Michigan Foreclosure King Buys Influence With $200k Check For Romney Super PAC

Romney Super PAC Is Attacking Gingrich For Cashing In On Foreclosures

Gregory Korte and Fredreka Schouten, USA TODAY

A Detroit-area law firm that represents mortgage giants Fannie Mae andFreddie Mac in foreclosure and eviction cases contributed $200,000 to a super PAC supporting Republican Mitt Romney for president.

That super PAC, Restore Our Future, has run ads against rival Newt Gingrich attacking his ties to Freddie Mac and accusing him of “cashing in” on the foreclosure crisis.

The contribution, dated Dec. 27, was written from the corporate account of Trott & Trott PC. A 2010 Supreme Court decision allowed corporations and unions to spend unlimited amounts on independent campaigns to support or oppose federal candidates.

Managing partner David Trott is a member of Romney’s Michigan finance committee. He and his wife also contributed $7,500 personally to the Romney campaign, according to FEC reports, and Trott employees also contributed more than $11,000 to Romney.

Through a firm spokesman, Trott declined to comment.

Romney spokeswoman Andrea Saul explained it this way: “To the extent anyone is supporting Mitt Romney over President Obama it is because the state of the economy and the president’s failure to create jobs.” She referred further questions to Restore Our Future.

“We don’t comment on our donors beyond what is disclosed in our FEC report,” said Brittany Gross, a spokeswoman for the super PAC. By law, super PACs can’t coordinate with candidate campaign organizations.

In debates, ads and stump speeches, Romney has blasted Gingrich for his role as a consultant for Freddie Mac after he left Congress in 1999. “He made $1.6 million in his company, the very institution that helped stand behind the huge housing crisis here in Florida,” Romney said in Dunedin, Fla., this week.

With 96 attorneys, the Farmington Hills firm is one of two law firms in Michigan authorized by both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored mortgage underwriters, to represent mortgage servicers foreclosing on government-backed mortgages.

“David Trott, either through Trott & Trott or individually, has a complete monopoly on everything that goes on post-foreclosure on someone’s home,” said Steve Dibert of MFI-Miami, who works as a mortgage investigator for homeowners in foreclosure.

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I was on Tony Conley’s Show on WILS Wednesday Morning in Lansing

I was honored to be on Tony Conley’s radio show this morning on 1320 WILS-AM in Lansing talking about the foreclosure town hall meetings Ingham County Register of Deeds Curtis Hertel, Jr. has been having across Ingham County.  We talked about how I started MFI-Miami, why I don’t like most politicians and how Curtis is only one of three elected officials in the country taking a lead on mortgage and foreclosure fraud.

You can hear it here

 

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MLive’s Jeff Wattrick Blogs About Foreclosures While Camping Out W/ Occupy Detroit

And Yes, I’m quoted in the article! 

Jeff Wattrick, MLive
If you want to talk about Wall St. kneecapping the middle class, the conversation has to start with the subprime mortgage meltdown and the foreclosure mess that followed. It’s an issue the Occupy movement has focused on, including here in Detroit where protesters rallied outside a downtown Bank of America branch Wednesday.
The mortgage system that nearly destroyed the American economy is very similar is remarkably similar to the way the drug trade was portrayed on “The Wire.”
You start with the end user, be it a mortgage buyer or a junkie like Bubbles. They would do anything to get their fix (or seven bedroom mcmansion at 48 Mile Road) and mortgage orginators/street dealers like the Barksdale Organization were happy to provide the product. If you wanted a million dollar mortgage with an initial monthly payment of $25, according to Michael Lewis’ “The Big Short,” there was someone who could get you just such a deal.
Up the ladder, mortgage originators sold their loans to Wall St. banks (Lehman Brothers’ Dick Fuld is kind of comparable to The Greek on “The Wire”) so no one particularly cared if the mortgages they were writing were garbage or solid. They didn’t have to service them. The banks weren’t worried either because, you know, housing prices could only possibly go up according the collective wisdom of several thousand Harvard MBAs. Besides, AIG was insuring them against any losses.
Of course, there were plenty of politicians—from George W. Bush to Chris Dodd—happy to play the role of Clay Davis, so long as the money kept rolling.
Which it did until it stopped. Then it was send money, guns, and lawyers time.
The real victims, as it turned out, weren’t the banks and insurance firms dealing with sunk costs (they got a bailout), or even necessarily the people being foreclosed up, but rather their mortgage-paying neighbors who saw their own home values tank with every foreclosed vacant in the neighborhood. In a sense, thanks to the financial industry, we are all West Baltimore.
As Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK) put it: “The free market has helped make America great, but it only functions when people deal with each other honestly and transparently.  At the heart of the financial crisis were unresolved, and often undisclosed, conflicts of interest. Blame for this mess lies everywhere from federal regulators who cast a blind eye, Wall Street bankers who let greed run wild, and members of Congress who failed to provide oversight.”
But that was three years ago. Since then we’ve elected a new president, two new Congresses, moved GM and Chrysler through structured bankruptcy, and even saw the Detroit Lions rebuild. Why is the mortgage situation still dead weight crushing the economy?
The short answer, according to mortgage fraud investigator Steve Dibert, is a moral hazard. Despite multimillion-dollar federal programs to help banks prevent foreclosure, they have no incentive to work with underwater homeowners.
“When they do modifications, they tell people you have to be 80-90 days behind before they can help you, which is horse pucky,” said Dibert. “They do that because they’re trying to get a certain number of loans to go into default so the insurance policy will pay off the investors.”
Dibert says despite claims to the contrary, the banks have total control to modify a loan. It isn’t up to third-party investors. To make matters worse, he says, “foreclosure mill” law firms have financial incentive to shortcut the foreclosure process.
“It’s not simply just the deadbeat homeowner just not paying the bill,” said Dibert. “It’s the wild, wild west of banking. Especially with law firms like Orleans. You know, Linda Orleans doesn’t care. Linda Orleans is just after the matter and bringing in as many of these as she can because she get pad $2500-$3000 per file.”
Dibert’s investigation into Orleans practices led to allegations of illegal “robo-signing” of foreclosure documents.
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I was on First Shift With Tony Trupiano In Detroit This Morning

Steve Dibert, MFI-Miami

For those of you who may have missed it, I was on First Shift With Tony Trupiano this morning talking about my favorite subject, Linda Orlans, Marshall Isaacs and fraudulent mortgage assignments Michigan based Orlans Associates are filing in Essex County, Massachusetts.  We discussed how Orlans and her Massachusetts partner Julie Moran are now being actively investigated by the Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley for robo-signing where as Michigan Attorney General Bill Shuette only has an “open” investigation.

Naturally, we began talking about Linda Orlans’ political ties to Michigan Secretary of State Ruth Johnson and Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette.  We touched on how those political connections and donations make the foreclosure mills believe they won’t get punished if they get caught committing fraud.

You can listen to the podcast version here

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