (foreclosure) sale and request both a temporary restraining order cancelling a pending sale, and for a preliminary injunction prohibiting any further attempts at foreclosure pending the duration of the borrower’s litigation challenging the foreclosure attempt.
2)    The Dave Krieger, – begin with Quiet Title Method:
from a post of Krieger’s on Livinglies:
“to file suit for quiet title and get the action to the point where you get to have discovery utilized through an evidentiary hearing [as Neil has suggested]. It would be at that point (if BOA won’t give you this stuff via a QWR and DVL) then an attorney that knows this stuff can advise you of your options. I don’t recommend doing this stuff pro se/pro per. I’m working a case now against them that is purposefully becoming convoluted in an attempt to thwart discovery. They DO NOT want you finding this stuff out. Quiet title action in this case is in state court. Don’t let them remove it to federal; and they will try under diversity jurisdiction using all the same arguments as they do with everyone else and then motion for a 12(b)(6) dismissal. “
3)    The Max Gardner Bankruptcy Litigation Model (BLM):
from Max’s BLM model website:
“Every bankruptcy client has, literally, hundreds of claims that a he can pursue via the FDCPA, state UDAP and TILA statutes, before the case is even filed. After filing, many servicers violate the automatic stay, file improper proof of claims and are outside the statute of limitations, among many other problems. After the bankruptcy is discharged, serious violations occur when servicers start sending bills to the debtor for thousands of dollars of fees they secretly accrued during the bankruptcy case that weren’t ever noticed out or approved by the bankruptcy court …”
Max’s base filing fees represent less than 10% of his firm’s revenue. The other 90% is earned through litigating claims for his clients. They are so shocked by their great bankruptcy results, they enthusiastically become Max’s best marketing tool and his main source for new clients”
4)    The administrative, non-judicial method with perfecting a UCC claim:
Start with “Notice of Conditional Acceptance upon proof of claim” when served with the notice of default or foreclosure sale.  This notice binds, or accepts the servicers ”offer” into a private contract without changing the terms or creating a counter proposal.  This is now a private contract outside the court room.  The single condition, “proof of claim” can be expanded into a long laundry list demand for discovery, in affidavit form, under penalty of perjury.  The debtor has a right to a legal accounting of his/her bill.  Demanding that accounting is his/her right under UCC.  Send out QWRs and other such stuff (all will be tossed by servicer) builds more ammunition for the potential future litigation
Then file UCC-1 Financing Statement, with 3 follups according to the timeline allowed by UCC to “Perfect the Claim”.  All of this is done with certified mail and notaries to everyone and everybody.
As further ammunition, file a Mechanics Lien, and a Lis Pendens on the property.
Some rogue Trustees will attempt to foreclose over a Lis Pendens.  I guess that is a big no-no, and when the owner or tenant gets served with an eviction notice, that’s pretty good ammunition to go after the trustee.  (I don’t understand this part yet).
Eventually this goes to quiet title, or in one case I’ve seen, the full Reconveyance was given. This part is what I don’t know.  I do know it delays the thing for a very very long time.

Filed under: foreclosure
Aug
20

LivingLies UPDATED Plan of Engagement: What to Do

UPDATE: This is THE OUTLINE of a plan that is current in its evolution but by no means complete or the last word. It replaces the entry I made in February of this year. The assumption here is that even without taking mortgage foreclosure cases into consideration, the percentage of cases that actually go to trial is between 5%-15% depending upon how you categorize “cases.” On the other hand, if you are not prepared for trial and counting on settlement, your opposition will generally know it and have the upper hand in negotiating a settlement. They are going to play for keeps. You should too. Don’t assume that the note in front of you is the actual original. Close inspection often reveals it is a color copy.

And for heaven sake don’t stand there with your mouth hanging open when someone says you are looking for a free house. You are looking for justice. You had your purse snatched in this transaction, you know there is an obligation, but you also know that they didn’t perfect the security interest (not your fault) and they received multiple payments from multiple parties on these securitized loans. You want a FULL accounting of all such transactions to determine what balance is due after insurance payments, who is subrogated or substituted on claims, and an opportunity to negotiate a settlement or modification with someone who actually has advanced money on THIS transaction and can show it to be so.

WORD OF CAUTION: IF YOU ARE ALREADY IN PROCESS, YOU ARE REQUIRED TO ACT WITHIN THE TIMES SET FORTH BY STATE LAW, FEDERAL LAW, OR THE LAWS OF CIVIL PROCEDURE. FAILURE TO DO SO LEAVES YOU IN AN UPHILL BATTLE TO REVERSE ACTIONS ALREADY TAKEN. ON THE OTHER HAND ACTIONS ALREADY TAKEN “FIX” THE POSITION OF YOUR OPPOSITION, SINCE THEY CAN NO LONGER ASSERT CHANGES IN CREDITOR, LENDER OR TRUSTEE. THUS IT MIGHT BE EASIER, ACCORDING TO SOME SUCCESSFUL LITIGATORS OUT THERE, TO WAIT UNTIL THE SALE HAS OCCURRED AND THEN ATTACK IT AS A FRAUDULENT SALE, THAN TO TRY TO STOP IT WITH A TEMPORARY RESTRAINING ORDER ETC.

CONSIDER BANKRUPTCY, ESPECIALLY CHAPTER 13, WHERE THERE ARE MORE REMEDIES THAN YOU MIGHT THINK IF YOU FILL OUT YOUR SCHEDULES PROPERLY. WE ARE SEEING BETTER RESULTS IN SOME BANKRUPTCY COURTS THAN FEDERAL OR STATE CIVIL COURT PROCEEDINGS.

