Foreclosure-Gate -The Whitewash/Cover-Up
source: http://figrd.blogspot.com/
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- figgdimension
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crossposted via:
Yves Smith/NakedCapitalism
The latest report by Shahien Nasirpour at Huffington Post confirms two things you’ve heard here and on some other sites following this sorry affair: first, that Tom MIller, Iowa attorney general who is leading the 50 state attorneys general negotiations on mortgage abuses, is a liar, and second, that any settlement will be a whitewash.
Actually, we already knew Miller was a liar. Shortly after the effort was launched, Miller promised that “”We will put people in jail.” He then started walking that back. Not only did he tell Bloomberg that they were NOT pursuing criminal charges, but per an e-mail:
I was w/ a European documentary maker this weekend who spoke to Miller a few days ago and said Miller relayed the fraud isn’t so bad, everything will be worked out .. the standard line; he’s already made up his mind. He doesn’t want those European governments demanding their money back. The meeting is a photo-op setup because the too-big-to-fail crowd is scared of put-back liability and shorts; they’re working hard to make it appear they’re doing something to quiet everybody down.
Note this message was sent BEFORE MIller made the “jail the baddies” promise that MIller recanted. And it indicates that this entire affair was intended to be an exercise in kabuki theater rather than anything remotely resembling a real investigation.
That brings us to MIller’s second lie. After a staffer ‘fessed up that no investigations were being undertaken, Miller maintained that extensive examinations were underway. That, as Nasiripour indicates, confirming earlier intelligence via Gretchen Morgenson, is complete crap (emphasis ours):
According to sources familiar with the ongoing state and federal probes, state and federal officials have wasted months not digging into the details of the foreclosure crisis, yielding little of value in court and undercutting the lenders’ incentive to strike a settlement of greater benefit to homeowners and taxpayers.
The investigators have yet to gather many documents, conduct depositions or assemble tallies of aggrieved homeowners. They don’t yet have a good handle on the number of wrongful foreclosures, the amount of fraudulent documents filed in local courts or the volume of legal instruments processed by so-called “robo-signers,” the agents that lenders employed to process foreclosure filings en masse without examining the underlying paperwork.
“The evidence a prosecutor would use is not in the possession of the prosecution,” said one person familiar with the ongoing settlement talks.
Even Richard Shelby, the ranking member of the Senate Banking Committee, and a long-standing critic of Wall Street, is not happy with the lack of investigations:
We need a full-fledged investigation,…There’s no substitute for a thorough investigation and finding of fact
The piece later details the evidence the prosecutors say they have obtained, and shows how it actually adds up to very little. This was a feature, not a bug. Consistent with the objective of doing nothing more than provide air cover for the banks, no meaningful investigations were conducted (and on top of that, there have been plenty of other irregularities in how the discussions were conducted). We pointed out this was essential to have any negotiating leverage: a party agrees to settle in order to escape possible litigation. The HufPo article underscores that point:
“I would never want to go into a negotiation without solid evidence of actual misconduct to hold as leverage over my counterpart,” said Neil M. Barofsky, the former special inspector general for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, which was crafted to bail out teetering banks. “It would also be very dangerous from a public policy perspective to waive all future claims as part of such a settlement if you do not have a good sense of the size, scope and severity of the underlying misconduct.”
If you don’t have a credible threat to launch a suit, why should anybody bother? The answer here is obvious: this isn’t a “settlement”; it’s a cash for a broad release (effectively, an indemnification). And since the AGs have done nada in the way of a probe, only the banks know the value of that waiver, and they won’t enter into a deal unless they think it is a bargain.
And indeed, the intended deal is a “get out of liability for almost free” card:
….expedience now appears to be trumping other considerations in settlement talks with major mortgage servicers. Despite failing to marshal a strong case proving misconduct during the foreclosure crisis, the government is seeking to craft a settlement quickly, in the hopes that this will inject greater certainty into the financial system, stabilize home prices and add vigor to a flagging economy.
Ah, yes, if we just give the banks another bailout, surely that will fix the economy! We can see how well that movie is working. As if “fixing the economy” is a good reason to ignore crooked behavior. By that logic, the government shouldn’t go after companies that sell beef full of e-coli because they provide employment.
And have no doubt, the Administration’s fingerprints are all over any deal:
The Justice Department is pressing state attorneys general to release the banks from liability for a host of alleged violations in exchange for a far-reaching settlement, people familiar with internal discussions said.
