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Banks' Foreclosure 'Robo-Signers' Were Hair Stylists, Teens, Walmart Workers: Lawsuit

Robosigners

First Posted: 10/13/10 05:42 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:00 PM ET

NEW YORK (AP, Michelle Conlin) -- In an effort to rush through thousands of home foreclosures since 2007, financial institutions and their mortgage servicing departments hired hair stylists, Walmart floor workers and people who had worked on assembly lines and installed them in "foreclosure expert" jobs with no formal training, a Florida lawyer says.

In depositions released Tuesday, many of those workers testified that they barely knew what a mortgage was. Some couldn't define the word "affidavit." Others didn't know what a complaint was, or even what was meant by personal property. Most troubling, several said they knew they were lying when they signed the foreclosure affidavits and that they agreed with the defense lawyers' accusations about document fraud.

"The mortgage servicers hired people who would never question authority," said Peter Ticktin, a Deerfield Beach, Fla., lawyer who is defending 3,000 homeowners in foreclosure cases. As part of his work, Ticktin gathered 150 depositions from bank employees who say they signed foreclosure affidavits without reviewing the documents or ever laying eyes on them -- earning them the name "robo-signers."

The deposed employees worked for the mortgage service divisions of banks such as Bank of America and JP Morgan Chase, as well as for mortgage servicers like Litton Loan Servicing, a division of Goldman Sachs.

Ticktin said he would make the testimony available to state and federal agencies that are investigating financial institutions for allegations of possible mortgage fraud. This comes on the eve of an expected announcement Wednesday from 40 state attorneys general that they will launch a collective probe into the mortgage industry.

"This was an industrywide scheme designed to defraud homeowners," Ticktin said.

The depositions paint a surreal picture of foreclosure experts who didn't understand even the most elementary aspects of the mortgage or foreclosure process -- even though they were entrusted as the records custodians of homeowners' loans. In one deposition taken in Houston, a foreclosure supervisor with Litton Loan couldn't define basic terms like promissory note, mortgagee, lien, receiver, jurisdiction, circuit court, plaintiff's assignor or defendant. She testified that she didn't know why a spouse might claim interest in a property, what the required conditions were for a bank to foreclose or who the holder of the mortgage note was. "I don't know the ins and outs of the loan, I just sign documents," she said at one point.

Until now, only a handful of depositions from robo-signers have come to light. But the sheer volume of the new depositions will make it more difficult for financial institutions to argue that robo-signing was an aberrant practice in a handful of rogue back offices.

Judges are unlikely to look favorably on a bank that claims paperwork flaws don't matter because the borrower was in default on the loan, said Kendall Coffey, a former Miami U.S. attorney and author of the book "Foreclosures."

"There has to be a cornerstone of integrity to the process," Coffey said.

Bank of America responded to Tiktin's depositions by re-affirming that an internal review has shown that its foreclosures have been accurate. "This review will ensure we have a full understanding of any potential issues and quickly address them," Bank of America spokesman Dan Frahm said. Frahm added that, on average, the bank's foreclosure customers have not made a payment in more than 18 months.

JP Morgan Chase spokesman Thomas Kelly said the bank has requested that courts not enter into any judgments until the bank had reviewed its procedures. But Kelly added that the bank believes that all the underlying facts of the cases involved in the document fraud allegations are true.

Litton Loan Servicing did not respond to a request for comment.

Even before the foreclosure scandal broke, the housing market was in the midst of an ugly detoxification. Now the escalating crisis is likely to prolong the housing depression for at least another few years. The allegations are opening the entire chain of foreclosure proceedings to legal challenge. Some foreclosures could be overturned. Others could be deemed illegal.

For a housing recovery to occur, all the foreclosed properties -- which could account for 40 percent of all residential sales by 2012 -- need to be re-scrutinized by the banks and resold on the market. Now, with so much inventory under a legal threat, the process will become severely delayed.

"This just adds more uncertainty to the whole mortgage process, so buyers are asking themselves: do I want to buy a home in this environment?" says Cris deRitis, director of credit analytics at Moody's Analytics. "We need to fix these issues before the economy can recover."

Though some have chalked up the foreclosure debacle to an overblown case of paperwork bungling, the underlying legal issues are far more serious. Yes, swearing that you've reviewed documents you've never seen is a legal offense. But at the center of the foreclosure scandal looms something much larger: the question of who actually owns the loans and who has the right to foreclose upon them. The paperwork issues being raised by lawyers and attorneys generals have the potential to blight not just the titles of foreclosed properties but also those belonging to homeowners who have never missed a mortgage payment.