  1. Get your act together, stop fighting amongst the members of your household and make a decision as to what you want to do — fight or flight?
  2. GET SOME HELP NO MATTER WHAT YOU DECIDE. GET THE LOAN SPECIFIC TITLE SEARCH, GET A SECURITIZATION SEARCH, AND GET A LAWYER LICENSED IN THE COUNTY WHERE YOUR PROPERTY IS LOCATED AND MAKE SURE HE/SHE IS NOT STUCK ON THE PROPOSITION THAT YOU SHOULD LOSE.
  3. If you choose flight, then by all means try the short-sale or jingle mail strategies that have been discussed on this blog. Do not try to make money on the short-sale, since nobody is going to give it to you. You can make a few dollars by riding out the time in foreclosure without making payments (and hopefully saving the money you would have paid) and by negotiating as high a price (a few thousand dollars)  as you can in a deal known as “cash for keys.” Even for this, you should employ the services of a local licensed attorney — at least for consultation. There are several short-sale options that have evolved. Google Edge Simonson or Prime financial. I’ve been working on a short-sale-leaseback option that seems to be picking up steam.
  4. STRATEGIC DEFAULTS RISING: More and more people of all walks of life including those that have some considerable wealth, are walking away from these properties that were the subject of transactions in which the presumed value of the property was preposterous. This is an option that scare the hair off the pretender lenders because it pouts the power in your hands. They in turn are trying to scare the public with threats of deficiency judgments etc and collections. It is doubtful that many or indeed any deficiency judgments would be awarded, even if they were allowed. But in many cases, particularly in non-judicial states, deficiency judgments are NOT allowed. A version of the strategic default that many people like is to stay as long as possible without paying and then walk. If you are smart about it, you raise your own capital by socking away the payments you would have made.
  5. If the decision is fight — then the second decision to make is to answer the question “fight for what?” If you want to buy time, there are many strategies that can be employed, which basically are the same strategies as those used if you are fighting for real. And you might be surprised by the result. Some people get a year or two or even more without payments. You are going to take a FICO hit anyway so why not put some cash in your pocket while you hold back payments.
  6. AVOID crazy deals where you give your property or share your property with a stranger. If you persist in engaging such people at least call references and make sure the references are real. Ask questions about their situation and how they feel it worked out to them. Get as much detail as possible.
  7. AVOID mortgage modification firms. If you persist in engaging such people at least call references and make sure the references are real. Ask questions about their situation and how they feel it worked out to them. Get as much detail as possible. My opinion is that if they don’t pursue an aggressive litigation strategy the statistical probability of you accomplishing anything by going to them is near zero.
  8. In all cases, if at all possible:
  9. (a) Get all your information together along with a short executive summary of your “journal” (even if you create the journal now). That means all closing documents, any information you have on title, recording in the county recorder’s office, the names of all parties who were “at” closing (that means not just the actual people who were there, but he names of companies that were represented or mentioned at closing). Also, include in the file any notices of default(NOD) or notice of Trustee sale (NOTS) or summons from a court.

    (b) Get a MORTGAGE ANALYSIS of the loan transaction itself. THIS INVOLVES THREE PARTS — (1) LOAN SPECIFIC TITLE SEARCH AND CHAIN OF TITLE, EXAMINATION OF THE DOCUMENTS, SIGNATURES, AND DATES OF DOCUMENTS PURPORTING TO BE REAL, (2) SECURITIZATION SEARCH THAT CHASES THE MONEY TRAIL AND WILL PROBABLY LEAD YOU TO SOME IMPORTANT ISSUES LIKE THE VERY EXISTENCE OF THE “TRUST” ASSERTING IT HAS THE RIGHT TO FORECLOSE AS WELL AS MONETARY ISSUES SUCH AS APPLICATION OR ALLOCATION OF PAYMENTS RECEIVED BY THE INVESTOR WHO ADVANCED THE FUNDS FOR THE LOAN AND (3) COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS THAT IS USABLE BY AN ATTORNEY IN COURT SUCH THAT HE/SHE CAN ARGUE THAT THERE ARE QUESTIONS OF FACT ENTITLING YOU TO PURSUE DISCOVERY. IF YOU WIN THAT POINT YOU ARE ON YOUR WAY TO A SUCCESSFUL CONCLUSION. BUT NOBODY IS GOING TO MAKE IT EASY FOR YOU.

    (c) Who is your creditor? The TILA Audit alone does nothing without taking further steps. The Trustee’s “Take-down” report should be demanded in non-judicial states and if the house is in foreclosure, your written objection should be sent to the Trustee.

    (d) If someone tells you they are “pretty sure” or can “definitely”  stop your foreclosure or promises a favorable outcome, and asks for money up front, then run like hell. This is a scam. IF THEY TELL YOU THEY WILL DO WHAT THEY CAN, AND THEY GIVE YOU SOME EXAMPLES OF WHAT THEY WILL BE DOING FOR YOU THEN LISTEN AND GET REFERENCES.

    (e) Only a Court order stops foreclosure or a Trustee Sale. No letter of any form or substance will stop it unless the other side is intimidated into stopping the action, which sometimes happens when they know their paperwork is “out of order.”

    (f) Get a Forensic Mortgage Analysis Report OR AN EXPERT DECLARATION that summarizes in a few pages the potential issues that you should be investigating AND WHICH LENDS SUPPORT TOY OUR DENIAL OF THE DEFAULT, DENIAL OF THE RIGHT OF THE OPPOSING PARTY TO CLAIM A DEFAULT, DENIAL OF THE RIGHT OF THE OPPOSING PARTY TO FORECLOSE.

    (g) Get an Expert Declaration that uses the forensic report and the expert opinions of specific experts (like appraisers, title analysts) and which identifies the probable chain of securitization and the money trail. You’ll be surprised when you find out there were two yield spread premiums not disclosed to you and that they can total as much or more than the “loan” itself. GET EXPERT OPINION ON PROBABLE DAMAGES INCLUDING RETURN OF UNDISCLOSED FEES, INTEREST, ETC. (SEE LAWYER’S WORKBOOK FROM GARFIELD CONTINUUM).

    (h) Send the Forensic Report and expert declaration to the known parties, with an instruction to forward it to all other parties known to them in the securitization chain. Include a Qualified Written Request(QWR) AND a Debt Validation Letter(DVL) (which is really a debt verification letter). Don’t be surprised if your pretender lenders will come back and tell you your QWR is defective or improper in some way, but that’s OK, you have followed statutory procedure and they didn’t. With the help of an attorney and with consultation with your experts decide on what resolution you will demand — damages, rescission, etc.

    (i) Don’t believe a word about modification. Practically none of them go through. They are leading you into default so they can collect more service fees, and get money out of you that you think is stopping the foreclosure.

    (j) Don’t believe a word that any pretender lender or representative says or represents, even if they are a lawyer, particularly verbal communications that they refuse to confirm in writing. Challenge everything.

    (k) Don’t accept any document as authentic. Many documents are being fabricated or forged, including affidavits. This is why you need a lawyer and an expert and a Forensic mortgage analysis — to determine what documents and parties are suspect and what you should be asking for in discovery and in the QWR and DVL.

    (l) YOUR FIRST STRATEGY IS TO RAISE NOT PROVE ISSUES OF FACT. BY PRODUCING A FORENSIC REPORT AND EXPERT DECLARATION, NEITHER YOU NOR YOUR LAWYER NEEDS TO ACQUIRE EXPERTISE IN SECURITIZED LOANS. YOU ONLY NEED TO RAISE THE ISSUE OF FACT BY SHOWING THE COURT THAT YOU HAVE EXPERTS WHO SAY THE PRETENDER LENDERS/TRUSTEES ETC. ARE NOT CREDITORS AND NOT AUTHORIZED AGENTS WORKING FOR THE CREDITORS. THEY SAY THEY ARE IN FACT THE CREDITORS OR HAVE SOME AUTHORITY GRANTED BY AN ALLEGED CREDITOR. IT IS NOT FOR THE COURT TO ACCEPT ONE VIEW OR THE OTHER, BUT RATHER TO ALLOW DISCOVERY AND AN EVIDENTIARY HEARING ON THE ISSUE OF STANDING (SEE MANY RECENT CASES REPORTED SINCE FEBRUARY ON THIS BLOG).

