Shock Therapy for Wall Street: JPMorgan Suspends 56,000 Foreclosures; GMAC and BOA Many More
Saturday 02 October 2010
by: Ellen Brown | WebofDebt.com | News Analysis

(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: House Committee on Education and Labor, Emmanuel Huybrechts)
“Maybe this is like shock therapy. Maybe this will actually get the lenders to the table and encourage them to work out deals that are to the benefit of everybody.”
--Economist Karl E. Case, quoted in The New York Times.
The hits are coming fast and furiously. It appears major Wall Street mortgage lenders could again be in serious trouble – and looking again for handouts.
On September 20th, Ally Financial Inc., which owns GMAC Mortgage, the nation’s 4th largest lender, halted evictions and the resale of repossessed homes in 23 states. This was after a document processor for the company admitted that he had signed off on 10,000 pieces of foreclosure paperwork a month without reading them. The 23 states were all those where foreclosures must be approved by a court, including New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Florida and Illinois.
On September 24th, Representatives Alan Grayson (D-FL), Barney Frank (D- MA) and Corrine Brown (D-FL) directed a letter to Fannie Mae questioning its use of “foreclosure mills,” which were described as “law firms representing lenders that specialize in speeding up the foreclose process, often without regard to process, substance or legal propriety.” The letter followed a report by the Florida attorney general’s office in August that it was investigating three law firms that had allegedly fabricated documents in thousands of cases to obtain final judgments of foreclosure.
On September 24, California attorney general Jerry Brown asked GMAC to halt foreclosures in his state until the lender could prove it was complying with a law that prohibits lenders from taking steps to foreclose a home before making an effort to work with the borrower. California is a non-judicial foreclosure state, meaning foreclosures do not require the prior approval of a court.
On September 28, JPMorgan Chase said it was halting 56,000 foreclosures because some of its employees might have improperly prepared the necessary documents. All of the suspensions were in the 23 states where foreclosures require court approval.
On September 29, the Washington Post reported that a top federal bank regulator had directed seven of the nation’s largest lenders to review their foreclosure processes, after learning about widespread mishandling of homeowner evictions. Besides JPMorgan Chase, they included Bank of America, Citibank, HSBC, PNC Bank, U.S. Bank and Wells Fargo. The Washington Post noted:
"The paperwork problems range from potentially forged documents to bank employees who never read borrowers' files before signing off on an eviction. . . ."While we don't expect our review to find that consumers were harmed, we will take appropriate action if we find any impact," JP Morgan spokesman Tom Kelly said."
No harm perhaps except the illegal taking of thousands of homes without due process . . . .
On September 30, Rep. Alan Grayson posted a devastating seven-minute video, in which he gave four real-world examples of such travesties of justice, including a man who was foreclosed on when he didn’t have a mortgage and paid cash for the home; a home that had two foreclosure suits against it because both servicers claimed ownership of the title; and a couple foreclosed on over a contested $75 late fee.
Grayson blamed the massive foreclosure problems largely on the electronic shortcut called MERS. “The banks simply digitized mortgage titles into a privatized system, called the Mortgage Electronic Registry System (or MERS),” he said. “And it did the transfers by trading Excel spreadsheets among the banks and trusts, rather than endorsing the notes as required by their own contracts, by state real estate law and by IRS rules.” He stated that 60 million properties are recorded in the name of MERS -- 60% of the mortgages in the USA, and 97% of the loans made between 2005 and 2008.
On October 1, Bank of America announced that it was delaying foreclosures in 23 states.
The same day, Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal took the radical step of putting a halt to all foreclosures from all banks in his state.
A Box Even Houdini Couldn’t Escape?
All of this is a major headache for the banks, but according to the New York Times, “The companies say they are reviewing their procedures to take care of any violations.” They seem to think they can correct the problem by redoing some paperwork. But if the holdings in recent court decisions are upheld, it will not be just a question of hiring extra staff to clean up some files. For all those mortgages filed in the name of MERS, say these courts, the chain of title has been irretrievably broken. Humpty Dumpty has had a great fall and cannot be put back together again.
