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Foreclosures Dismissed and False Notaries Pleed the 5th

Five Foreclosure have been dismissed, and perhaps more to come because of “false” certifications (aka forgeries?) by notaries.

The notaries, who apparently signed the foreclosure documents, are now invoking their 5th Ammendment Right against self-incrimination, but aren’t facing prosecution (yet!).   The incriminating evidence that banks have forged signatures, amongst other things is coming out in the open, and banks are on the defense.

…and they should be.  The evidence is there. 

What’s next for homeowners?  Most are now looking into legal means of stopping the banks.  There is no other way, since servicers and lenders are blatently violating state and federal law.   To defend yourself against the bank, many are choosing to join in a Class Action Lawsuit. Call (831) 621-1149 for details and reference Troubled Property Solutions.

By Abigail Field
The Daily Finance

Among the many legal problems now being discovered with the foreclosure documents that banks have been using are false notarizations. The most typical variety of this problem occurs when a notary certifies that the person whose signature appears on a document really did sign it, even though the notary didn’t witness the signing. 

While such false notarizing is criminal, I’ve not yet heard of any notaries being charged. However, in Maryland, Steve Lash of The Daily Record reports that 18 current and former notaries have invoked their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination in a foreclosure case.

The notaries were brought before the court in proceedings involving a lawyer who didn’t actually sign numerous foreclosure documents that were nonetheless notarized saying he did. The judge excused the notaries from the proceedings after they took the Fifth, and apparently, they aren’t facing prosecution.

Title Issues Trip Up Innocent Buyers

Nonetheless, the ramifications of those false certifications are significant. Because the lawyer — Thomas P. Dore — didn’t sign the documents as certified, the judge has dismissed five foreclosures, although the banks can refile. In addition, the judge is considering what to do in 15 other cases where Dore isn’t sure whether or not he signed the documents, and the judge is also weighing what to do about 12 Dore foreclosures that were completed in which the properties have since been sold. This is a striking situation when you consider the judge’s options. Might he rescind the sales? Void the foreclosures, but let the sales stand?

For Full Article DailyFinance: http://srph.it/ihdnyK

Countrywide – Bank of America Hit Again with Another Lawsuit

This past Monday Countrywide, Bank of America, as well as a suite of others got hit with Another Lawsuit. 

This time from Life Insurance Policies  in which it is alleged that Countrywide sold a lot of bogus paper to pretty much every large insurance company in the world.  Whereas Countrywide told these investors that they were selling good paper, but in effect it was a load of crap.   Remember that Countrywide bundled the loans when they were originated (or sometimes before as the forensic loan audits are revealing) – then they sold them off as mortgage backed securities to investors on Wall Street.  The paper was ranked – apparently not correctly since BofA is getting sued left and right on all sides.  The article may be a bit technical for most, but the bottom line is that Countrywide, Bank of America, and a suite of other lenders and servicers are facing lawsuits for fraud, misrepresentation, etc on all sides.  Most likely if you have a Countrywide or Bank of America loan your loan is in one of these mortgage backed securities. 

 Previous articles that we wrote tell that these type of loans techinically should be almost impossible to foreclose on.  But foreclosures are happening anyways. If you are trying to save your home, or if you have a bad loan you don’t have to sit back and let the banks win.  You have options.

  1. Start with a forensic loan audit to know what’s really going on with your loan.

  2. Then take action.  A Class Action Lawsuit is the most cost effective, and safe way to move forward legally. Banks have deep pockets, and so joining together with other homeowners is a smart decision.  Call (831) 621-1149 and reference Troubled Property Solutions for details.

Here’s their allegations – the basis of the lawsuit:
Article Posted 2011-01-24 18:41
Market Tickler
by Karl Denninger

Countrywide Failed To Ensure That Title To The Underlying Loans Was Effectively Transferred

The rules for these transfers are governed by the law of the state where the property is located, by the terms of the pooling and servicing agreement (“PSA”) for each securitization, and by the law governing the issuing trust (with respect to matters of trust law). Generally, state laws and the PSAs require the promissory note and security instrument to be transferred by indorsement, in the same way that a check can be transferred by indorsement, or by sale. In addition, state laws generally require that the trustee have physical possession of the original, manually signed note in order for the loan to be enforceable by the trustee against the borrower in case of default.