So far, JP Morgan Chase, PNC Financial and Litton Loan Servicing have stopped some foreclosure proceedings in 23 states. Bank of America and GMAC, recently renamed Ally, have extended their moratoriums to all 50 states. Wells Fargo and Citigroup have said they are continuing with foreclosures, adding that they are confident in their documents and processes.

But Citigroup has now backpedaled some on that assertion. The bank sent out a press release Tuesday that it was no longer using the law firm of "foreclosure king" David Stern, now under investigation by the Florida attorney general's office. "Pending the outcome of the AG's investigation, Citi is not referring new matters to this firm," the bank said in an e-mailed statement.

Late last week, in an interview with the Florida attorney general, a former senior paralegal in Stern's firm described a boiler-room atmosphere in which employees were pressured to forge signatures, backdate documents, swap Social Security numbers, inflate billings and pass around notary stamps as if they were salt.

Stern's lawyer, Jeffrey Tew, did not respond to a request for comment.

Meanwhile, the public outrage continues to mount. In what is perhaps a sign of things to come, a Simi Valley, Calif., couple and their nine children broke into their foreclosed home over the weekend and moved back in, according to television station KABC of Simi Valley. The couple, Jim and Danielle Earl, say they were working with the bank to catch up on payments until they discovered a $25,000 difference between what they owed and what the bank said they owed. The family was evicted from their Spanish-style two-story in July. The home has been sold, and the new owner was due to move in soon.

The Earls and their attorney now allege that they were victims of fraudulent paperwork.

Curt Anderson contributed from Miami.

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NEW YORK (AP, Michelle Conlin) -- In an effort to rush through thousands of home foreclosures since 2007, financial institutions and their mortgage servicing departments hired hair stylists, Walmart f...
NEW YORK (AP, Michelle Conlin) -- In an effort to rush through thousands of home foreclosures since 2007, financial institutions and their mortgage servicing departments hired hair stylists, Walmart f...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TomKnows
06:49 PM on 10/15/2010
Well at least the banks are creating some new jobs
avg american
It's about jobs, jobs, jobs...
12:41 PM on 10/15/2010
If the corp obstructionists win in Nov., they will finish the job by greasing through the bill that (POTUS vetoed) would have allowed legalized hearsay and fraudulent notarized documents signed by these robo-signers to serve as the truth.
The destruction of our economy was not an oopsie accident.
It was systematic and deliberate....... like organized crime. RICO anyone?
RICO offenses
Under the law, racketeering activity means:
Any violation of state statutes against gambling, murder, kidnapping, extortion, arson, robbery, bribery, dealing in obscene matter, or dealing in a controlled substance or listed chemical (as defined in the Controlled Substances Act);
Any act of bribery, counterfeiting, theft, embezzlement, fraud, dealing in obscene matter, obstruction of justice, slavery, racketeering, gambling, money laundering, commission of murder-for-hire, and several other offenses covered under the Federal criminal code (Title 18);
Embezzlement of union funds;
Bankruptcy fraud or securities fraud;
Drug trafficking; long-term and elaborate drug networks can also be prosecuted using the Continuing Criminal Enterprise Statute;
Money laundering and related offenses;
Bringing in, aiding or assisting aliens in illegally entering the country (if the action was for financial gain);

At a cursory glance, it looks like the banks committed fraud, gambling, possibly money laundering (laundering money from foreign countries). Where is law enforcement?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
salmonellae
01:18 PM on 10/15/2010
That's what every single American should be screaming about: WHERE IS THE LAW?? WHY ARE THESE BANKSTERS STILL NOT IN JAIL??
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cranmer1549
Always bet on black.
11:27 AM on 10/15/2010
Is anyone going to do anything about the criminal ways of the big banks, ever? Or are both parties going to continue to bow down to them?
07:28 PM on 10/14/2010
This is the same thing that happened when lenders were giving people credit to buy houses. They gave loans to anyone and everyone. There was no checking for employment, income and credit. Same preocess here, there is no checking if the people are qualified to do the job.
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catcancook
Going Forward 2013-2016
06:34 PM on 10/14/2010
Tim Geithner's friends Goldman Sachs is involved...hum, I guess this is why he always comes down on the side of the Bankers!

Banking Fraud? Again?

And still no JAIL sentences or investigations into these Bank CEO's? Why?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rory talbot
Former Dem but they r now wing of Corp. party
05:51 PM on 10/14/2010
Foreclosures hit an all time high (AGAIN!)...and Obama/Geithner still do NOTHING except carry water for Wall Street and Big Banks. Two words: ENTHUSIASM CANYON!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen1p
04:23 PM on 10/14/2010
We've got a messaging problem that is going on out in media-land, and that is that once the investigations are finished and the paperwork errors corrected, the foreclosures will go forward anyway and people will lose their homes, because this is all just a "technicality." These fraudulent documents that have been filed in Recorder's offices across the country just cannot be UN-FILED. They are already slandering title. Slandered title is clouded title, which is unmarketable. This is the problem that no one in media is addressing.



