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14 de diciembre de 2010

Families Exchange Homes to Stop Foreclosure


SAN JOSE, Calif.Dec. 14, 2010 /PRNewswire/ -- Home Lease Exchange, LLC, through ForceYourLenderToModify.com, is launching a unique free service today that will aid hundreds of thousands of families, who are in jeopardy of losing their homes, by forcing lenders to decide between becoming landlords or modifying mortgages.

9 de diciembre de 2010


New Jersey Court Decision May Be Unique, but Still Bad for BofA and RMBS



Written by
David Fanger
Senior Vice President
David.Fanger@moodys.com
and

Yehudah Forster
Vice President - Senior Analyst
Yehudah.Forster@moodys.com
For:
MOODY ’S  RESI   LANDSCAPE, Dec. 9, 2010 Issue





On 16 November, a bankruptcy court in New Jersey dismissed Bank of America’s (BofA, Aa3 negative, C-/Baa2 stable) claim for standing to enforce a mortgage originated and securitized by Countrywide in 2006. The judge concluded Countrywide had failed to properly endorse and transfer possession of the mortgage note to the securitization’s trustee, leaving it unenforceable under New Jersey law. Last week BofA was reported in the press as saying that the facts upon which the judge based her conclusion may not have been correct.
We believe the case will lead to increased litigation, higher servicing costs, and more foreclosure delays. This will pressure BofA’s earnings. Increased foreclosure timelines and costs associated with potentially defective loans will also increase losses for Countrywide-sponsored RMBS. This is negative for both BofA and Countrywide-sponsored RMBS.

17 de noviembre de 2010

La ACLU envia cartas reclamando acceso abierto a los casos de ejecuciones hipotecarias

ACLU: Letters Regarding Open Access To Florida State Foreclosure Court Proceedings

15 de noviembre de 2010

La ACLU pide a los jueces de la Florida acceso abierto a los casos de ejecuciones hipotecarias

ACLU Calls On Florida Judges To Ensure State Foreclosure Court Proceedings Are Open To Public

2 de noviembre de 2010

Miles de demandas de ejecuciones hipotecarias resueltas en 3 meses

65,830 foreclosure cases in Florida cleared in three months

11/02/2010 © Palm Beach Post
By Kimberly Miller

Florida's courts cleared 65,830 foreclosure cases in a three-month period beginning July 1, with 71 percent being decided in quickie hearings before the judge sometimes called "rocket dockets."
According to a report released today by the Office of State Courts Administration, only 23 foreclosure cases went to trial statewide during the same time period.

1 de noviembre de 2010

Oficial del gobierno cuestiona derecho a ejecuciones hipotecarias

Lawmaker Questions Power to Foreclose

By ROBBIE WHELAN
Wall Street Journal
Nov. 1, 2010

A Virginia lawmaker asked the state's attorney general to launch an investigation of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, the middleman firm in millions of court filings that helps keep the mortgage-securitization machine moving.

Robert G. Marshall, a Republican member of the Virginia House of Delegates, requested that Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli determine whether the Reston, Va., company violates state law because it doesn't pay a fee every time a loan changes hands.


30 de octubre de 2010

Juez desestima cientos de demandas de ejecuciones hipotecarias en cuestión de horas

Judge: 357 idle foreclosure suits gone in 2 1/2 hours

10/30/2010 © Bradenton Herald

MANATEE — The foreclosure case was filed in March 2007. Within a month, all of the parties were served with copies of the suit.
Then, nothing.
No reply from the homeowner. No filings nor hearings set by the bank’s attorney.
The court case sat idle for the next 3 1/2 years, seemingly forgotten among the thousands of foreclosures clogging the legal system.
That was until Thursday, when Manatee County Circuit Court Judge Paul E. Logan dismissed it for inactivity.

28 de octubre de 2010

Propietarios en el condado Lee presentan demanda contra suba de costos de las ejecuciones hipotecarias

Lee suit to fight foreclosure fees

10/28/2010 © Ft. Myers News-Press

Three Lee County property owners who say they are being priced out of the court system will file a lawsuit today against top Florida officials, arguing a 2009 law that raised the cost of foreclosure lawsuit filings is unconstitutional.
The lawsuit will be filed in federal court in Fort Myers on behalf of Kevin Camm, Enneis Haney and Yuyuan Lucy Lu, all of whom are involved in foreclosure lawsuits in Lee County.
The three are attempting to file a class-action lawsuit to stop enforcement of the law.
The defendants are Gov. Charlie Crist, Attorney General Bill McCollum, Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink, Agriculture Commissioner Charles Bronson, the Florida Cabinet and the Florida Department of Revenue.

Abogado de "rescate" de ejecuciones hipotecarias acusado de falsificar documentos

Foreclosure lawyer accused of forgery

10/28/2010 © Miami Herald

A Coral Springs lawyer who worked for a troubled foreclosure rescue company is facing a criminal probe for allegedly forging court documents.

BY DAVID OVALLE

State authorities are investigating allegations that a Coral Springs lawyer forged the signatures of Broward County judges while working with a disgraced foreclosure assistance company, court documents show.
The lawyer, Frank J. Ingrassia, worked with Outreach Housing, which is accused of siphoning more than $2 million from desperate homeowners, according to a search warrant filed in Miami-Dade court this month.

27 de octubre de 2010

Dúo de WPB crea firma de datos sobre ejecuciones hipotecarias

West Palm Beach duo builds foreclosure data-filtering firm

10/27/2010 © The Palm Beach Post

WEST PALM BEACH — They say they’re just two guys with laptops and a water cooler.
But the electronic system of collecting and organizing judicial records that Jay Hollenkamp, 28, and Michael Olenick, 44, have created streams data gold to court-hungry customers.
Their West Palm Beach-based company, Legalprise Inc., snatches information from state foreclosure court records and filters it into searchable spreadsheets. For example, they can tally how many times a law firm has requested a summary judgment in a foreclosure case, or how often attorneys file paperwork saying a home’s note is lost.

26 de octubre de 2010

Fannie Mae pide a firma de abogados detener casos de ejecuciones hipotecarias pendientes

Fannie Mae asks Florida law firm to hold cases

10/26/2010 © Florida Today

ORLANDO - Fannie Mae has asked a Florida law firm under investigation by state
officials for fabricating foreclosure documents to put on hold all the cases involving the
government-controlled mortgage buyer.

Fannie Mae today also asked the Law Offices of David Stern to stop setting up
hearings for Fannie Mae cases. Spokeswoman Amy Bonitatibus said Fannie Mae was working
closely with their regulator on this matter. Last week, the Florida Attorney General's Office released the deposition of a former assistant at the law firm who testified that the office manager for the foreclosure department would sign 1,000 files a day without reviewing them. The office manager also would allow
paralegals to sign her name for her when she got tired, the former assistant said.

23 de octubre de 2010

Estiman que mercado inmobiliario sufre por congelamiento de ejecuciones hipotecarias

Freeze souring house deals

10/23/2010 © Daytona Beach News-Journal

DAYTONA BEACH -- So far, major banks freezing parts of the foreclosure process have caused some lost or delayed house sales in the Volusia-Flagler market, real-estate officials said this week.
"It's a strong knee-jerk reaction by the lenders, and it's too strong," said Aswin Suri, owner of Exit Realty of Daytona. "We had a deal with a bank that's not even among the ones freezing foreclosures, and it was about to close when it was held up because of the freeze."
Still, investigations of mishandled foreclosures are continuing across the country.

