Fight Foreclosure |Foreclosure Fraud |HAMP|Loan Modification

In the Foreclosure Fight there are several “Tip of the Spear” Law Practitioners. The reason for posting this article is to open your eyes regarding foreclosure fraud and how you can fight foreclosure based on the mortgage note the mortgage and the fraudulent foreclosure practices of the “foreclosure Mill Law firms, the Servicers and the courts who are allowing wrongful foreclosures simply to clear their dockets!

Thank you Florida Foreclosure Defense Law Offices of Carol C. Asbury

This article addresses some of the traps that have engulfed my clients, causing the loss, or near loss of their homes. Later I will explain why it is more advantageous to litigate rather than seek a loan modification or walking away from your home…

Trap 1: Not hiring a mortgage defense attorney who believes in winning.
Truth: You will lose your home.

Trap 2: Trusting the bank is delaying your foreclosure lawsuit while “considering” your loan modification application.
Truth: That’s a LIE. The Bank’s game is to keep you from defending the foreclosure until the Court orders your house sold and you lose your home.

Trap 3: Paying a Loan Modification Company or Loan Modification Attorney for a loan modification. THERE ARE NO loan modifications.
Truth: The Home Affordable Mortgage Program (HAMP) is not  guaranteed loan modification; it’s free, if your lender is participating; and, if you agree to a HAMP loan modification, you become worse off than a renter. The truth is, loan modification is not available because the Banks DO NOT own your Note. The Note was sold to a Trust, whose investors often won’t agree to a loan modification.

Trap4: Trusting the Loan Modification Company or Loan Modification Attorney handling your foreclosure suit.
Truth: No one is DEFENDING your foreclosure suit. Result: You lose your home.

Trap 5: Signing an answer handed to you by a non-attorney or Loan Modification Attorney as a “Pro Se” defendant.
Truth: “Pro Se” means you are representing yourself and you may be admitting to something you do not want to admit. Result: you lose your home.

Trap 6: Ignoring the foreclosure complaint.
Truth: Big Mistake! Result: You lose your home.

Trap 7: Thinking Bankruptcy will solve the foreclosure.
Truth: Bankruptcy may be an option but in most cases it only stalls the foreclosure. You need to seek an attorney who will explain the difference as well as your options.

Trap8: Mortgage Defense Attorneys are expensive.
Truth: Not True! It’s more cost effective and adventitious to defend the foreclosure than to seek a Loan Modification or walk away. Fighting is the ONLY way you will win. And you CAN win!

Trap 9: There are no defenses against foreclosure.
Truth: NOT True! Foreclosure defenses are available because of the securitization of the Notes to Trusts, who sold unregulated securities to investors for three times the value of your Note. Like any Ponzi Scheme, it has holes.

You CAN win!

There are Forged notes, lost notes, intentional destruction of notes, unauthorized people signing mortgage assignments or endorsing notes, missing documentation, fraudulently fabricated documents, and different plaintiffs foreclosing on the same property, plaintiffs who do not exist and the inability or refusal to provide proof of purchase and/or ownership of the promissory notes.

These are some of the situations I have encountered in my practice of over 24 years.

In addition, there are more and more claims arising from predatory lending practices of the Plaintiffs bank; including, violations of state and federal law, deceptive trade practices, and unfair or abusive dept collection.

Fighting the bank is advantageous to you. The goal of any good litigation attorney is to utilize all defenses/strategies in order to obtain the best possible outcome for the borrower. Depending on the evidence, litigation may even lead to a home free and clear of any mortgage. It is all about giving you options and creating leverage against the banks.

You need to have a plan of action, a direction, and understanding of why that plan is good for you

Here is her website www.FightTheBanksNow.com

Thanks again Carol, keep up the good fight. Together we can stop and fight illegal foreclosures and hopefully stop this mortgage mess!Homeowners need to know their legal rights!

Strategy To Dismiss Every Foreclosure In Florida

An Anarchist’s Strategy To Dismiss Every Foreclosure In Florida

Matt Weidner, An VERY Progressive Attorney in Florida Posted this On February 7th, 2010 ·

Courts Are Overwhelmed With Foreclosures

Across the country, circuit court judges and their staff are becoming overwhelmed and frustrated by the total avalanche of foreclosure cases that have been dumped in their courtrooms.  In Pinellas County, Circuit Court judges who used to handle like 400 foreclosure cases are now handling something like 3,000.These judges still have one judicial assistant and the same limited resources the had before the crisis.  When the judge’s loan JA sits down to start the day, they are bombarded with phone calls and mail and people in their face every single second….it’s chaos, its a burden and it is completely untenable for the long run.

Things have gotten so bad for the judges that I’m told at least two Circuit Court Judges in Pinellas County (Linda Allan and Douglas Baird) have announced they were no longer going to hear Motions to Dismiss filed by Defendants in foreclosure cases, but were going to start just denying them across the board without even having a hearing on the matter.  Now that’s one way to deal with the crisis.  It’s an unconstitutional, unfair and totally biased approach that completely ignores the law and the rights of the citizens these judges took an oath to serve, but it is one way to deal with the crisis. (Look for Appeals To Come If This Practice Really Begins to Take Hold.)

I know, Let’s Throw All The Rules Out The Window

Many of the Plaintiff’s attorneys that are working so hard to throw borrowers out of their home cannot rely on good, solid, honest legal work to accomplish their job.  As an attorney who sees the work of these firms every day, I am just astonished that the Courts continue to allow such horrendous practice to continue unchecked, but there seems to be little desire to try and force a correction of the behavior.  Just in case you think I’m overstating the problem, here is an excerpt from the Florida Supreme Court’s Task Force Report on Residential Mortgage Foreclosures

  • Finally, it is critical that these firms be candid, clear, and truthful and accurate in connection with pleadings and affidavits filed with the Courts.  A leading plaintiff’s lawyer and a major plaintiff’s law firm have been the subject of a public reprimand and sanctions due to untruthful filings with the courts.  Judges continue to see affidavits of amounts due and owing signed by law firm employees, and cost affidavits charging very high service of process fees for process serving firms owned by the law firm principals.  To some extent, it is fair to be concerned whether the press of the case load is interfering with a judge’s ability to police the conduct of the firms before them in these usually uncontested, unopposed foreclosure cases.