    (m) Be very aggressive on discovery. They will argue that even if they are not the creditor and even if they refuse to disclose the identity of the creditor, they are still entitled to disclose because they are the holder of the note and/or mortgage. Your argument will probably be that they still have a duty to disclose the identity of the creditor and the source of the their authority to represent the creditor, along with proof that the creditor has received notice of these proceedings.


Filed under: bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, currency, Eviction, foreclosure, GTC | Honor, Investor, Mortgage, securities fraud Tagged: debt validation, expert declaration, forensic analysis, qualified written request, TILA audit, trustee
Aug
19

South Florida Attorneys Addition

Posted by Ann

Editor’s Note: These go up either because someone else posts them or I run across the work of a lawyer that I liked. No guarantees, no magic bullets.

Florida – Before hiring a lawyer, check his credential at the Florida Bar website member seach:
http://www.floridabar.org/names.nsf/mesearch?openform.

Go to the Court House and ask the Court Clerk to give you some cases handled by the lawyer. Ask the lawyer to show you some of his winning cases. Question him about Trustee, assignments, affirmative defenses, Pooling Service Agreement (PSA), April Charney, Mortgage securization etc.

Some excellent Florida Foreclosure Defense Lawyers :
Miami/Broward – Dillon Graham Esq.
Broward – Carol Asbury Esq.,
Palm Beach – Thomas Ice Esq.
North Florida – Chip Parker, Matt Weidner, Wasylik Esq.

Can’t afford a lawyer ? Read http://www.foreclosureprose.com


Filed under: foreclosure
Aug
18

Securitization Search: Why You Need the PSA

Quoted from April Charney — I’m not sure of the source. She is right on every point.PSA= Pooling and Servicing Agreement

EDITOR’S NOTE: Glad to see that April is doing what the rest of us are doing — going deeper and deeper. There are two things you need — the loan specific title search with analysis and the securitization search, report and analysis. One tracks the chain of title the other tracks the chain of money. You must track both in order to avoid the “proffers” and bogus representations of opposing counsel. The only thing I would add is that the Prospectus, Assignment and Assumption Agreement, Distribution reports and “re-stated” agreements tell a long tale as well.

The search for the securitization documents is not as simple as you might think. The claim of some “Trustee” for a “pool” is never backed up by documents showing the full chain of title of the loan, because the receivables were assigned, not the loan. More than one pool can often be found claiming “ownership” of a loan that meets MOST of the characteristics of your loan, but not all of them. It is these inconsistencies that enable you to chip away at the credibility of the pretender lenders.

COMBO TITLE and SECURITIZATION Search, Report, Documents and Comprehensive Analysis

You must realize that while the original PSA is a good starting point, it isn’t the ending point. That is because of the the dissolution of hundreds if not thousands of these special purpose vehicles which was easy because they were never officially formed in the first place. You must realize that the point of fact is that there is a “claim” that the loan is in a “pool” which may or may not have ever existed, but that the the documentary trail shows it was never really assigned tot he pool. So the money trail leads us to those people who have an actual interest in the loan — only after you can make the point that ALL transactions by or relating to the “pool” must be accounted for and allocated to individual loans.

My opinion, is that the the money people, if they can be found, have an interest that can imposed by equity and not by law. Everyone else is simply out to line their own pockets without ever having invested a dime in the loan transaction.

FROM APRIL CHARNEY—–

“You have to get the PSA and the mortgage loan purchase agreement and the hearsay bogus electronic list of loans before the court. You have to educate your judge about the lack of credibility or effect of the lifeless list of loans as the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act specifically exempts Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities from its application. Also, you have to get your judge to understand that the plaintiff has given up the power to accept the transfer of a note in default and under the conditions presented to the court (out of time, no delivery receipts, etc). Without the PSA you cannot do this.

Additionally the PSA becomes rich when you look at § 1-302 (b) which says that the obligations of good faith, diligence, reasonableness and care prescribed by the code may not be disclaimed by agreement, but may be enhanced or modified by an agreement which determine the standards by which the performance of the obligations of good faith, diligence reasonableness and care are to be measured. These agreed to standards of good faith, etc. are enforceable under the UCC if the standards are “not manifestly unreasonable.”

The PSA also has impact on when or what acts have to occur under the UCC because § 1-302 (c) allows parties to vary the “effect of other provisions” of the UCC by agreement.

Through the PSA, it is clear that the plaintiff cannot take an interest of any kind in the loan by way of an “A to D” assignment of a mortgage and certainly cannot take an interest in the note in this fashion.

Without the PSA and the limitations set up in it “by agreement of the parties”, there is no avoiding the mortgage following the note and where the UCC gives over the power to enforce the note, so goes the power to foreclose on the mortgage.

So, arguing that the Trustee could only sue on the note and not foreclose is not correct analysis without the PSA.
Likewise, you will not defeat the equitable interest “effective as of” assignment arguments without the PSA and the layering of the laws that control these securities (true sales required) and REMIC (no defaulted or nonconforming loans and must be timely bankruptcy remote transfers) and NY trust law and UCC law (as to no ultra vires acts allowed by trustee and no unaffixed allonges, etc.).

The PSA is part of the admissible evidence that the court MUST have under the exacting provisions of the summary judgment rule if the court is to accept any plaintiff affidavit or assignment.

If you have been successful in your cases thus far without the PSA, then you have far to go with your litigation model. It is not just you that has “the more considerable task of proving that New York law applies to this trust and that the PSA does not allow the plaintiff to be a “nonholder in possession with the rights of a holder.””


Filed under: bubble, CORRUPTION, evidence, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, GTC | Honor, investment banking, Investor, Mortgage, Motions, Pleading, securities fraud, Servicer, STATUTES, trustee Tagged: SEC report, SEC search, securitization search, title report, title search
Jul
29

Mass Extinction of Pools Becomes Clearer

Our good friend “Anonymous” has piped up with more vital information and expressed it more succinctly than I did.

“The senior tranches have largely already been paid and closed. Since the junior tranches are paid only if there is left over current payment – after the senior tranches have been paid. Thus, junior tranches are paid nothing (this is evident in investor lawsuits – damages do not deduct foreclosure recovery). If anything remains today from the toxic mortgage loan securitizations, it is the residual tranche – which has likely been resecuritized into a separate Trust – that is not a current pass-through security – but, rather, synthetically derived from a dismantled original Trust structure. “

Editor’s Note: In other words, if you have a high quality loan wherein you have a high credit score and received relatively good terms, it was in the “senior tranches.” The senior tranches were paid and closed. They were paid from the meager proceeds of the junior tranches, from insurance, credit default swaps etc. Bottom Line: If you got one of those mortgages, it has almost certainly been paid in full. So why are they still collecting your payments? Because they can.

