Foreclosuregate and Obama's "Pocket Veto"

by: Ellen Brown, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Foreclosuregate and Obama's "Pocket Veto"
(Photo: stevendepolo; Edited: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t)

Amid a snowballing foreclosure fraud crisis, President Obama today blocked legislation that critics say could have made it more difficult for homeowners to challenge foreclosure proceedings against them.

The bill passed the Senate with unanimous consent and with no scrutiny by the DC media. In a maneuver known as a "pocket veto," President Obama indirectly vetoed the legislation by declining to sign the bill passed by Congress while legislators are on recess.

The White House issued a statement regarding the veto, citing the need for "further deliberations on the intended and unintended impact of [the] bill on consumer protections, including mortgages, before this bill can be finalized."

The swift passage and the president's subsequent veto of this bill come on the heels of an announcement that Wall Street banks are voluntarily suspending foreclosure proceedings in 23 states.

By most reports, it would appear that the voluntary suspension of foreclosures is underway to review simple, careless, procedural errors - errors which the conscientious banks are hastening to correct. Even Gretchen Morgenson in The New York Times characterizes the problem as "flawed paperwork."

However, those errors go far deeper than mere sloppiness; they are concealing a massive fraud. They cannot  be corrected with legitimate paperwork, and that was the reason the servicers had to hire "foreclosure mills" to fabricate the documents. These errors involve perjury and forgery - fabricating documents that never existed and swearing to the accuracy of facts not known.

Karl Denninger at MarketTicker is calling it "Foreclosuregate." Diana Ollick of CNBC calls it "the RoboSigning Scandal." On Monday, Ollick reported rumors that the government is planning a 90-day foreclosure moratorium to deal with the problem.

Three large mortgage issuers - JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and GMAC - have voluntarily suspended thousands of foreclosures, and a number of calls have been made for investigations.

Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray announced on Wednesday that he is filing suit against Ally Financial and GMAC for civil penalties up to $25,000 per violation for fraud in hundreds of foreclosure suits.

These problems cannot be swept under the rug as mere technicalities. They go to the heart of the securitization process itself. The snowball has just started to roll.

You Can't Recover What Doesn't Exist

Yves Smith of Naked Capitalism has uncovered a price list from a company called DocX that specializes in "document recovery solutions." DocX is the technology platform used by Lender Processing Services to manage a national network of foreclosure mills. The price list includes such things as "Create Missing Intervening Assignment," $35; "Cure Defective Assignment," $12.95; "Recreate Entire Collateral File," $95. Notes Smith:

[C]reating ... means fabricating documents out of whole cloth, and look at the extent of the offerings. The collateral file is ALL the documents the trustee (or the custodian as an agent of the trustee) needs to have pursuant to its obligations under the pooling and servicing agreement on behalf of the mortgage backed security holder. This means most importantly the original of the note (the borrower IOU), copies of the mortgage (the lien on the property), the securitization agreement, and title insurance.

How do you recreate the original note if you don't have it? And all for a flat fee, regardless of the particular facts or the supposed difficulty of digging them up.

All of the mortgages in question were "securitized" - turned into Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS) and sold off to investors. MBS are typically pooled through a type of "special purpose vehicle" called a Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduit or "REMIC," which has strict requirements defined under the US Internal Revenue Code (the Tax Reform Act of 1986). The REMIC holds the mortgages in trust and issues securities representing an undivided interest in them.

Denninger explains that mortgages are pooled into REMIC Trusts as a tax avoidance measure, and that to qualify, the properties must be properly conveyed to the trustee of the REMIC in the year the MBS is set up, with all the paperwork necessary to show a complete chain of title. For some reason, however, that was not done; and there is no legitimate way to create those conveyances now, because the time limit allowed under the Tax Code has passed.

The question is, why weren't they done properly in the first place? Was it just haste and sloppiness as alleged? Or was there some reason that these mortgages could NOT be assigned when the MBS were formed?

Denninger argues that it would not have been difficult to do it right from the beginning. His theory is that documents were "lost" to avoid an audit, which would have revealed to investors that they had been sold a bill of goods - a package of toxic subprime loans very prone to default.

