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10 banking organizations to address misconduct and negligence (repost)
Action Date: April 14, 2011
Location: Washington, DC
The Federal Reserve Board on Wednesday, April 13, 2011, announced formal enforcement actions requiring 10 banking organizations to address a pattern of misconduct and negligence related to deficient practices in residential mortgage loan servicing and foreclosure processing. According to the press release from the Federal Reserve, these deficiencies represent significant and pervasive compliance failures and unsafe and unsound practices at these institutions.
The Board stated that it is taking these actions to ensure that firms under its jurisdiction promptly initiate steps to establish mortgage loan servicing and foreclosure processes that treat customers fairly, are fully compliant with all applicable law, and are safe and sound.
The 10 banking organizations are: Bank of America Corporation; Citigroup Inc.; Ally Financial Inc.; HSBC North America Holdings, Inc.; JPMorgan Chase & Co.; MetLife, Inc.; The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc.; SunTrust Banks, Inc.; U.S. Bancorp; and Wells Fargo & Company. Collectively, these organizations represent 65 percent of the servicing industry, or nearly $6.8 trillion in mortgage balances. All 10 actions require the parent holding companies to improve holding company oversight of residential mortgage loan servicing and foreclosure processing conducted by bank and nonbank subsidiaries.
In addition, the enforcement actions order the banking organizations that have servicing entities regulated by the Federal Reserve (Ally Financial, SunTrust, and HSBC) to promptly correct the many deficiencies in residential mortgage loan servicing and foreclosure processing. Those deficiencies were identified by examiners during reviews conducted from November 2010 to January 2011.
The Federal Reserve believes monetary sanctions in these cases are appropriate and plans to announce monetary penalties. These monetary penalties will be in addition to the corrective actions that the banking organizations are expected to take pursuant to the enforcement actions.
The enforcement actions complement the actions under consideration by the federal and state regulatory and law enforcement agencies, and do not preclude those agencies from taking additional enforcement action. The Federal Reserve continues to work with other federal and state authorities to resolve these matters.
The actions taken Wednesday require each servicer to take a number of actions, including to make significant revisions to certain residential mortgage loan servicing and foreclosure processing practices. Each servicer must, among other things, submit plans acceptable to the Federal Reserve that:
strengthen coordination of communications with borrowers by providing borrowers the name of the person at the servicer who is their primary point of contact;
ensure that foreclosures are not pursued once a mortgage has been approved for modification, unless repayments under the modified loan are not made;
establish robust controls and oversight over the activities of third-party vendors that provide to the servicers various residential mortgage loan servicing, loss mitigation, or foreclosure-related support, including local counsel in foreclosure or bankruptcy proceedings;
provide remediation to borrowers who suffered financial injury as a result of wrongful foreclosures or other deficiencies identified in a review of the foreclosure process; and strengthen programs to ensure compliance with state and federal laws regarding servicing, generally, and foreclosures, in particular.
The Federal Reserve will closely monitor progress at the firms in addressing these matters and will take additional enforcement actions as needed.
In addition to the actions against the banking organizations, the Federal Reserve on Wednesday announced formal enforcement actions against Lender Processing Services, Inc. (LPS), a domestic provider of default-management services and other services related to foreclosures, and against MERSCORP, Inc. (MERS), which provides services related to tracking and registering residential mortgage ownership and servicing, acts as mortgagee of record on behalf of lenders and servicers, and initiates foreclosure actions. These actions address significant compliance failures and unsafe and unsound practices at LPS and its subsidiaries, and at MERS and its subsidiary. The action requires LPS to address deficient practices related primarily to the document execution services that LPS, through its subsidiaries DocX, LLC, and LPS Default Solutions, Inc., provided to servicers in connection with foreclosures. MERS is required to address significant weaknesses in, among other things, oversight, management supervision, and corporate governance. The LPS action is being taken jointly with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the Office of Thrift Supervision, while the MERS action is being taken jointly with those agencies and the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
The Federal Reserve Board based its enforcement actions on the findings of the interagency reviews of the major mortgage servicers, LPS, and MERS. A summary of the findings from the reviews of the mortgage servicers is available in the Interagency Review of Foreclosure Policies and Practices, which is simultaneously being released by the Federal Reserve Board and the other agencies.