Your obligation has most likely been satisfied long ago without any rights of subrogation. If you are in foreclosure now with one of these loans, the “Trustee” is in actuality out of the picture because the “Trust” was closed out (IF IT EVER LEGALLY EXISTED). All of this leads to the politically incorrect conclusion that people gt their houses for “nothing.” But that is not true.

ALL THE MONEY THAT WAS OWED ON THAT LOAN HAS BEEN PAID. WHY SHOULD ANYONE COLLECT ANYTHING FURTHER?

More comments from “Anonymous”

This is a very important post. I have been aware of cases where the defendant is sent to mediation without first identifying the real creditor. Some here have stated that the real party issue is not relevant because eventually the plaintiff will get his “ducks in a row” and proceed with the foreclosure under the real party name.

Not identifying the real party in court is not only fraud but also deprives the defendant of direct and timely negotiation with the real party true creditor. Thus, damages accrue to the defendant.

Although real party, in my opinion, is the single most important issue, I am not seeing courts enforce discovery to ascertain the real party. Once it can be established that the real party is not before the court, all the produced documents are also subject to question. I have seen cases where the real party is at issue – but most of the cases simply state that the plaintiff does not have standing – without attempting to demonstrate why the plaintiff is not the real party.

Since foreclosure cases most often are indicative of securitization, knowing the chain of sale/assignment in a securitization is crucial. Also, knowing what the “investors” are entitled to is important. Again, while I think this post is very important – i disagree with “there is nothing left to pay the investors who advanced money into a pool from which some mortgages were funded” 1) any investors who indirectly funded a “pool” – did not directly fund mortgages and 2) tranche “investors” – for which there a limited number of tranches – were only entitled to current income pass-through – not foreclosure recovery (which is not current and not passed on to pass-through security investors. (However, the residual tranche is not a pass-through – and is usually held by the servicer – who may -or may not be the current creditor). 3) the Trust is likely dissolved.

The fact that mediation is being conducted without identification of the current creditor – in whose name any modification must be contracted – is simply additional fraud upon the borrower defendant. This fraud is akin to “loan modification” scams that are being currently investigated by some state Department of Justices.

How and why the courts are allowing this to happen – and actually promoting it – is beyond me.

Editor’s Note: Legally this puts us at the horns of a dilemma. If we want to travel the path of “PAID IN FULL” then we are treading on the thin ice of accepting or admitting that the loan was actually legally and correctly assigned and indorsed into the pool, in addition to the usual “free house” talk.  If we travel the path of UNSUCCESSFUL ATTEMPTED ASSIGNMENT then we get to the conclusion that the loan is still owned by the originating lender, who was PAID IN FULL at the time of the loan closing, but still is the owner of record. If we travel both paths, we are presenting a highly complex argument that most judges won’t understand. This is why the winners out there are not making big splashes with exotic legal arguments (even though they would be right), the winners are getting down to the details that any Judge would understand — SHOW ME THE TRUST DOCUMENT, SHOW ME THE NOTE, SHOW ME THE ASSIGNMENT, SHOW ME THE INDORSEMENT, SHOW ME THE ACCOUNTING, SHOW ME THE CREDITOR ETC.

MANY THANKS, ANONYMOUS!!!


Filed under: bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, Eviction, evidence, expert witness, foreclosure mill, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, Investor, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, Motions, Pleading, securities fraud, Servicer, STATUTES, trustee Tagged: creditor, fraud, mediation, REAL PARTY IN INTEREST
Jul
07

“special servicing” fees

FROM A READER IN COLORADO ANSWERING “ANONYMOUS”

You raise a good point as to the servicer keep all the payments. As it has been proven in the two WAMU cases I have, the servicer(JPM not Chase Home Finance) is compelling the action under a bogus POA for the trustee. The trustee does not have control if the operation as the PSA has always shown the servicer was responsible for the foreclosure.

That however is the crux of the issue. The certificate holders put up money to gain an income stream although they thought they were backed by the notes which were never deposited. This scam was different than typical bank bond holder deals that were present before this mess started.

The servicer is in control of the “limited” replacement loans that need to go into the trust if one or two loans default but once the pool is shown to be failing the status is void and the default swap pays in to cover the “event”

I would say that the default swaps may have been multiple and created to cover multiple things. One swap may cover the income stream which is why the trusts still exist and the other covers the principle balance which under REMIC is not allowed to be placed back into the trust mid stream. This leaves the servicer and master servicer in control of it all.

The master servicer controls the REO and the Payout from the default swap covering the principle balance effectively holding the total balance of the top tier certificates and the REO valued at maybe 50%. Since they are prohibited from depositing the money back to allow the certificate holders to recoup their money under the IRS code they reinvest it most likely in buying the certificates that are valued at 5 cents on the dollar from the holders that got screwed.

This will lead to a huge windfall when they weather the storm with the tax payer money such as TALF which is so much more than the TARP money and effectively allows the banks to pledge the top level junk they hold for real time cash.

The trusts stay open as they are trying to bridge over the issue and play the inevitable boom bust history they have made us live in forever. The income stream comes from a separate swap that keeps the dividends paying but the value is shot to nothing making the bond holders want to sell and get out and the bank uses their money owed to buy them out and screw them another time.

The servicer is then charging “special servicing” fees at a huge rate while body dragging the homeowners intentionally inflicting emotional distress so they want to walk away. This helps break their spirit and helps eat up the payments that are coming in that they pocket since the dividends are paid from the other swap contract.

The servicer is the key as they have always and will always control everything and the homeowner gets intentionally abused and the investor has no clue. They want everyone to bailout and walk away from the houses and the investments because they have a plan to use that to make another round of huge bonuses. This is why they value the fraudulent loans at nothing because they are yet the real value of what is being laundered is the servicing rights and the collection of the REO.

Lender Processing Services was funded in 2008 by JP and BoA so that they could perpetuate the fraud of collecting zeroed out loans and now the big law firms that receive the f/c files are going public set to retain huge pools of mortgage notes and continue the game.

If anyone can say that this problem is happenstance and not premeditated racketeering at its most egregious I would say they are certainly fit to be judges or negative bloggers. The entire “foreclosure industry” was planned from the start in the late nineties and this is just part of the cycle they expect us to sit through. It is too well planned with the legislature passing all the little changes in law in preparation.

Conspiracy theory or real conspiracy coming to fruition? I know where I stand.

I created a coin phrase for this….compartmentalized fraud which goes well with plausible deniability and this cannot happen without a master mind that lays out the plan….who might that be?