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The Tranche Problem

Here is another possible explanation, constructed from an illuminating CNBC clip dated June 29, 2007. In it, Steve Liesman describes how Wall Street turned bundles of subprime mortgages into triple-A investments, using the device called "tranches." It's easier to follow if you watch the clip (here), but this is an excerpt:

How do you create a subprime derivative? ... You take a bunch of mortgages ... and put them into one big thing. We call it a Mortgage Backed Security. Say it's $50 million worth.... Now you take a bunch of these Mortgage Backed Securities and you put them into one very big thing.... The one thing about all these guys here [in the one very big thing] is that they're all subprime borrowers, their credit is bad or there's something about them that doesn't make it prime....

Watch, we're going to make some triple A paper out of this ... Now we have a $1 billion vehicle here. We're going to slice it up into five different pieces. Call them tranches.... The key is, they're not divided by "Jane's is here" and "Joe's is here." Jane is actually in all five pieces here. Because what we're doing is, the BBB tranche, they're going to take the first losses for whoever is in the pool, all the way up to about 8% of the losses. What we're saying is, you've got losses in the thing, I'm going to take them and in return you're going to pay me a relatively high interest rate.... All the way up to triple A, where 24% of the losses are below that. Twenty-four percent have to go bad before they see any losses. Here's the magic as far as Wall Street's concerned. We have taken subprime paper and created GE quality paper out of it. We have a triple A tranche here.

The top tranche is triple A because it includes the mortgages that did NOT default; but no one could know which those were until the defaults occurred, when the defaulting mortgages got assigned to the lower tranches and foreclosure went forward. That could explain why the mortgages could not be assigned to the proper group of investors immediately: the homes only fell into their designated tranches when they went into default. The clever designers of these vehicles tried to have it both ways by conveying the properties to an electronic dummy conduit called MERS (an acronym for Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems), which would hold them in the meantime. MERS would then assign them to the proper tranche as the defaults occurred. But the rating agencies required that the conduit be "bankruptcy remote," which meant it could hold title to nothing; and courts have started to take notice of this defect. They are concluding that if MERS owns nothing, it can assign nothing, and the chain of title has been irretrievably broken. As foreclosure expert Neil Garfield traces these developments:

First they said it was MERS who was the lender. That clearly didn't work because MERS lent nothing, collected nothing and never had anything to do with the cash involved in the transaction. Then they started with the servicers who essentially met with the same problem. Then they got cute and produced either the actual note, a copy of the note or a forged note, or an assignment or a fabricated assignment from a party who at best had dubious rights to ownership of the loan to another party who had equally dubious rights, neither of whom parted with any cash to fund either the loan or the transfer of the obligation.... Now the pretender lenders have come up with the idea that the "Trust" is the owner of the loan ... even though it is just a nominee (just like MERS).... They can't have it both ways.

My answer is really simple. The lender/creditor is the one who advanced cash to the borrower.... The use of nominees or straw men doesn't mean they can be considered principals in the transaction any more than your depository bank is a principal to a transaction in which you buy and pay for something with a check.

So, What's to Be Done?

Garfield's proposed solution is for the borrowers to track down the real lenders - the investors. He says:

[I]f you meet your Lender (investor), you can restructure the loan yourselves and then jointly go after the pretender lenders for all the money they received and didn't disclose as "agent."

Karl Denninger concurs. He writes:

Those who bought MBS from institutions that improperly securitized this paper can and should sue the securitizers to well beyond the orbit of Mars.... [I]f this bankrupts one or more large banking institutions, so be it. We now have "resolution authority," let's see it used.

The resolution authority Denninger is referring to is in the new Banking Reform Bill, which gives federal regulators the power and responsibility to break up big banks when they pose a "grave risk" to the financial system - which is what we have here. CNBC's Larry Kudlow calls it "the housing equivalent of the credit financial meltdown," something he says could "go on forever."