El Sur de la Florida en el centro de creciente debacle por ejecuciones hipotecarias

South Florida at center of growing foreclosure legal mess

10/23/2010 © South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Does this sound familiar? South Florida lawyer from humble origins presides over a rapidly expanding business empire. He spends lavishly along the way, with a fleet of expensive sports cars, million-dollar waterfront properties and yachts, including one named "Misunderstood."
He has a trusted female aide, whom former co-workers say got generous perks, including a luxury car, a home and personal bills paid by the firm.
No, I'm not talking about Scott Rothstein, the attention-seeking Ponzi schemer.
I'm describing David J. Stern, a publicity-evading attorney headquartered in Plantation who has gotten rich from America's mortgage meltdown.
Stern, who hasn't been accused of any wrongdoing, doesn't deal in fictitious legal settlements but painfully real foreclosures.
Tons of them.

21 de octubre de 2010

Abogado David J Stern renuncia a la presidencia de su bufete

Foreclosure attorney Stern leaves as chairman of subsidiary firm

10/21/2010 © South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Plantation foreclosure attorney David J. Stern, who is under investigation by state regulators over his law firm's alleged mishandling of tens of thousands of foreclosure documents, has left his position as chairman of the subsidiary company that handles most of his law firm's paperwork, the Securities and Exchange Commission said.
The SEC disclosure came Wednesday as calls increased for The Florida Bar, which is also investigating Stern's operations, to use its state constitutional authority to regulate attorneys' conduct and take steps to discipline law firms that have become what some say are "foreclosure mills."
"The Bar should step up and regulate this. It must insist that attorneys involved in handling foreclosures comply with the rules of the court," said Diane Thompson, an attorney with the National Consumer Law Center who is an expert on mortgages.

Procurador General de la Florida se involucra en la crisis de ejecuciones inmobiliarias

Florida's foray into the foreclosure crisis

10/21/2010 © South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial

For a short-timer, Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum has a lot on his plate, particularly when it comes to residential and commercial foreclosures. News of unscrupulous lending practices, coupled with the examination of those practices by lenders, resonates in a state that relies so heavily on real estate for growth and jobs. So it was a relief that McCollum last week joined counterparts in the other 49 states in scrutinizing banks, mortgage companies and loan servicers involved in the debilitating foreclosure crisis. He has also asked for a meeting with major lenders that have curtailed foreclosure procedures to assess how big an impact a foreclosure moratorium could have on Florida.
The reality is that the impact could be huge. Half of Florida's housing sales currently involve foreclosed properties, and if that pipeline is shut off for a long period of time, it would prolong hopes for an economic recovery in the Sunshine State. For that reason, McCollum is wise to hold off on any further action, such as encouraging a freeze on foreclosures or initiating lawsuits, at this point.

Opinan que congelamiento de ejecuciones hipotecarias perjudica la ya debilitada economía

Our views: The crisis continues.
Foreclosure moratorium would hurt the still struggling economy

Florida Today editorial
October 21, 2010

During the real estate bubble, lenders wrote mortgages like they were giving away candy on Halloween.
Their irresponsibility nearly sank the economy and now they’re repeating it as the foreclosure crisis continues.
Attorneys general in all 50 states are starting a coordinated probe into inaccurate and fraudulent documents prepared by lenders and their subcontractors in foreclosure suits.
Federal investigators are doing the same.
The problem involves untrained mortgage company and law firm workers who signed hundreds of documents a day without reviewing them, violating laws that require a signed affidavit saying all documents filed were complete and accurate.
As a result, experts say an untold number of people may have been forced from their homes illegally.
Some of the nation’s largest lenders, such as Bank of America and JP Morgan Chase, put a temporary halt on foreclosure sales to address the problem, with the effect rippling along the Space Coast: Brevard County courts, which currently are handling nearly 13,000 foreclosure suits, are reporting a growing number of foreclosure hearings canceled or postponed. The figure reflects just part of the Space Coast’s crisis, where 30,000 foreclosure suits were filed between January 2007 and September 2010.

20 de octubre de 2010

Jueces proponen otra solución antes que un congelamiento de las ejecuciones hipotecarias


No foreclosure moratorium: White House, judges have a better response.


10/20/2010 © Palm Beach Post editorial

From now on, Palm Beach County Chief Judge Peter Blanc says, even when foreclosure
cases are uncontested, banks will have to produce sworn or certified documents to prove that
they have the right to repossess a home. That approach in courts around the country beats a
national foreclosure moratorium.
Since Florida Rules of Civil Procedure require such paperwork, that should have been the case
all along. In light of allegations that attorneys representing lenders and mortgage servicers have been using forged documents, it's more important than ever that judges make them follow the letter of the law. Civil rights organizations and some Democratic lawmakers have called for a nationwide moratorium on foreclosures in response to the alleged fraud. Holding lenders accountable makes more sense.
Judge Blanc admitted to The Post's Kim Miller, however, that in thousands of cases that hasn't happened. "In the past, when affidavits came in on defaults, the judges haven't been requiring the documents because no one was there objecting," Judge Blanc said, noting that 80 percent of the cases are uncontested. "Dealing with the volume we are dealing with, we want to make sure that all our i's are dotted and t's crossed."
Even when the homeowner fails to show up in court, lenders should have to prove their case, because they can collect from defaulting homeowners the balance between what they owe and what the bank gets from selling the home. The records that support lenders' foreclosure claims include details of the loan, borrower fees and payment history that verify how much is owed. In one case, a judge failed to inspect the documents and granted summary judgment to a lender even when the homeowner's attorney objected to the validity.
A summary judgment is a swift ruling made instead of a trial when the facts of the foreclosure are considered irrefutable. The problem has been that, too often, the facts are disputable.
The 50 state attorneys general have opened a joint investigation into whether banks and loan servicers used false documents and signatures to justify hundreds of thousands of foreclosures. The Obama administration's Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force is investigating whether those that did submit flawed paperwork misled federal housing agencies, which own or insure a majority of home loans.
These investigations, coupled with judges taking a more active role, is a practical response as opposed to the political response of calling for a moratorium. A nationwide foreclosure moratorium only would delay the inevitable for most homeowners, and further delay the housing market recovery.
Jack McCabe, a real estate consultant based in Deerfield Beach, favors a moratorium, but admits that it would have a negative effect on the economy. "Forty to 50 percent of sales in the state have been foreclosure sales," he said. With a moratorium, there would be "a large reduction in the number of foreclosure sales, and in sales in the overall market with these foreclosures not being available." Buyers of non-distressed properties might wait, fearing that they are paying too much.
The housing market will not improve until those distressed homes get back onto the market and get sold. The foreclosures must be scrutinized, but they must continue.

- Rhonda Swan, for The Palm Beach Post Editorial Board

Procuradioría General de Florida amonesta a uno de sus abogados por trabajo en foreclosure mill



AG's office reprimands one of its attorneys for "foreclosure mill" work


10/20/2010 © Tampa Tribune

TAMPA - The Florida Attorney General's Office has reprimanded one its attorneys for notarizing documents for one of the "foreclosure mills" the office is investigating. Erin Cullaro, an assistant attorney general for the office's Economic Crimes Division in Tampa, is a former employee of Tampa-based Florida Default Law Group.
The Attorney General is investigating the firm, along with three other Florida firms, for what "appears to be fabricating and/or presenting false and misleading documents in foreclosure cases."
Cullaro was given permission from the Attorney General's Office in April 2008 for dual employment, allowing her to notarize law firm documents for 15 minutes three days a week.
But, according to the written reprimand, Cullaro failed to renew the application into the new fiscal year, "which would have altered the {Attorney General's Office } to your continued outside employment and accurately reflected the time commitment involved."

