Federal Judge Agrees, Fannie Mae Foreclosure Could Violate U.S. Constitution

Comments Based On Findings By MFI-Miami And Michigan Attorney 

Steve Dibert, MFI-Miami

On May 7, 2012, Judge Robert J. Jonker of the United States District Court, Western District of Michigan dismissed Fannie Mae’s Motion for Summary Judgment in the case of Pablo Bocardo and Guadalupe Bocardo v. Select Portfolio Services and The Federal National Mortgage Association. (Docket # 1:12-cv-177) and is allowing this to go to trial.

Judge Jonker agreed with two points that the Bocardo’s attorney, Jason Jenkinson of the Northern Michigan Law Center argued.

Jenkinson argued that denying the Bocardos the right to contest the merits of their foreclosure after their redemption period would violate their due process rights under Article III of the U.S. Constitution. Judge Jonker agreed by stating, “…from my perspective, standing is an Article III jurisdictional issue. It deals with injury in fact first of all.  And I can’t imagine anybody better than the party that says they are entitled to lawful possession of the house because something was wrong with foreclosure process.”

During the investigation leading up to the lawsuit, Steve Dibert of MFI-Miami discovered a memo from Fannie Mae to their mortgage servicers stating Fannie Mae’s ownership interest.

 “This discovery allowed Jason to question whether the proper party in this matter foreclosed on the Bocardo’s home and if Fannie Mae has the authority to evict,” explained Dibert.

By denying The Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, Judge Jonker ultimately forwarded the idea that further inquiry was needed to determine whether Michigan Statute MCL 600.3204 was violated by the alleged foreclosure and/or the improper attempt to evict

After the decision, Jenkinson commented that “it’s refreshing to see that someone is willing to look into how the foreclosure mills spearheaded by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have been working overtime to throw people out of their homes.  Hopefully this will lead to more attempts by the banks to modify deserving homeowners.”
Bocardo Transcript 5-15-12

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Romney says banking reform hurting housing market in Florida

Adam C. Smith, Tampa Bay times

Mitt RomneyMore than four in 10 Florida homeowners are underwater on their mortgages. President Barack Obamahas not done much to help them, and it doesn’t sound like Mitt Romney has any serious plan in store either. His main idea? Repeal Wall Street reform.

“Bankers have been very slow in renegotiating the mortgages, helping people go through the process, short sales and so forth that allow these products, these homes, to be taken out of the market so they can be bought by new investors,” Romney said in a Political Connections interview airing today on Bay News 9.

“Government has made it harder for the banks to do it. The Dodd-Frank (Wall Street) legislation has scared particularly community banks in such a way that they’re just paralyzed. They’re not taking action to help people get their mortgages renegotiated and let people either stay in their home or have the home ultimately go back in the hands of new investors that will turn it around and ultimately bring home values back up.”

Check out the full interview at 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. on Bay News 9.

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ResCap Goes Broke Leaving Families In Limbo

Catherine Curran, NY Post

ResCap goes into BK

As ResCap goes broke, it leaves homeowners in limbo

Two weeks ago, a Westchester family had finally reached the end of seven years in foreclosure hell.

Then the plate tectonics of the massive bank that controls their fate shifted. Ally Financial, formerly GMAC, filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy for its troubled Residential Capital mortgage unit last Monday. Ally owes taxpayers roughly $12 billion in bailout money and is majority-owned by Uncle Sam.

This unprecedented bankruptcy of a mega-servicer is hitting ordinary New York families hard, with worse blows to come. Inside Mortgage Finance publisher Guy Cecala estimates the bankruptcy affects roughly 120,000 loans in New York, out of 2.4 million ResCap consumer mortgages.

Unemployment caused the Westchester family to miss mortgage payments and seek Chapter 13 bankruptcy protection. Now they are in limbo, awaiting approval by the ResCap Chapter 11 judge.

“Resolution is on hold,” said the family’s lawyer, Linda Tirelli, who could not disclose more details because the deal is still pending. “GMAC has sought bankruptcy protection like many of its customers have.”

The giant servicer will continue operating while selling assets. But GMAC has sent out notices to attorneys regarding non-foreclosure litigation, indicating it’s taking advantage of the automatic freeze bankruptcy puts on such cases.

That will further burden New York’s overstressed court system, as consumers from across the nation seek hearings in the Southern District, where the case was filed.

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Adverse Possession Case Goes To Trial

 

CASTLE ROCK, Colo. (CBS4)- A Douglas County judge has ordered a man who had been living in a million dollar home to stand trial on charges including trespassing and perjury.

CBS4’s On Your Side Investigator Rick Sallinger has linked this case to at least a dozen other “stolen homes” across the area. The homes involved were under foreclosure and taken over by people who claim they have a legal right to do so under a law called “Adverse Possession.”

Sergio Hernandez was in court for a preliminary hearing after he was evicted from a million dollar mansion in the Bell Mountain Ranch subdivision near Castle Rock on March 22nd. Hernandez is charged with trespassing, perjury, offering false instrument and violation of a bail bond.

In March, Hernandez and his family members were forced to leave the four bedroom, five bathroom home at 1252 Rosewind Circle. All their possessions were hauled to the curb by bank hired movers.

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