MERS is simply an electronic data base. On its website and in assorted court pleadings, it declares that it owns nothing. It was set up that way intentionally so that it would be “bankruptcy-remote,” something required by the credit rating agencies in order to turn the mortgages passing through it into highly rated securities that could be sold to investors. MERS not only has no assets; it has no employees. The thousands of people enlisted to sign affidavits on its behalf are merely conduits. The arrangement satisfied the ratings agencies, but it has not satisfied the courts. Increasingly, judges are holding that if MERS owns nothing, it cannot foreclose, and it cannot convey title by assignment so that the trustee for the investors can foreclose. MERS breaks the chain of title so that no one has standing to foreclose. The homes are effectively owned free and clear.
That does not mean the homeowners don’t owe money to someone. They do. But the claim for relief is not in “law” (by virtue of an enforceable contract or rule) but in “equity” (a remedy provided just because it is fair), and MERS is not the proper plaintiff. Every MERS case involves a securitization, which means the real parties in interest are a group of investors somewhere; and before the homeowners can be made to pay, the investors have to come forward and prove not only that they are the parties owed the money, but the actual sums they are owed. In some cases they might already have been paid; for example, by insurers on credit default swaps held by the investment pool. The investors are entitled to recover in equity only so much as they are actually out of pocket, not the full amount of the original promissory notes, since they were not parties to those notes and there is no way to re-establish the chain of title.
What About the Non-judicial Foreclosure States?
Foreclosures have been suspended by JPMorgan, GMAC and BOA in 23 states, but what about the rest? The others are non-judicial foreclosure states, which means they allow foreclosure through a power of sale clause in a deed of trust without going to court. The presumption is that if the lender doesn’t have to prove his standing to sue before a judge, he can proceed. State laws in non-judicial states allow the sale of a property to satisfy a foreclosure as long as the trustee follows the regulations concerning notice. That would seem to violate Constitutional due process, but the United States Constitution has held that due process protections apply only when the government is involved in the taking of property. When a deed of trust and promissory note are executed between two private parties (homeowners and lenders), there is no automatic due process protection. The homeowners agreed to it in writing; case closed.
But here’s the catch: what if the lender signing the original documents is not the party foreclosing on the property? Then it becomes a question of fact whether the foreclosing party has authority to proceed, and that makes it a judicial issue – a question of fact for the courts. If the foreclosing party can show a clear chain of title – an assignment or progression of assignments from the original lender to himself – he is home free. But courts have increasingly been holding that MERS breaks the chain of title. Foreclosure expert Neil Garfield argues that even in non-judicial foreclosure states, that means the investors have to go to court to prove their case. And when they do, they will run up against the brick wall of MERS. He concludes:
"There will be a head-slapping moment when title carriers, attorneys, judges and administrative agencies and clerks suddenly realize that the monster created on Wall Street has its equivalent in the public records of counties across the nation. I doubt if more than 6-7% of all the foreclosures in the past 10 years have resulted in clear title delivered to anyone. And the only corrective instrument can come from the original owner. That homeowner is sitting in the catbird seat and doesn’t know it. Millions of people who THINK they have lost their homes still own them and if anyone wants a signature from those people to clear title, they are going to be required to pay dearly, which is at it should be. Eventually the purse gets returned to the victim from whom it was snatched."
To Subsidize or Nationalize?
Where does that leave JPMorgan, GMAC, Bank of America, and the other major lenders? Investors have massive claims against these banks, and so do homeowners. A major title insurance company has already said it will not insure title to properties foreclosed upon by GMAC until further notice. Moody’s has placed the servicer ratings of GMAC and JPMorgan Chase on review for possible downgrade, and the Treasury is asking regulators for an investigation.
Investment adviser Christopher Whalen thinks we could soon be looking at more Wall Street bankruptcies. If so, hopefully we won’t fall into the trap this time of underwriting the losses while letting the banks keep the profits. If we the people are picking up the tab, we should insist on owning the banks.

This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.



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.
This is wonderful news! Now
Sat, 10/02/2010 - 10:51 — BillyDoc (not verified)This is wonderful news! Now we just have to hold our bought-and-paid-for congress's feet to a fire so they LET THE BANKS FAIL.