Financial analyst Marshall Auerback suggests calling a bank holiday. He writes:

Most major banks are insolvent and cannot (and should not) be saved. The best approach is something like a banking holiday for the largest 19 banks and shadow banks in which institutions are closed for a relatively brief period. Supervisors move in to assess problems. It is essential that all big banks be examined during the "holiday" to uncover claims on one another. It is highly likely that supervisors will find that several trillions of dollars of bad assets will turn out to be claims big financial institutions have on one another (that is exactly what was found when AIG was examined - which is why the government bail-out of AIG led to side payments to the big banks and shadow banks).... By taking over and resolving the biggest 19 banks and netting claims, the collateral damage in the form of losses for other banks and shadow banks will be relatively small.

What we need to avoid at all costs is "TARP II" - another bank bailout by the taxpayers. No bank is too big to fail. The giant banks can be broken up and replaced with a network of publicly-owned banks and community banks, which could do a substantially better job of serving consumers and businesses than Wall Street is doing now.

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Ellen Brown developed her research skills as an attorney practicing civil litigation in Los Angeles. In "Web of Debt," her latest book, she turns those skills to an analysis of the Federal Reserve and “the money trust.” She shows how this private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people themselves, and how we the people can get it back. Her eleven books include Forbidden Medicine, Nature’s Pharmacy (co-authored with Dr. Lynne Walker), and The Key to Ultimate Health (co-authored with Dr. Richard Hansen). Her websites are www.webofdebt.com, www.ellenbrown.com, and www.public-banking.com.


Comments

This forum is moderated by software. Please allow up to 15 minutes for your comments to go live and avoid posting the same comment multiple times.



Well the solutions posed in

Well the solutions posed in this article sound interesting but unfortunately, they will never happen. To quote the cartoon anchorman from the Simpsons, "I've said it before and I'll say it again: Democracy just does not work."



Richard Cloward and Frances

Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven must be looking at this mess and smiling. It's nothing more than the Cloward-Piven strategy applied to the housing and financial markets.



Good on Obama. Bad on

Good on Obama. Bad on Congress, both parties, and (surprise, surprise) Wall Street.



The link to the CNBC clip is

The link to the CNBC clip is not working.



yesterday, LPS explained on

yesterday, LPS explained on an investor call that the "price list" you refer to was from 2001, years before they acquired that subsidiary.

you're also incorrect about what they do.



F#$king unbelievable, he

F#$king unbelievable, he actually does something good.. He and the Democrats could have passed cramdown in 2009 or they could have simply declared a moratorium on foreclosures, or could have done any number of things to restrain the outrageous manipulation of housing prices by Wall Street (they'd all be in jail if they pulled this sh$t with silver) but a little victory needs to be celebrated.



Obama has done a LOT of good

Obama has done a LOT of good things:

www.obamarecord.blogspot.com/

politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/rulings/promise-kept/



At last, a purpose for his

At last, a purpose for his Obamanible Do-NOTHING talent! Maybe he can keep his Lipsticking, TOO!



Resolution Authority is

Resolution Authority is FINALLY being discussed. This is good news, albeit after Ohio AG filed $25K/foreclosure lawsuit. Me thinks Warren is making headway!

Go Elizabeth, GO!!!



Thank You Mr.

Thank You Mr. President...one small step for the little guy, one giant step for our country, I hope...



The first 2/3 of this

The first 2/3 of this article is a very good summary. The last third (so what is to be done) makes no sense, and is out of context. Don't you have editors?

The borrowers being foreclosed will get a grace period, and ultimately may be lucky enough to find a counterparty ready, willing, and able to renegotiate a lower loan payment.

The investors have already suffered huge losses.

The intermediaries are the ones who should be sued - for malfeasance, for fraud.

What I found new was the idea that the securitization into tranches was in conflict with the REMIC tax law, in that the ex post facto assignment to a specific pool could not occur in subsequent years. That creates a bitter pill for securitization.

Who is in jeopardy - primarily the 4-5 big institutions that packaged these securitizations. Goldman, Chase, Merrill Lynch (now BofA), Deutsche, and now defunct Lehman. If these securities were improperly created, they would be on the hook.



