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By davidpetraitis, on June 6th, 2011 So it seems that Bank of America and MERS can’t make their story stick in Oregon. The Courthouse News Service has an article under Dee Moore’s byline Ruling Challenges Ore. Foreclosure System that shows that Oregon law may make the securitization house of cards fail a bit further.
Bank of America and Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems broke the law when they failed to . . . → Read More: Bank of America and MERS in trouble in Oregon
By davidpetraitis, on May 16th, 2011 HuffPost has an article on the scare tactics of Deutsche Bank against one of the acknowledged experts in foreclosure fraud: Ms. Lynn Szymoniak. She has fought her own foreclosure, and it was thrown out of court once already. But now Deutsche has named her son as a co-defendant in the foreclosure, even though he is not on the note and has no interest . . . → Read More: Deutsche files harassing foreclosure case against son of foreclosure activist
By davidpetraitis, on March 6th, 2011 I love reading Yves Smith at Naked Capitalism…. if only because she can come out with these type of quotes:
this proposal is just another example of throwing taxpayers under the bus to save the banks from suffering the consequences of their incompetence and criminality.
The article in total is a great indictment of the Administration’s program to get rid of Freddie and . . . → Read More: Throw the Taxpayers under the bus
By davidpetraitis, on March 4th, 2011 RJ Eskow wrote a piece in the Huffington Post on the Administration’s proposal to clean up the foreclosure mess. I will comment on it separately later. But I want to use it to deal with a long conversation I had with a friend about how the ideology from people on the right seems to try to blame a liberal conspiracy of Fannie/Freddie and . . . → Read More: Freddie/ Fannie-Barney Frank Liberal conspiracy to sell poor people too much house.
By davidpetraitis, on February 25th, 2011 Bloomberg reports that it seems finally jail terms are being given for mortgage fraud. Though reading between the lines it seems this guy was an originator who falsified mortgage documents that he passed on to Fannie. It isn’t clear if consumers were caught up in this fraud as well.
The former president of a New Jersey-based mortgage company has been sentenced to 14 . . . → Read More: NJ Man sentenced to jail time in mortgage fraud scheme
By davidpetraitis, on February 12th, 2011 Well it seems that the lawyers in Florida are the first to taste the wrath of the courts in Foreclosuregate. The Palm Beach Post notes that a local lawyer was cited in contempt of court for presenting fake documents. It seems that they were declared lost, then filed later, then apparently were for another property. Laughable.
A day after federal mortgage giant Fannie . . . → Read More: Flordia Lawyer cited for contempt of court in Foreclosure fraud
By davidpetraitis, on February 9th, 2011 Dr. Philip Neches has an analysis at the Huffington Post of the Bank of America (BAC) announcement that they will separate 1.3 million of their mortgages into a new entity. This is a “good bank / bad bank” strategy. Bank of America will now try to resolve the loans that it places in the bad bank at low impact on its own balance sheet. I wonder how it is going to do this. IF the entity becomes separate from BAC they could take out a short on it though… or they could securitize the entity in tranches and sell off the more toxic stuff to some idiots. If they could buy a AAA from some supine rating firm, then they could get a good price for the securities. Does this sound familiar? . . . → Read More: Legacy entity slieght of hand at Bank of America
By davidpetraitis, on January 25th, 2011 The endgame of Foreclosuregate is starting. According to the Wall Street Jounal Bank of America through its purchase of Countrywide, and Countrywide’s ex-CEO Angelo Mozilo are being sued for hundreds of millions of dollars in fraud allegations. Separately, Shashien Nasiripour at the Huffington Post reports that the Congressional Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission will call for prosecution of fraudulent behavior on the part of principals on Wall Street. Obviously these are part of the first moves by the investor class to take to task the predatory and fraudulent mortgage origination practices that led to the meltdown of the global financial system. This will play out over many years in the courts and in Congress . . . → Read More: Bank of America (Countrywide) sued by investors for fraud
By davidpetraitis, on January 16th, 2011 The office of the Attorney General of the State of Florida has made a Powerpoint presentation (and posted it on Scribd) of the abuses that it has found in Florida Foreclosure-gate. It details the delegation of powers of attorney and signature powers to foreclosure attorneys and clients in servicers, multiple cases of different robo-signing irregularities, creation illegitimate documents, falsification of affidavits. I would be VERY surprised if the Florida AG does not pursue criminal and conspiracy to commit fraud cases in 2011. . . . → Read More: Florida Attorney General has a presentation on Foreclosure Abuses
By davidpetraitis, on December 28th, 2010 Bank of America has not yet seen the bottom of the hole that it dug itself when it purchased Countrywide. A report today add Allstate insureance to the growing list of companies that have sued BofA for the fraud perpetrated on them by the RMBS’ sold to them by Countrywide.
Nasdaq reports:
Insurance company Allstate Corp. sued mortgage- originator Countrywide Financial Corp., now . . . → Read More: Allstate queues up at the BofA trough
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