19 de octubre de 2010

Juez del condado Palm Beach reclama a bancos mas evidencia en demandas de ejecuciones hipotecarias


Palm Beach County judges want more evidence in uncontested foreclosures

10/19/2010 © Palm Beach Post

Thousands of Palm Beach County homes have been repossessed by lenders that failed to follow a court rule requiring evidence be attached to foreclosure affidavits, something judges often allowed to happen when no one contested the case.
After revelations in recent weeks that sworn affidavits from several major banks and home loan servicers may be flawed, Palm Beach County Chief Judge Peter Blanc said banks will increasingly have to prove their foreclosure claims with sworn or certified supporting paperwork.
The 15th Circuit's judges discussed the evidence regulation, outlined in the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure for summary judgments, on Friday. A summary judgment is a swift ruling held in lieu of a full trial. They are requested by bank attorneys when the facts of the foreclosure are considered irrefutable.
"In the past when affidavits came in on defaults, the judges haven't been requiring the documents because no one was there objecting," said Blanc, who added that about 80 percent of foreclosures in the county are not contested. "Dealing with the volume we are dealing with we want to make sure that all or i's are dotted and t's crossed."

Testigos afirman que firma legal ofrecía incentivos por alterar documentos


Witness: Foreclosure firm owner gave gifts for altering documents

10/19/2010 © Tampa Tribune

TAMPA - Some employees of Florida's largest "foreclosure mill" were given jewelry,
cars and houses from the firm, in exchange for altering and forging key documents used to
obtain foreclosures, according to a statement released today by the Florida Attorney General's
Office.
The office released transcripts of two interviews it conducted for its investigation into
the law offices of David J. Stern. The sworn statements were from Kelly Scott, a former
employee of Stern's and Mary R. Cordova, a former employee of G&Z, a process server used
by Stern's office. The women's testimonies appear to back up that of former Stern's employee
Tammie Lou Kapusta, whose statement was released last week. The three statements paint a
picture of a secret system designed to speed up the foreclosure process. Attorneys and staff
members forged signatures, changed dates, passed around notary stamps, the women say in
interviews with attorney general's staff.

La ACLU investiga records publicos para determinar la constitucionalidad de las ejecuciones hipotecarias en Florida

ACLU Seeks Public Records To Determine Constitutionality Of Foreclosure Proceedings In Florida

18 de octubre de 2010

Complicaciones creadas por un posible Foreclosure Freeze


Foreclosure freeze creates major headache for Collier, Lee real estate industry

10/18/2010 © Naples Daily News

Since Oct. 4, banks have withdrawn more than 270 foreclosure homes from the Fort Myers multiple listing service, or MLS. In the Naples market, there have been about 120 listings pulled from the MLS during the past week.

NAPLES —For years, Mike Donnelly has dreamed of owning his own home. His dream was about to come true, until his closing was abruptly halted last week by the seller, Fannie Mae.
“I was heartbroken,” said Donnelly, 52. “I thought, ‘You’re kidding me.’ It’s the perfect dream house.”
Fannie Mae, the seller, stopped the closing because of concerns over the title. The servicer on the defaulted loan was Countrywide, now part of Bank of America. Earlier this month, Bank of America announced it was putting a chill on foreclosure sales in 50 states because of concerns over faulty documents. Other major lenders, including Ally and JP Morgan Chase, also have suspended some foreclosure sales, as they review their procedures following criticisms that they improperly took homes away from struggling borrowers.

Presentan declaración jurada en investigación a abogados de ejecuciones hipotecarias

Attorney General Bill McCollum News Release

October 18, 2010
Media Contact: Jennifer Krell Davis
Phone: (850) 245-0150


El Procurador General, Bill McCollum, publicó hoy otras tres declaraciones juradas en las investigaciones en curso sobre los Bufetes de Abogados Marshall C. Watson, P.A. y David J. Stern, P.A. por su supuesta participación en la fabricación de documentación y posterior presentación de la misma ante los tribunales en acciones de ejecución hipotecaria para obtener sentencias definitivas contra los propietarios de las viviendas. La oficina continuará publicando las declaraciones a medida que éstas lleguen.

17 de octubre de 2010


Did circuit judge do too much homework?

10/17/2010 © Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Column by Tom Lyons
Published: Sunday, October 17, 2010.

Since I liked her reprimand of a law firm that handles foreclosure cases by the bushel basket, I'm biased in favor of Circuit Judge Janette Dunnigan.
So f I were a judge assigned to review the propriety of that reprimand, I'd need to recuse myself. I wanted to find the law firm guilty as soon as I read that Dunnigan cited the lawyers there for contempt and assessed them a fine. But anyone familiar with the work of foreclosure mills in general should be biased against them.
Such firms have become infamous for filing documents signed by robo-signers, often clerks who use fancy titles that make them sound important but who have little idea what is in the thousands of documents they put their signatures on to attest to their accuracy and truth.

16 de octubre de 2010

Nuevo programa de mediación en ejecuciones hipotecarias deberá mejorar negociaciones

New foreclosure mediation program to improve communication

10/16/2010 © Polk County Democrat

By MARY CANNADAY

With Florida having the highest inventory of foreclosed homes in the nation, The Florida Supreme Court assembled a committee of 15 people in 2009 to come up with possible solutions. Poor communication between buyers and lenders hinders the foreclosure process and for borrowers, lack of information is common. The Task Force on Residential Mortgage Foreclosure Cases concluded that early case management and mediation would save time and in some cases avoid foreclosure.

The court then ruled that home lenders must spell out the foreclosure process to borrowers and must give them the opportunity to meet with a mediator, lender representative and other key officials to try to hammer out a new agreement. The goal is to reduce the stockpile of empty, foreclosed homes; to help motivated borrowers keep their property and to loosen the stranglehold on Florida’s courts.


The new law kicked in on July 1 requiring that mediation be offered in all foreclosure cases. Cases pending before that date can mediate also, but must apply. The lender pays for the service.
Local mediation programs are supervised by the Collins Center for Public Policy in Tallahassee. The Central Florida Mediation Group LLC, on U.S. Highway 98 South, coordinates the operation for the 10th Judicial Circuit, comprising Polk, Highlands and Hardee counties.

15 de octubre de 2010

Firma legal de Fort Lauderdale en problemas con corte local


Fort Lauderdale law firm in trouble with local court
10/15/2010 © Bradenton Herald

MANATEE — A Fort Lauderdale law firm fined $49,000 for not following Manatee
County Circuit Court rules has gotten itself into even more hot water with court officials.
The judge who fined Smith, Hiatt & Diaz P.A. dismissed one of its subsequent filings
because it contained several illegible signatures, court records show. And the firm didn’t pay
the required filing fee when it asked an appeals court to review Judge Janette Dunnigan’s
sanctions.
Roy A. Diaz, the partner representing the firm in the issue, did not return voice mails
left Wednesday and Thursday. In a Sept. 2 order, Dunnigan found the firm in “deliberate, willful and flagrant” civil contempt of court in a 2007 foreclosure case. She was upset with the firm, which represented the bank in the case, for setting several court hearings and not showing up or not properly canceling them in a timely manner. Dunnigan also scolded the firm for several incidences of not filing required documents.

Crisis hipotecaria atrae nueva forma de "flipping"

Crisis yields a new brand of flipping
10/15/2010 © Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Homes that fell into foreclosure during the housing collapse are being marketed as bank-owned, even though the homes have been purchased by private sellers who are flipping the property for a profit.
In its most common form, private sellers -- in some cases the Realtor listing the home -- still state "foreclosure" and "bank-owned" in yard signs, on websites and in the official real estate listings database.
It is unclear precisely how widespread this new brand of flipping is. But Realtors have a name for it -- "fauxclosures" -- because it centers on homes that once were bank-owned.
The phenomenon is so common now because of the huge proportion of distressed sales in the market -- more than 50 percent -- and the hunger for those types of deals among buyers, said Chip Waterman, a Coldwell Banker agent who has sold distressed properties in Southwest Florida for the last 30 years.
"Using the word 'foreclosure' in the lead of your listing or ad indicates to any buyer looking for that great deal that it is the fabulous buy they have been looking for," Waterman said.

