Monday, May 31, 2010

My Zimbio

Foreclosures- The End Game of Wall Street’s Fraud, Lies and Deceit

Source:Matt Weidner Blog
May 9th, 2010 · 9 Comments · Foreclosure


One of the many problems those who are fighting foreclosures have to deal with is the fact that some judges and most people on the “outside” of the mortgage meltdown don’t understand that the Fat Cats set the mortgages up to fail from the very beginning–because mortgages that were “bad” paid the Fat Cats much more at the outset. Now this is wild and insane stuff….how can mortgages given to people that have no hope of ever paying them (even if the economy didn’t crash)? The answer lies in the lies, greed, fraud and arrogance that dominated Wall Street when these loans were created–a culture that continues to victimize normal Americans today.

If you really want to go insane watch this CBS News report here which details how Goldman Sachs was making millions of dollars by selling “shitty” deals to their institutional investors. It just makes me furious to hear these guys gloating over making millions while at the same time refusing to admit to even the slightest amount of wrongdoing. The homeowners really were on the lowest end of the “dupes” totem pole, but they were not the only ones taken.


The book Chain of Blame details the unholy alliances that were formed between the subprime lenders and Wall Street and how the subprime lenders and Wall Street kept competing with one another to create “shittier” and “shitter” deals. The bottom line is in order to keep making more insane profits, the bad actors had to keep making loans that were increasingly less likely to be paid in the long term because loans that performed would not provide the bigger payouts that came from the bets they made on the back end that the portfolio of loans would fail.

The national media is starting to pick up on this. The quotes below are from a story in today’s St. Petersburg Times.

A central part of Lehman’s business was making and selling “liar’s loans” under its Aurora subsidiary. It was a suicidal enterprise. These kinds of loans, where borrowers have an incentive to inflate income or assets, are set up to fail. Black estimates that every dollar lent on a liar’s loan loses 50 to 85 cents.

In the short term, making these loans produces significant apparent but fictional income — and correspondingly huge bonuses for executives. Only later do the loans create real catastrophic losses for those holding them.

Lehman was the world leader in originating these loans. In the first six months of 2007, Aurora was lending more than $3 billion a month of subprime and liar’s loans. This guaranteed senior management extraordinary paydays. Even as the fall was becoming evident, the firm’s CEO and chairman, Richard Fuld, was awarded $40 million in total compensation for 2007. (Much of it in stock that later became worthless.)

Undoubtedly, the firm’s top executives knew that making fraudulent loans was its primary source of income. But Lehman assiduously attempted to hide that fact, classifying its liar’s loans as “prime” loans in disclosures, Black says. Had Lehman disclosed the true nature of the loans it was selling, no one would buy them and the firm would have been found out as insolvent.

To various degrees this kind of deceit was the business model of every player in the subprime mortgage lending and securities market: every bank that loaned money without documenting a borrower’s credit worthiness, every firm that securitized loans without examining the lender’s loan files, every accounting and law firm that helped fudge disclosures, and every credit rating agency that rated a mortgage-related security as safe without sampling the underlying loans.


So what’s all this got to do with the little ‘ole homeowner sitting in foreclosure today?

One of the most important things we’ve all got to understand, and a key point we’ve got to make sure our judges start to understand, is that the very same lies, fraud, greed and unethical conduct that is now being exposed on such a massive scale in Wall Street and in Washington has migrated into our courtrooms.

Many judges and attorneys still cling to a naive and antiquated professional worldview wherein attorneys, as officers of the court, remembered that they are officers of the court and do not make false statements or engage in misleading practices before the court. The problem is the entire foreclosure system is now functioning based on fabricated documents, forged documents, false and misleading statements and gross violations of the most basic ethical standards. Two documents that are part of nearly every foreclosure file illustrate this point.

1)The affidavits of amounts due and owing that are filed in nearly every case do not meet the most basic evidentiary standards and they cannot be relied upon as evidence to grant foreclosure.

2)The assignments of mortgages or endorsements that are filed in nearly every case are either outright improper on their face (such as when the assignment post-dates filing of the suit) or questionable such as endorsements that “appear” on documents from failed or defunct subprime lenders that ceased functioning years ago.

Advocates and judges have only recently become aware of just how failed this whole system is. Some judges are just covering their eyes, holding their noses and continuing to grant foreclosures despite the growing body of evidence that the law firms and the clients they represent are engaged in such widespread and systemic improper practices. This will all come back to haunt every American for decades to come. The biggest problem is this represents a fundamental breakdown in the rule of law. Courtrooms and judges are no longer owed respect and honor and fear…the pressures placed on our courts have turned them into fast food flop houses operating in servitude to the Millionaire Foreclosure Mills. The only real objective is to plow through these hundreds of thousands of foreclosures as quickly as possible so that the foreclosure mills and their clients can continue to make millions.

Ignore long established rules of evidence

Ignore new rules of the Supreme Court of Florida

Ignore blatant and not so blatant fraud

Ignore expectations of professionalism and respect for judges and the courts by Millionaire Foreclosure Mills that have decided their profits are more important than treating the courts with respect.

There is one thing missing from this whole calculus and that is the fact that these practices and procedures are producing failed titles to property. In the rush to plow through all these foreclosures, we’re creating a nightmarish scene of destruction where title to real property will be thrown into chaos for decades to come. Some judges get it (do a google search for New York Judge Schack) and many, many more will get it in the decades to come when we title lawyers come back before them to vacate judgments of foreclosure that were improperly granted. That’s enough for this morning, but obviously much more of this to come.
 

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