Filed under: foreclosure
Jul
06

Bank of New York Slammed for Misrepresenting Standing

6.29.10Bank-of-New-York-v-Michael-Raftogainis[1]

Judge Todd also stated that additional discovery is to be produced when the foreclosure involves a securitization, lost note claims, or a holder in due course challenge (which may arise in the context of the purported assignment of a toxic loan to a securitized trust prior to the trustee of that trust instituting a foreclosure action, as well as any predatory loan claims against the original lender). Judge Todd recognized that there are dozens of legal issues and inquiries where a foreclosure involves a securitization, and that a borrower has both the right to know who owns the mortgage loan and whether a foreclosing party has the legal right to foreclose.

WHY TITLE AND SECURITIZATION REPORT IS SO IMPORTANT FOR FORECLOSURE DEFENSE

Posted on July 6, 2010 by Foreclosureblues

Editor’s Note….This case and outcome in favor of the homeowner was a direct result of obtaining an accurate title and securitization report from a qualified expert that contradicted the “alleged” evidence of the foreclosing plaintiff and provided substance that enabled the judge to rule in favor of the homeowner.

http://foreclosureblues.wordpress.com/

NEW JERSEY TRIAL COURT JUDGE ISSUES 53-PAGE OPINION DISMISSING FORECLOSURE COMPLAINT OF BANK OF NEW YORK AS SECURITIZED TRUSTEE: OPINION COULD PAVE THE WAY FOR AMENDMENTS TO NEW JERSEY RULES OF PROCEDURE REQUIRING FORECLOSURE COMPLAINTS TO BE CERTIFIED AND FOR FORECLOSING PARTIES TO PRODUCE SECURITIZATION DISCOVERY IN ORDER TO BE ABLE TO PURSUE FORECLOSURE

Today, July 06, 2010, 30 minutes ago

Jeff Barnes Esq.

July 6, 2010

In an extremely well-reasoned and detailed written opinion, New Jersey trial court Judge William C. Todd has issued a 53-page (yes, fifty-three page) Order dismissing a foreclosure action filed by Bank of New York as Trustee for Home Mortgage Investment Trust 2004-4 Mortgage-Backed Notes Series 2004-4, Docket No. F-7356-09, Atlantic County, New Jersey. The matter was decided on June 29, 2010 and the formal opinion was approved for publication this week after the matter was tried at the end of June, 2010.

The opinion sets forth an incredible analysis of a host of issues involving foreclosure in securitization contexts and highlights why a foreclosing plaintiff must comply with its obligations to prove standing in order to be able to pursue a foreclosure action. While we do not summarize the entire holding here, we do want to point out some of the significant findings.

The court found that there was no meaningful attempt by Bank of New York (hereafter “BONY”) to comply with applicable New Jersey procedural rules requiring a recitation of all assigments in the chain of title. BONY simple alleged that it had acquired possession of the note prior to the litigation being filed. However, the evidence at trial failed to establish this allegation, with the Court noting that there were missing documents incident to the securitization of the loan including the mortgage loan schedule that should have been attached to the mortgage loan purchase agreement. The Court also found that the “MERS assignment was potentially misleading”.

The Court found that there was a failure of proof as to BONY’s legal standing, warranting dismissal of the action and conditioning any refiling on a certification that the plaintiff is in possession of the original note at the time of filing. This is in line with the recent action of the Supreme Court of Florida which, as of February 11, 2010 by Administrative Order, requires all residential mortgage foreclosure complaints to be verified. It is no secret that Florida trial courts have and continue to dismiss foreclosure actions which do not comply with the verification requirement. It is hoped that the courts of New Jersey will adopt Judge Todd’s well-reasoned analysis and dismiss foreclosure complaints which do not comply with the New Jersey procedural rules requiring proof of legal standing to foreclose at inception and time of filing a Complaint for foreclosure.

Judge Todd also stated that additional discovery is to be produced when the foreclosure involves a securitization, lost note claims, or a holder in due course challenge (which may arise in the context of the purported assignment of a toxic loan to a securitized trust prior to the trustee of that trust instituting a foreclosure action, as well as any predatory loan claims against the original lender). Judge Todd recognized that there are dozens of legal issues and inquiries where a foreclosure involves a securitization, and that a borrower has both the right to know who owns the mortgage loan and whether a foreclosing party has the legal right to foreclose.

This incredibly significant decision will hopefully become the law in the state of New Jersey, and it is hoped that the Rules Committee for the New Jersey courts will soon adopt court rules requiring that all residential foreclosure complaints filed in New Jersey be accompanied by the filing of an appropriate Certification, and further requiring that all securitization discovery be produced in all foreclosure cases involving a securitized loan. We applaud and salute Judge Todd for his amazing effort to not only streamline foreclosure litigation in New Jersey, but also insuring that borrowers’ legal rights are protected as well.

Jeff Barnes, Esq., http://www.ForeclosureDefenseNationwide.com


Filed under: bubble, CASES, CORRUPTION, Eviction, evidence, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, Investor, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, Motions, politics, securities fraud, STATUTES, trustee Tagged: Bank of New York Mellon, Home Mortgage Investment Trust, New Jersey, securitization report, title report, William C. Todd
Jul
01

AIG Waived Rights in Bailout: NO SUBROGATION=PAID IN FULL

EDITOR’S NOTE: LISTEN UP! It’s easy to pass over these reports with the thought that it merely points out chicanery you already knew was about. But this one confirms what I’ve been saying for three years. The best defense against any claim is to show payment. Normally if someone pays off your debt it is either a gift (hence the defense of payment, even if it wasn’t by you) or they were buying the debt, which means that the deal was they were subrogated in the claim.

In other words if AIG gave Goldman Sachs money for “losses” on loan pools, the insurer would normally have the right to collect on the debts that were paid. OR they would have the right to receive money back if they paid for a loss claim where there was in fact no loss.

But that step was both skipped and waived. First of all, the payoff from AIG was never allocated specifically to a loan pool in violation of the express terms of the contracts with the investors who advanced the funds.

Second, the “Trustee” or manager of the pool never allocated the payment in any manner to the loans that were failing. Since most of the loans that were failing were the worst loans that would have made them a lot more valuable. In fact, for the investment banks that are buying up the toxic waste tranches, their end game might well be exactly that — to allocate the payments received from third party insurers and counter-parties on hedge contracts etc. and thus raise the value of the “toxic” pools considerably AFTER they have screwed all the investors and the borrowers.

The plain truth is that in the co-venture antics that were going on, the recipients of insurance, bailout, hedge, and other credit enhancements were acting at all times as either agents or constructive trustees for the investors. The fact that they received payment and failed to give that money to the investors is a case “between the creditors” as some judges like to say. But it also is a reduction in the amount owed to the investor from the pool (via the mortgage backed securities the investor bought).

If the reduction in the balance owed to the investor is properly allocated then the loans in the pool are no longer backing the full amount owed to the investor — they are backing something less. Now if AIG bought the loan, the borrower would still owe the money, this time to AIG. But AIG didn’t buy the loan, the pool, or anything for that matter. AIG merely paid out on an insurance contract under a deal where they, for their own reasons, specifically waived any claims for refund and under which they had no rights of substitution (subrogation) in the claims.