Abogados de Orlando procesados por cobrar anticipo en modificaciones de hipotecas

Attorney General Bill McCollum News Release

October 15, 2010
Media Contact: Jennifer Krell Davis
Phone: (850) 245-0150


TALLAHASSEE (FL) – El Procurador General, Bill McCollum, anunció hoy que su oficina obtuvo una sentencia que le adjudica $4.3 millones de dólares en demanda contra la que se considera la mayor operación de modificación de préstamos de Florida Central. El fallo de hoy condena a Wineberg, Lopez & Rodriguez, y a sus propietarios, Wineberg, Rodríguez, h. y Freddie Lopez, Sr. por violaciones a la Ley de Prevención del Fraude en las Ejecuciones Hipotecarias de Florida. El fallo fue dictado por el Tribunal de Circuito del condado de Orange.

14 de octubre de 2010

PB Post: El Robin Hood de los dueños de casa lucha contra los gigantes de las ejecuciones hipotecarias

Homeowners' Robin Hood fights foreclosure giants


10/14/2010 © Palm Beach Post

Tom Ice was a desert boy who wanted to be Jacques Cousteau. He earned the degree and everything, leaving his home in Santa Fe, N.M., to study ocean engineering at the University of Miami.

But the former high school debater had an inexplicable change of heart, one that led him from the rhythmic comfort of the ocean to the tense arguments of the courtroom. Ice, 50, has emerged as a Robin Hood of sorts in the tangled world of foreclosures, representing homeowners and fighting powerful law firms backed by big banks.

From his West Palm Beach home - he doesn't have an office at his firm in Ice's legal wrangling is largely recognized for contributing to the nationwide suspension of foreclosures enacted by several major lenders. On Wednesday, attorneys general from every state launched a nationwide probe of loan servicers.

Ice credits his engineering background for his attention to detail and years of litigating for his tenacity. He was trained, he said, to doubt everything the other side says and "look under every rock." What he and his wife, Ariane, found buried under boulders of foreclosure paperwork were backdated documents, affidavits sworn to by bank employees processing thousands of foreclosures a month, and questionable assignments of mortgages coming out of the Mortgage Electronic Registration System, or MERS.

Los jueces deberan escuchar a los dueños en casos de ejecución hipotecaria

Before foreclosing, judges must hear out homeowners
Polyana da Costa
Daily Business Review
October 14, 2010

In a ruling likely to create more headaches for lenders, a state appeals court
Wednesday ruled that judges can't give banks the go-ahead to foreclose until they respond to
defenses raised by homeowners.
A three-judge panel of the 4th District Court of Appeal said that Broward Circuit Judge
Peter Weinstein erred when he granted Deutsche Bank a $337,000 summary judgment against
Margate residents Judith Alejandre and Sergio Terron, even though the bank ignored their
defenses. His decision allowed Deutsche to take title to the couple's property and evict them in
February.
The case has been sent back to the trial court.

Juez de Palm Beach niega al Procurador General pedido sobre "Foreclosure Mills"


Palm Beach judge denies state's request in "foreclosure mill firm" case
Ruling says Florida Bar and courts, not state regulators, have jurisdiction

Diane C. Lade
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
1:41 PM EDT, October 14, 2010

A Palm Beach County judge will not allow the Florida Attorney General's request for
documents that would bolster its investigation of one of the state's largest foreclosure law
firms, saying The Florida Bar and the courts were responsible for regulating attorneys.
Circuit Judge Jack S. Cox on Thursday denied the state's request for a rehearing on the case involving Shapiro & Fishman, of Boca Raton, one of three South Florida foreclosure firms under state investigation since August. Two of the three have been fighting the Attorney General Bill McCollum's original subpoenas for extensive documents involving the firms employees, investments and clients over the past five years.
Gerald Richman, the attorney representing Shapiro & Fishman, had filed a motion to quash the subpoenas, arguing McCollum had no jurisdiction. Cox agreed last week, adding the request was overbroad, vague and unduly burdensome.

13 de octubre de 2010

Campaña multiestatal para reglamentar servicios de hipotecas

Attorney General Bill McCollum News Release

October 13, 2010
Media Contact: Jennifer Krell Davis
Phone: (850) 245-0150


TALLAHASSEE (FL) – El Procurador General, Bill McCollum, anunció hoy que se está llevando a cabo una campaña para reglamentar los servicios de hipotecas y proteger a los floridanos de supuestas prácticas engañosas y desleales. El Procurador General McCollum y otros 49 procuradores generales participan en una operación multiestatal destinada a detener a los prestamistas hipotecarios en la supuesta presentación de declaraciones juradas o la firma de notificaciones que parecen tener defectos de procedimiento en ejecuciones judiciales o extrajudiciales.

12 de octubre de 2010

Miami Herald reporta demanda ya presentada contra David J Stern


Challenges mount at law firm
10/12/2010 © Miami Herald

A Plantation-based law firm is struggling to deal with a state investigation and foreclosure
freezes that threaten its bottom line.

By Toluse Olorunnipa
tolorunnipa@MiamiHerald.com

The Law Offices of David Stern, which rode a wave of growth by processing foreclosures during the financial crisis, is now dealing with its own distress, as the foreclosure freeze has added to the firm's growing list of problems.
On Tuesday, the law firm's lawyers plan to challenge a state investigation into Stern's
foreclosure practices in Broward County circuit court.
Florida's attorney general's office, leading the state's investigation of Stern and three other
foreclosure law firms, announced Monday that it would press forward with its probe, despite a
Palm Beach County judge's ruling against the state inquiry last week. Attorney General Bill
McCollum also said he was joining 39 other states in a national investigation of shoddy
foreclosure practices.

Ejecuciones hipotecarias continuan a pesar del anuncio hecho por bancos


Lee County foreclosures continue
10/13/2010 © Ft. Myers News-Press

Two giant lenders who said they’re freezing foreclosures nationwide are conducting business as usual at the Lee County Courthouse.
JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Bank of America Corp., along with some smaller lenders, have announced that they were holding off on court-based foreclosures until they could sort out issues with them, such as whether attorneys actually read all the paperwork.
But in Lee County, court records show both of those banks have continued to get court judgments allowing the sale of mortgages on foreclosed houses at public auction.
That’s despite statements from both banks that they stopped doing that about two weeks ago.
April Charney, a Jacksonville-area legal aid attorney who’s an expert on foreclosure issues, said she’s hearing similar reports from around the country.

Procuradores Generales de Florida y otros 39 estados investigan crisis de ejecuciones hipotecarias


General joins 39 states investigating foreclosure crisis
10/12/2010 © South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum has joined top regulators from 39 other states in scrutinizng the banks, mortgage companies and loan servicers involved in the widening foreclosure crisis.
But McCollum stopped short of calling for some or all lenders to temporarily halt to foreclosures, short sales or evictions — something attorneys general in Massachusettes, Texas and some other states have done within the past week.
"While this is no doubt a serious matter, there still exist valid foreclosures that need not be delayed," said Ryan Wiggins, McCollum's spokeswoman.
Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller, who is leading the State Foreclosure Prevention Working Group that Florida joined, last week asked that foreclosures by three major lenders be stalled in that state: the GMAC Mortgage unit of Ally Financial, Bank of America, and JPMorgan Chase.

11 de octubre de 2010

Apelan fallo en caso Shapiro & Fishman LLP y otros abogados investigados

Attorney General Bill McCollum News Release

October 11, 2010
Media Contact: Jennifer Krell Davis
Phone: (850) 245-0150


El Procurador General Bill McCollum apeló hoy el fallo de la semana pasada del Juez de Circuito, Judge Cox, que determina que el Procurador General no puede investigar el bufete Shapiro & Fishman por su presunta participación en la presentación ante la justicia de documentos falsos en acciones de ejecución hipotecaria con el fin de obtener sentencias definitivas contra los propietarios. El Procurador General está investigando actualmente cuatro bufetes, The Law Offices de Marshall C. Watson, P.A.; Shapiro & Fishman, LLP, The Law Offices de David J. Stern, P.A., y Florida Default Law Group, PL por la supuesta implementación de estas prácticas.

