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Posted on 05 March 2010.
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WE DESERVE MONETARY TRANSARENCY!
Excellent Support Goup go HERE: http://endthefedusa.ning.com/
Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments
Posted on 05 March 2010.
[googlevideo=http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8484911570371055528#docid=638447372044116845]When you get a chance I highly recommend you understand how this all was created. It is up to you, but in order to grasp the concept of today you have to go back. This started back in 1910 and G. Edward Griffin wrote all about this in 1994 in an amazing book called The Creature from Jekyll Island. Here is more on this book and also video of this man speaking to the press in 2008. He tells the story how this scam was created.
Sources:
G. Edward Griffin
G. Edward Web Site
Go through the sequence of the 12 videos below:
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7auQEXTWomA]
jekyllisland Does exist.
Here were some key players including todays Yes…United States Secretary of the Treasury Timothy Geithner et al~
He was previously the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
Posted in concealment, conspiracy, corruption, FED FRAUD, G. Edward Griffin, RON PAUL0 Comments
Posted on 05 March 2010.
Listen to this JUDGE! He puts it all out there as we know it…who is going to argue with his points!
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onIYL5leAAk]
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HU-vYbGxTrE]
My Interpretation: I’ll HIDE You! Sshhhh
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mxBWfhgByW0]
Posted in concealment, conspiracy, corruption, FED FRAUD, geithner, RON PAUL, scam0 Comments
Posted on 05 March 2010.
By: Anonymous
This was sent to me by someone who came across this. They state…
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Continue to read about the case HERE
© 2010-12 FORECLOSURE FRAUD | by DinSFLA. All rights reserved. www.StopForeclosureFraud.com
Posted in STOP FORECLOSURE FRAUD2 Comments
Posted on 05 March 2010.
LivingLies by Neil Garfield opinion (I urge everyone to bookmark this website)
TRUSTEE SAYS “Chase filed documents that appear to be patently false or misleading”
As pointed out in this article, 95% of foreclosures are NOT scrutinized. This is why homeowners need to go to forensic analysts, experts and lawyers. Most people are walking away from homes they still own on the basis of a claim by a party who is NOT a creditor. The TILA Audit, if it includes conclusions drawn from an analysis of the securitization of the transaction, will provide the homeowner with ample ammunition to raise issues of fact and require proof from the pretender lender.
As in many cases, careful scrutinization will reveal that the assignment and other documents are fabricated, forged and/or improperly notarized. The most obvious example is shown here where the document was signed in Florida and notarized in Buffalo, NY at the offices of the foreclosure mill (Baum law offices).
This type of scrutiny and research on the securitization of the loan is an essential part of the forensic analysis. If ignored, the “audit” becomes a vehicle for potential recovery of a minor amount of damages, plus attorney fees. If used properly the damages rise and the potential for principal reduction or even elimination of the obligation, note and mortgage if the other side can’t come up with the real party in interest.
By RICHARD WILNER, NY POST
Last Updated: 12:01 PM, February 28, 2010
Posted: 12:54 AM, February 28, 2010
As the mortgage melt down paralyzed the economy across the US and throughout New York State, one company in the center of the storm had all the business it could handle.The little-known law firm of Steven J. Baum PC
, which is based in suburban Buffalo, NY, and represents dozens of banks in matters of failed mortgages, last year filed a staggering 12,551 foreclosure lawsuits in New York City and the suburbs, which works out to about 48 a day.The foreclosure mill is one of a handful of super-regional law firms used by the country’s banks — and its lawyers appear to have practiced in every county courthouse and bankruptcy court from Staten Island to Plattsburgh and from Montauk to Niagara Falls.
But as the volume of its workload increased, so did complaints from opposing lawyers and judges that some of the thousands of lawsuits contained questionable legal work.
One bank caught in the crosshairs is JPMorgan Chase Bank, one of the largest mortgage lenders in the city.
Last month, Diana Adams, the US Trustee in Manhattan, filed papers in court supporting punitive financial sanctions against the bank for a string of bad behavior, including seeking to foreclose on homes after they rejected the attempts to make on-time payments and for failing to prove they own the mortgage on a home even as they move to seize it.
Chase filed documents that appear to be patently false or misleading, Adams said in the filing.
Although Chase has recently taken steps to address concerns expressed by courts in connection with other cases, based on Chase’s past and current conduct it needs to be sanctioned, Adams wrote.
A spokesperson for Chase had no comment on the US Trustee’s action.
The complaints against Baum — on the record during hearings, in legal pleadings and, eventually, borne out in judges’ decisions — include:
* Not divulging mortgage payments: In the White Plains bankruptcy of Blanca Garcia, Baum’s firm filed papers claiming Garcia was in arrears — when she actually made payments and showed the court her receipts, but they were not credited to her account. When Garcia’s lawyer complained, Baum’s firm answered the claim but, the lawyer said in court papers, ignored the receipts and continued to claim the mortgage was in arrears.
* Creating questionable assignments: A Suffolk County judge took it upon himself to investigate a filing by Baum’s firm when it attempted to foreclose on the home of Gloria E. Marsh. “A careful review,” the judge wrote in a four-page order, “reveals a number of glaring discrepancies and unexplained issues of substance.”
The judge found that Baum filed the action before the date it claimed its client took ownership of the mortgage.
* Botched legal papers: In the bankruptcy of Matthew Austin, Baum’s firm tried to prove that its client owned the mortgage backing Austin’s house by filing an assignment of that mortgage from a Florida company signed by an executive of that company — but it was notarized in Buffalo, NY.
Continue reading…here
Posted in Mortgage Foreclosure Fraud0 Comments
Posted on 05 March 2010.
BY ERIC ENRIQUE •
As an attorney who defends homeowners in foreclosure, I nearly fell out of my chair when I read Sunday’s guest column, “Time for noncourt foreclosures” by Alex Sanchez, chief executive officer of the Florida Bankers Association.
After selling risky loans for quick profits, and then taking billions in taxpayer money, the attempt by bankers to steal Floridians’ due process rights is shameful. Mr. Sanchez claims banks want to keep people in their homes and they work with them for months to modify their loan. The truth is the banks are not making reasonable efforts to work with homeowners to modify their loan because it is not profitable for them to do so. To find out just how unwilling the banks are, ask anyone who has tried to obtain a loan modification. They will tell you they have spent countless hours on the phone, only to have their call mysteriously disconnected, and have had to repeatedly submit the same financial documentation.
After months of frustration, most applicants are either denied, or given a paltry temporary payment reduction with a loan term extended up to 40 years, making homeownership even more expensive. When home values have fallen to less than half of what a homeowner may still owe on their home, is it any wonder homeowners are rejecting these offers?
If the banks really want to solve the housing crisis, they should offer permanent interest-rate and principal reductions to reflect the home’s current value. Instead, the banks would rather litigate, foreclose and sell the home at the current value. The reason is because many of the foreclosing banks do not own the loan and are loan servicers that collect loan payments on behalf of investors. As loan servicers, the banks can charge their investors higher fees when a loan is in default.
The numbers support the banks’ unwillingness to offer reasonable loan modifications. According to Hope Now, an alliance of leaders in the housing industry, in Florida’s third quarter of 2009, there were 278,189 delinquent loans, 80,327 new foreclosure actions, but only 13,205 loan modifications.continue HERE
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6AuzIK53E1w]
click the PigsAss
Posted in conspiracy, corruption, Mortgage Foreclosure Fraud, scam0 Comments