Deutsche Bank Drops Suit Against Lynn Szymoniak’s Son Blames AHMSI

Zach Carter, Huffington Post

Deutsche Bank has dropped the son of high-profileforeclosure fraud investigator Lynn Szymoniak from the foreclosure case against her, according to new court documents.

The bank had added Szymoniak’s son, Mark Cullen, to the foreclosure suit this May, a move that many experts saw as an act of retaliation against Szymoniak, who has publicized banks’ widespread use of forged signatures in the foreclosure process to improperly give borrowers the boot. On June 8, lawyers filed a “Notice of Dropping Party” with the Florida court dismissing its previous claims against Cullen.

The bank’s decision to back down marks a minor victory for Szymoniak in her own fight to preserve her home. When Deutsche Bank hiked the interest rate on Lynn Szymoniak’s mortgage in 2008, she challenged them in court, alleging the move was a violation of the original contract.

Szymoniak has challenged her bank outside the court as well” She has taken them to task in the halls of Congress, with state and federal law enforcement agencies and over the airwaves. A white-collar crime expert who specializes in documentation fraud, Szymoniak has detailed scores of commonplace foreclosure documentation improprieties as the foreclosure epidemic has deepened and shared her findings with state and federal officials.

Szymoniak also appeared on CBS New’s 60 Minutes” in April to detail the rampant forgery of signatures at the heart of the foreclosure system implemented by most major national banks.

These forged signatures help banks cover up their own mistakes, some which have pushed borrowers into foreclosure through no fault of their own. In Lynn’s case, she says she decided to stop paying her mortgage after the bank improperly raised her interest rate. But her investigations then uncovered that her bank’s had relied on forged signatures to prove that they owned her loan in the first place.

A Flordia court agreed with Szymoniak, and shortly after her “60 Minutes” appearance, a judge threw out the bank’s case. The bank was given a few weeks to refile the case if it could get its ownership records in order.

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Michigan Senator wants to extend foreclosure prevention program

Allison Hillaker, NBC25, Flint, MI

The 90-day foreclosure prevention program could expire on July 5th, but one Senator is trying to extend it.

Sen. Mike Green is trying to pass legislation that would extend the foreclosure prevention program by two years.  He says it “encourages cooperation between lenders and homeowners. It helps people remain in their homes while benefiting lenders by getting mortgages current again.”

Sen. Green states that under this program, mortgage lenders have to provide a notice before the foreclosure process begins that provides homeowners with a list of counselors available.  Once a homeowner has the help of a counselor, he/she can then negotiate with the lender, and take steps to avoid foreclosure.

The bill has been referred to the Senate Committee on Banking and Financial Institutions for consideration.

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Trying to Put a Price on Bank Errors

Gretchen Morgenson, NY Times

KUDOS to the Congressional Oversight Panel for publishing a thoughtful and thorough report last week on the mortgage documentation mess. It argued that, yes, in fact, these paperwork problems may have significant implications for banks, investors and the stability of the financial system.

Since mortgage paperwork flaws became front-page news this fall, the banks caught in the glare have characterized the problems as technicalities that are easily remedied.

Their responses sound a lot like Mike Wazowski, the assistant scarer in “Monsters, Inc.,” who is reprimanded for not turning in his daily reports. “Oh, that darn paperwork,” he tells his supervisor. “Wouldn’t it be easier if it all just … blew away?”

But the mortgage paperwork problems aren’t blowing away, and the panel report analyzes their implications in fine detail. It also questions the view, held by some overseeing the Treasury Department’sloan modification effort, that mortgage documentation errors have no impact on the program.

Phyllis Caldwell, chief of the Treasury’s Homeownership Preservation Office, articulated the Treasury’s view in her testimony before the panel, according to the report. She said false affidavits and other processing flaws weren’t problematic for the government’s modification plan, known as the Home Affordable Modification Program or HAMP.

Because loan modifications don’t require physical production of a mortgage and note, the Treasury has not been examining whether document flaws have an impact on its efforts, she said.

Ted Kaufman, the former Delaware senator who leads the panel, saw it differently on Thursday. “Financial institutions all say everything is fine, but prudence would dictate that we make sure,” he said. “Not that we don’t trust the banks, but let’s take a hard look at this thing.”

In an interview on Friday, Tim Massad, acting assistant Treasury secretary for financial stability, clarified his agency’s position. “We weren’t saying these problems aren’t serious,” he said. “They are extremely serious, they are clearly widespread, they do pose dangers and they need to be fixed. But based on the evidence today, we didn’t see a systemic risk to financial stability.”

STILL, the oversight report points out problems that arise if servicers modify mortgages under HAMP when they don’t actually have the right to do so.

First, the report said, borrowers may either be granted or denied modifications improperly. And paperwork errors may mean the government is paying modification bounties of $1,500 a mortgage to the wrong banks.

Treasury officials told the oversight panel that if ownership of the mortgage was not properly transferred, the government could claw back incentives paid to the wrong institution.

But such a solution may not be feasible, the report concluded. And even if the Treasury chased down a loan servicer to return the incentive money it received in error, the government would have essentially handed that bank an interest-free loan for the period it kept the funds.

Read more here: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/21/business/21gret.html?_r=1

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Real IRA, Northern Irish Terror Group, Threatens Bankers

William Alden, Huffington Post

Northern Irish militant group Real I.R.A., an offshoot of the Irish Republican Army, has turned its violent focus on bankers and banks, in response to popular hostility against the financial community, spokespeople told The Guardian.

The group, which The Guardian says has 100 activists, pointed to its “track record of attacking high-profile economic targets” in the U.K. In 2000 and 2001, Real I.R.A. activists set off bombs at London cars and a post office.

In what The Guardian says is the group’s first public threat against the financial community, the Real I.R.A. called bankers “criminals” and said the recent cycle of bailouts and bonuses was “essentially a crime spree that benefits a social elite at the expense of many millions of victims.”

In 1990, the Real I.R.A. bombed the London Stock Exchange, and in 1996, it bombed Canary Wharf, the London business district. But “security sources,” reports The Guardian, don’t think the group has the resources to launch what the newspaper calls “large-scale bombings.”

Violence, which could include “punishment shootings and expulsions,” the Real I.R.A. told The Guardian, is “a last resort to protect the community.”

Yesterday, Derek Barnett, president of the Police Superintendents’ Association of England and Wales, told the Telegraph that austere fiscal policy could cause “disaffection, social and industrial tensions.”

Such unrest, albeit to a much less violent degree than threatened by the Real I.R.A., has already been raging in Greece, where prime minister George Papandreou is sticking firmly to a policy of austerity in the face of that country’s severe economic woes. Protesters also took to the streets in France last week, anticipating what the AP called a “season of strikes.”

Read more here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/09/15/post_515_n_717447.html

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