"Rocket Docket" rushing foreclosures, lawyers say
10/11/2010 © Florida Times-Union
By Roger Bull

The cases go quickly through the conference room on the fifth floor of the Duval
County Courthouse. That's where a special foreclosure court has been set up to hear
foreclosures and nothing but.
With 15,000 open foreclosure cases in Duval County, it's staffed by retired judges with
a goal of resolving 25 cases an hour, leading some critics to label it the "Rocket Docket," and
there are harsher descriptions as well. "The fundamental problem," said Chip Parker, an attorney who specializes in foreclosure defense, "is that for the first time, this court was created with the specific goal of reducing foreclosures 62 percent."
"If they find for the defendant, the plaintiffs [usually lenders] just refile," he said. "The
only way to reduce [the case load] is to give it to the plaintiff. It's designed with a result in mind, and that's not how justice is supposed to work."
With millions of Americans facing foreclosure, much of the foreclosure process itself is
in well-publicized disarray. At least seven states are investigating allegations of wrongdoing
involving bogus signatures and missing documents.
On Friday, Bank of America announced that it was stopping foreclosures in all 50
states after evidence that employees and lawyers signed documents without verifying them.
JP Morgan Chase & Co and Ally Financial have stopped foreclosure proceedings in some states
after similar evidence surfaced.
Several cases have been tossed out by Florida judges who found fraud. Duval Circuit
Judge Jean Johnson declared that one South Florida law firm under investigation, Shapiro &
Fishman, had "committed fraud on this court" on behalf of Chase. She dismissed the case in
August, finding in favor of Parker's client, because of fraudulent documents.
"We have not encountered any fraud yet," said Judge A.C. Soud who is in charge of
the newly created foreclosure division. "If we encountered fraud, it would go to [State
Attorney] Angela Corey, I can tell you that."
The special foreclosure courts that began operating July 1 are funded by $9.6 million
budgeted by the state Legislature.
In the Fourth Circuit, four judges rotate in Jacksonville, one at a time working a fourday week. Clay and Nassau counties each have one judge working two days a week.
So far, they have been losing ground: There were 12,104 open cases in Duval County
on July 1, now there are 15,088. But Soud said the court started slowly because banks were
not ready to proceed in July.
But now, with all the questions, Soud said plaintiffs are now cancelling their hearings,
including 40 to 50 that had been set for Thursday, to verify their documentation.
Starting in January, Soud plans to add a second judge for two days a week in
Jacksonville and reduce the staffing in Clay and Nassau to just one day a week.
The goal, Soud said, is to resolve 25 cases per hour, which includes uncontested cases
which make up 98 percent of them. Usually, it's lawyers who come to the conference to
present their motions, but occasionally, a homeowner comes to represent himself.
The court, like other foreclosure courts in Florida, has harsh critics among some of the
attorneys who make regular appearances.
Parker said that in the three years before the foreclosure court was established, his
firm participated in about 100 hearings for a contested final summary judgment and never lost
one. With the new court, they are 1-for-15, winning their first last week in Clay County.
"For the first time, they're not even pretending to be unbiased arbiters of justice," Parker said.
Mark Kessler, who is in the Duval County foreclosure court almost every day representing plaintiffs/lenders, disagreed.
"I take great issue with some of those comments," he said. "These judges are extremely fair. It's not like it's a steamroller, they pay close attention to each of the cases."
Victoria McNair, an attorney with Three Rivers Legal Services won a case for her client last week - the foreclosure was dismissed. She and Parker think it's the first one that's been dismissed since the court began in July.
"They're under a lot of political pressure to move so many cases so fast," she said. "There's
the sheer volume of having to deal with all the stuff these foreclosure mills have filed. And the law is changing so fast, maybe some of these judges need some learning curve time.
"If they've been out [off the bench] for more than three years, they've missed all the
changes in the foreclosure law."
At the heart of the foreclosure controversy are the affidavits that the plaintiffs file
which says who owns the note, how much money is owed, etc. Employees at several major
lenders have admitted signing the affidavits without confirming the information was correct.
"The foreclosure mills take these cases by the thousands," McNair said, "and they do it
by cutting all the corners and all the laws. When they file these things, they're all defective.
They just don't have the elements that law requires." Among Parker's concerns is that affidavits are routinely accepted in foreclosure court without the supporting records to show that they're correct.
"I really believe we're subverting the rule of law for the convenience of clearing the
docket," he said "There is clearly a second set of rules being followed by the foreclosure judges."
But Soud said that's not true, and that the required records are included.
"What we have is affidavits that are attached and filed in these hearings that are signed by people who are custodians of the records," he said.
"We're following the law as we understand it," he said. "We're just not doing it the way
they think it should be done. If they don't like it, that's what the First District Court of Appeals in Tallahassee is for."
While most of the business in the courtroom is done by lawyers, homeowners do show up.
Wednesday, Robert E. Lee came in with a stack of medical records to explain why he
hadn't made the payments on his house since 2008. On disability, the 59-year-old retired
railroad worker had been in the hospital five times in the past two years. And he knew he'd
overpaid when he agreed to pay $90,000 for his house off Kings Road near Edward Waters
College when it was appraised at half that.
But after the deaths of his wife and daughter, he really wanted to be in a neighborhood where he had so many relatives. That's what he said he wanted to explain to Judge Aaron Bowden.
"I didn't get a chance to tell him anything," Lee said. "I tried to tell him what was going on and he told me to stop whining. He gave me until Dec. 2 and that's enough time for me to find a place to stay."

roger.bull@jacksonville.com, (904) 359-4296.

9 de octubre de 2010

Seguros a los títulos hipotecarios pueden volverse escasos debido a la crisis de ejecuciones hipotecarias

Foreclosure sales may stall if title insurance becomes scarce


10/09/2010 © South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Sales of foreclosed properties, already stalled by mounting evidence of widespread
flawed documentation practices by lenders and attorneys, may hit another roadblock: New
buyers might not be able to get the title insurance required for a mortgage.
New House Title, owned by a large Tampa foreclosure law firm under state
investigation, this week denied coverage for a 2009 Deerfield Beach condo foreclosure that its
own attorneys had handled, citing potentially defective court filings.
The New York Times last week also claimed Old Republic National Title, the fourth
largest title insurer in the country, had sent a memo to its agents in some states saying the
company would not cover homes foreclosed on by JPMorgan Chase until "objectionable issues
have been resolved." Earlier, the company had taken the same stand on homes foreclosed by
GMAC Mortgage, now owned by Ally Bank.
Louis Spagnuolo, vice president of mortgage banking at WCS Lending in Boca Raton,
said title insurers are becoming very selective about they'll cover as the foreclosure crisis
deepens. He predicted major underwriters soon will put a moritorium on policies for
foreclosures by troubled lenders.
Lee Huszajh, executive secretary treasurer of the Florida Land Title Association, said he has
not heard insurers stopping coverage on all foreclosures handled by specific lenders or law firms.
But title examiners "are double checking everything now," he said. "It's a lot more work."
Old Republic, in the Friday issue of The Title Report, said its notices had been
"misconstrued" to apply to foreclosure sales in general. The company "continues to insure
properties of all kinds" according to its usual guidelines "and will continue to evaluate those
risks based on relevant facts," according to its statement in the trade publication.
Old Republic declined to comment to the Sun Sentinel. Florida Default Law Group, which owns New House Title, is one of four foreclosure firms being investigated by the Florida Attorney General for allegedly fabricating documents.
New House sent a notice this week to the Boca Raton attorney handling the Deerfield Beach
foreclosure sale, saying it could not proceed because of "potential defects" in affidavits
submitted by JPMorgan Chase.
Spokeswoman Lisa Nason said New House had no blanket policy freezing titles on
foreclosures, and made coverage decisions on a case by case basis.
PNC Financial Services Group Inc. on Friday became the fourth major lender to
temporarily stop or more closely review foreclosures, evictions or sales amid reports their
employees or attorneys improperly signed documents or never reviewed them. Some experts
have speculated the overarching crisis could eventually require hundreds of thousands of
foreclosures be reviewed.
Title insurers "need to limit their liablity going forward, there is so much uncertainty,"
Spagnuolo said.
Future foreclosure sales will stall or completely shut down if prospective buyers can't
get title insurance, Spagnuolo said. Lenders require it for a mortgage, as the policies protect
them against financial loss from unknown liens, errors or fraud that occurred prior to the
closing. Buyers usually pay for the lender policies, and can purchase coverage for themselves as well.
The courts probably would need to determine exactly what the title insurer would be
responsible for if paperwork errors or forgeries were uncovered on foreclosures, Spagnuolo
said. "Nobody really knows how it will play out," he added.
Those who already have purchased foreclosed properties from lenders using "robo-signers" – employees who signed as many as 10,000 documents a month that they never verified – could file against their title policies. Shari Olefson, a Fort Lauderdale real estate attorney and author of Foreclosure Nation, thinks underwriters will be inundated with claims and some could go out of business.
The American Land Title Association, however, said the emerging foreclosure problems
should have little impact on new owners or on claims. If the courts did set aside a foreclosure
due to mistakes, it would be the lender, not the insurance underwriter, that would be
responsible for reimbursing the new property owner, the association said.
Association spokesman Jeremy Yohe said the title insurers are working with lenders to
obtain warranties, guaranteeing the proper foreclosure documents had been verified and were
accurate.