Source: Fraud Digest
Banks float $5 billion deal to settle foreclosure probe: report
(Reuters) – Major banks are willing to pay as much as $5 billion to settle claims by federal and state officials of improper mortgage foreclosure practices, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the situation.
The banks’ offer comes as mortgage companies and state and federal officials continue their efforts to strike a settlement of investigations sparked by allegations of “robo-signing” and other questionable foreclosure practices that came to light last fall, the Journal said.
The banks intend to propose that as much as $5 billion be used to compensate any borrowers previously wronged in the foreclosure process and provide transition assistance for borrowers who are ousted from their homes, the WSJ said, citing people familiar with the matter.
(Reporting by Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore; Editing by Ramya Venugopal)
Foreclosures Trapped by a Lack of Lawyers
By NICK TIMIRAOS
Moves by banks to ditch law firms snared in the “robo-signing” mess are spreading delays and confusion to borrowers, while angering judges grappling with thousands of foreclosure cases now trapped in limbo.
The trouble began when U.S. banks and government-owned mortgage giants lost confidence in some law firms that handled a huge volume of foreclosures. After controversy erupted last fall over the shoddy review of loan documents known as robo-signing, banks dropped some law firms.
The problems are particularly acute in Florida. Above, a home in Miami.
Finding replacement lawyers who can pick up the slack quickly has been a struggle. While the resulting slowdown means that fewer houses are being seized, late fees are piling up for homeowners seeking a loan modifications. Investors who own bonds backed by those mortgages could face higher costs from the snags.
“It’s causing chaos because nobody knows who’s representing whom,” says Thomas Ice, a foreclosure defense lawyer in Royal Palm Beach, Fla.
The problems are particularly acute in Florida, one of 23 U.S. states where foreclosures must be processed through courts. Last fall, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac terminated their relationship with the Law Offices of David J. Stern. At its peak, the Plantation, Fla., firm handled nearly 20% of all foreclosures in the state.
In March, the Stern law firm told judges across Florida that it was unable to file the necessary paperwork to withdraw from 100,000 cases. Florida’s attorney general is investigating allegations that the firm routinely forged notarized documents. The firm denies the accusations and is challenging the attorney general’s jurisdiction in court.
“There’s nobody to call to expedite any of these things. My clients are in limbo every day,” says Craig Lynd, a founding partner of KEL Attorneys, an Orlando, Fla., law firm.
Two of his clients, 58-year-old Ruth Diehl and her husband, have been in talks with a J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. unit for more than two years about a loan modification on their home in Ocoee, Fla. The bank agreed to offer different loan terms at a court-ordered mediation session last summer, where it was represented by the Stern law firm.
But the deal wasn’t finished, Mr. Lynd says, and efforts to force compliance with the agreement in court was hampered by the removal of the Stern firm from the case. A different law firm was assigned to the case, and J.P. Morgan asked the new firm to reach out to Mr. Lynd, said a J.P. Morgan spokesman.
Ally Financial Inc., the GMAC Mortgage parent in which the U.S. government owns a 73% stake, transferred to other lawyers its foreclosures previously assigned to the Stern firm.
Lisa Butterfield, who is trying to surrender her Middleburg, Fla., home to GMAC through a “deed-in-lieu” of foreclosure, says she has heard nothing from the new lawyer who was assigned her case. “You finally think, ‘I’m finally going to get this settled,’ and then it’s not,” she says. She moved last year to take care of her parents but still pays the utilities in hopes of reaching a deal with GMAC.
An Ally spokeswoman says the “situation in Florida is challenging, given the large number of borrowers in foreclosure and the number of quality law firms to manage these cases.” She declined to comment on Ms. Butterfield’s situation.