In order to preserve the bankruptcy-remote status of the issuing trusts in RMBS transactions, the notes and security instruments are generally not transferred directly from the mortgage loan originator to the trust. Rather, the notes and security instruments are generally initially transferred from the originator (e.g., Countrywide Home) to the depositor (e.g., CWALT), either directly or via one or more special-purpose entities established by Countrywide Financial. After this initial transfer to the depositor, the depositor transfers the notes and security interests to the issuing trust for the particular securitization. Each of these transfers must be valid under applicable state law in order for the trust to have good title to the mortgage loans.

In addition, the PSA generally requires the transfers of the mortgage loans to the trust to be completed within a strict time limit after formation of the trust in order to ensure that the trust qualifies as a tax-free real estate mortgage investment conduit (“REMIC”).

 The applicable state trust law generally requires strict compliance with the trust documents, including the PSA, so that failure to comply strictly with the timeliness, indorsement, physical delivery, and other requirements of the PSA with respect to the transfers of the notes and security instruments means that the transfers would be void and the trust would not havegood title to the mortgage loans.

The Offering Documents for each offering of the Certificates represented in substance that the issuing trust for that offering had obtained good title to the mortgage loans comprising the pool for the offering. In reality, however, Countrywide routinely failed to comply with the requirements of applicable state laws and the PSAs for valid transfers of the notes and security instruments to the issuing trusts. In Kemp .v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., Bkrtcy. No. 08-18700 (D.N.J.), Countrywide sought to prove that the Bank of New York, as trustee for an RMBS issuing trust that purportedly held Mr. Kemp’s mortgage, was entitled to enforce the mortgage. Countrywide presented testimony by Linda DeMartini, who had been employed by Countrywide Servicing for almost ten years as of August 2009 and was then a supervisor and operational team leader for the Litigation Management Department of Countrywide Servicing. Ms. DeMartini testified that, in her extensive career in the mortgage loan servicing business of Countrywide, “I had to know about everything . . . .” She testified that Countrywide Home originated Kemp’s loan in 2006 and transferred it to the Bank of New York as trustee for the issuing trust, but that Countrywide Servicing retained the original note in its own possession and never delivered it to the Bank of New York because Countrywide Servicing was the servicer for the loan.

For the full article and a copy of the lawsuit go to: http://market-ticker.org/akcs-www?post=178151

 

Homeowners Are Not the Only Ones Sueing the Lenders

JP Morgan Chase, EMC, Wells Fargo, Bank of America are all seeing the repercussions of these bad loans – by homeowners and investors alike. 

Lawsuits are being filed all over the country by homeowners, and now investors who own the mortgage backed securities, against the major lending institutions based upon claims of wrongdoings by the banks and their servicers.   These banks can no longer just ignore homeowner complaints, as many are taking to the court system for fraud, misrepresentation, and violations of federal law. 

Mortgage fraud is rampant.  Homeowners across the nation are turning toward legal action in defending themselves against the bank. Many are joining a Class Action Lawsuit. Call (831) 621-1149 for details and reference Troubled Property Solutions. 

JPMorgan’s EMC Mortgage Sued Over Home Loan Documents
By Sophia Pearson – Jan 18, 2011 11:30 AM PT
Bloomberg Press

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 January 18, 2011 in Delaware Chancery Court in Wilmington.  “The trustee has repeatedly requested that EMC provide access to the subject documents,” Wells Fargo said in the complaint. “EMC has played proverbial ‘rope a dope’ and otherwise continued to drag its feet, and has produced nothing.”