The Palm Beach Post contributed material to this report.
Diane Lade can be reached at 954-356-4295 or dlade@sunsentinel.com.

8 de octubre de 2010

Florida foreclosure firm's title insurer won't insure firm's foreclosure titles

10/08/2010 © Palm Beach Post

The title insurance arm of one of the state's largest foreclosure law firms is refusing to cover properties foreclosed on by its own attorneys citing potential defects in court filings.

New House Title, which is owned by the same people who run the Tampa-based Florida Default Law Group, sent notice to a Boca Raton real estate attorney Wednesday that a 2009 foreclosure was off limits.

What Attorney Robert Feldman found interesting in New House's denial for the Deerfield Beach condominium is the foreclosure was handled by the Florida Default Law Group. "It is somewhat surprising that now they won't even insure their own work," Feldman said.

The New House email faults JPMorgan Chase for the rejection. Chase is one of three national lenders, including Ally Financial Inc., and Bank of America, that has suspended some foreclosure proceedings to review and correct flawed documents that may have been used to take people's homes.
Editorial: A job for the state's top cop: If fraud is an issue, attorney general should
have power to probe


10/08/2010 © Palm Beach Post

Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum should appeal the ruling by Palm Beach County
Circuit Court Judge Jack S. Cox that the attorney general's office lacks the authority to
investigate law firms suspected of fraudulent foreclosure practices.
On Monday, Judge Cox granted a request by Shapiro & Fishman to quash a subpoena for
information from the Boca Raton firm, saying that the Florida Bar is responsible for
investigating allegations of misconduct by attorneys. Shapiro & Fishman is one of four firms
under investigation for allegedly doctoring foreclosure documents to get quick judgments on
behalf of lenders. The fraud scandal has forced the nation's biggest banks to halt foreclosures
in 23 states, including Florida. On Tuesday, judges in Palm Beach County canceled half of the
150 scheduled foreclosure auctions.
In his ruling, Judge Cox took a circuitous route to conclude that the attorney general's
office must back off. The investigation centered on Shapiro & Fishman's legal representation of
lenders in foreclosure matters. The office initiated the investigation under the state's
Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act. Judge Cox noted that the activities of entities
regulated by the Office of Financial Regulation, such as banks, are exempt under that law.
"The enumerated list of exempted activities does not specifically include attorneys, law
firms or any person or entity that is regulated by the Florida Bar," Judge Cox wrote. "However,
the Legislature knew that the authority to regulate and discipline the conduct of attorneys has
been exclusively reserved to the Supreme Court."
The Florida Constitution does give the Supreme Court exclusive authority to admit
attorneys into the practice of law and to discipline them. That authority, however, does not
preclude law enforcement from investigating allegations of illegal conduct. The attorney
general is the state's chief legal officer.
To cite one extreme example, the Florida Supreme Court didn't take down Ponzischeming Fort Lauderdale lawyer Scott Rothstein, who defrauded investors out of $429
million. Nor did The Florida Bar. The U.S. Attorney's office did. The Florida Supreme Court
disBarred Rothstein, at his request, while he was under investigation. Further, the state Office of Financial Regulation does not regulate national institutions
such as Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, and Ally Financial, on whose behalf the law firms
are alleged to have filed fraudulent documents. Maryanne Downs, president of the Florida Bar,
said her organization does not investigate complaints against law firms, just individual attorneys.
So if the state's top cop can't investigate, who can? Florida's courts have issued thousands of foreclosure judgments, many in recent weeks after the Legislature last spring appropriated $9.6 million to expedite the cases. Defense attorneys say many of those foreclosures were the result of falsified documents.
Lenders have halted foreclosures while they try to correct the paperwork. That delay is
making it harder for Florida to get through the foreclosure backlog and revive the real estate
market. No one, however, should be defrauded out of a home. Florida should be able to go
after those who have gamed the system and tried to profit from a crisis.

Rhonda Swan, for The Palm Beach Post Editorial Board.

5 de octubre de 2010


Paperwork problems put foreclosures in limbo
10/05/2010 © Tampa Bay Online

ST. PETERSBURG - Gale Green says she never missed a mortgage payment on her St.
Petersburg home, but that didn't stop GMAC from filing for foreclosure last year.
The lender returned one of her checks in some sort of mix-up and then stopped taking
her payments while it tried to figure out what had happened, she said.
Without any warning, she says, the lender moved to take the home back a few months later.
"The next thing I knew, there was a knock at the door, and it was foreclosure," Green said.
That's when Green's foreclosure case became one of tens of thousands now in limbo,
while lenders review problematic paperwork.
An affidavit detailing the facts in Green's foreclosure case was signed by the same
processor whom GMAC says it now knows did not read foreclosure documents he signed.
Two weeks ago, GMAC's parent company, Ally Financial, said it discovered the
processor signed off on key documents without making sure they were accurate. Federal
lawmakers and state officials have said such practices could be fraudulent.
Last week, JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America said the same thing was happening at their companies.
It's not clear how many loans are affected, but the three lenders are some the largest in the nation. All three also service loans owned by other lenders. Those loans are included in the foreclosure moratorium.
Bank of America, the biggest U.S. bank in terms of assets and deposits, estimated it will be reviewing tens of thousands of documents.
The law requires the lender's processor to personally verify that the lender has the
right to foreclose on a home. The processors, though, signed more than 10,000 documents a
month, and some have given sworn testimony that they relied on other staff members to
verify the documents.
Foreclosures involving all three lenders are now on hold in 23 states, including Florida.
The lenders have all said the problems were "technical" and that they don't think any
of the foreclosure documents contained errors. They say they plan to resubmit documents
properly and then proceed with foreclosures.
Homeowners such as Green are wondering what will happen to them now. Green hired
an attorney to fight the foreclosure, but the bank didn't respond until the scope of the
paperwork problems came to light. Still, the only response she's gotten so far is a temporary
halt to the foreclosure.
Her lawyer, Matt Weidner, said he wants to get Green's case dismissed and expects
other foreclosure defense attorneys to try the same for their clients. "Because of this document they've filed, they are not going to be able to proceed with
this case," Weidner said. "I'm not going to allow them to get a judgment in this case."