[FORECLOSE]
Mr. Stern has blamed former foreclosure clients for failing “to take into consideration any succession planning” when they terminated his firm, according to a written response to a Florida judge. Jeffrey Tew, a lawyer for Mr. Stern, says banks have withheld millions in legal fees and are to blame for delays.
A Fannie spokeswoman says transfers of foreclosure files from terminated firms to new lawyers have been completed. Fannie has approved 16 law firms to handle its cases in the state, up from nine firms last year. Freddie uses 14 law firms in Florida, up from four.
Peter Blanc, the chief judge in Palm Beach County, Fla., with nearly 9,000 cases from the Stern firm, last month urged Mr. Stern to reconsider his decision to walk away from cases. Another problem: Two law firms that got some of the Stern cases were later dropped by Fannie, Freddie and banks.
“Whatever anyone thinks the cost of David Stern’s implosion is, quadruple it,” says Richard Shuster, a real-estate lawyer in Miami.
On Friday, Judge Blanc will start convening special hearings to reassign hundreds of cases a day until the backlog is cleared. “If nobody shows up” on behalf of the banks, “we will dismiss the cases,” he says. If that happens, banks would have to essentially start over.
In February, Fannie terminated its relationship with Ben-Ezra & Katz after the Fort Lauderdale firm notified Fannie that some paralegals took inappropriate technical shortcuts. Marc Ben-Ezra, a principal at the law firm, says the firm is trying to withdraw from 15,000 cases “cooperatively and responsibly.”
But other firms taking over those foreclosures “tend to be overwhelmed,” while some clients have seized files and told his firm to no longer act on their behalf. “It’s bad for everybody,” Mr. Ben-Ezra says. On Thursday, the law firm said it is suspending its foreclosure practice until further notice.
Write to Nick Timiraos at nick.timiraos@wsj.com
Thrivent sues lenders for ‘massive frauds’
Updated: April 30, 2011 – 4:58 PM
Countrywide and GMAC both say that Thrivent should have understood the risks of the mortgage-backed securities it bought.
Thrivent Financial for Lutherans has sued Countrywide Financial Corp. and GMAC Mortgage over what it describes as “massive frauds” in which it says it was duped into buying hundreds of millions of dollars in mortgage-backed securities.
Thrivent says it wanted conservative, low-risk investments and believed it was buying only those mortgages that carried the highest, AAA investment-grade ratings. But because Countrywide and GMAC failed to follow their underwriting guidelines, Thrivent says, it ended up holding higher-risk mortgages and has suffered huge losses amid the housing market collapse.
Between 2005 and 2007, the suit says, Minneapolis-based Thrivent and its affiliates paid hundreds of millions of dollars for 20 mortgage-backed securities offerings from Countrywide and for seven offerings from GMAC. The suit says that two firms either knew or recklessly disregarded the fact that the securities failed to meet the criteria for the AAA ratings they carried.
The firms say Thrivent should have known what it was getting into. “This suit represents an action by a sophisticated investor which had available to them offering materials and associated risks for their consideration,” GMAC Mortgage spokesman James Olecki said. “We intend to vigorously defend ourselves.”
Countrywide was bought in 2008 by Bank of America, whose spokeswoman, Shirley Norton, said Thrivent is a knowledgeable investor that is “looking to blame someone for investment losses incurred during a period of economic downturn.”
Mortgage-backed securities are bondlike instruments that trade in capital markets. They are made up of individual mortgages that are packaged together and sold in slices, or tranches, identified by their levels of estimated risk and potential reward.
The 127-page suit was filed in Hennepin County last month, but the defendants filed a petition this week to remove the case from Hennepin County to federal court.
Countrywide’s fraudulent marketing practices are well known, the suit says. It cites an $8 billion settlement agreement the company reached with various states, including Minnesota, and the fact that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission reached a settlement in October with three former executives.
Angelo Mozilo, Countrywide’s former CEO, agreed to pay $67.5 million in penalties and disgorgements. David Sambol, the firm’s chief operating officer, and Eric Sieracki, its chief financial officer, agreed to pay a total of $5.65 million. Mozilo and Sambol are each named as defendants in the Thrivent lawsuit.