The full report can be found here but the bottom line is this, the lenders and their law firms are lying, lying, lying.  They’re committing fraud on the courts on an unprecedented scale.  The report of the Supreme Court is a bit sanitized, but the firms are whipping out foreclosure cases so quickly that they’re not even bothering to get the proper documents that prove they have a correct basis to file a suit from the outset.  Some firms have ownership interests in the process servers who are supposed to personally hand the lawsuit to a defendant and they’re both charging exorbitant fees for this service and lying about whether proper service has been obtained or even attempted.  And finally, the biggie….they’re lying, lying, lying about the evidence they’re submitting to the court, these come primarily in the forms of Affidavits and Assignments submitted to support Summary Judgments of Foreclosure.

Affidavits and Assignments in Foreclosure, Liars Re-Telling Lies Re-created From Fiction

There are several areas where the lying is reduced to black and white and submitted to the court.

Assignment of Mortgage

First, when the foreclosing Plaintiff is not the original lender, there must be a formal Assignment of Mortgage executed which says, “The Original Lender Assigns This Mortgage to the Plaintiff in This Case.”  This document is needed to give the Plaintiff the proper legal basis to be suing the Defendant. Many of the originating lenders are no longer operating so getting a real assignment from a dissolved corporation would be difficult.  In other cases, the Plaintiff introduces an Assignment of Mortgage executed by “MERS” a shadowy, shifty, shady backroom dealer of mortgages.   The Assignment of Mortgage issue is problematic even when a mortgage was only assigned from an originating lender to the foreclosing Plaintiff, but in cases where a mortgage has changed hands many times, there should be an unbroken chain of properly executed assignments from originating lender straight through to foreclosing Plaintiff.  (In fact, this requirement of an unbroken chain of assignments was originally part of the foreclosure procedures in Pinellas County, but this requirement was stripped.)  The problem is these assignments are frequently fraudulent.  The lenders know this, their attorneys know this and the courts know this, but they’re all just going ahead and pretending like it’s not an issue. IT IS AN ISSUE!

Affidavit of Amounts Due and Owing

The second area of Affidavit Fraud is the Affidavit of Amounts Due and Owing which states, “Your Undersigned Affiant is an employee of the Plaintiff and I SWEAR Based on my PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE that the Plaintiff is Owed, $150,000?.   In a case where the original lender is the foreclosing Plaintiff, an employee of that lender could sign such an affidavit based on their review of the company’s accounting records.  In most of the foreclosure cases currently pending in courts around the country, the mortgages have changed hands many times and there is simply no basis whatsoever for any person to sign an affidavit stating that they have any knowledge whatsoever of who is owed any money whatsoever.  These affidavits are legally insufficient, they’re false and fraudulent.

Affidavit of Lost Note

The third area of Affidavit Fraud is the Affidavit of Lost Note which states, “Your Undersigned Affiant is an employee of the Plaintiff who had posession of the note when it was lost and while we looked long and hard to find the note, it’s just plain disappeared and we just will never find it.”  In cases where the Plaintiff cannot locate the original note, this Affidavit is required in order to “Re-establish The Lost Note”, a technical process which must be followed in order to successfully and honestly proceed with a foreclosure case.  There are two problems here.  First, in many cases, the Affidavit does not include the correct language wherein the Plaintiff asserts that it was in possession of the note when it was lost.  The affidavit states, “the note was in possession of someone (we don’t know who) when it was lost”.  The other variation of this is when the Plaintiff is in possession of the note but they don’t bother disclosing this to the court.

Laws and Rules Just Don’t Matter Anymore, Everyone Hop On Board The Fraud Train!

So if the Plaintiffs and their attorneys are engaging in massive and systemic fraud and the courts are totally aware of this and yet it’s going totally unpunished and unanswered why doesn’t everyone just get on the fraud train? I mean why not?  Well here’s one way that consumers and anarchists could engage in fraud that would totally throw the system into chaos.  If rebels and anarchists and people who just don’t care executed and recorded Satisfactions of Mortgages across the country, it would send the entire foreclosure system into collapse.  A Satisfaction of Mortgage is a one page document that costs $8.50 to record.  It can be produced on a home computer, filled out correctly then sent in along with a money order or cashier’s check.  The Clerk of Court is required to record it and there would be no way of ever knowing where these fraudulently produced satisfactions were coming from.   While the lenders were trying to figure out how to deal with this massive problem, they would have no choice but to stop the pursuit of the foreclosure cases.

Anarchy Is a Crime- Revolution is a Crime.

Make no mistake, doing this is wrong.  It is a crime. A serious crime.  I would not do it and I’m not seriously suggesting anyone should, especially for their own mortgage.  But what if? I mean what if some modern day Robin Hood or Paul Revere set out with a few hundred bucks and a few hours on a computer and started just sending in satisfactions?  And what if, at the same time these same band of anarchist Robin Hoods also filed with the courts “Notice of Voluntary Dismissal and Release of Lis Pendens”?  I mean when the law firms that are prosecuting these cases are so out of touch that they have no idea what’s happening with their files and they have no contact whatsoever with the lenders they claim to represent, it would take them months to figure out if their law office or their client really did dismiss the case or whether this was another one of those Anarchist Dismissals.

But if the system is so broken down that judges are engaging in systematic denial of a defendant’s rights and if the Supreme Court of Florida is acknowledging in writing

that they are aware of widespread and systemic fraud being perpetrated on courts across the country and they’re doing nothing to stop it,

isn’t a little bit of anarchy in order?

Fighting A Foreclosure Ponsi Scheme

The Foreclosure Fight on TV. This video from CNBC features April Charney stating the

Truth about Foreclosure and Mortgage Backed Securities. Please excuse the commercial in the beginning

Read more

Loan Modification VS Foreclosure Fight

Daily, in the newspapers, radio, television and the internet, articles are written about the difficulty that borrowers face in getting loan modifications. These reports come not just from reporters, but from loan modification companies and also attorneys who are attempting to do the loan modifications. These reports fly in the face of what the US government is saying about getting loan modifications. (Usually, the government says that lenders are doing loan modifications, and that a homeowner should not pay to have one done.)  The question becomes, “what is the truth”?

The problem is that most people, including loan modification companies and attorneys do not understand what they are fighting against.  Nor are they helped to understand the fight because of incompetent “audit” companies who do not  understand this either.  LFI will attempt to shed light on this subject.

