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California Attorney General Forms Mortgage Fraud Strike Force

By: Carrie Bay

California Attorney General Kamala Harris announced the creation of a 25-person task force on Monday charged with protecting homeowners from mortgage fraud.

“Families are losing their homes, while those who perpetrated crimes and frauds against them walk free,” Harris said.

The Mortgage Fraud Strike Force will be staffed by Department of Justice attorneys and investigators and composed of both civil and criminal enforcement teams.

Harris has tasked the group with monitoring and prosecuting violations at every step of the mortgage process, from the origination of mortgage loans to the promotion of fraudulent foreclosure rescue services to the marketing of mortgage-backed securities (MBS) to the investing public.

Los Angeles Mayor Antonio R. Villaraigosa joined Harris at a press conference announcing the initiative and offered his support of the new strike force.

“With nearly 10,000 foreclosures in the city of Los Angeles last year,” he said, “this strike force is certain to help

countless residents and families from becoming victimized.”

“The fingerprints of illegal activity are all over the foreclosure crisis,” said Paul Leonard, director of the Center for Responsible Lending’s California office. “The attorney general’s effort marries the need to punish bad actors for the practices that brought our economy to the brink with the need to eliminate the scam artists who have since attempted to profit from it.”

The attorney general’s office says California has not only been hit hard by the foreclosure crisis, but by predators looking to take advantage of the millions of residents who are underwater on their mortgages, in foreclosure, or at risk of losing their homes.

Last year alone, the attorney general’s office reports there were foreclosure filings against 546,669 California homes, and it is projected that between 2009 and 2012, a total of 2 million California homes will enter the foreclosure process.

Within the last year, the California Department of Justice says it has received thousands of complaints related to foreclosure scams and mortgage servicing practices.

In addition to scams on the default side of the business, the task force will be on the lookout for fraud related to unfair and predatory practices in originating loans, investment and money laundering schemes related to both origination and foreclosure prevention, and misconduct and false claims involving investments and securities tied to subprime mortgages.

The Mortgage Fraud Strike Force will operate out of Department of Justice offices in Los Angeles, Fresno, San Francisco, and Sacramento.

Mortgage Fraud Up 44% in First Quarter: Report

By: Heather Hill Cernoch, 5/17/2011

The first three months of 2011 saw a 44 percent increase in the volume of mortgage fraud case activity, according to industry data released this week. The cases reported represent fraud on an estimated $1.2 billion in real estate loans, rising from $0.9 billion in the final period of last year.

These are the latest findings of the first quarter Mortgage Fraud Index from MortgageDaily.com. The index is based on mortgage fraud case activity tracked at the mortgage fraud blog FraudBlogger.com.

The index, which climbed to 990 from 126 in the fourth quarter of 2010, was still lower than 1,144, which was recorded for the first quarter of 2010.

“We’re seeing signs that repurchases are responsible for some of the latest increase,” said MortgageDaily.com founder and publisher, Sam Garcia. “Smaller firms that are forced to buy back loans from housing agencies or correspondent lenders are doing their own investigations and uncovering more fraudulent activity.”

Florida had the highest index at 130 followed by California and New York. California had the highest dollar amount with nearly $0.3 billion in mortgages associated with first-quarter case activity.

“The average quarterly index peaked in 2009 at 1,676 while loan delinquency also topped out that year,” Garcia said. “But subprime mortgage production peaked in 2005, suggesting an average lag time of around four years from when the actual fraud occurred to when the criminal case is prosecuted.”

According to Mortgage Daily, the report indicates that prosecution of mortgage fraud occurs around four years after the crime.

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.

The Banks Covered by the Consent Orders

Bank of America: Federal Reserve, OCC

Wells Fargo: Federal Reserve, OCC

JPMorgan Chase: Federal Reserve, OCC

GMAC (aka Ally): Federal Reserve and FDIC

OneWest (aka IndyMac): OTS

U.S. Bank: Federal Reserve, OCC

Aurora: OTS

SunTrust: Federal Reserve

MetLife: Federal Reserve, OCC

Sovereign Bank: OTS

EverBank: OTS

Resources

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!

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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.


Fund Legal Assistance for Homeowners Now!

“Are There Government Barriers to the Housing Market Recovery?”  Is the title of the Testimony of Julia Gordon, Center for Responsible Lending, before members of congress February 16th 2011

Within this congressional testimony we find important recommendations the most critical in my opinion is…

“Level the playing field in court by funding legal assistance for homeowners.”

But if you wait for Congress to level the playing field it will already be too late.  So please find an attorney willing to litigate the end game which includes the professional fees incurred to reach an agreement predicated on an affordable sustainable settlement for you, the at risk homeowner.

Here are some of the other recommendations that the Center for Responsible Lending made to congress and we should all consider…

  1. Mandate loss mitigation prior to foreclosure.
  2. In making changes that impact housing finance and mortgage origination going forward, consider the needs of first-time home buyers and customers from low wealth backgrounds who have the ability to repay safe and sustainable loans.
  3. Level the playing field in court by funding legal assistance for homeowners.
  4. Ensure that homeowners receiving mortgage debt forgiveness or modifications do not find their new financial security undermined by a burdensome tax bill.
  5. Change the bankruptcy code to permit modifications of mortgages on principal residences.

For deeper understanding of what this group is advocating please refer to the written testimony attached…

Gordon-HFS-Biggert-testimony-final

MainStreet Resolutions is collaborating with a trusted network of attorneys and real estate professionals dedicated to achieving the highest level of results possible for deserving at risk home owners.  If you feel you are a legitimate victim please contact us to access the most expert help available.

TLA

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.

5 Elements of Foreclosure Defense

The key concept each of these items provide is leverage.  All of the elements listed below may or may not be appropriate for any individual case.  As long as an at risk homeowner has tried to do the right thing and been a victimized either by design, default, or circumstances legal defense is appropriate and right.  That being said there are only a handful of attorneys and professionals that are using all of the weapons in a concerted stratagem.

  1. Counter Suites
  2. Fair Housing Complaints
  3. Professional Liability Errors and Omission claims
  4. Bankruptcy
  5. Civil Action

Smart home owners with smart lawyers using due diligence analytics and the will to litigate are going to make the banks pay one messy attempted foreclosure at a time.  But act quickly and decisively because the banks you are defending yourself against have unlimited resources and access to the best analytics available to make it difficult.  Use the Powel doctrine as a mantra, Paraphrased… Have a clear political objective; don’t be afraid to go in heavy handed, and don’t apologize for decisive action.

So, take a heavy handed bare fisted approach to bring the fight to the banks and don’t apologize.   With the right leverage the Bank will beg you to take a reasonable offer when an impartial forensic analysis is over.  MERS could very well be proven to have broken the chain of ownership improperly assigning the right to foreclose and removing the legal claim to property as collateral of the debt.

The objective is clear… An affordable payment based on your current income and the legal and professional fees required to confirm the figure has been negotiated fairly. Have the forensics analytics done to help define every element you can use as leverage.

TLA

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.