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Iowa Attorney General Seeks To Halt Foreclosures

MIKE GLOVER   10/ 7/10 05:55 PM ET   AP

Iowa Foreclosures

DES MOINES, Iowa — Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller is calling on three large mortgage companies to halt foreclosure proceedings in the state while he investigates problems with documents filed with the courts.

At a news conference Thursday, Miller said his office has contacted Ally Financial's GMAC Mortgage unit, Bank of America, and JPMorgan Chase to urge the companies to suspend foreclosure proceedings as well as evictions and sheriff's sales in Iowa.

A furor has been growing as mounting evidence has surfaced that mortgage lenders have been evicting homeowners using flawed court papers. State and federal officials have been ramping up pressure on the mortgage industry over concerns about potential legal violations.

Attorney General Eric Holder said Wednesday that the government is looking into the issue. And in a letter Tuesday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and dozens of Democratic lawmakers urged bank regulators and the Justice Department to probe whether mortgage companies violated any laws.

Ally, JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Bank of America Corp. have halted some foreclosures in 23 states – including Iowa – after evidence surfaced that their employees or outside lawyers signed important foreclosure documents, including affidavits, without reading them or filed inaccurate paperwork.

Even though the companies have agreed to halt some foreclosures in Iowa, officials there believe that the problem is serious enough that the three banks should put a definite stop to seizing borrowers' homes.

"We have admissions that was done in a sort of mass production, almost manufactured, basis," Miller said. "This is contrary to Iowa law."

Miller heads a 13-state group that deals with foreclosure issues, and he said Iowa would take the lead in coordinating the latest effort. The law requires that those signing the affidavits have personal knowledge of a foreclosure proceeding, Miller said, but it appears that often wasn't the case.

He said he'd expand his inquiry to see if other companies used the same improper procedures. Iowa staffers will coordinate their efforts with other states that have taken similar steps and the federal government, Miller said.

Miller said his office will examine the operations of other companies and he urged any "with anything less than absolute confidence in its internal foreclosure review procedures" to also halt foreclosures.

On Wednesday, Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray filed a lawsuit against Ally Financial, alleging it committed fraud that may have involved hundreds of foreclosures in the state. In response, Ally said it has been working to fix "procedural mistakes."

Iowa's foreclosure rate is actually far lower than in much of the country. As of June 30, about 9 percent of the state's homeowners who have a mortgage had either missed at least one mortgage payment or were in foreclosure, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. That compares with about 14 percent nationally.

A spokeswoman for Ally declined to comment on the Iowa announcement. Chase spokesman Thomas Kelly said his company is going over documents it has filed in current foreclosure proceedings. "We anticipate this should be complete in a few weeks," he said.

Bank of America spokesman Dan Frahm issued a statement Wednesday night addressing state requests for foreclosure halts. "Our initial assessment findings show the factual loan information underlying our foreclosures is accurate," he said.

___

AP Business Writer Alan Zibel contributed to this report from Washington.

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DES MOINES, Iowa — Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller is calling on three large mortgage companies to halt foreclosure proceedings in the state while he investigates problems with documents filed ...
DES MOINES, Iowa — Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller is calling on three large mortgage companies to halt foreclosure proceedings in the state while he investigates problems with documents filed ...
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03:58 PM on 10/15/2010
Attorneys can really help make a difference if people want to be taken seriously. I used one the Raleigh personal injury attorneys at http://www.attorneysnc.com and I my case would have been terrible without him.
01:33 PM on 10/10/2010
If it were a snake it would have bitten you on the .....
Why is it that everyone is overlooking the obvious? The Banks need to focus their energy on modifying mortgages to adjusted market values and keeping homeowners in their homes....instead...the focus is on how quick the Banks can foreclose on homeowners without any future recourse. The Banks made this mess..and have absolutely no intent to fix it and make it right with homeowners...and the Government is just letting them get away with it. Our tax dollars bailed out the Banks....but don't expect any kind of help in return. This is sickening!
10:30 AM on 10/10/2010
The bright light in the soybean field.
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12:49 PM on 10/08/2010
A.G. Tom Miller is the best thing Iowa politics has going for it/us.
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kareemachan
watashi ha tororu ga oroka da to omoi masu。
12:18 PM on 10/08/2010
And in the meantime, those locksmiths are being paid double overtime to get those foreclosures done.

I said it before and I'll say it again: come one, Rob McKenna, get your derriere in gear. These vultures are hurting our state, and we deserve better.
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mountainweb
Conservative Commonsense
08:23 AM on 10/08/2010
This is going to be tough on Obama, caught between Wall Street who has bought and paid for him, and doing the right thing for the American taxpayers. The statement by BOA "Bank of America spokesman Dan Frahm issued a statement Wednesday night addressing state requests for foreclosure halts. "Our initial assessment findings show the factual loan information underlying our foreclosures is accurate,"" clearly indicates they are going to continue screwing the homeowners until they are forced to stop.
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kareemachan
watashi ha tororu ga oroka da to omoi masu。
12:20 PM on 10/08/2010
Right. So tough that he refused to sign the bill yesterday which would have made it easier for the banks. Looks like he wasn't so bought and paid for as you claim.
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retrievals
TAX CUTS = JOBS = BIG FAT LIE
07:46 AM on 10/08/2010
The courts throughout the country are now in bed with corporations. No, there may not debtor prisons anymore, but even better for corporations is using the court system to steal your salary through court ordered, rubber stamped garnishments, and property through levies and foreclosures, to enhance their bottom line and exorbitant salaries.
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truthfinderddw
07:17 AM on 10/08/2010
Obama will have to get ahead of this Train or it leave without Him.
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Taninthesummer
Left of center moderate independent
10:02 PM on 10/07/2010
President Obama,

You MUST NOT abandon the American middle class! This is your moment to raise your reasoned, yet passionate voice, in our favor. Please, do not allow the banks to take control of this situation. They are not worthy. We are.