As of January, 29 percent of the mortgage loans underlying Thrivent’s purchases from Countrywide were either in arrears, foreclosure, bankruptcy or repossession, and 23 percent of those purchased from GMAC were in similar straits, the suit says. As a result, the credit ratings of the certificates have been downgraded.
More than 95 percent of the Countrywide certificates and 85 percent of the GMAC certificates are rated as junk, the suit says. That means they can’t be sold for anything close to what Thrivent paid for them.
According to Thrivent’s lawsuit, in 2005 some 90 percent of Countrywide’s home loans were considered prime, meaning the borrowers were top credit quality and the mortgages were secured by first-position liens on single-family residences. Most were conforming loans, which have the lowest delinquency rates in the industry.
But in the rush to increase market share, the suit says, Countrywide disregarded its underwriting guidelines, pressured appraisers to provide inflated valuations, and made more loans to higher-risk borrowers. Thrivent says Countrywide kept the best-quality mortgages for itself and dumped the riskier loans onto Thrivent and others.
Thrivent made similar allegations against GMAC, citing a number of confidential witnesses who had worked for the company.
Thrivent seeks unstated compensatory and/or rescissionary damages, punitive damages and costs.
Dan Browning • 612-673-4493
Since August 2007, which marked the beginning of the “foreclosure crisis”, MainStreet has provided guidance, direction and peace of mind to over 150 families. These families are from every walk of life and each of their mortgage situations is as unique as each individual tied to it. MainStreet Resolutions is Your Path to A Fresh Start!
Call US TODAY
to See How We Can Help.
1-888-728-3020
Are you in default or foreclosure? If you suspect you have been the victim of Predatory Lending here in Florida, suspect you might be a victim of fraud, suspect the lender who provided your mortgage may have been less than honest, or may have even purposely overvalued your property in the Appraisal, please contact me, Tiffany Arthur at tiffanylarthur@aol.com or visit my website for more information at www.mainstreetresolutions.com We are interested in helping the homeowner find a permanent resolution to keep them in their home.
As Regulators and Banks Review Foreclosures, We’ll Be Watching
by Paul Kiel
ProPublica, April 21, 2011, 10:19 a.m.
A bank-owned sign stands outside of a foreclosed home on June 15, 2009. Regulators are launching an unprecedented plan to compensate victims of wrongful foreclosures in 2009 and 2010. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)
The country’s bank regulators are launching an unprecedented plan to undo some of the damage done by mortgage servicers, compensating victims of shoddy or illegal foreclosure practices. Part of the plan involves a massive outreach effort to contact the potentially millions of borrowers affected.
Exactly how this will unfold is, for now, unclear; if regulators hold true to form, the process figures not to be transparent. Homeowner advocates applaud the idea of the banks righting their wrongs but are skeptical the process will be thorough and fair. The regulators don’t “have a good track record at identifying or fixing servicer misbehavior,” said Diane Thompson of the National Consumer Law Center.
Bank of America: Federal Reserve, OCC
Wells Fargo: Federal Reserve, OCC
JPMorgan Chase: Federal Reserve, OCC
Citi: Federal Reserve, OCC
GMAC (aka Ally): Federal Reserve and FDIC
OneWest (aka IndyMac): OTS
HSBC: Federal Reserve, OCC
U.S. Bank: Federal Reserve, OCC
PNC: Federal Reserve, OCC
Aurora: OTS
SunTrust: Federal Reserve
MetLife: Federal Reserve, OCC
Sovereign Bank: OTS
EverBank: OTS
- Making Home Affordable.gov
The administration’s web site for the foreclosure prevention program. Provides an FAQ, homeowner examples, and other tools to see whether you might qualify for the program. - Foreclosure Avoidance Counselors
A list of HUD-approved housing counseling agencies nationwide. - FTC Tips for Mortgage Servicing Consumers
Tips for homeowners from the Federal Trade Commission. - Program Guidelines for Mortgage Servicers
These “supplemental directives” lay out how mortgage servicers are supposed to conduct the program. - Compensation for Mortgage Servicers
This Treasury Department document lays out how mortgage servicers are compensated for completed modifications - Calculated Risk
A finance and economics blog that provides news and metrics on the state of the housing market.