I financed, and refinanced

I financed, and refinanced my house on a 15 year loan through my credit union, rather than a bank. and the payments are automatically deducted from my checking account. I feel a lot safer, (so far anyway).
Jim of olym



RIGHT ON President Obama!

RIGHT ON President Obama! It is reassuring to see that you are alert and willing to stop the SNAKES in our Senate dead in their tracks. You ARE the People's president and we thank you.



21:33 What you're asking

21:33 What you're asking makes no sense, investors have already suffered huge loses?
This is untrue!
Credit derivatives helped turn AIG, for example, into a hedge fund, but they also protected companies and investors from a housing market collapse and rise in defaults during a recession.If Banks were on the hook they would be insolvent!
Taxpayers are on the hook, if a homeowner in this situation can discover who the investors are, that is leverage.



The fact that the 'cramdown'

The fact that the 'cramdown' bill was not passed (OVERWHELMINGLY by BOTH parties) in the spring of 2009 shows the clear coercion between our government(both parties) and BIG Business(the financial industry!) And since then MILLIONS of honest middle class Americans lost their homes! NOW when 'fraud' would easily by exposed by the Financial Institutions WE(our government) LET the banksters put their own 'voluntary suspension' of mortgages so THEY (the banks) aren't EXPOSED MORE!!!....SUCCESS to me will come when THOUSANDS of the 'THIEVES' are rounded up and PROSECUTED!!! AND if found guilty! Then WE foreclose on their FREEDOM!!!!(for a LONG TIME!!!)



Your spam filter is really

Your spam filter is really creepy. Certainly liberals should have more respect for comments than you have. It is damned insulting to be blocked as span when one writes ones opinion that is aimed for discussion and dialogue. Really Creepy!



To the person who thought my

To the person who thought my solutions were off, I think he misread my article, because I agree with his solutions: the homeowners and investors should get together and do a fair workout; the middlemen should be on the hook for the losses.

On the spam filter, a number of people have written to me saying they couldn't get their comments posted, so I wrote to the editor. He apologized and said they knew they had problems with it and they're redoing their website; it's just a matter of time and funding.

To the person who thought my solutions were off, I think he misread my article, because I agree with his solutions: the homeowners and investors should get together and do a fair workout; the middlemen should be on the hook for the losses.



All you chickenshit

All you chickenshit "anonymouses": What are you scared of? What are you hiding? Who are you fronting for? Why is this even offered as an option?

Yes, I know these are not campaign contributions (which are allowed by law to be anonymous in many of the most important cases, because those who wish to hide their obscene support for obscene causes can easily find ways to channel their smarm through the "exceptions" generously provided them by our "elected" representatives).

And I also know that many people, seeing that option, think, "Gee, maybe it would be better if I didn't reveal my identity to strangers with whom I will never again have any contact."

But what does democracy mean if people choose to conceal their own participation in the public discourse?



Sorry I come across as

Sorry I come across as "chickenshit" to Scott A. Weir but I am afraid of our government since Bush unleashed the spying apparatus upon us and Obama has continued it.

Regarding this article, I wonder when the mainstream media gets around to reporting this. PBS Newshour put on a show of trying to cover this story but carefully dodged the implications and wasted nearly half their time letting an incoherent speaker guide the conversation away from anything that might suggest a way out for the beleaguered. Alan Grayson's video here on Truthout is well worth it. And thank you, Ellen Brown.



wonder what hank paulson's

wonder what hank paulson's doing this evening



Even Clinton put 1100 S&L

Even Clinton put 1100 S&L fraudsters in prison. Scumbag Obama: NONE, yet this is about 100x worse. What a bank whore.



Maybe we'll see the end of

Maybe we'll see the end of "Too big to fail Banks" after all?



I think that's what's coming

I think that's what's coming -- they're going to fail. We can't do another bailout. A foreclosure freeze is going to be just like the credit freeze of 2008 -- game changing.



I object to these mortgages

I object to these mortgages being termed loans. To loan something means you have it to begin with. That is the consideration that one party, the bank, supposedly brings to the contract. The other party, the borrower offers, for his part in consideration, thirty years of promised payments plus collateral.

The problem is, the money is "created" by the bank when the "borrower" signs the promissory note.