The Servicers/lenders of these loans have no vested interest in doing loan modifications.  They are simply acting as “collection agencies” most of the time.

The loans were usually sold in the process known as securitization.  Loans were “bundled together”, placed into Trusts and then “sliced and diced” into “tranches”, a pretty word for slice.  The tranches were then sold to investors and securities dealers who then sliced and diced them again into smaller pieces.  This process continued until it reached the point where the actual owners of the loans cannot easily be determined.

Who Controls The Loan?

To control the payment process, the Trust named a Trustee to see that different parties were paid monthly.  The Trustees included US Bank, Citibank, Chase, Deutsche Bank, Lasalle Bank, Lehman, and others.

All factors related to the loan process is governed by the Pooling and Servicing Agreements for each trust.  This Agreement covers all aspects of the transaction from the origination of the loan, to the final disbursements.  This Agreement is where the problem in negotiating loan modifications and principal reductions occur.

The Agreements all have similar language regarding loan modifications.  Paraphrased, the Agreements authorize the Master Service to do loan modifications when the default of a particular loan is inevitable or likely.  It is this phrase that “prevents” servicers from modifying a loan that the borrower is up to date on payments.

To make matters worse, the Servicer is bound by the Agreement to determine what will be in the best interests of the Trust. If more money can be made by foreclosing and liquidating the property instead of doing a loan modification, then the Servicer must foreclose.  The process for doing the calculations to determine what is in the best interest is subjective at best, and each Servicer is likely to approach it differently.

It Only Gets Worse!

To further complicate the issue, when reading the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, there is a section entitled “Advances”.  Simply put, this section  states that for any homeowner who missed a payment,  the Master Servicer must make that payment to the Trust from its own money.  The homeowner keeps missing payments, the Master Servicer keeps making the payments to the Trust.  This process continues until one of several events can occur:

  • The homeowner brings the loan up to date, re-institution, by paying the back-owed money.
  • The Master Servicer determines that the chances of repayment are nil, so foreclosure is initiated and accomplished.
  • A Loan modification is worked out.
  • Swapping out the bad loan by replacing it with a “good loan”.

The problem with these solutions is that the only way that the Master Servicer can be “refunded” the Advannces, is by the loan being brought up to date, or the foreclosure completed.

Now, imagine the number of homeowners behind in payments.  The Master Servicer has put money out on each of these loans, and they are now severely strapped for cash.  The easiest method for the Master Servicer to get back the Advances is to…………..FORECLOSE.

There, we have thee problem.  The Master Servicer has its own interests in mind.  By foreclosing, they no longer make the Payment Advances, and the Advanced Money is returned to them.

Where Did The TARP Funds Go?

An aside to this scenario…….it now becomes evident what the TARP funds issued to the banks by the US Government is for.  It allows the banks, actually the Master Servicers to have the funds to keep operating.  As more foreclosures occur, the TARP funds keep the bank leveraged so that the doors remain open.

Nice how it all fits in, when you know more of the details.

Thank you to Loan Fraud Investigations for this information

www.loanfraudinvestigations.com

Foreclosure Fix|Produce The Note There is More To IT|Fighting Foreclosure

If you are in foreclosure or possibly facing home foreclosure you are probably thinking “is there a foreclosure fix?”
As you probably know, the foreclosure process involves you, your home and a lender or party trying to foreclose on your home. This is where fighting foreclosure becomes tricky as most of us KNOW NOTHING or very little about the foreclosure process and the process of the law. The media briefly promoted the “Produce the Note” as a defense. While in it’s appearance, the Produce the Note is very credible, what do you do if the lender while in the foreclosure process, does produce the note?
The real issue regarding the legality of the foreclosure processes happening against you is this…

Does the entity or lender foreclosing on your home have the Legal right to even take this action against you? Do they really own the right to foreclose, are the the TRUE Holder in Due Course?

The majority of foreclosures being filed are on mortgages that have been reduced to securities, meaning that possibly a Thousand or more people and companies own a small piece of your Mortgage! And that YOUR home and mortgage is now in a Trust and the trustee is trying to take possession of your home during this foreclosure process!
Here is a potential Foreclosure Fix…The questions pertaining to case law on Trusts/Remic standing as legal entities is no different than most “standing” related cases. It has been said many times, by many brilliant legal minds, that it is the Pension Hedge Funds who are the true “holders” in due course and they WILL NOT come forward.
So in fighting foreclosure, most of your (or your attorneys) questions regarding detailed case law about securitization cannot be addressed. They will try to fool the courts and manipulate the foreclosure process simply won’t be compelled to produce real evidence if they don’t implicate themselves by attaching to the lawsuit as a party in interest.
When you ask the Judge to grant standing using the Note and Assignments, you need to be more clear.
1. Is the Note in the name of the same party acting as Plaintiff?
2. Was the Mortgage properly assigned and before the file went to foreclosure?
3. Was Power of Attorney filed allowing Plaintiff to act on behalf of your Pretender Lender?
4. Was the Note properly negotiated according to UCC Code? (Owning the Note is different than holding and vice versa)
5. An assignment of Mortgage is not an assignment of the Note regardless of what the Plaintiff states in their Material Statements and Admissions.
Raise all these questions to get a hearing to avoid Summary Judgment. In the foreclosure process,Summary Judgment must only occur when no issue of material fact exists. If they can not prove that they are the true “holder” of the mortgage note, how then, can the legally foreclose on your home?
So if you are fighting foreclosure, or possibly facing a foreclosure fight, this is a potential foreclosure fix by creating a problem for the pretender lender by challenging their standing, their actual right to even start the foreclosure process at all!

Supreme Court Helps The Foreclosure Fight

The Fight Against Foreclosure, Illegal Foreclosure Filings and the Ongoing Discovery into Mortgage Lender Violations has a friend in the Supreme Court

Here is something that you probably did not read in your local newspaper or saw on the news… In a surprising 5-4 vote, the Supreme Court ruled that national banks are still subject to the laws of the states they operate in. What made the ruling unusual is that Justice Scalia wrote the opinion and the other four conservative judges were in dissent (Roberts, Thomas, Alito and the normal swing vote Kennedy).

The ruling overturned an appeals court ruling that said that state attorneys general cannot investigate banks if they operate in more than one state.