Claims of wrongdoing by banks and loan servicers triggered a 50-state investigation last year into whether hundreds of thousands of foreclosures were properly documented as the housing market collapsed. Lending practices have also pitted mortgage-bond investors against banks over misrepresentations such as overstatements of borrowers’ income and inflated appraisals.  Christine Holevas, a spokeswoman for New York-based JPMorgan, declined to comment.

Wells Fargo said it needs access to the documents to answer “serious” questions raised by investors in the trust about whether EMC breached representations and warranties regarding the quality of option-adjustable rate mortgage loans the trust bought.

Investor Questions

An investor in the trust, who owns 42 percent of the outstanding face amount of the portfolio’s certificates, questioned the condition of underlying loans, Wells Fargo said in the complaint, citing an August letter it received from David Grais, the investor’s attorney.  Grais, a partner at New York-based Grais & Ellsworth LLP, represents the federal Home Loan Banks of Seattle and San Francisco and Charles Schwab Corp. in litigation seeking to force banks including Bank of America Corp. and JPMorgan to repurchase mortgage-backed securities because they allegedly misrepresented the quality of the loans.

In a September interview, Grais said he was also working with two hedge funds that hadn’t filed suits and had contacted trustees with similar complaints. He wouldn’t name the funds.  In the Aug. 31, 2010, letter to San Francisco-based Wells Fargo, Grais said he had investigated 1,317 of the loans held by the trust and determined that EMC appeared to have violated its representations with respect to 938 loans, according to the complaint.  Grais didn’t immediately return a phone call today seeking comment on the complaint.

400 Loans

Wells Fargo began requesting the documents in January last year and reached an agreement with EMC in December on access to files for 400 loans. EMC had until Jan. 12 to produce documents on the first 100 loans, according to the complaint. EMC failed to produce the documents “culminating more than a year of good-faith negotiations and misplaced patience by the trustee in a futile attempt to avoid litigation,” Wells Fargo said in the complaint. The case is Bear Stearns Mortgage Funding Trust 2007-AR2 by Wells Fargo Bank N.A. as Trustee v. EMC Mortgage Corp., CA6132, Delaware Chancery Court (Wilmington).

To contact the reporter on this story: Sophia Pearson in Wilmington, Delaware, at spearson3@bloomberg.net.

Foreclosures Voided Due to Insufficient Paperwork

Foreclosing with insufficient documentation on mortgages that were securitized has come back and bit the banks. 

The Massachusetts Supreme Court recently ruled against U.S. Bank and Wells Fargo and recinded two foreclosures after paperwork indicated they had no right to foreclose.  The securitization of the note was and will be the biggest problem for banks to foreclose on homes.  Millions of loans were sold as mortgage back securities into Wall Street – sometimes even before the loan was taken out!  In the case below, even if the banks had produced a trust agreement or pooling and servicing agreement—proof that a mortgage pool was sold and assigned to the trust—they would still have to provide records detailed enough to show that the actual mortgage in question is contained in that mortgage pool.  And that is not happening.

What does that mean for all homeowners?  Each state is different, but this could set the standard for all future forclosures.

  • How can you find out if your loan has been securitized?  A Forensic Loan Audit - that includes a Sercuritization Audit – will give you those details.
  • What can you do with this information?  The homeowner has choices.  Participating in a Class Action Lawsuit is one smart choice a homeowner can make. Class Action Lawsuit video.

Want your Situation to Be Like these  Two Cases Cited Below?  Get Started Today!

Why the Massachusetts Supreme Court Voided Two Foreclosures and What It Could Mean for Banks

by Marian Wang ProPublica, Jan. 20, 2011

When Massachusetts’ highest court ruled against U.S. Bank and Wells Fargo earlier this month and invalidated two foreclosures, the decision was hailed by some as an important precedent for courts seeking to resolve foreclosure disputes.

While the decision’s impact isn’t entirely clear, even Wall Street analysts who downplayed its applicability acknowledged its troubling implications for banks trying to foreclose with missing or insufficient documentation for the mortgage loans securitized and sold to investors.