Did you lose your home to foreclosure? Please share your experiences with ProPublica reporters.
Have you worked for a servicer in a loan modification call center? We want to hear from you.
ProPublica will be watching closely. We’d like to hear from current and former homeowners who wrongfully faced foreclosure in the last couple of years [1]. Much as we’ve tracked [2] the administration’s mortgage modification program [3], we’ll be tracking what happens with these cases.
Last week, regulators released “consent orders” that laid out problems at many of the country’s biggest servicers (see sidebar for the list), which collectively handle almost 70 percent of the country’s mortgages. The orders followed an investigation [4] prompted by widespread revelations [5] last fall that servicers were regularly filing false affidavits signed by so-called “robo-signers [6].” According to the orders, regulators found that servicers weren’t properly evaluating homeowners for loan modifications, had wrongly foreclosed on some homeowners, and in addition to doing a generally poor job, had broken the law. (None of this should surprise those who’ve been reading our coverage [7].)
You can see the regulators’ report on their investigation and all of the orders here [8].
To fix the ongoing problems, the orders lay out broad principles that servicers should follow — basics such as having sufficient staff, training them adequately, not losing documents, etc. But because the orders are so general, borrower advocates have been vocal [9] in saying they won’t be enough to fundamentally change the industry’s cost-cutting ways [10] or to ensure that homeowners are properly evaluated for a modification.
The orders include a requirement for the banks to do foreclosure reviews to address problems that have cropped up during recent years. The process will start immediately but won’t culminate until early 2012.
Each bank is required to hire an outside firm to review all of its foreclosure actions in 2009 and 2010. The firm will be tasked with looking for certain violations (see our list below [11]), ranging from robo-signed affidavits and forged documents to foreclosure sales that occurred without a proper review for a modification. Based on those findings, banks will compensate the victims, or as the orders put it, “remediate all financial injury to borrowers caused by any errors, misrepresentations, or other deficiencies.”
So, how exactly will this work? Many of the details remain unclear, but we spoke to regulatory sources who provided some additional information.
Over the next couple months, the banks will hire the outside firms to conduct the reviews. The actual reviews are expected to begin this summer. They are supposed to cover all mortgages that were in the foreclosure process at any point in 2009 or 2010, but because that involves more than 3 million loans, the firms will use sampling to do their analysis.
The process won’t be strictly internal, however. Regulators also will require some form of outreach. It’s likely, for instance, that all the banks will be sending letters to every homeowner who was in foreclosure in 2009 or 2010.
Of course, some of these people are likely to be former homeowners who may well no longer reside at the same address. There might also be a kind of ad campaign, but regulators acknowledge these people will be tough to reach.
However it’s done, there will be some way for homeowners to submit their complaints to banks. Those who think they might be eligible for reimbursement or remediation should “get their documents together,” said one regulatory source. When the reviews launch in the summer, it should become clear exactly where those complaints should go. (You can be sure we’ll post that information when it’s available.)
It’s still anyone’s guess what will happen after complaints are submitted. Among the important unanswered questions: whether the review will involve homeowner interviews; how the outside firms will investigate claims of violations; whether those who complain will receive some sort of explanation if they’re denied; and how banks and regulators will calculate what victims are owed.
Thompson, of the National Consumer Law Center, said she worries the reviews will “shift the burden onto homeowners” to prove they were wronged. Homeowners won’t necessarily have kept the documents that demonstrate harm, she said. Even those who do have documentation may not know they were wronged, she added. They wouldn’t know, for instance, whether the fees they were charged were improper or whether they were considered for a modification.
If the reviewers do no investigation of their own and simply reply on homeowners to submit proof of wrongdoing, she said, it will miss most of the problems: “The process and remediation will serve as a whitewash for servicer misbehavior without actually either remediating past errors or preventing future ones.”