4 de octubre de 2010

Investigación de Procurador General de la Florida afectada por juez

AG investigation into foreclosure law firms dealt blow
October 04, 2010
By: Julie Kay

Palm Beach Circuit judge dealt a blow today to Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum’s investigation of foreclosure law firms by quashing a subpoena issued to one of the firms.

Judge Jack Cox in a sharply worded order said it’s up to the Florida Supreme Court and The Florida Bar to regulate attorneys, not the attorney general. He also called the attorney general’s subpoena of Shapiro & Fishman “overbroad, vague, inconsistent and unduly burdensome.” McCollum’s office had no immediate response.

The office had subpoenaed three of the state’s largest foreclosure law firms — the Law Offices of David Stern in Plantation, the Shapiro firm with offices in Boca Raton and Tampa, and the Law Offices of Marshall Watson in Fort Lauderdale — as part of a wider investigation into foreclosure firms.

Critics including consumer advocate groups and foreclosure defense firms have alleged the firms targeted by McCollum’s office filed incorrect or even phony paperwork to achieve foreclosure judgments in the state courts. The plaintiff law firms have denied wrongdoing.

3 de octubre de 2010

Juez de Sarasota simplifica casos de ejecución hipotecaria

Sarasota judge simplifies foreclosure cases
10/03/2010 © Sarasota Herald-Tribune

COURTROOM: A checklist of filing errors can bring a case to a halt

By Todd Ruger
Published: Sunday, October 3, 2010 at 1:00 a.m.

SARASOTA COUNTY - Criminal defense attorneys used to call Judge Harry Rapkin "Hang 'Em High Harry" for his tough prison sentences, and his latest crackdown in foreclosure court might have home lenders trying to come up with a similar nickname.

Rapkin unleashed a new order last week, aimed at attorneys for lenders who are still making the kind of simple errors that would be considered ridiculous in any courtroom. A lot is at stake; Rapkin sees hundreds of cases where the lender is minutes away from taking someone's property.

Rapkin's new order completely dismisses foreclosure cases when they do not follow the simplest of rules. The judge's new order has nine check boxes listing the most common mistakes he sees in
foreclosures. The most basic -- not showing up for a hearing -- is listed first. Then there is one for attorneys who filed a motion to win a case that they had previously dismissed, and one for attorneys who filed a motion to win a case they had already won. If one these boxes gets checked, the judge dismisses the case.

Jueza trata de tomar control del caos en las ejecuciones hipotecarias

Judges try to get grip on foreclosure chaos
10/03/2010 © Bradenton Herald

MANATEE — The fifth time was the final straw for Manatee County Circuit Court Judge Janette Dunnigan.

Four times in a 2007 foreclosure case, a Fort Lauderdale law firm representing a bank scheduled a hearing and either did not appear or canceled it at the last minute without telling others. So when it happened again April 13, Dunnigan called Smith, Hiatt and Diaz P.A. and issued a warning: Stop it or I’ll hold you in contempt of court.

The threat didn’t work: The firm subsequently set two more hearings and didn’t show for either one. So Dunnigan found the firm in “deliberate, willful and flagrant” contempt after an Aug. 30 hearing and issued a $49,000 fine, which the firm is contesting.

Legal observers said they believe Dunnigan’s act is the first time a Florida judge has sanctioned a so-called ‘foreclosure mill’ for its practices. But they said it also illustrates a growing effort by judges to regain control of the foreclosure process after years of chaos.

“The system’s overloaded and they’ve got to do something about it,” said Dawn Bates Buchanan, managing attorney for Gulfcoast Legal Services’ Bradenton office. “The judges all are saying, ‘No more. We’ve had enough.’ ”

2 de octubre de 2010

Abogados reclaman pedido del Procurador General

Lawyers fight AG inquiry
10/02/2010 © Miami Herald
TOLUSE OLORUNNIPA
tolorunnipa@MiamiHerald.com

South Florida law firms being investigated for shady foreclosure practices are fighting back by challenging the attorney general's jurisdiction, refusing to cooperate with parts of the probe and gearing up for a legal showdown.

A Palm Beach County judge is expected to rule Monday on a motion by Shapiro & Fishman of Boca Raton to "quash" the subpoena issued in August by Attorney General Bill McCollum. The motion calls the investigative subpoena "overly broad, unreasonable and unduly burdensome." The subpoena demands the firms -- Shapiro, the Law Offices of David J. Stern and the Law Offices of Marshall C. Watson -- turn over five years worth of documents and e-mails, and copies of all contracts between the law firm and the lenders that hired it to handle their foreclosures.

The Law Offices of David J. Stern has decided to partially cooperate, its legal counsel said. The Plantation-based firm handed over some of the requested documents to the attorney's general office, but not all of them, according to Miami attorney Jeffery Tew, who represents Stern's firm. Tew said he believed that the attorney general's subpoena was too broad, but that Stern's firm had provided three years worth of documents that were relevant to the investigation.

Problemas de documentación detiene casos de ejecución hipotecaria

Mortgage document troubles holding up foreclosures
10/02/2010 © Palm Beach Post
Posted: 1:52 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 2, 2010

The technical glitch that Ally Financial is citing for freezing portions of its foreclosure machine could keep Susan Carlsen in her million-dollar Jupiter home for another year. Or, even win her the court case all together. Carlsen's attorney, no doubt like many foreclosure defenders nationwide, plans to take full advantage of the acknowledgments by Ally, JPMorgan Chase and now Bank of America, that legal documents used to repossess people's homes were flawed.

Attorneys for Ally, formerly GMAC, withdrew an affidavit stating how much Carlsen owes on the house last month as it was revealed bank employees swore to personal knowledge of foreclosure documents when they had no such knowledge. The unexpected reprieve for tens of thousands of delinquent borrowers opens legal avenues to slow Florida's so-called "rocket docket" - a blur of quickie foreclosure judgments aided by a summer infusion of $9.6 million to hire additional judges and court employees.

Bank of America detiene las ejecuciónes hipotecarias mientras Fannie Mae interviene

Bank of America slows foreclosures as Fannie Mae steps in
10/02/2010 © South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Bank of America announced it is delaying foreclosures in 23 states – including Florida - - after the Associated Press reported that a bank official acknowledged in a legal proceeding that she signed up to 8,000 foreclosure documents a month and typically didn't read them. 

Bank of America said late Friday it is delaying foreclosures in 23 states, becoming the third major lending institution to acknowledge mortgage documentation problems. Meanwhile, Fannie Mae stepped up efforts to hold lenders accountable, saying it will warn loan servicers to report problems with cases that may violate financial laws.

Bank of America -- one of the largest mortgage lenders in Florida and the nation's largest bank -- did not give an estimate for how many homeowners' cases will be affected in South Florida and elsewhere.
Bank of America spokesman Dan Frahm said the institution was "assessing our existing processes" and would be delaying some actions.

The Federal National Mortgage Association – commonly known as Fannie Mae -- said it is alerting 1,400 loan servicers nationwide that they would be in violation of their contracts on federally-backed Fannie Mae loans if their foreclosure processes don't comply with state and local laws.

29 de septiembre de 2010

JPMorgan Chase congela 56,000 ejecuciones hipotecarias


The Washington Post

J.P. Morgan Chase issued a freeze on 56,000 foreclosures on Wednesday, acknowledging that some employees may have signed off on documents submitted in support of them without proper review.

Chase spokesman Tom Kelly said the company has requested that the courts not enter judgments in pending matters until the company has had time to re-examine the filings "to verify that the affidavits and other documents meet the standard of personal knowledge or review where that is required."

"While Chase does not expect find any factual problems and that customers have been harmed, but if we do find any cases we will take appropriate action," Kelly said.

In May, a Chase employee named Beth Ann Cottrell said in a sworn deposition that she and her team signed off on up to 18,000 foreclosure affidavits and other documents a month without reviewing them thoroughly.