The case in question involved the enforcement of fair lending laws in N.Y. State, specifically allegations that some banks were charging minorities higher interest rates. Instead, even though these are state laws, the appeals court had said that only the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) had the power to investigate. In practice, this means that the laws were null and void, since the OCC has a lousy track record on such issues. Here is The Summary of the Case

“This is a huge win for consumers across the nation,” said Andrew Cuomo, the attorney general for the state of New York, in a statement.

The case began in 2005 when Cuomo’s predecessor, Eliot Spitzer, asked banks for information about their lending practices. The banks sued to block the probe, and lower courts agreed with the banks. Spitzer had threatened to issue subpoenas to get the data.

The Supreme Court ruled that Spitzer could not have issued subpoenas, but was allowed to bring an enforcement action if violations were uncovered. States are free to pursue investigations of banks for consumer protection issues in courts, the ruling said.

The Clearing House, the banking group that brought the suit, said it was “disappointed” with the decision. Another bank group, the Financial Services Round-table, went even further, saying that the decision “will create a patchwork of 50 state laws that destroys the efficiencies of the national market.” Sounds Like Sour Grapes to Me!

The Key Problem has been that Enforcing state laws is simply not a priority for a division of the Treasury Department.  And has caused jurisdictional problems for foreclosure defense. While clearly there can be a problem if multiple agencies have jurisdiction in regulation, allowing things to slip through the cracks, there can also be problems when there is only one regulator and that regulator is in the pocket of the regulated. It is harder to capture all 50 state attorneys general and the OCC, than it is just the OCC alone. Make no mistake, the head of the OCC, John Dugan, a holdover from the last administration, is very much a creature of the big banks he is supposed to be overseeing. The OCC ranks just behind the OTS in being an ineffectual regulator during the bubble.

While the state attorneys general will not be able to issue subpoenas on their own authority (they need approval from a state judge), it does mean that they do not have to sit on their hands if they think the banks are breaking the law. It also will mean a more fair application of the law and your legal rights.

If the appeals court ruling had been allowed to stand, then the state attorneys general would have been free to go after a little community bank that only operated in their state, but unable to go after the big banks like J.P. Morgan , Bank of America , Citigroupand Wells Fargo that dominate the banking business. Sort of like telling them, yeah, it’s okay for the state to go after the street level drug traffickers, but not allowed to go after the kingpins.

This is a major win for consumer protection, and a loss for the banks. It is also a big win for states in the ongoing struggle between state and federal jurisdiction. I guess the Supreme Court is not as susceptible to campaign contribution influence as the Congress is. Thanks to Dirk van Dijk and Greg Robb, MarketWatch For First Making this Important issue Available !…

The fight against foreclosure is only beginning, stay tuned for more about the mortgage mess and lender violations. Together we will Stop Illegal Foreclosures and give ourselves equal access to the law regarding predatory lending as it should be!

How Can I Stop Foreclosure?

Here are some Ideas: American homeowners need to come together and scream out loud, “We’re not gonna take it!” through filing predatory lawsuits alleging fraud and demanding quiet title actions.

While there is quite a self-serving underground movement aimed at suppression, (think Deep, Deep Throat, the sequel), we still have, on our side, a little document called the United States Constitution which assures us that “Citizens of the United States shall not be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.”

This is the  biggest question we hear from Loan Audit Clients

So how do you find your own due process?

If you are a victim of the Loan Fraud and part of their conspiracy, follow my ten step war plan of engagement

(Specia lThanks to  Iris Martin, Autor of Mortgage Wars For this)

1. Get out those dusty closing documents and peruse them; they actually make for fascinating reading. You will learn all sorts of facts that your mortgage broker and lender did not want you to know, as in how they committed mortgage fraud.

2. Check your credit rating. If you have fallen to the bottom of the class and your loan is fraudulent, there is hell to pay. Your lender has violated the Fair Credit Reporting Act.

3. Compare the current value of your home to the stated appraised value at your closing. If your value has dropped significantly, it may have been fraudulently inflated to increase the loan amount, so your broker and lender could reap higher fees. Again, a major no no.

4. Is your debt to income ratio was over 35%? Oops, they did it again. It is against the law to put borrowers into loans that they cannot pay back.

5. Does your income reported to the IRS match the income on your loan application? If not, check to see if your data was fudged and your signature was forged.  This was a common  practice which also happens to be a crime.

6. Go online and Google your lender’s 10K and 8K filings for the year that you signed your loan documents. See how your lender has gleefully bragged to its investors about how efficiently it securitized loans such as your own. Most lenders even go as far as to claim that no loans sold into pools were predatory in any way! (Think investor fraud.) And don’t get me started on the accounting firms who certified these blatant lies. Or the credit rating agencies who stepped up to the plate with inflated ratings and outstretched palms.

7. Get a Forensic Loan Audit. It is the first step in building a winning lawsuit. We provide State of the art, comprehensive Forensic Loan Audits

8. Get a qualified attorney to file your “Qualified Written Requests” and your legal complaint. We have access to  some of the best ones in the country who will not rip you off. No point in jumping from predatory lending to predatory lawyer.

9. Demand your loan be extinguished or Rescinded. After you have been defrauded, it is your legal right to demand that the predators be held accountable. Toward that end, don’t waste time attempting to modify a securitized loan. Go right for the jugular, just as your lender has.

10. Break out the champagne. You have tamed the wolf. Maybe in time, you can transform him into a lovable canine companion, maybe a Wall Street born-again Marley.

Stand up for yourself. Don’t fall for the media’s pre-emptive attacks on your character. An examination of recent history paints an entirely different picture of a conspiracy of politicians, regulators, investment bankers, mortgage brokers and nominal lenders that would do anything — including bankrupting the country and the globe — to profit from the derivatives explosion.

Get your Loan Audit, Get Informed Know your homeowner legal rights, and Get Help. It’s time for this karmic cycle to reverse and for homeowners to take back their American dream, one lawsuit at a time. It’s time to Stop Illegal Foreclosures

The Fight Mortgage Foreclosure Crisis

Foreclosure Starts Hit One Million So Far This Year

Here is the result of the Obama administration’s anti-foreclosure plan….

The US Housing Market has hit One million new foreclosures which have been filed so far in 2009, according to estimates by the Center for Responsible Lending. This comes on the heels of a new report from the Mortgage Bankers Association, the first quarter 2009 National Delinquency Survey, showing that 12% of all mortgages are now delinquent — the highest level since the MBA started measuring 37 years ago.

