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Poetic Justice strikes Banksters: Judges say, "No tickee, no forclosee."


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2008 Feb 22, 5:08am   25,800 views  146 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Judge Smales
Judge Smales: "You'll get nothing and like it!"

Banks Lose to Deadbeat Homeowners as Loans Sold in Bonds Vanish

Some highlights:

Feb. 22 (Bloomberg) -- Joe Lents hasn't made a payment on his $1.5 million mortgage since 2002.

That's when Washington Mutual Inc. first tried to foreclose on his home in Boca Raton, Florida. The Seattle-based lender failed to prove that it owned Lents's mortgage note and dropped attempts to take his house. Subsequent efforts to foreclose have stalled because no one has produced the paperwork.

...Judges in at least five states have stopped foreclosure proceedings because the banks that pool mortgages into securities and the companies that collect monthly payments haven't been able to prove they own the mortgages.

...Each time the mortgages change hands, the sellers are required to sign over the mortgage notes to the buyers. In the rush to originate more loans during the U.S. mortgage boom, from 2003 to 2006, that assignment of ownership wasn't always properly completed, said Alan White, assistant professor at Valparaiso University School of Law in Valparaiso, Indiana.

"Loans were mass produced and short cuts were taken,'' White said. "A lot of the paperwork is done in the name of the original lender and a lot of the original lenders aren't around anymore.''

...When the mortgage servicers and securitizing banks that act as trustees of the securities fail to present proof that they own a mortgage, they sometimes file what's called a lost-note affidavit, said April Charney, a lawyer at Jacksonville Area Legal Aid in Florida.

Nobody knows how widespread the use of lost-note affidavits are, Charney said. She's had foreclosure proceedings for 300 clients dismissed or postponed in the past year, with about 80 percent of them involving lost-note affidavits, she said.

"They raise the issue of whether the trusts own the loans at all,'' Charney said. "Lost-note affidavits are pattern and practice in the industry. They are not exceptions. They are the rule.''

"Lost-note Affidavits". Add that to "Bandos" as a nominee for best new bubble buzzword of the year.
HARM

#housing

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60   justme   2008 Feb 25, 1:15am  

NVR,

>>The deflationistas are smoking crack.

Of course you know this already, but it is worth pointing out that the deflation scarecrows are not worried about consumer price deflation, they only care about ASSET DEFLATION, including real property, stocks, bonds and other investables (new word analogous to consumables). So when they whine about deflation they conveniently ignored food prices.

Asset deflation is bad for the wealthy. Given the choice between asset DEflation and consumer INflation, they will choose the latter if at all possible.

61   Malcolm   2008 Feb 25, 1:22am  

Inflation/Deflation is relative. People spend too much time worrying about the cost of a gallon of gas or a tomato when they should be more worried about things that really make an impact like taxes, interest, and housing. For the most part, the rest to me seem pretty insignificant.

62   justme   2008 Feb 25, 1:26am  

Permarenter,

I ask you please to reconsider your view of democrats as being sloppy on immigration. They are not. It is the (republican) establishment that wants cheap labor. They allow illegal immigrants to take jobs without imposing citizenship checks on the employers, and that is the real problem of unchecked immigration. No jobs, no immigration.

You don't seriously think McCain is going to put all the illegal immigrants in a lockbox(TM) and ship them back out, do you?

Immigration is being used by the Republicans to create a false "wedge issue", designed to make people who feel passionately about immigration reform to vote Republican at any cost. This is how they "won" the 2000 and 2004 elections, by setting up strawmen (abortion, generic holiness, national security, gay marriage) that they would claim only they could knock down. And with good help from the media, they made enough people believe it that in they end they were close enough to 50% to steal the election. Please do not let this happen again.

63   justme   2008 Feb 25, 1:27am  

Malcolm,

Agreed, it is not going to kill me if gas is $6 per gallon, in fact I think it may be a good idea. But for the poorest 25% it is going to be a tremendous hardship.