Another mortgage company, Ally Financial--the nation's fifth largest lender--on Sept. 20 halted evictions and resale of repossessed homes in 23 states. Jeffrey Stephan, a document processor for the company, admitted that he had signed off on 10,000 pieces of foreclosure paperwork a month without reading them.

State attorneys in at least nine states have announced investigations into the matter.

By Ariana Eunjung Cha | September 29, 2010; 5:07 PM ET

27 de septiembre de 2010

Jueces en Florida niegan casos a favor de bancos


MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2010

Florida’s Kangaroo Foreclosure Courts: Judges Denying Due Process on Behalf of Banks

Florida is ground zero of the foreclosure crisis. In addition to being one of the epicenters of the housing meltdown, it has also become the jurisdiction where local lawyers have been the most effective overall in unearthing how servicers and foreclosure mills have engaged in widespread document fabrications and use of improper affidavits to foreclose.
This abuse of contracts and legal procedures matters because the courts are the last bastion of defense of the individual. Even libertarians, who keenly oppose government mission creep, give courts an elevated role as a protector of rights.
Given the success that local attorneys are having (it has reached the point where the state attorney general’s office has opened an investigation into three so-called foreclosure mills operating in the state), pushback by the mortgage industrial complex was inevitable. The old saw about “best government money can buy” now looks to apply to the courts, the one area most people assume to be relatively free from tampering by well funded interests.
The New York Times did report on this development, but its account was such a pale version of what is happening on the ground as to give readers a distorted picture.
These new foreclosure-only courts are special creations of the Florida legislature, funded separately from the usual court system. They are manned by retired judges, which means in many cases they are not familiar with real estate law.

FUBAR Mortgage Behavior: Florida Banks Destroyed Notes; Others Never Transferred Them

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2010

Before we get to the meat of the post, I have a fun project for readers. Just as “whocoulddanode” has become inextricably linked to the excuses for the failure to see the housing crisis coming, we need a new tag phase for the hopeless tangled mess that the folks who screwed up mortgage securitizations have foisted on Americans. Conceptually, FUBAR (Fucked Up Beyond All Recognition) is accurate, but it is pretty antique as far as slang goes, so we need a new term. Ideas encouraged.
But to give readers the latest report of modern FUBAR, mortgage edition, let us continue with the sorry saga of “Where’s My Note?” For the benefit of newbies, what everyone calls a mortgage actually has two components: the note, which is the borrower IOU, and the mortgage (in some states, it’s called a deed of trust) which is the lien on the property. In 45 states, the mortgage is a mere accessory to the note; you must be the real party of interest in the note in order to foreclose.
The pooling and servicing agreement, which governs who does what when in a mortgage securitization, requires the note to be endorsed (just like a check, signed by one party over to the next), showing the full chain of title, and the minimum conveyance chain is A (originator) => B (sponsor) => C (depositor) => D (trust). The endorsements also have to be wet ink; no electronic signatures permitted.
I’ve had a lot of anecdotal evidence to support the idea that these procedures, which were created in the early days of mortgage securitizations, were simply not observed on a widespread, if not a universal basis. My sense is that the breakdown in practice was well underway by 2004, but it may have taken place earlier. For instance, a group of over 100 lawyers in a loose network around Max Garndner, a North Carolina bankruptcy lawyer who has taken a serious interest in this area, now has a standing joke that the first one that finds a deal where the note was correctly endorsed must bronze it and hang it on their wall. In other words, in none of the cases this large group has seen were the notes transferred to the trust properly.

17 de septiembre de 2010

Titulos usados por Jeffrey Stephan de GMAC


FORECLOSURE FRAUD – TITLES USED BY JEFFREY STEPHAN OF GMAC




Jeffrey Stephan,  who actually works for GMAC Mortgage Corp. in Montgomery County, PA, signs thousands of Mortgage Assignments each month as an officer of other banks and mortgage companies in order to transfer mortgages TO GMAC.
In Florida, the law firms that regularly present documents signed by Jeffrey Stephans as “proof” that GMAC has standing to foreclose include The Law Offices of Marshall Watson, The Law Offices of David Stern and Florida Default Law Group.
Stephan has admitted in depositions that he has no personal knowledge of the facts of documents he signs, does not verify the facts, and often does not sign in front of a notary (though the documents are eventually notarized).
Titles used by Jeffrey Stephan include the following:

4 de septiembre de 2010

NYT: Florida tiene una respuesta rápida al desastre hipotecario

The New York Times

September 4, 2010

Florida’s High-Speed Answer to a Foreclosure Mess


TEN days from now, a four-bedroom house on a cul-de-sac in Middleburg, Fla., is scheduled to be auctioned off at the Clay County courthouse, 25 miles south of Jacksonville.
A judge who recently took over their foreclosure case has ordered Rodney Waters; his fiancée, Terri Reese; and their four children to leave the home they bought in 2006.
Mr. Waters, a supervisor at a local packaging company and the family’s sole breadwinner, fell behind on his mortgage two years ago after his property taxes jumped unexpectedly. He now owes $264,000 on the house; a similar home down the street sold for $138,500 in February.
The predicament of the Waters-Reese family is common in Florida today. The state routinely sets new records for foreclosures — in the second quarter, 20.13 percent of its mortgages were delinquent or in foreclosure, a national high, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. And with housing prices still in a free fall, almost half of all borrowers in Florida owe more on their mortgages than their properties are worth, says CoreLogic, a data firm.

10 de agosto de 2010

Investigan bufetes de abogados de ejecuciones hipotecarias

Attorney General Bill McCollum News Release

August 10, 2010
Media Contact: Jennifer Krell Davis
Phone: (850) 245-0150


TALLAHASSEE (FL) – El Procurador General, Bill McCollum, anunció hoy que su oficina inició tres investigaciones nuevas sobre las imputaciones de acciones desleales y engañosas por parte de bufetes de Florida que manejaban casos de ejecución hipotecaria. La División de Delitos Económicos del Procurador General está investigando si se presentó documentación inadecuada ante los tribunales de Florida para acelerar los procesos de ejecución hipotecaria, posiblemente sin el consentimiento de los propietarios.

Las investigaciones nuevas nombran a Law Offices of Marshall C. Watson, P.A.; Shapiro & Fishman, LLP; y a Law Offices of David J. Stern, P.A. Los bufetes fueron contratados por prestamistas para iniciar el proceso de ejecución hipotecaria cuando los consumidores estuvieran atrasados en el pago de sus hipotecas.

Continuar leyendo aquí:
http://www.myfloridalegal.com/newsrel.nsf/newsreleases/2BAC1AF2A61BBA398525777B0051BB30?Open&LN=SP

1 de junio de 2010

Cuales son tus derechos cuando la deuda es vendida o tranferida

Esta información fue obtenida del sitio en internet de la Federal Trade Commission (FTC) y esta relacionada a los derechos del propietario en relación a la venta o transferencia del servidor de la deuda hipotecaria y de la Nota o préstamo hipotecario:

. . . .

Transfer of Loan Ownership

The ownership and servicing rights of your loan may be handled by one company or two. If ownership of your loan is transferred, the new owner must give you a notice that includes:
  • the name, address and telephone number of the new owner of the loan
  • the date the new owner takes possession of the loan
  • the person who is authorized to receive legal notices and can resolve issues about loan payments
  • where the transfer of ownership is recorded.
The new owner must give you this notice within 30 days of taking possession of the loan. It is in addition to any notices you may get about the transfer of the servicing rights for your loan.

Inquiries and Disputes


Under federal law, your mortgage servicer must respond promptly to written inquiries, known as “qualified written requests” (see Sample Complaint Letter). If you believe you’ve been charged a penalty, late fee or some other fee by mistake, or if you have other problems with the servicing of your loan, write to your servicer. Include your account number and explain why you believe your account is incorrect. Send your correspondence to the address the servicer specifies for qualified written requests.
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