The reviews are expected to culminate late this year or early next year, when checks are scheduled to go out to victims. Regulatory sources told us that the total amount sent to eligible homeowners would likely be disclosed. Even before this phase, observers may get a hint of what’s happening if, as expected, regulators levy financial penalties against the banks. The findings of the reviews will determine the size of those penalties, regulatory officials said.
Regulators have done similar reviews in the past to compensate victims of bank wrongdoing, but not on this scale. In 2008, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (one of several regulatory agencies for the biggest banks and servicers, such as Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, and Citibank), oversaw a process that resulted in Wachovia Bank issuing $150 million in checks [12] to more than 740,000 consumers for the bank’s role in a telemarketing scam. Regulators acknowledge, however, that the foreclosure reviews, which will involve 14 banks, millions of consumers, and billions of dollars in claims, is in a class of its own.
If you think you’re a borrower who should be compensated through this process, we want to hear from you [1]. We also want to hear from homeowners who have mortgage servicers not covered by this process (there are some large ones), because they might be covered by efforts from other regulators down the line [13].
Here’s the language from the Consent Orders that describes the scope of the foreclosure review:
The purpose of the Foreclosure Review shall be to determine, at a minimum:
(a) whether at the time the foreclosure action was initiated or the pleading or affidavit filed (including in bankruptcy proceedings and in defending suits brought by borrowers), the foreclosing party or agent of the party had properly documented ownership of the promissory note and mortgage (or deed of trust) under relevant state law, or was otherwise a proper party to the action as a result of agency or similar status;
(b) whether the foreclosure was in accordance with applicable state and federal law, including but not limited to the SCRA and the U.S. Bankruptcy Code;
(c) whether a foreclosure sale occurred when an application for a loan modification or other Loss Mitigation was under consideration; when the loan was performing in accordance with a trial or permanent loan modification; or when the loan had not been in default for a sufficient period of time to authorize foreclosure pursuant to the terms of the mortgage loan documents and related agreements;
(d) whether, with respect to non-judicial foreclosures, the procedures followed with respect to the foreclosure sale (including the calculation of the default period, the amounts due, and compliance with notice periods) and post-sale confirmations were in accordance with the terms of the mortgage loan and state law requirements;
(e) whether a delinquent borrower’s account was only charged fees and/or penalties that were permissible under the terms of the borrower’s loan documents, applicable state and federal law, and were reasonable and customary;
(f) whether the frequency that fees were assessed to any delinquent borrower’s account (including broker price opinions) was excessive under the terms of the borrower’s loan documents, and applicable state and federal law;
(g) whether Loss Mitigation Activities with respect to foreclosed loans were handled in accordance with the requirements of the HAMP, and consistent with the policies and procedures applicable to the Bank’s proprietary loan modifications or other loss mitigation programs, such that each borrower had an adequate opportunity to apply for a Loss Mitigation option or program, any such application was handled properly, a final decision was made on a reasonable basis, and was communicated to the borrower before the foreclosure sale; and
(h) whether any errors, misrepresentations, or other deficiencies identified in the Foreclosure Review resulted in financial injury to the borrower or the mortgagee.
Since August 2007, which marked the beginning of the “foreclosure crisis”, MainStreet has provided guidance, direction and peace of mind to over 150 families. These families are from every walk of life and each of their mortgage situations is as unique as each individual tied to it. MainStreet Resolutions is Your Path to A Fresh Start!
Call US TODAY
to See How We Can Help.
1-888-728-3020
Are you in default or foreclosure? If you suspect you have been the victim of Predatory Lending here in Florida, suspect you might be a victim of fraud, suspect the lender who provided your mortgage may have been less than honest, or may have even purposely overvalued your property in the Appraisal, please contact me, Tiffany Arthur at tiffanylarthur@aol.com or visit my website for more information at www.mainstreetresolutions.com We are interested in helping the homeowner find a permanent resolution to keep them in their home.