WRONG!



The message needs to be that it isn't just that the robo-signers didn't read what they signed, but that FRAUD was actually committed in documents recorded with the counties and submitted to courts and trustees. This cannot be undone by re-doing the paperwork. The fraud has already been committed and that is a basis for damages and equitable relief, meaning the bank will NOT be able to proceed with the foreclosure as they claim, may have to pay money damages, and may be subject to criminal investigations. They may also be forced to clear up the titles to millions of properties, to forgive the principal, and offer loan modifications at significantly lower interest rates.
03:50 PM on 10/14/2010
Sounds like the banks may have simply adopted the voter registration practices of the organization that pressured them to make bad loans in the first place: ACORN.
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Inkeesgirl
You can't take the sky from me...
10:41 PM on 10/14/2010
You are not making any sense
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
piperson
My micro-bio is half full...
03:31 PM on 10/14/2010
?Hay que hablar ingles hacer este trabajo?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Writeonwater
Let's be critical of rhetoric
02:59 PM on 10/14/2010
"several said they knew they were lying when they signed the foreclosure affidavits …"

There's little question that bankers are pushing limits of propriety; it’s a circus of administration. Getting peons to do the dirty work distances management. I'll make a larger point.

Hiding behind authority (be your collar blue or white) and doing things that are harmful (more or less) for a living is common and takes countless forms. Regardless of moving matter or information, workers distance themselves from responsibility for their actions by placing it upon authority. Executives and management distance themselves from the work saying “I didn't do it.” It's a vicious circle. The absurdity of treating a Corporation as an "individual" (sheltering people from responsibility) makes the circumstance worse.

The working and middle class rationalize with good reasons for the harm their participation causes. We look through the kaleidoscope of "I have obligations, kids, debt, & need to buy that new whatchamacallit, etc." It’s NOT that what we see IN the kaleidoscope of desire, work ethic or pride is not clear and distinct. Yet it's a distortion of what's on the other side of the kaleidoscope; people similar to ourselves are being put at risk or harmed.

Remember, executives rarely get their hands dirty poisoning the environment, or cheating others. That’s the workers job. The worker eagerly extends his index finger and points upward saying "they told me to." Two sides of one coin!
02:23 PM on 10/14/2010
During the housing bubble, these were some of the same people that got into real estate to sell those overpriced homes...

Why are we surprised?
01:57 PM on 10/14/2010
People under 18 cannot even execute contracts in some states. This mess is about much more than fraud.
avg american
It's about jobs, jobs, jobs...
12:42 PM on 10/15/2010
RICO
12:45 PM on 10/14/2010
This doesn't surprise me after talking to the refinance "expert" at the bank that holds my mortgage. I am happily taking my business elsewhere for a much better interest rate.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maybealittlecommonsense
kick it root down
11:55 AM on 10/14/2010
I heard one was even an ex community organizer - talk about no qualifications.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
billyfitz
12:38 PM on 10/14/2010
Keep making light of serious abuse by the banks in order to feed your racism, and our country will soon no longer be ours.
01:29 PM on 10/14/2010
PS: GFYSELF.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maybealittlecommonsense
kick it root down
08:50 AM on 10/15/2010
LOL Tough Keyboard Guy. Libs usually react this way when they know they've been pwnd.
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Scoppertop
Sunny Side
11:30 AM on 10/14/2010
“As a supplement to this excellent link from muck-raker:

muck-raker 16 minutes ago (8:14 AM)
1102 Fans
Unfan
Dave4Obama...agreed F&F...here is and excellent short video Alan Grayson

...................................FRAUD FACTORIES.......................
http://vodpod.com/watch/4566147-fraud-factories-rep-alan-grayson-explains-the-foreclosure-fraud-crisis
------------------------------------------------------------

Please also take the time to read all about the loyal Bushies behind MERS and holdovers in Fannie & Freddie:

http://www.mersinc.org/about/bod.aspx

Note that MERS chairman & CEO is probably not a Dem living in Birmingham, Alabama.

http://www.freddiemac.com/governance/bod.html

Recognize any names, there?

http://www.fanniemae.com/governance/board/index.jhtml;jsessionid=ZTWPQXUIPN 4INJ2FQSIS FGA?p=Corporate+Governance&s=Board+of+Directors

Lots of loyal GOP base in there.”