The NY Times reports: “Foreclosures are costing neighboring families hundreds of billions of dollars and dragging down the entire economy. Foreclosures started today’s crisis, and foreclosures will keep the crisis going if this epidemic continues.”

The Key issues to this “mortgage crisis” and the “foreclosure fight” I want to point out are:

The Government and is not focusing on (or possibly intentionally hiding) the real truth about the root cause of foreclosures. As we know, many of the foreclosures being filed the Lenders who are not the “Holder in Due Course” These Lenders do not own the note!
On a side note, these lenders count on homeowners not defending themselves and so far they are right as less than 1% of people served with a foreclosure defend themselves, they count on Americans to do what they always do… believe the government and fear the banks!

Not to mention the TILA, RESPA and other violations which are present in over 80% of all loans written between 2002 through 2006, which puts them in Jeopardy of having to pay the homeowners their money back in penalties …OR…being forced by the legal system to give the homeowner a “Free and Clear” title and ownership of the home. A Forensic Loan Audit will find these violations!
You may not know that Wall Street and these lenders intentionally created Mortgage Backed Securities to increase their profits. This is how your mortgage payments keep getting changed to different companies. This has caused a serious problem for them as they cannot prove ownership of the mortgages they are foreclosing!

If you haven’t read the Obama plan, has an unrealistic goal to prevent up to four million foreclosures. The Plan also is scheduled to give up to $75 billion in incentives to lenders to reduce loan payments for troubled borrowers. This past March, according to the US Treasury, Approximately 100,000 homeowners have been offered a modification, there are not many modification offers have been accepted by homeowners because it DOES NOT HELP THEM! We have seen unverified numbers that approach a HUGE total of 75 modifications out of 100,000 applications! You do the math on the percentages

Keep in mind, the Obama Plan has restrictions in the Loan-to Value based on the current market value of the home. I know I would not qualify as my home has dropped in value from $320,000 two years ago to a current value of around $190,000.

The Center for Responsible Lending projects 2.4 million foreclosure starts in 2009, with these foreclosures reducing the property values of some 70 million nearby households a total of $502 billion — about $7,200 per family. Through 2012, those numbers will rise to at least 9 million foreclosures that will cost 92 million neighboring families $1.9 trillion in lost home value. They also report that currently a new foreclosure starts every 13 seconds — nearly 6,500 a day.

Here is the problem as I see it…Obama is counting on and negotiating with lenders and loan servicers, the Same Lenders who manipulated the market and committed intentional Loan Fraud, to work with homeowners in good faith to dramatically increase loan modifications that actually stop foreclosures and keep people in their homes. Obama may as well negotiate with Terrorists, he will probably have better results!

Loan modifications will not succeed for homeowners with shallow fixes, but the Lenders will do them to eliminate the previous mortgage and the potential Liability it carries! Often times the modification will not lower a homeowner’s monthly payments and rolls all of the costs into the new loan!

Let me ask you, do you want to finance your home above the market value, include lender legal fees and be in debt for 40 years allowing the lender to manipulate you and scare you into submission. These lenders are similar to the Borg in Star Trek “You will comply or you will be assimilated” (assimilated meaning foreclosed).

Or will you be the Homeowner who Defends Your Legal Rights, get “mad as hell and not take it anymore” and find the fraud in your mortgage, Have Us perform a thorough Forensic Loan Audit and make the situation with your mortgage bode in your favor, make the lender negotiate with you! Put the odds in your favor, find the Fraud in your loan and avoid and/or stop your home foreclosure

Editorial by Buddy Toth, Axis Financial Consultants, www.how2fightforeclosure.com

Bad Loans|Predatory Lending|Wall Street Knew!

Bad Loans Were Common on Wall Street

and on Your Street!

I am not surprised by the foreclosure crisis and you shouldn’t be either.  I spent over 17 years in the Mortgage and Financial industries watching this mess growing.
It is a known fact that the banks, lenders, wall street often hired quality-control contractors that reviewed sub prime loans for investment banks before they were sold off on Wall Street. Or they had “In House” Q.C. as employees doing the work, or at least trying to do the work.  You know, to not have loan fraud (LOL)

It was  the QC  persons job to dig into the loans and find the problems or “Red Flags”.  Believe me between 2002 through 2006, Bad Loans were easy to find. The Financial Industry wanted VOLUME! After all, they were giving the Securities a bogus rating to begin with all in the name of progress! (can you say ponsi scheme?)

There were hotel workers in California claiming that they made,$15,000 a month so that they could qualify for a $500,000 home!
Had I known this I would have become a hotel worker is making $15,000 a month changing sheets at the Days Inn, WHO WOULDN’T want to do it. It just really made no sense.  Here is another example: I saw a Lawn Service Owners application in Florida claiming to make $20,000 per month, That is a lot of grass and trees to maintain, I think I will stick with the hotel Job!

The Key Factor For Mortgage Fraud

The key factor for mortgage fraud was that the investors  didn’t want the supervisors to have the auditors to do their job. If they would reject, or kick out, a loan, they usually would overrule the auditor and approve it.

I witnessed first hand a QC reviewer, at a “Now Defunct Lender” who reviewed the kicks would say, ‘Well, I thought it had merit.’  I thought to myself What? Their credit score was below 580.
And if it was an income verification, a lot of times they weren’t making the income.What kind of merit could you have determined, how can it get funded? The response would be something like ‘Oh, it’s fine. Don’t worry about it.’ ”
The main issue is: About 75 percent of the time, loans that should have been rejected were still put into the pool and sold!

A Smoking Gun?

All of this suggests that auditors working for Wall Street investment bankers knew how preposterous these loans were, and that could mean Wall Street liability for aiding and abetting fraud. …Any one speak with Bear Stearns About this Lately?

If you ask any loan-auditing firm (if they will speak with you) they will reply that the company has no incentive to give loans a passing review if they fail to meet underwriting criteria and that it uses additional quality-control measures to further check up on loan reviews.
I ask you to consider this their had to be breakdowns in quality control at a lot of companies. How else did millions of people wind up in loans that they can’t pay?
(Can you say Forensic Loan Audit for your mortgage to find the violations??)

Is There Accountability on Wall Street?