And the AGs have been sold a complete bill of goods:
The government fears that if it can’t stanch the flood of foreclosures by lowering troubled homeowners’ monthly mortgage payments — and if mortgage servicers cannot resume taking possession of homes for which borrowers have long been delinquent and sell them to people able to afford them — the housing crisis could drag on for years, keeping the broader economy in a feeble state. This is the scenario the government is seeking to stave off by striking a swift settlement with banks, restoring legal clarity to the foreclosure process and providing additional relief for distressed borrowers.
By including assistance for homeowners in the settlement agreement — like loan modifications that reduce payments or the overall amount owed — state and federal authorities said they believe they can help the housing market recover.
This is utter rubbish. First, the AGs are NOT going to “restore clarity to the foreclosure process.” Any action by the AGs will have no impact on the judiciary (the settlement will apparently include useless boilerplate about how banks will follow the law. They are supposed to be following the law regardless; an extra affirmation is pointless). The reason the banks are having so many trouble foreclosing is pervasive problems with how ownership interests were handled in the securitization process. In most cases, they are not amenable to easy fixes, which is why there has been so much fraud committed in courts all over the country.
The story indicates that the states are willing to sell out because any cash settlement would help fill yawning state budget gaps. But what we have been told by well placed sources is that the banks will take a deal only if it is very close to free: a minimal cash component (the $30 billion number in the HuffPo article is pure smoke and mirrors), with the rest being credits of various sorts, including for past mortgage mods. Oh, and any settlement is tax deductible, further lowering what little real cost there will be.
If you are as upset with this as I am, call your state attorney general and give him a piece of your mind. You can find their phone numbers here.http://crimeshouldntpay.com/callagtoday
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Mark701
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So, the status quo will be maintained. I'm not surprised. The "too big to fail banks" were not required to get smaller due to GOP interference in the financial reform bill so they remain too big to fail. This means they can continue to blackmail the US government and US citizens with threats like "if we have to pay a fine it'll crash the economy. Jesus. How did it ever come to this?
- 11 months ago
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Mark701
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letsliveinpeace
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Mark701:
Simple. The bank lobbies and Wall St lobbies are calling the tune. Again. And we get to pay. Again. How to stop them? Bankrupt them and be done with it. Then start over. By forcing them to take back their note, and giving back all the money.
- 11 months ago
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letsliveinpeace
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squarethecircle
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I am glad this still gets to be news, but don't we know who, what, when and how? All that is left is the where and that should be jail. Deterrent for your senses when they make issues of obvious already know situations, our laws are a joke with or without money. It just greases the slide up or down.
- 11 months ago
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squarethecircle
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EmileZ [removed]
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squarethecircle:
Does this get to be news??? Is there any serious examination???
- 11 months ago
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EmileZ [removed]
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squarethecircle
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EmileZ:
Should there be or is it a waste of time since we already know the answers?
- 11 months ago
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squarethecircle
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EmileZ [removed]
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You've got some fantastic posts Figgisdimension.
Yes, we can't enforce the law, or conduct any meaningful investigation on the elites who ruin (did I say ruin, I meant run) the country because it might upset the "animal spirits" on Wall Street, and you never know how the animal spirits might react to such an affront. You know, we have to send the right psychological signals to these mysterious entities. The justice department clearly understands this.
- 11 months ago
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EmileZ [removed]
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artemis6
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I heard that the Fed ( federal bank ) called them up and told them to back off , that the economy was too fragile ?
- 11 months ago
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artemis6
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dugdog47
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The picture of the old woman holding an AK-47 is cool. It seems to say"you want my house? Come try and take it."
- 11 months ago
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dugdog47
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kennymotown
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Warm up the AXE!
- 11 months ago
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kennymotown
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COMMONSENSEFORCOMMONGOOD_COM
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So why aren't we all storming up the steps of every capital building in this country? Why aren't we all protesting all banks, wall street, and corporation in every legal way possible? This is no more or less than the corrupt way our elected officials have been selling out the people of this country forever. ONLY WE CAN STOP IT ! ! ! Demand better from your legislator, and join in protest against every fraud going.
- 11 months ago
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COMMONSENSEFORCOMMONGOOD_COM
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figgdimension
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why am i getting so much spam from current and have to block being automatically transported to another page every time i come to an article luckily i have apps for that but damn annoying
- 11 months ago
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figgdimension
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COMMONSENSEFORCOMMONGOOD_COM
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figgdimension:
more big corporate manipulation figg. they have us on their drug, so now they require more of us for our fix. they're a profit driven organization, period.
- 11 months ago
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COMMONSENSEFORCOMMONGOOD_COM