In plain terms, if you wreck your car and the insurance company adjusts it as a total wreck then they pay you off and take what is left of the car to mitigate their damages. What AIG did was pay the claim but they didn’t take the car, leaving you with the wreck to further mitigate your damages. It’s not a complete analogy but you get the point, right?

So back to AIG. Since they merely paid off the debt, the debt was reduced. The debt having been reduced it should have been reflected on the books of the investor or whoever is claiming to be the holder or enforcer of the loan obligation. It wasn’t. So the amount anyone claimed to be in default on any loans that were claimed to be in a pool (whether the loan actually made it into the pool or not) was and remains incorrectly stated. That means the notice of default, the notice of sale, the foreclosure suit are all wrong. In fact, when you add in all third party payments, as I have done in a number of cases, the obligation has been overpaid by factors of as much as 10 times the loan.

So we have a foreclosure on a home encumbered by a mortgage that has been satisfied because the OBLIGATION was satisfied. When the obligation was satisfied, the co-venturers here in securitization intentionally held onto the notes as though they were still due in full when they knew they had received multiple payments on them but since THEY were in charge of the bookkeeping, THEY didn’t reduce the loan balances.

Then THEY authorized some new entity to say they were the holder of the note, which they might be. But the note is evidence of the obligation, not the obligation itself.  If the obligation is paid, the holder of the note has only one action left — to give it back to the borrower marked PAID IN FULL.

June 29, 2010

In U.S. Bailout of A.I.G., Forgiveness for Big Banks

By LOUISE STORY and GRETCHEN MORGENSON

At the end of the American International Group’s annual meeting last month, a shareholder approached the microphone with a question for Robert Benmosche, the insurer’s chief executive.

“I’d like to know, what does A.I.G. plan to do with Goldman Sachs?” he asked. “Are you going to get — recoup — some of our money that was given to them?”

Mr. Benmosche, steward of an insurer brought to its knees two years ago after making too many risky, outsize financial bets and paying billions of dollars in claims to Goldman and other banks, said he would continue evaluating his legal options. But, in reality, A.I.G. has precious few.

When the government began rescuing it from collapse in the fall of 2008 with what has become a $182 billion lifeline, A.I.G. was required to forfeit its right to sue several banks — including Goldman, Société Générale, Deutsche Bank and Merrill Lynch — over any irregularities with most of the mortgage securities it insured in the precrisis years.

But after the Securities and Exchange Commission’s civil fraud suit filed in April against Goldman for possibly misrepresenting a mortgage deal to investors, A.I.G. executives and shareholders are asking whether A.I.G. may have been misled by Goldman into insuring mortgage deals that the bank and others may have known were flawed.

This month, an Australian hedge fund sued Goldman on similar grounds. Goldman is contesting the suit and denies any wrongdoing. A spokesman for A.I.G. declined to comment about any plans to sue Goldman or any other banks with which it worked. A Goldman spokesman said that his firm believed that “all aspects of our relationship with A.I.G. were appropriate.”

A Legal Waiver

Unknown outside of a few Wall Street legal departments, the A.I.G. waiver was released last month by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform amid 250,000 pages of largely undisclosed documents. The documents, reviewed by The New York Times, provide the most comprehensive public record of how the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and the Treasury Department orchestrated one of the biggest corporate bailouts in history.

The documents also indicate that regulators ignored recommendations from their own advisers to force the banks to accept losses on their A.I.G. deals and instead paid the banks in full for the contracts. That decision, say critics of the A.I.G. bailout, has cost taxpayers billions of extra dollars in payments to the banks. It also contrasts with the hard line the White House took in 2009 when it forced Chrysler’s lenders to take losses when the government bailed out the auto giant.

As a Congressional commission convenes hearings Wednesday exploring the A.I.G. bailout and Goldman’s relationship with the insurer, analysts say that the documents suggest that regulators were overly punitive toward A.I.G. and overly forgiving of banks during the bailout — signified, they say, by the fact that the legal waiver undermined A.I.G. and its shareholders’ ability to recover damages.

“Even if it turns out that it would be a hard suit to win, just the gesture of requiring A.I.G. to scrap its ability to sue is outrageous,” said David Skeel, a law professor at the University of Pennsylvania. “The defense may be that the banking system was in trouble, and we couldn’t afford to destabilize it anymore, but that just strikes me as really going overboard.”

“This really suggests they had myopia and they were looking at it entirely through the perspective of the banks,” Mr. Skeel said.

Regulators at the New York Fed declined to comment on the legal waiver but disagreed with that viewpoint.

“This was not about the banks,” said Sarah J. Dahlgren, a senior vice president for the New York Fed who oversees A.I.G. “This was about stabilizing the system by preventing the disorderly collapse of A.I.G. and the potentially devastating consequences of that event for the U.S. and global economies.”

This month, the Congressional Oversight Panel, a body charged with reviewing the state of financial markets and the regulators that monitor them, published a 337-page report on the A.I.G. bailout. It concluded that the Federal Reserve Bank of New York did not give enough consideration to alternatives before sinking more and more taxpayer money into A.I.G. “It is hard to escape the conclusion that F.R.B.N.Y. was just ‘going through the motions,’ ” the report said.

About $46 billion of the taxpayer money in the A.I.G. bailout was used to pay to mortgage trading partners like Goldman and Société Générale, a French bank, to make good on their claims. The banks are not expected to return any of that money, leading the Congressional Research Service to say in March that much of the taxpayer money ultimately bailed out the banks, not A.I.G.

A Goldman spokesman said that he did not agree with that report’s assertion, noting that his firm considered itself to be insulated from possible losses on its A.I.G. deals.

Even with the financial reform legislation that Congress introduced last week, David A. Moss, a Harvard Business School professor, said he was concerned that the government had not developed a blueprint for stabilizing markets when huge companies like A.I.G. run aground and, for that reason, regulators’ actions during the financial crisis need continued scrutiny. “We have to vet these things now because otherwise, if we face a similar crisis again, federal officials are likely to follow precedents set this time around,” he said.

Under the new legislation, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation will have the power to untangle the financial affairs of troubled entities, but bailed-out companies will pay most of their trading partners 100 cents on the dollar for outstanding contracts. (In some cases, the government will be able to recoup some of those payments later on, which the Treasury Department says will protect taxpayers’ interest. )

Sheila C. Bair, the chairwoman of the F.D.I.C., has said that trading partners should be forced to accept discounts in the middle of a bailout.

Regardless of the financial parameters of bailouts, analysts also say that real financial reform should require regulators to demonstrate much more independence from the firms they monitor.