You have to understand that the auditors  were hired to find the bad apples in the barrel and pull them out: borrowers with payments they couldn’t afford, houses with inflated appraisals, people lying about their income. But the investment banks had such a strong financial incentive that  “They put the bad apples back in the barrel because they knew that they could sell the bad apples along with the good apples and, at least in the short term, nobody would know the difference. That’s why they put them back in — because they made more money that way, the age old bundling od credit risk as used in the Auto Sales Business

“There’s a name for this — it’s called ‘passing the trash,’ ” says David Grais of Super Lawyers Fame, an attorney getting ready to sue Wall Street firms on behalf of investors — big pension funds and others — who bought the bad loans.

“These were immensely profitable deals. One study showed that the investment banks were making a 40 percent return on equity every two months on these securitizations, which is an eye-popping number,” he says.
Grais says many people on Wall Street make huge bonuses when their business unit is making big money. So the faster they could package up loans — good, bad or ugly ones — and sell them to investors, the more money that they made, he says.

I know in speaking with a friend who was an outside wholesale representative  that the managers got bonuses for how quickly they reviewed loans, not for how many bad loans they caught.

Did The Banks Agree to Limit Loan Rejections?

Other evidence is emerging….. A bankruptcy examiner in the case of the collapsed subprime lender New Century ( oops I said the name) recently released a 500-page report, and buried inside it is a pretty interesting detail. According to the report, some investment banks agreed to reject only 2.5 percent of the loans that New Century sent them to package up and sell to investors.

If that’s true, it would be like saying no matter how many bad apples are in the barrel, only a tiny fraction of them will be rejected. I have also heard that the attorney general in New York and other prosecutors are taking a look at all of this. They, too, want to know whether Wall Street firms were covering up bad loans and selling them to investors.

Think about how  amazing it is... if any investment bank agreed to a maximum number of loans they would kick back for defects. That means that they were willing to accept junk. There’s no other way to put it, they got greedy and now they are going to PAY FOR IT!
In your Fight Against Foreclosure and Predatory Lending, protect yourself, get your personal forensic loan audit. Give your attorney something to work with and Stop an Illegal Foreclosure in it’s tracks!

WHERE’S THE NOTE, WHO’S THE HOLDER

WHO HAS YOUR MORTGAGE NOTE?

This Fight Against Home Foreclosure….

Is Constantly Getting more interesting (If I can Use the word “interesting” ) Here is a recent article from our friend in Southern California.

INTRODUCTION

In an era where a very large portion of mortgage obligations have been securitized, by assignment to a trust indenture trustee, with the resulting pool of assets being then sold as mortgage backed securities, foreclosure becomes an interesting exercise, particularly where judicial process is involved. We are all familiar with the securitization process. The steps, if not the process, is simple.

A borrower goes to a mortgage lender. The lender finances the purchase of real estate. The borrower signs a note and mortgage or deed of trust. The original lender sells the note and assigns the mortgage to an entity that securitizes the note by combining the note with hundreds or thousands of similar obligation to create a package of mortgage backed securities, which are then sold to investors.

Unfortunately, unless you represent borrowers, the vast flow of notes into the maw of the securitization industry meant that a lot of mistakes were made. When the borrower defaults, the party seeking to enforce the obligation and foreclose on the underlying collateral sometimes cannot find the note. A lawyer sophisticated in this area has speculated to one of the authors that perhaps a third of the notes “securitized” have been lost or destroyed. The cases we are going to look at reflect the stark fact that the unnamed source’s speculation may be well-founded.

UCC SECTION 3-309

If the issue were as simple as a missing note, UCC §3-309 would provide a simple solution. A person entitled to enforce an instrument which has been lost, destroyed or stolen may enforce the instrument. If the court is concerned that some third party may show up and attempt to enforce the instrument against the payee, it may order adequate protection. But, and however, a person seeking to enforce a missing instrument must be a person entitled to enforce the instrument, and that person must prove the instrument’s terms and that person’s right to enforce the instrument. §3-309 (a)(1) & (b).

WHO’S THE HOLDER

Enforcement of a note always requires that the person seeking to collect show that it is the holder. A holder is an entity that has acquired the note either as the original payor or transfer by endorsement of order paper or physical possession of bearer paper. These requirements are set out in Article 3 of the Uniform Commercial Code, which has been adopted in every state, including Louisiana, and in the District of Columbia. Even in bankruptcy proceedings, State substantive law controls the rights of note and lien holders, as the Supreme Court pointed out almost forty (40) years ago in United States v. Butner, 440 U.S. 48, 54-55 (1979).

However, as Judge Bufford has recently illustrated, in one of the cases discussed below, in the bankruptcy and other federal courts, procedure is governed by the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy and Civil Procedure. And, procedure may just have an impact on the issue of “who,” because, if the holder is unknown, pleading and standing issues arise.

BRIEF REVIEW OF UCC PROVISIONS

Article 3 governs negotiable instruments – it defines what a negotiable instrument is and defines how ownership of those pieces of paper is transferred. For the precise definition, see § 3-104(a) (“an unconditional promise or order to pay a fixed amount of money, with or without interest . . . .”) The instrument may be either payable to order or bearer and payable on demand or at a definite time, with or without interest.

Ordinary negotiable instruments include notes and drafts (a check is a draft drawn on a bank). See § 3-104(e).

Negotiable paper is transferred from the original payor by negotiation. §3-301. “Order paper” must be endorsed; bearer paper need only be delivered. §3-305. However, in either case, for the note to be enforced, the person who asserts the status of the holder must be in possession of the instrument. See UCC § 1-201 (20) and comments.

The original and subsequent transferees are referred to as holders. Holders who take with no notice of defect or default are called “holders in due course,” and take free of many defenses. See §§ 3-305(b).

The UCC says that a payment to a party “entitled to enforce the instrument” is sufficient to extinguish the obligation of the person obligated on the instrument. Clearly, then, only a holder – a person in possession of a note endorsed to it or a holder of bearer paper – may seek satisfaction or enforce rights in collateral such as real estate.

NOTE: Those of us who went through the bank and savings and loan collapse of the 1980’s are familiar with these problems. The FDIC/FSLIC/RTC sold millions of notes secured and unsecured, in bulk transactions. Some notes could not be found and enforcement sometimes became a problem. Of course, sometimes we are forced to repeat history. For a recent FDIC case, see Liberty Savings Bank v. Redus, 2009 WL 41857 (Ohio App. 8 Dist.), January 8, 2009.