When these banks fail the assets they have been stealing with such wild abandon will find their way back into the economy. In most cases directly to people who are in financial trouble and will spend a great proportion of this money. This is the perfect economic stimulus for us all. Instead of a bleak economic future if these banks fail, their failure makes the future look incredibly bright!
LET THEM FAIL!!!!
Well, if this doesn't cause
Sat, 10/02/2010 - 11:42 — Anonymous (not verified)Well, if this doesn't cause congress to push the reset button on banking and finance law I can't imagine what will. I would suggest that ALL home owners and those who have "lost" their homes to foreclosure check to see if this applies to their situation and either retrieve their property through the courts, in the case of foreclosure, or stop paying your mortgage knowing the banks have no recourse, if only to teach the bastards a lesson. We may yet be able to reclaim our country from the money barons.
“NO BANK LEFT BEHIND”
Sat, 10/02/2010 - 12:30 — Anonymous (not verified)“NO BANK LEFT BEHIND” has been an effective government policy. Performed successfully with millimetrical effectiveness. So the Government is the solution and not the problem. Wrong Mr. Reagan. Fabricating crisis and news have become a very profitable activity. Do nothing and steal a lot of money, generate a crisis and wait for the “small” government to be the lifeguard. Is this another trick by the banks to make more billions expecting the forecasted republican’s victory? They will have the speaker and a strong ally.
Remember, it was Alan
Sat, 10/02/2010 - 14:02 — mysterioso (not verified)Remember, it was Alan Greenspan who said that fraud should not be considered illegal. He was the one who set the standard for all of this to happen. He set the tone that anything was O.K. as long as it made money.
Alan Greenspan should be charged with financial terrorism against the United States and hung from a lamppost and left to rot in the sun. All these profit first, let the market regulate itself, greed merchants need to be taught a lesson.
"This tribe of black gentry work more effectually against us than the enemy's arms. They are a hundred times more dangerous to our liberties, and the great causes we are engaged in. It is much to be lamented that each State, long ere this, has not hunted them down as pests to society, and the greatest enemies we have to the happiness of America." - George Washington
The banks own the
Sat, 10/02/2010 - 14:33 — Anonymous (not verified)The banks own the government. That's how Paulson, Geitner and others got their positions. Even Chris Dodd profited from millions of dollars of loans from Countrywide as a member of the "friends of Angelo (mozillo)list of favored. It is totally corrupted as a system. Back to the constitution of the US for a review. Read the writings of Jefferson, Franklin and others. We have lost our way. Let's find it again in the true principals of our country.
If anybody knows how to help
Sat, 10/02/2010 - 14:40 — Andre (not verified)If anybody knows how to help these people, please let me know and I will pass it on to them or you can post a comment on the youtube video. They have no money for a lawyer and have disabilities preventing them from
understanding the process.
youtube.com/watch?v=H_vdfbCNnNo
youtube.com/watch?v=Y4WDYcppix0
NO more bailouts for Banks,
Sat, 10/02/2010 - 14:50 — Uno Nacion (not verified)NO more bailouts for Banks, the country needs to be protected from failure, not banks. Cowards in Congress who voted to protect too big to fail banks should be held to account - this is an outrage. Banks have screwed millions, and now they are attempting to do an equally vicious hatchet job on these people before they are thrown in the street. To anyone in this situation who is facing the prospect of losing their homes, my fullest sympathies, your elected officials - so far- have let you down. Fight on and win.
Hello, the banks want to
Sat, 10/02/2010 - 16:32 — Anonymous (not verified)Hello, the banks want to delay foreclosure now because they would have to recognize current value not what is on the books. The balance sheets would tilt and no bank would meet the solvency tests. Watching the reporters and news is like watching pro wrestling..."oh! He is down! He looks hurt...but wait he is getting up..." Are we really this stupid?
And thanks to Alan Grayson
Sat, 10/02/2010 - 17:09 — Anonymous (not verified)And thanks to Alan Grayson and the people he has been working with on this for their research and tirelessly speaking out the truth against great odds. Frodo lives!
BANKRUPTED Big Banks Because
Sat, 10/02/2010 - 17:33 — Kevin Schmidt (not verified)BANKRUPTED Big Banks
Because they no longer have clear title on trillions of dollars worth of mortgages, the big banks now have trillions of dollars in negative assets. Everyone with bank accounts over FDIC limits are going to lose it all, again!
