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View Full Version : Bank of America halts ALL foreclosure sales



Ares
8th October 2010, 09:08 AM
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Bank of America is halting foreclosure sales in all 50 states as part of a widening investigation into flaws in the process, the company announced Friday.

The announcement came a week after the nation's largest bank said it was freezing home foreclosures in 23 states where foreclosures must be approved by the courts. Friday's announcement by Bank of America extends a review of foreclosure documents to all states, regardless of the required legal processes.

"Our ongoing assessment shows the basis for our past foreclosure decisions is accurate," said Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500) spokesman Dan Frahm in an e-mailed statement. "We continue to serve the interests of our customers, investors and communities."

The announcement came two days after JPMorgan Chase (JPM, Fortune 500) said it will also halt foreclosures for about 56,000 homeowners after learning that its employees may have approved foreclosures without personally reviewing loan files.

JP Morgan Chase had no comment on Friday's announcement by Bank of America.

Ally Financial, previously known as GMAC, the finance arm of General Motors, has also paused foreclosures in the 23 states.
0:00 /1:59FDIC's Bair: Paradigm shift needed

On Thursday, the White House said that President Obama won't sign a bill that could have made it easier for courts to clear foreclosures. The bill would have required federal and state courts to recognize documents that were notarized in other states.

In addition to action on the federal level, state attorneys general have stepped up pressure on banks in recent days after it was revealed that some bank employees had signed foreclosure affidavits without verifying that the documents were accurate, a process now known as "robo-signing."

Ohio's attorney general has filed a lawsuit against Ally Financial and its subsidiary GMAC Mortgage for allegedly submitting fraudulent documents in hundreds of foreclosure cases across the state. To top of page

http://money.cnn.com/2010/10/08/real_estate/bank_america_50/index.htm

joe_momma
8th October 2010, 09:15 AM
I'm looking for the Federal Government to call a "Do Over" - these mortgages have been bundled, default swapped, and derived to the point where no one can untangle them.

I'm not sure how they'll un-cluster this clusterf*ck, but am certain that the taxpayer will be screwed.

Ares
8th October 2010, 09:20 AM
I'm looking for the Federal Government to call a "Do Over" - these mortgages have been bundled, default swapped, and derived to the point where no one can untangle them.

I'm not sure how they'll un-cluster this clusterf*ck, but am certain that the taxpayer will be screwed.


I found this on another site:

I have been researching the mortgage industry for some time now. The foreclosure fraud that is currently in the news has brought to light some fantastic revelations that everyone paying a mortgage needs to know about and look into.

1. MERS, which is the acronym for Mortgage Electronic Recording System, is a total fraud and is completly illegal and decoupled from the legal system of recording property transferrs in the local court house as required by law!

2. Look on your mortgage document and see if you are in the MERS system.

3. If so, call or write your mortgage company and tell them you would like verification in writing of:

A. Any title assingments to third parties
B. Verification that your payments are going to the current holder of your note.
C. A "blue ink" copy of your original agreement

After the stammering stops on the other end, I think you will find that mortgages in the MERS system are a complete fraud. Not only do you not know if your payments are going to the correct party, the mortgage company, more than likely, never recorded your title assignment in the local court house. This means they have no legal document to make you pay or to foreclose on your property.

chad
8th October 2010, 09:37 AM
QE2 is now assured. the banks need money from somewhere. now that they can't steal your house, they'll get it from you another way.

gunDriller
8th October 2010, 09:43 AM
I'm looking for the Federal Government to call a "Do Over" - these mortgages have been bundled, default swapped, and derived to the point where no one can untangle them.

I'm not sure how they'll un-cluster this clusterf*ck, but am certain that the taxpayer will be screwed.


since the US gov. is acting as the Buyer of Last Resort on these properties, that means they are in the housing rental business, whether they like it or not.

my suggestion is to let the bankers - and the pension funds - take it on the chin, which means bankruptcies and writedowns. for the retirees depending on those pension funds, it means
A/ camping trips instead of trips to Hawaii
B/ maybe they'll get smart about where they park their investment funds - and buy some PM's & some mining companies ?

in the meantime, it seems logical for the US gov. to rent out the facilities to people who need a place to stay. with some kind of incentive not to trash the place.

it reminds me of those old TV shows, "Green Acres" (city people living in the country), "Beverly Hillbillies" (country people living in Beverly Hills). except now it's homeless people and sub-prime borrowers and unemployed people living in McMansions built during the real estate bubble.

ximmy
8th October 2010, 11:30 AM
QE2 is now assured. the banks need money from somewhere. now that they can't steal your house, they'll get it from you another way.


It's really this simple... why should our bank gods suffer any profit loss by bankrupt homeowners... (and the hiring of extra staff for foreclosure processes)

they are waiting for another bailout... so end of the year profits stay high...

EE_
8th October 2010, 06:48 PM
What does it say when every member of the house and senate unanimously votes to cover up this fraud?

Congressional Chickens

It would have been political suicide for the President to have signed that bill and he knows it, thus the "pocket veto". But how in the hell did such a bill pass Congress in the first place?

The answer is the chickens in both houses of Congress passed the "Interstate Recognition of Notarizations Act" by voice vote.

In a blatant act of galling chicken behavior here is the result.

Apr 27, 2010: This bill passed in the House of Representatives by voice vote. A record of each representative’s position was not kept.

Sep 27, 2010: This bill passed in the Senate by Unanimous Consent. A record of each senator’s position was not kept.

Just about two weeks ago, the country’s fourth largest lender, GMAC announced it was suspending foreclosure and eviction actions in 23 states, including Ohio. The reason? A document processor for the company admitted he had approved 10,000 foreclosure documents a month without even reading them.
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2010/10/sec-failure-to-regulate-mbs-resulted-in.html