In that regard, the newly released Congressional documents show New York Fed officials deferring to bank executives at a time when the government was pumping hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars into the financial system to rescue bankers from their own mistakes. While Wall Street deal-making is famously hard-nosed with participants fighting for every penny, during the A.I.G. bailout regulators negotiated with the banks in an almost conciliatory fashion.

On Nov. 6, 2008, for instance, after a New York Fed official spoke with Lloyd C. Blankfein, Goldman’s chief executive, about the Fed’s A.I.G. plans, the official noted in an e-mail message to Mr. Blankfein that he appreciated the Wall Street titan’s patience. “Thanks for understanding,” the regulator said.

From the moment the government agreed to lend A.I.G. $85 billion on Sept. 16, 2008, the New York Fed, led at the time by Timothy F. Geithner, and its outside advisers all acknowledged that a rescue had to achieve two goals: stop the bleeding at A.I.G. and protect the taxpayer money the government poured into the insurer.

One of the regulators’ most controversial decisions was awarding the banks that were A.I.G.’s trading partners 100 cents on the dollar to unwind debt insurance they had bought from the firm. Critics have questioned why the government did not try to wring more concessions from the banks, which would have saved taxpayers billions of dollars.

Mr. Geithner, who is now the Treasury secretary, has repeatedly said that as steward of the New York Fed, he had no choice but to pay A.I.G.’s trading partners in full.

But two entirely different solutions to A.I.G.’s problems were presented to Fed officials by three of its outside advisers, according to the documents. Under those plans, the banks would have had to accept what the advisers described as “deep concessions” of as much as about 10 percent on their contracts or they might have had to return about $30 billion that A.I.G. had paid them before the bailout.

Had either of these plans been implemented, A.I.G. may have been left in a far better financial position than it is today, with taxpayers at less risk and banks forced to swallow bigger losses.

A spokesman for Mr. Geithner, Andrew Williams, said it was easy to speculate about how the A.I.G. bailout might have been handled differently, but the government had limited tools.

“At that perilous moment, actions were chosen that would have the greatest likelihood of protecting American families and businesses from a catastrophic failure of another financial firm and an accelerating panic,” Mr. Williams said.

For its part, the Treasury appeared to be opposed to any options that did not involve making the banks whole on their A.I.G. contracts. At Treasury, a former Goldman executive, Dan H. Jester, was the agency’s point man on the A.I.G. bailout. Mr. Jester had worked at Goldman with Henry M. Paulson Jr., the Treasury secretary during the A.I.G. bailout. Mr. Paulson previously served as Goldman’s chief executive before joining the government.

A Close Association

Mr. Jester, according to several people with knowledge of his financial holdings, still owned Goldman stock while overseeing Treasury’s response to the A.I.G. crisis. According to the documents, Mr. Jester opposed bailout structures that required the banks to return cash to A.I.G. Nothing in the documents indicates that Mr. Jester advocated forcing Goldman and the other banks to accept a discount on the deals.

Although the value of Goldman’s shares could have been affected by the terms of the A.I.G. bailout, Mr. Jester was not required to publicly disclose his stock holdings because he was hired as an outside contractor, a job title at Treasury that allowed him to forgo disclosure rules applying to appointed officials. In late October 2008, he stopped overseeing A.I.G. after others were given that responsibility, according to Michele Davis, a spokeswoman for Mr. Jester.

Ms. Davis said that Mr. Jester fought hard to protect taxpayer money and followed an ethics plan to avoid conflict with all of his stock holdings. Ms. Davis is also a spokeswoman for Mr. Paulson, and said that he declined to comment for this article.

The alternative bailout plans that regulators considered came from three advisory firms that the New York Fed hired: Morgan Stanley, Black Rock, and Ernst & Young.

One plan envisioned the government guaranteeing A.I.G.’s obligations in various ways, in much the same way the F.D.I.C. backs personal savings accounts at banks facing runs by customers. On Oct. 15, Ms. Dahlgren wrote to Mr. Geithner that the Federal Reserve board in Washington had said the New York Fed should try to get Treasury to do a guarantee. “We think this is something we need to have in our back pockets,” she wrote.

Treasury had the authority to issue a guarantee but was unwilling to do so because that would use up bailout funds. Once the guarantee was off the table, Fed officials focused on possibly buying the distressed securities insured by A.I.G. From the start, the Fed and its advisers prepared for the banks to accept discounts. A BlackRock presentation outlined five reasons why the banks should agree to such concessions, all of which revolved around the many financial benefits they would receive. BlackRock and Morgan Stanley presented a number of options, including what BlackRock called a “deep concession” in which banks would return $6.4 billion A.I.G. paid them before the bailout.

The three banks with the most to lose under these options were Société Générale, Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs. Société Générale would have had to give up $322 million to $2.1 billion depending on which alternative was used; Deutsche Bank would have had to forgo $40 million to $1.1 billion, while Goldman would have had to give up $271 million to $892 million, according to the documents.

Société Générale and Deutsche Bank both declined to comment.

Ultimately, the New York Fed never forced the banks to make concessions. Thomas C. Baxter Jr., general counsel at the New York Fed, explained that a looming downgrade of A.I.G. by the credit rating agencies on Nov. 10 forced the regulator to move quickly to avoid a default, which would have unleashed “catastrophic systemic consequences for our economy.”

“We avoided that horrible result, got the job done in the time available, and the Fed will eventually get out of this rescue whole,” he said in an interview.

And yet two Fed governors in Washington were concerned that making the banks whole on the A.I.G. contracts would be “a gift,” according to the documents.

Gift or not, the banks got 100 cents on the dollar. And on Nov. 11, 2008, a New York Fed staff member recommended that documents for explaining the bailout to the public not mention bank concessions. The Fed should not reveal that it didn’t secure concessions “unless absolutely necessary,” the staff member advised. In the end, the Fed successfully kept most of the details about its negotiations with banks confidential for more than a year, despite opposition from the media and Congress.

During the A.I.G. bailout, New York Fed officials prepared a script for its employees to use in negotiations with the banks and it was anything but tough; it advised Fed negotiators to solicit suggestions from bankers about what financial and institutional support they wanted from the Fed. The script also reminded government negotiators that bank participation was “entirely voluntary.”

The New York Fed appointed Terrence J. Checki as its point man with the banks. In e-mail messages that November, he was deferential to bankers, including the e-mail message in which he thanked Mr. Blankfein for his patience.

Many Thank-Yous

After UBS, a Swiss bank, received details about the Fed’s 100-cents-on-the-dollar proposal, Mr. Checki thanked Robert Wolf, a UBS executive, for his patience as well. “Thank you for your responsiveness and cooperation,” he said in an e-mail message. “Hope the benign outcome helped offset any aggravation. Thank you again.”

The Congressional Oversight Panel, which interviewed A.I.G.’s trading partners about how tough the government was during the negotiations, concluded that many of the governments efforts were merely “desultory attempts.”