Once this fact dawns on everyone, the stock market will crash, there will be a run on the big banks, and the Republican inspired Second Great Depression will be in full force.
This is the October Surprise that surprised everyone!
The upper 1% said to the middle class, "Let them eat whine." Well now the middle class says to the upper 1%, "Let them eat clear titles!" And the middle class can now tell the upper class to stop whining and suck it up!
As a California/Nevada
Sat, 10/02/2010 - 18:00 — Terry J. Thomas, Esq. (not verified)As a California/Nevada lawyer, fighting foreclosures, I have had numerous "questionable" documents, fostered by So.Cal & Las Vegas Foreclosure Industry mills.
Judges are avoiding their responsibilities so they can leave at 5:00 pm... Not bother with the 200 years of evidence law that mandates that unauthenticated copies of copies are pure, inadmissible hearsay and less than useless in a normal lawsuit.
Everyone is equal before the law... Some are just MORE equal than others.
Anyone interested in Nevada's failed attempt to slow foreclosures and avoid court refusals to enforce the law is invited to see the updates on my YouTube channel: "T2esquire."
great ,now bring some jobs
Sat, 10/02/2010 - 18:15 — Anonymous (not verified)great ,now bring some jobs back from outsourceland and we''ll have a stable country again
I am not completely proud to
Sat, 10/02/2010 - 22:43 — Anonymous (not verified)I am not completely proud to say I have several accounts with Bank of America. I have wanted to move them to smaller, community oriented bank out of sheer disgust for the big banks that wrecked this economy, but unfortunately they are CD Accounts and I have no desire to be charged an outrageous fee for accessing them early. However, most of them will be up for renewal by December, and I intend to move them before BoA goes under for good. I suggest everyone start looking ahead before those ATM's stop spitting cash.
That's a good idea for
Sun, 10/03/2010 - 00:40 — Ellen Brown (not verified)That's a good idea for philosophical reasons but I don't think you're at risk of losing your deposits. My bank went bankrupt and nothing happened except it changed names. The government will take it over, and the Fed will work some quantitative easing magic on the numbers, and all will be well. If you own stock in it, that's another matter.
As a class member I have
Sun, 10/03/2010 - 09:16 — Anonymous (not verified)As a class member I have been directly involved in the 2 of the Nevada MERS case's, for 2 years now, and we are fortunate to have a great legal team-Hager & Hearn. My lender wasn't even registered with the State to do business in the state of Nevada, but was a conduit for Countrywide and B of A . They set the whole thing up from the beginning, so as to collect twice on a foreclosure, once when the homeowner triggered the default, by being only 30 days late, thus collecting the insurance money from AIG via credit default swap insurance, and a 2nd time when they take the home illegally and sell it at auction.. The crooks also have not been paying the county recording fee's on all those NOD's and related notices ..they owe millions to Washoe and Douglas counties..and that's just the counties I'm aware of.. Unfortunately I cant say any more at present time, other than to join a class if possible.
This was the best chance in
Sun, 10/03/2010 - 10:11 — Bob (not verified)This was the best chance in a long time to break the power of finance over the people but the financiers owned the system & only became stronger. Until the banks are nationalized & money is only created by the peoples governments rather than the monstrous fractional reserve system we will be forever under their thumb. I would think that 99% of the American people do not realize that most money but zero real wealth is "created"by private companies by indebting everyone. Think about it; everyone owes money, individuals, companies, governments at all levels. Who do we owe it to, where did they get it & just what is money & where does it come from. I know this is like questioning god (you should do that too because it's about the same) but when you learn the truth you will be blown away by what you find. The real question is, "how can they bamboozle so many for so long?" PS, They own the courts too even at the highest levels. Conrad Black was able to get the supremes to change the law to get out of jail where he was only because of his supreme arrogance, not because of his frauds.
One needs to find and read
Sun, 10/03/2010 - 11:31 — Anonymous (not verified)One needs to find and read the book titled "The Creature From Jekyll Island". Much wisdom to be learned about our current financial system.