THE RULES

Judge Bufford addressed the rules issue this past year. See In re Hwang, 396 B.R. 757 (Bankr. C. D. Cal. 2008). First, there are the pleading problems that arise when the holder of the note is unknown. Typically, the issue will arise in a motion for relief from stay in a bankruptcy proceeding.

According F.R.Civ. Pro. 17, “[a]n action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.” This rule is incorporated into the rules governing bankruptcy procedure in several ways. As Judge Bufford has pointed out, for example, in a motion for relief from stay, filed under F.R.Bankr.Pro. 4001 is a contested matter, governed by F. R. Bankr. P. 9014, which makes F.R. Bankr. Pro. 7017 applicable to such motions. F.R. Bankr. P. 7017 is, of course, a restatement of F.R. Civ. P. 17. In re Hwang, 396 B.R. at 766. The real party in interest in a federal action to enforce a note, whether in bankruptcy court or federal district court, is the owner of a note. (In securitization transactions, this would be the trustee for the “certificate holders.”) When the actual holder of the note is unknown, it is impossible – not difficult but impossible – to plead a cause of action in a federal court (unless the movant simply lies about the ownership of the note). Unless the name of the actual note holder can be stated, the very pleadings are defective.

STANDING

Often, the servicing agent for the loan will appear to enforce the note. Assume that the servicing agent states that it is the authorized agent of the note holder, which is “Trust Number 99.” The servicing agent is certainly a party in interest, since a party in interest in a bankruptcy court is a very broad term or concept. See, e.g., Greer v. O’Dell, 305 F.3d 1297, 1302-03 (11th Cir. 2002). However, the servicing agent may not have standing: “Federal Courts have only the power authorized by Article III of the Constitutions and the statutes enacted by Congress pursuant thereto. … [A] plaintiff must have Constitutional standing in order for a federal court to have jurisdiction.” In re Foreclosure Cases, 521 F.Supp. 3d 650, 653 (S.D. Ohio, 2007) (citations omitted).

But, the servicing agent does not have standing, for only a person who is the holder of the note has standing to enforce the note. See, e.g., In re Hwang, 2008 WL 4899273 at 8.

The servicing agent may have standing if acting as an agent for the holder, assuming that the agent can both show agency status and that the principle is the holder. See, e.g., In re Vargas, 396 B.R. 511 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 2008) at 520.

A BRIEF ASIDE: WHO IS MERS?

For those of you who are not familiar with the entity known as MERS, a frequent participant in these foreclosure proceedings:

MERS is the “Mortgage Electronic Registration System, Inc. “MERS is a mortgage banking ‘utility’ that registers mortgage loans in a book entry system so that … real estate loans can be bought, sold and securitized, just like Wall Street’s book entry utility for stocks and bonds is the Depository Trust and Clearinghouse.” Bastian, “Foreclosure Forms”, State. Bar of Texas 17th Annual Advanced Real Estate Drafting Course, March 9-10, 2007, Dallas, Texas. MERS is enormous. It originates thousands of loans daily and is the mortgagee of record for at least 40 million mortgages and other security documents. Id.

MERS acts as agent for the owner of the note. Its authority to act should be shown by an agency agreement. Of course, if the owner is unknown, MERS cannot show that it is an authorized agent of the owner.

RULES OF EVIDENCE – A PRACTICAL PROBLEM

This structure also possesses practical evidentiary problems where the party asserting a right to foreclose must be able to show a default. Once again, Judge Bufford has addressed this issue. At In re Vargas, 396 B.R. at 517-19. Judge Bufford made a finding that the witness called to testify as to debt and default was incompetent. All the witness could testify was that he had looked at the MERS computerized records. The witness was unable to satisfy the requirements of the Federal Rules of Evidence, particularly Rule 803, as applied to computerized records in the Ninth Circuit. See id. at 517-20. The low level employee could really only testify that the MERS screen shot he reviewed reflected a default. That really is not much in the way of evidence, and not nearly enough to get around the hearsay rule.

FORECLOSURE OR RELIEF FROM STAY

In a foreclosure proceeding in a judicial foreclosure state, or a request for injunctive relief in a non-judicial foreclosure state, or in a motion for relief proceeding in a bankruptcy court, the courts are dealing with and writing about the problems very frequently.

In many if not almost all cases, the party seeking to exercise the rights of the creditor will be a servicing company. Servicing companies will be asserting the rights of their alleged principal, the note holder, which is, again, often going to be a trustee for a securitization package. The mortgage holder or beneficiary under the deed of trust will, again, very often be MERS.

Even before reaching the practical problem of debt and default, mentioned above, the moving party must show that it holds the note or (1) that it is an agent of the holder and that (2) the holder remains the holder. In addition, the owner of the note, if different from the holder, must join in the motion.

Some states, like Texas, have passed statutes that allow servicing companies to act in foreclosure proceedings as a statutorily recognized agent of the noteholder. See, e.g., Tex. Prop. Code §51.0001. However, that statute refers to the servicer as the last entity to whom the debtor has been instructed to make payments. This status is certainly open to challenge. The statute certainly provides nothing more than prima facie evidence of the ability of the servicer to act. If challenged, the servicing agent must show that the last entity to communicate instructions to the debtor is still the holder of the note. See, e.g., HSBC Bank, N.A. v. Valentin, 2l N.Y. Misc. 3d 1123(A), 2008 WL 4764816 (Table) (N.Y. Sup.), Nov. 3, 2008. In addition, such a statute does not control in federal court where Fed. R. Civ. P. 17 and 19 (and Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7017 and 7019) apply.

SOME RECENT CASE LAW

These cases are arranged by state, for no particular reason.

Massachusetts

In re Schwartz, 366 B.R.265 (Bankr. D. Mass. 2007)

Schwartz concerns a Motion for Relief to pursue an eviction. Movant asserted that the property had been foreclosed upon prior to the date of the bankruptcy petition. The pro se debtor asserted that the Movant was required to show that it had authority to conduct the sale. Movant, and “the party which appears to be the current mortgagee…” provided documents for the court to review, but did not ask for an evidentiary hearing. Judge Rosenthal sifted through the documents and found that the Movant and the current mortgagee had failed to prove that the foreclosure was properly conducted.