All of this was quite different from the tack the government took in the Chrysler bailout. In that matter, the government told banks they could take losses on their loans or simply own a bankrupt company; the banks took the losses.

During the A.I.G. bailout, the Fed seemed more focused on extracting concessions from A.I.G. than from the banks. Mr. Baxter, in an interview, conceded that the way that the New York Fed handled the negotiations meant that any resulting deal “took most of the upside potential away from A.I.G.”

The legal waiver barring A.I.G. from suing the banks was not in the original document that regulators circulated on Nov. 6, 2008 to dissolve the insurer’s contracts with the banks. A day later a waiver was added but the Congressional documents show no e-mail traffic explaining why that occurred or who was responsible for inserting it. The New York Fed declined to comment.

Policy experts say it is not unusual for parties to waive legal rights when public money is involved. Mr. Moss, the Harvard professor, said the government might have been concerned that the insurer would use taxpayer money to sue banks. “The question is: was this legitimate?” he asked. “The answer depends on the motivation. If the reason was to avoid a slew of lawsuits that could have further destabilized the financial system in the short term, this may have been reasonable.”

But two people with direct knowledge of the negotiations between A.I.G. and the banks, who requested anonymity because the talks were confidential, said the legal waiver was not a routine matter — and that federal regulators forced the insurer to accept it.

Even if the waiver was warranted, experts say it unfairly handcuffed A.I.G. and has undermined the financial interests of taxpayers. If, for example, the banks misled A.I.G. about the mortgage securities A.I.G. insured, taxpayer money could be recouped from the banks through lawsuits.

Unless A.I.G. can prove it signed the legal waiver under duress, it cannot sue to recover claims it paid on $62 billion of about $76 billion of mortgage securities that it insured. (A.I.G. retains the right to sue on about $14 billion of the mortgage securities that it insured.)

If A.I.G. had the right to sue, and if banks were found to have misrepresented the deals or used improper valuations on securities A.I.G. insured to extract heftier payouts from the firm, the insurer’s claims could yield tens of billions of dollars in damages because of its shareholders’ lost market value, according to Mr. Skeel.

A.I.G. still has the right to sue in connection with exotic securities it insured called “synthetic collateralized debt obligations,” which are known as C.D.O.’s. Such instruments do not contain actual bonds, which is why they were not accepted as collateral by the Fed.

A.I.G. had insured $14 billion of synthetic C.D.O.’s,, including seven Goldman deals known as Abacus. One of the Abacus deals is the subject of the S.E.C.’s suit against Goldman. A.I.G. did not insure that security, but A.I.G.’s deals with Goldman are similar to the one in the S.E.C. case.

Throughout the A.I.G. bailout, as Congressional leaders and the media pressed for greater disclosure, regulators fought fiercely for confidentiality.

Even after the New York Fed released a list of the banks made whole in the bailout, it continued to resist disclosing information about the actual bonds in the deals, including codes known as “cusips” that label securities. “We need to fight hard to keep the cusips confidential,” one New York Fed official wroteon March 12, 2009.

Regulators said they wanted confidentiality because they did not want investors trading against the government’s portfolio. Others dispute that, saying that Wall Street insiders already knew what bonds were in the portfolio. Only the public was left in the dark.

“The New York Fed recognizes the public’s interest in transparency and has over time made more information available about the A.I.G. transactions,” a Fed spokesman said about the matter.

It was not until a Congressional committee issued a subpoena in January that the New York Fed finally turned over more comprehensive records. The bulk remained private until May, when some committee staff members put them online, saying they lacked the resources to review them all.


Filed under: foreclosure
Jun
24

Trustee Foreclosures Not Working Either

Submitted by Ann: Article by Matt Weidner, Esq. Florida Attorney

US BANK AS TRUSTEE CAN’T FORECLOSE
From http://www.mattweidnerlaw.com/blog

Judge Vacates Final Judgment and Sale- Foreclosure Courts are Courts of Equity!
We’ve all seen it and it happens too often…Borrower is in a formal modification with the lender or servicer or has fallen victim to a foreclosure rescue scam and doesn’t respond to the lawsuit. Unbeknownst to the homeowner, the lender is moving right ahead with the foreclosure sale and their home is lost. This happened to a family in Port Charlotte, but rather than losing everything, Elizabeth Boyle and the Super Foreclosure Heroes from GulfCoast Legal got the good judge to cancel the sale, vacate the final Order and allowed the Defendants to Answer. A copy of the Order is below:

akeysersettingaside

A key point made in the order is that foreclosure courts are Courts of Equity. Keep in mind that this bedrock principle is embodied in the law used by these reckless mills to engage in this widespread fraud. We should all begin quoting the following statute in every pleading submitted before the court. We need to constantly remind our judges that courts of equity are fundamentally different than courts of law…here is the cite:

FLORIDA STATUTES 702.01 Equity.–All mortgages shall be foreclosed in equity.

Courts of Equity- A chancery court, equity court or court of equity is a court that is authorized to apply principles of equity, as opposed to law, to cases brought before it.

Next thing that Boyle (and anyone else facing Indymac in litigation) needs to do is challenge the right of Indymac to proceed with the litigation. I’m pretty confident that if we pull back hard enough on the Indymac curtain we’re going to find

INDYMAC HAS NO RIGHT TO PROCEED AS A PARTY PLAINTIFF- THOSE RIGHTS WERE SURRENDERED FIRST TO THE FDIC THEN TO ONEWEST

While we’re on the subject of courts vacating sales, I publish again the fantastic Order Vacating the Order Substituting Party Plaintiff recently entered in St. Johns County.

7th+Cir+Judge+Trayno+USBankvMcCleod-vacatewprejudice

http://mattweidnerlaw.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/7th+Cir+Judge+Trayno+USBankvMcCleod-vacatewprejudice.pdf

We’re all aware that Plaintiffs are morphing in and out of cases through ex-party Orders, Assignments of Bid and other improper means. We all know that standing is being falsely created through questionable endorsements and improper Assignments of Mortgage. I particularly like the section of that Order that quotes the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar 4.3-3(a)(1)-

“A lawyer shall not knowingly make false representations or fail to correct a false statement of fact made to the court.”

It disturbs me that this rule is being widely ignored and on the much larger level, I am deeply troubled that billions of dollars in foreclosure judgments are being issued to entities that are not properly identified, that change right in front of the courts eyes and which we have no way of tracking or identifying.

JUDGE- EXACTLY WHO ARE YOU GRANTING FORECLOSURE TO?

WHO DOES THE AFFIANT WORK FOR?

WHO SIGNED THE ASSIGNMENT OF MORTGAGE?

WHOSE INCOMPLETE, ILLEGIBLE MARK IS ON THAT NOTE?

WHO PROFITS FROM YOUR JUDGMENT OF FORECLOSURE?


Filed under: foreclosure
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