Great comments, very
Sun, 10/03/2010 - 11:46 — Anonymous (not verified)Great comments, very informative and educational. Concise, to the point, more useful than the boring, no-substance, deceptive articles of the mainstream press.
Anyone want to bet that the
Mon, 10/04/2010 - 09:23 — Ron (not verified)Anyone want to bet that the lame duck Congress doesn't "fix" this problem for the banks?? Maybe retroactively chartering MERS as a national bank??
Hey, they paid for these guys, didn't they?
It only takes 5-months for a
Mon, 10/04/2010 - 09:58 — Anonymous (not verified)It only takes 5-months for a decesion on a short sale.
Bankers need to stream line this process!!!!!
This is wonderful news! Now
Mon, 10/04/2010 - 12:32 — Tarequl Islam Munna (not verified)This is wonderful news! Now we just have to hold our bought-and-paid-for congress's feet to a fire so they LET THE BANKS FAIL.
How many bankers does it
Mon, 10/04/2010 - 18:16 — Anonymous (not verified)How many bankers does it take to really screw things up - I mean, to screw is a light bulb? They got greedy and they made a lot of money; they remained greedy and got a lot of bonuses. But they are just too greedy and now they are about to be discovered for who they really are. "They are who we thought they were!" They broke so many rules and got away with it all - and now - maybe - they are about to lose big time and it is exactly what they deserve. They are about to reap the harvest they deserve.Free homes for homeowners - or - show us your paperwork and show us all the correct documentation and show us who owns the deed, etc...
We are looking at
Tue, 10/05/2010 - 12:02 — Anonymous (not verified)We are looking at symptoms..pure and simple. What I mean here is that we carved up the mortgages into Tranches and sold them off and there is NO WAY to clear title. We can only assume that the real "disease" will be cured by removing the paper from the chain and make believe that the owners of record actually do exist. Thereby, the foreclosures can continue.
This issue arose over 8 months ago somewhere in the Eastern USA (South Carolina, I think) and there was a general announcement made in the press that told plaintiffs: "Tell them in Foreclosure proceedings to present their titles. They will not be able to do so and the judges HAVE to rule that the proceedings must be discontinued." From there, even mortgage payments can be terminated without process. Hilarious if we all just want to our lenders and asked them to produce proof of ownership in original form. Just stop paying until they do and they cannot!!
Obviously the only reason
Wed, 10/06/2010 - 14:52 — GT (not verified)Obviously the only reason they are suspending foreclosures is to buy time so they can get the proper paper work to continue. If I was in the process of being foreclosed on and it was still moving forward, I'd challenge it. Otherwise, all this is is a small reprieve until the vultures start picking at the carcass again.
Amazing New Health Tonic, WOW!
Fri, 03/11/2011 - 18:42 — Feng (not verified)Amazing post, honest!
http://www.thespahealth.com/
Reersonry
Sun, 03/13/2011 - 04:46 — Reersonry (not verified)http://dogemopil.do.funpic.de http://rebivafiv.re.funpic.de http://qajoqobako.qa.funpic.de http://nedelulaqe.ne.funpic.de http://topogujup.to.funpic.de
Amazing post,
Wed, 03/30/2011 - 03:59 — ourhealthroad (not verified)Amazing post, honest!
http://www.ourhealthroad.com/
yo
Tue, 05/15/2012 - 20:59 — Anonymous (not verified)ah its not wordpress, its drupal right?
uggs online outlet
Fri, 10/12/2012 - 21:36 — berazoon (not verified)ugg boots online to your friends MgVdmwWj http://www.ugg-boots-online.us/
ugg usa
Sun, 10/21/2012 - 18:52 — DesMeede (not verified)check this link, ugg usa to take huge discount jBxbrykY http://www.ugg-usa.net/
christian louboutin outlet
Tue, 10/30/2012 - 01:58 — CadoSees (not verified)best for you christian louboutin outlet for promotion code MYfAyGrq http://www.christianlouboutin-outletstore.org/
billy cundiff jersey
Fri, 11/02/2012 - 23:57 — Jimmyrt8bf (not verified)amguz darren mcfadden jersey
hhzak darren sproles jersey
sjdmm johnny knox jersey
gbqkv torrey smith jersey
ssqin robbie gould jersey