Until we recognize the fraudulent nature of this contract, and the wording that describes it,we will never get out from under this debt-based money and banking scam.

By the subversion of language we are subverted. Stop calling mortgages loans. They are dishonest flim-flam created in a dishonest monetary system.



Bravo, Mr. President I hope

Bravo, Mr. President
I hope that this means that you heard all of us on the National Mall on October 2. The message was, I hope, “Do the right thing and we have your back. Don’t, and we will call you to account.”
In this case, congratulations, Mr. President, you got it right! Thank you.



This is merely a

This is merely a pre-election move to lesson the damage to the dems. Nothing is dead. It will be revisited once the election is over.



Good article. I'm REALLY

Good article. I'm REALLY tired of the Obama bashing by some of the TruthOut readers. Calling the President a "scumbag" and other needlessly nasty labels shows that you're no better than the idiot Teabaggers and Faux News Nazis --- perhaps worse.



I think only one person in

I think only one person in the comments outlined the real underlying issue of the fraud - When you get a "Loan" from a bank, they monetize your promise to pay, ie. the Promissory Note. Think of it as you signing a check for the amount of the loan. The bank then takes that note, endorses the back of it, just like a check, and then they transmit that endorsed note to the Federal Reserve, who in turn credits the bank for that amount. So what just happened? You just funded the loan yourself, with your signature! Then they have you sign a Deed of Trust giving the bank a security interest in the house that you just paid for with your signature. This is called Fraudulent Conversion and it has been happening day in and day out in this country since 1933.

To add fraud on top of fraud, a few years ago banks came up with this scheme to make even more money buy bundling these securities and selling them to unwitting investors, but in their exuberance for more profit, they got careless with their bookkeeping, maybe drunk on hubris thinking they would never get caught. This ForeclosureGate issue is just one slice of the total fraud that is our financial system. If you really want to educate yourself on just how far the rabbit hole goes, pick up the book - They Own It All, Including You. Or visit http://www.newpeopleorder.com



Takes your breath away

Takes your breath away twice. First with the level of outright fraud involved (remember Greenspan who said even fraud was OK as the market would self correct); we now know what he meant by correct "the peoples money would be stolen". Second; the unanimous passage of this thing tells me just how filthy our government is; they shouldn't just be thrown out, they should be in jail, every one who voted for this monstrosity.



Liberal democracy,’ Robert

Liberal democracy,’ Robert Lynd wrote twenty-five years ago, ‘has never dared face the fact that industrial capitalism is an intensely coercive form of organization of society that cumulatively constrains men and all of their institutions to work the will of the minority who hold and wield economic power; and that this relentless warping of men’s lives and forms of associations becomes less and less the result of voluntary decisions by “bad” men or “good men” and more and more an impersonal web of coercions dictated by the need to keep “the system” running.’ – The State of Capitalist Society p. 74 c 1969 - Ralph Miliband



Why did HR 3808 fly through

Why did HR 3808 fly through the Senate? That's all the Senators, voting unanimously for this bill to whitewash fraud.

Yesterday Axelrod is on TV saying tha foreclosures shouldn't be held up because some have paperwork "that is a-ok". He completely misses the point of course, and that never matters in politics. Legislators who voted for TARP/TARP II should be ejected from office.



Of course it will, Anonymous

Of course it will, Anonymous on 10/8 at 12:12 - That's how it works! So keep a sharp eye out for who wins on Nov. 2nd. Look for "good guys" bent on re-regulation.



Wrong target, Scott Weir!

Wrong target, Scott Weir! You should be haranguing Congress - well, actually the Senate - for ditching the DISCLOSE Act, if you want folks to be more transparent. Some at T/O Comments ARE cowards; you can tell them by their texts: always criticizing the author; never arguing the issues; ad hominem attacks. Others may need to be kept confidential for a zillion different good reasons; those people will not engage in the above activities of the cowards.



Anonymous on 10/7 at 21:24 -

Anonymous on 10/7 at 21:24 - Nice paraphrase of Neil Armstrong! Also you could turn it into math: One small step for millions of Americans = a giant step for our country!



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