One-Time Clinton Extortionist Kathleen Willey Claims She’s A Victim Of Robo-Signing

Matt Drudge Bitch Andrew Breitbart’s Website Trumpets Her As A Whistle Blower Of A Global Conspiracy Masterminded By George Soros

Jeffery Scott Shapiro, BigGovernment.com

One-time Extortionist Kathleen WilleyKathleen Willey, the former White House volunteer who accused President Clinton in 1998 of sexually harassing her in 1993, is trying to expose potential robo-signing foreclosure fraud from her home state of Virginia–and she’s already gone on national television to get the word out to her fellow Americans.

Foreclosure proceedings were commenced against Willey in 2010, but Willey was able to stop the expedited 14-day foreclosure process by filing a fraud suit against her lender, One West Bank. In an exclusive telephone interview with Big Government from her Richmond based home, Willey told me the following:

I applied for a modification back in 2009. My bank was IndyMac, which was the very first bank the feds seized in 2008. Then they turned it around and sold it to George Soros and Larry Dell for a song. So, the two of them–big Obama contributors–they bought that bank.

That got a lot of play in California. There were lots and lots of stories, but it just kind of died. Out of sheer desperation I finally said look, I’ve had it, I need to know something about what’s happening to my home, and I was reading all the horror stories of what they were doing to people and so I told them if you don’t do something to help me and all these other people I’m going to go on television and they laughed at me.

I went on Fox & Friends on October 21, 2010 and someone from One West Bank called into the show and suspended the foreclosure. All of a sudden they were my new best friend. I had my very own modification officer at the bank, but then it just started dragging on again. Finally, I called last February. They were supposed to give me a decision within 30 days to tell me whether or not I even qualify, but they didn’t.

Finally, I called again and I got someone on the phone who said it was looking good and that I shouldn’t have any problem and then I called again and then they turned me down. Then they turned around and they sent me a 2-page self-explanatory letter signed by a person telling me the reasons I’d been turned down, a number of reasons I could have shot bullets through. So, I waited, waited and waited and then it got to December 29 when I got my first letter of fair debt collection, that they were moving in and they put it on fast track and now my home is scheduled to be sold next Thursday, February 2nd.

But there’s more—Willey may have stumbled upon a new form of “robo-signing,” the illegal practice of bank employees signing thousands of documents and affidavits without verifying the information. Right now, the U.S. is in talks with five major banks including Ally Financial Inc., Bank of America Corp., Citigroup, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., and Wells Fargo & Co. about a $19 billion settlement for their participation in robo-signing fraud.

 

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Foreclosure system ripe for errors in Virginia

The state has one of the fastest-moving systems in the country, and one lawyer said flaws are likely common.

Laurence Hammack, Roanoke Times

The day his house was sold at an auction on the steps of the Salem courthouse, M.T. Warden said he didn’t even know he was facing foreclosure.

He knew he was several months behind on his mortgage. When he called American Home Mortgage Servicing to make a payment, Warden recalled recently, “they said my home had been sold, and I didn’t live there.”

That was news to Warden, 30, who, at the time, was sitting in the kitchen of his Valleydale Road home. The next week, he found an eviction notice taped to his front door.

Rather than move, Warden filed a lawsuit challenging the foreclosure. After his attorneys found flaws in the paperwork leading up to the Dec. 2, 2008, auction, the case was settled last year and Warden was allowed to keep his house.

It was a rare win for a homeowner in Virginia, which has one of the fastest-moving foreclosure systems in the nation, according to consumer advocates. Foreclosures can be carried out in as little as 15 days — less time than it can take to evict a renter.

“There’s no doubt that Virginia is one of the leaders in getting people out of their homes quickly,” said Ira Rheingold, executive director of the National Association of Consumer Advocates. “Its laws are designed to help the banking industry, not the homeowners.”

In recent weeks, foreclosures in Virginia and across the country have fallen under increased scrutiny in the wake of revelations that some mortgage lenders cut corners and falsified documents in their rush to take houses from struggling borrowers.

Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli joined his counterparts in the other 49 states in a national investigation into foreclosure practices.

It’s unknown just how many forced home sales in Virginia might have been affected, and to what degree. Tom Domonoske, a Harrisonburg attorney who represented Warden in the disputed Salem foreclosure, said he believes the flaws uncovered in that case are common.

Read more here: http://www.roanoke.com/news/roanoke/wb/266586

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Money Being Used to Help VA Homeowners Facing Foreclosure

Attorney General Bill Mims awarded $50,000 for foreclosure relief counseling for Virginia families that are in danger of losing their homes to foreclosure Monday.

The grant funds are from a settlement in January 2009 with Countrywide Financial Corporation. The settlement addressed alleged deceptive acts and practices with Countrywide’s mortgage activities in Virginia. Under the court-approved settlement, Virginia set aside $50,000 for foreclosure education.

The $50,000 contribution will fund grants to nonprofit counseling agencies, and is projected to benefit about 200 Virginia families facing foreclosure. Read more about foreclosure help in Virginia

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