Specifically, Judge Rosenthal found that there was no evidence of a proper assignment of the mortgage prior to foreclosure. However, at footnote 5, Id. at 268, the Court also finds that there is no evidence that the note itself was assigned and no evidence as to who the current holder might be.

Nosek v. Ameriquest Mortgage Company (In re Nosek), 286 Br. 374 (Bankr D Mass. 2008).

Almost a year to the day after Schwartz was signed, Judge Rosenthal issued a second opinion. This is an opinion on an order to show cause. Judge Rosenthal specifically found that, although the note and mortgage involved in the case had been transferred from the originator to another party within five days of closing, during the five years in which the chapter 13 proceeding was pending, the note and mortgage and associated claims had been prosecuted by Ameriquest which has represented itself to be the holder of the note and the mortgage. Not until September of 2007 did Ameriquest notify the Court that it was merely the servicer. In fact, only after the chapter 13 bankruptcy had been pending for about three years was there even an assignment of the servicing rights. Id. at 378.

Because these misrepresentations were not simple mistakes: as the Court has noted on more than one occasion, those parties who do not hold the note of mortgage do not service the mortgage do not have standing to pursue motions for leave or other actions arising form the mortgage obligation. Id at 380.

As a result, the Court sanctioned the local law firm that had been prosecuting the claim $25,000. It sanctioned a partner at that firm an additional $25,000. Then the Court sanctioned the national law firm involved $100,000 and ultimately sanctioned Wells Fargo $250,000. Id. at 382-386.

In re Hayes, 393 B.R. 259 (Bankr. D. Mass. 2008).

Like Judge Rosenthal, Judge Feeney has attacked the problem of standing and authority head on. She has also held that standing must be established before either a claim can be allowed or a motion for relief be granted.

Ohio

In re Foreclosure Cases, 521 F.Supp. 2d (S.D. Ohio 2007).

Perhaps the District Court’s orders in the foreclosure cases in Ohio have received the most press of any of these opinions. Relying almost exclusively on standing, the Judge Rose has determined that a foreclosing party must show standing. “[I]n a foreclosure action, the plaintiff must show that it is the holder of the note and the mortgage at the time that the complaint was filed.” Id. at 653.

Judge Rose instructed the parties involved that the willful failure of the movants to comply with the general orders of the Court would in the future result in immediate dismissal of foreclosure actions.

Deutsche Bank Nat’l Trust Co. v. Steele, 2008 WL 111227 (S.D. Ohio) January 8, 2008.

In Steele, Judge Abel followed the lead of Judge Rose and found that Deutsche Bank had filed evidence in support of its motion for default judgment indicating that MERS was the mortgage holder. There was not sufficient evidence to support the claim that Deutsche Bank was the owner and holder of the note as of that date. Following In re Foreclosure Cases, 2007 WL 456586, the Court held that summary judgment would be denied “until such time as Deutsche Bank was able to offer evidence showing, by a preponderance of evidence, that it owned the note and mortgage when the complaint was filed.” 2008 WL 111227 at 2. Deutsche Bank was given twenty-one days to comply. Id.

Illinois

U.S. Bank, N.A. v. Cook, 2009 WL 35286 (N.D. Ill. January 6, 2009).

Not all federal district judges are as concerned with the issues surrounding the transfer of notes and mortgages. Cook is a very pro lender case and, in an order granting a motion for summary judgment, the Court found that Cook had shown no “countervailing evidence to create a genuine issue of facts.” Id. at 3. In fact, a review of the evidence submitted by U.S. Bank showed only that it was the alleged trustee of the securitization pool. U.S. Bank relied exclusively on the “pooling and serving agreement” to show that it was the holder of the note. Id.

Under UCC Article 3, the evidence presented in Cook was clearly insufficient.

New York

HSBC Bank USA, N.A. v. Valentin, 21 Misc. 3D 1124(A), 2008 WL 4764816 (Table) (N.Y. Sup.) November 3, 2008. In Valentin, the New York court found that, even though given an opportunity to, HSBC did not show the ownership of debt and mortgage. The complaint was dismissed with prejudice and the “notice of pendency” against the property was cancelled.

Note that the Valentin case does not involve some sort of ambush. The Court gave every HSBC every opportunity to cure the defects the Court perceived in the pleadings.

California

In re Vargas, 396 B.R. 511 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 2008)

and

In re Hwang, 396 B.R. 757 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 2008)

These two opinions by Judge Bufford have been discussed above. Judge Bufford carefully explores the related issues of standing and ownership under both federal and California law.

Texas

In re Parsley, 384 B.R. 138 (Bankr. S.D. Tex. 2008)

and

In re Gilbreath, 395 B.R. 356 (Bankr. S.D. Tex. 2008)

These two recent opinions by Judge Jeff Bohm are not really on point, but illustrate another thread of cases running through the issues of motions for relief from stay in bankruptcy court and the sloppiness of loan servicing agencies. Both of these cases involve motions for relief that were not based upon fact but upon mistakes by servicing agencies. Both opinions deal with the issue of sanctions and, put simply, both cases illustrate that Judge Bohm (and perhaps other members of the bankruptcy bench in the Southern District of Texas) are going to be very strict about motions for relief in consumer cases.

SUMMARY

The cases cited illustrate enormous problems in the loan servicing industry. These problems arise in the context of securitization and illustrate the difficulty of determining the name of the holder, the assignee of the mortgage, and the parties with both the legal right under Article 3 and the standing under the Constitution to enforce notes, whether in state court or federal court.

Interestingly, with the exception of Judge Bufford and a few other judges, there has been less than adequate focus upon the UCC title issues. The next round of cases may and should focus upon the title to debt instrument. The person seeking to enforce the note must show that:

(1) It is the holder of this note original by transfer, with all necessary rounds;
(2) It had possession of the note before it was lost;
(3) If it can show that title to the note runs to it, but the original is lost or destroyed, the holder must be prepared to post a bond;
(4) If the person seeking to enforce is an agent, it must show its agency status and that its principal is the holder of the note (and meets the above requirements).

Then, and only then, do the issues of evidence of debt and default and assignment of mortgage rights become relevant.

Thanks,
Mortgage Audits

Thank you Robert, your efforts on the Fight For Homeowners Rights, and The Foreclosure Mess is invaluable, Together we will help Homeowners Get Educated  One  At A Time!

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