The Massachusetts court, in its decision against the banks, ruled that in two very similar foreclosure cases, neither bank had been able to prove that it had the right to foreclose on the homeowner due to an incomplete chain of title. In other words, the banks couldn’t prove they had legal standing to foreclose because the transfers of ownership weren’t properly documented each time the mortgage changed hands—or was assigned to a new party—during the securitization process.

Here’s a handy chart from the ruling, showing how the chain of title should have been documented with the Ibanez mortgage:

U.S. Bank, as the chart shows, wasn’t the mortgage originator or the servicer in this case—it was the trustee of the mortgage-backed security (responsible for distributing funds to investors in the security). The Financial Times’ Alphaville blog explains how U.S.Bank’s documentation fell short:

One of the issues is the so-called “mortgage in blank” procedure. In the Ibanez case, for instance, the last mortgage assignment with a full set of names on it is from Rose Mortgage to Option One. After that, the mortgage is assigned in blank throughout the securitisation. There’s no assignment with “US Bank” on it anywhere, though the bank did try to go back and finish off the assignment after it moved to foreclose.

Banks, in order to smooth over the problem of missing assignments, will often do “confirmatory assignments” after a foreclosure has been initiated. It’s standard practice in Massachusetts, FT Alphaville reported.

But these “confirmatory assignments” only work when “there is a prior valid assignment to confirm,” bankruptcy lawyer and foreclosure expert Max Gardner explained to me. Even though the lower court gave both banks time to produce evidence of earlier assignments, the banks weren’t able to cough up the proof.

They did, however, produce some securitization documents that the court said did not suffice as proof of legal standing in this case. U.S. Bank submitted the offering documents for the mortgage-backed security, which the court said showed an “intent to assign mortgages to U.S. Bank, not proof of their actual assignment.”

The court went on to say that even if the banks had produced a trust agreement or pooling and servicing agreement—proof that a mortgage pool was sold and assigned to the trust—they would still have to provide records detailed enough to show that the actual mortgage in question is contained in that mortgage pool.

The American Securitization Forum chose to take a glass-half-full approach to interpreting the ruling. It issued a statement  saying it was “pleased that the Court validated the use of the conveyance language in securitization documents as being sufficient to prove transfers of mortgages” under Massachusetts law.

(Georgetown University associate law professor Adam Levitin, meanwhile, looked at securitization documents for other mortgage securities and concluded that many would probably fall similarly short.)

Wall Street has nonetheless argued that the Massachusetts ruling was limited in scope. Paul Jablansky, an asset-backed securities strategist at the Royal Bank of Scotland, issued a report stating that “we do not believe that this case will be a broadly applicable landmark.”

That could be true. The ruling only has direct implications for foreclosures in Massachusetts, and state courts elsewhere could rule differently on a similar set of facts. That’s up to the courts to decide.

CNBC points out that the problems may be close to impossible for the banks to fix. Take the Ibanez mortgage as an example—the chain of title was supposed to include assignments to and from Lehman Brothers, which collapsed in 2008:

Getting someone at Lehman to go through the process of executing the assignment is going to be very difficult. It’s not even clear if anyone at Lehman Brothers has the legal authority to execute an assignment now, while Lehman is bankrupt.

In any case, getting the assignment from Lehman wouldn’t really help you. You’d still have a gap in the chain from Option One to Lehman. It’s probably best to skip over Lehman all together and go directly to Option One to ask for the assignment.

But you have a bit of a problem. You didn’t buy the mortgage from Option One. They aren’t under any contractual obligation to you to execute any documents.

On top of that, the basic rules of securitization could be another obstacle for banks hoping to fix their mistakes by simply assigning mortgages years after the fact. The trusts were formed under tax rules passed in 1986 that gave them tax-exempt status so long as they “do not acquire any new assets after the trust closes,” according to FT Alphaville.

If the trusts violate these rules, they could potentially be required to pay penalties, taxes and interest, Gardner told me—ultimately wiping out investors.

No one’s sure what the Ibanez ruling will mean just yet, but one thing is clear: Foreclosing on mortgages that were securitized with insufficient documentation will continue to be tricky business for the banks.

HSBC – Litton Loan Servicing – MERS – Case of the Multiple Mortgage Notes

HSBC – Litton Loan Serving – MERS:  Caught with multiple notes and conflicting “original signatures” in court.

Another case of fraud on the lender’s part.

Here’s another example of how messed up the paperwork is when it comes to our mortgages.  Most mortgages were sold off as securities in the last 10 years, and servicing rights assigned to third parties, as described in the article below.  When it comes to who owns the actual debt, unwinding the system has led to inconsistencies, and the servicers, lenders, and any potential parties of interest forging signatures and making up documents.  As these come out in the court system, judges are beginning to take notice of these inconsistencies and foreclosures are being stopped in their tracks.  The case below depicts just one example of the fraud coming out into the public’s eye.

Yes, you can do something about this.  People are winning against the lenders!

A forensic loan audit does the research on who owns your note, as well as investigates if the banks have been complying with federal law as it relates to your mortgage.

The evidence is there – banks and servicers are being caught red-handed lying, creating documents, and whatever it takes to take your home.  A Class Action Lawsuit is being formed for all homeowners.   Find out more by submitting your details.  Class Action Lawsuit Video.

Daily Finance | Why Paperwork Matters: Consider This Mortgage Mess
Posted by Foreclosure Fraud on January 20, 2011

Why Paperwork Matters: Consider This Mortgage Mess

By ABIGAIL FIELD – Daily Finance

Judge Shelley C. Chapman, of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York, has ordered HSBC and Litton Loan Servicing (a Goldman Sachs subsidiary) to send officers with some juice — and not low-level types — to her Manhattan courtroom on Feb. 10 to explain themselves. More specifically, to explain their failure to provide adequate documentation about a mortgage they claim to own and service. Judge Chapman also ordered the Texas attorney who signed the documents to show up.

At issue is the fact that HSBC (HBC) hasn’t come close to proving it owns the loan, and the documents it has submitted look funny. It also doesn’t appear to have been acting in good faith when it comes to trying to modify the loan (also known as “loss mitigation”). So, the judge wants to talk to people who actually know things and can make decisions.

How Did HSBC Get the Note?

Here’s the story:

In 2004, Miguelito and Jacqueline Garcia bought a property in New York City’s borough of the Bronx, using a mortgage from Fremont Investment & Loan. Shortly afterward, that mortgage was apparently securitized, and HSBC became the trustee for securitized trust. HSBC hired Goldman Sachs’s (GS) Litton Loan Servicing to service the trust loans.

Last summer, the Garcias declared bankruptcy, and Litton Loans told the court the Garcias owed HSBC some $3,600 in missed principal, interest and fees. (This isn’t a foreclosure case, at least not yet.) To back up its claim, Litton gave the court the note — stamped “Duplicate Original” (starting on page 3 of the linked document) — and the accompanying mortgage (starting on page 10).

But the Garcias’ lawyer, consumer bankruptcy attorney David Shaev, pointed out in a letter to Litton that the note was made out to Fremont Investment & Loan, and the mortgage was made out to MERS — the Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems — as nominee for Fremont. Litton didn’t give the court any evidence that either document was transferred to the trust HSBC represented. In the first place, Fremont hadn’t endorsed the note to anyone, and second, HSBC hadn’t submitted an assignment of the mortgage to anyone.

Two Different Notes

Shaev didn’t get a meaningful reply from Litton, so he formally objected to HSBC’s claim. When Litton replied, it submitted a new note that was endorsed. But Litton’s filing didn’t address the fact that the first note it submitted wasn’t endorsed, while it now it offered one that was. Nor did Litton mention several other oddities, such as the initialing by the borrowers on the new note is in a different order and position on each of the first two pages. Even the signatures on page 3 of the note look different — for example, look at the “J,” “a” and “q” in Jacqueline.

See full article from DailyFinance: http://srph.it/fYURAC