64   Malcolm   2008 Feb 25, 1:48am  

I hate to sound like the media with their generic "both parties are equally guilty" in depth analysis, but on illegal immigration issue it is hard to say one party is more hypocritical than the other. Republicans are influenced by the cheap labor and further disgust me because on top of that they then turn around when it is convenient and say "these people are here illegally. They are not entitled to workers comp or disability, or fair labor laws.....etc." They then straddle the fence and court the hispanic voting block.
Democrats just seem to overtly court the same voting block and seem to go out of their way to attract these people with their constant expansion of entitlements. Then claim it is an invasion of privacy for someone to prove they are here legally in order to qualify for assistance. Worse yet, I believe they know these people actually illegally vote for them so they actually have an interest in preserving these identity thieves' presence. They are the masters of the double talk with their "no amnesty" pitch, and then all the proposals avoid the full deportation of illegal aliens. Their political correctness has even forced the media to no longer even use the term illegal aliens.

65   northernvirginiarenter   2008 Feb 25, 1:49am  

Justme,

On target post sir and agreed, and no I had not thought of framing it based on wealth class status. Yes sound understanding of the action of the specific classes, but interesting to frame all the noise in that manner. Makes absolute sense.

What is actually being "destroyed" is not so much wealth or money which never existed, but rather liquidity. There was a thread here recently about wealth destruction that I didn't entirely follow. IMHO, what is happening is simply a destruction of liquidity in certain asset classes, like bonds and housing. Stocks soon to follow.

@Malcolm

I think I disagree, though not entirely sure of your argument. If you mean that inflation deflation affects different wealth classes in different areas, this speaks directly to justme's point. For those with the "fat" housing assets, sure deflation might be a big factor. And for those at the lower rungs, which is vast majority of American's btw, the food inflation that is occurring is a HUGE deal.

I highly recommend this piece on front page NY Times today; we are exporting inflation in a massive way right now leading to significant run on effects all over the world. The article shows how we are effectively hollowing out the middle class in the Middle East right now, folks are struggling to afford food. This has the potential of becoming very destabilizing, obviously. Scary. And a nice illustration of the downside of inflation.

http://tinyurl.com/yo2o5f

66   Malcolm   2008 Feb 25, 1:58am  

It still seems relative to me because the price of gas going up makes the price of gas guzzlers (For some reason poor people love driving them which is part of the stupidity which makes them poor) go down. If they were smart, they would fix their credit, trade that piece of shit in and lease a Prius for $300/month. The net savings in gas means that you drive a pretty kick ass new car for under $200 per month (present gas dollars). Talk about deflation. When you invest in yourself like that, it them becomes fun to sit back and watch prices spike knowing that as they do, your investment is paying you back even more than you signed up for.

67   Malcolm   2008 Feb 25, 2:04am  

Not saying classes, although classes react differently to changes. I'm saying sure food and some stuff might go up, but then a laptop is cheaper now. Percentage wise, if housing drops 10% in cost (owning or renting) the proportions make it so that everyone is basically richer. I'm looking at it from the buyer's persepective, not someone who is losing value on an asset. Right? That's the measure of inflation, what things costs to buy. Admittedly, it is dynamic so no matter what happens you have winners and losers.

68   Malcolm   2008 Feb 25, 2:08am  

Just glanced over the article and it's been a long held reocurring view that a declining dollar will hurt people overseas who have dollars. It is perfectly logical. In a way we enjoy the best of both worlds by the phenomenon because if you tie that to what I'm saying, domestically your dollar buys more here (net average) but to the oil sheik who has a mountain of cash; internationally he becomes poorer because his pile of dollars is worth less than it was before.

69   Malcolm   2008 Feb 25, 2:13am  

recurring~

Maybe what I'm saying is that a dollar has different value to different people here and abroad. If you're a buyer in the market for a house, your dollar is getting more valuable. If you bought gold when gold was cheap, you did even better because now you can cash in and get more dollars that are even house stronger than before. For someone barely scraping by who doesn't do anything other than work to live their dollar is weaker when they go to fill the gas tank.

70   Peter P   2008 Feb 25, 2:16am  

The last 8 years have shown with total clarity the risks of having a war-hawk/republican in the white house, and people will vote to ensure it does not happen again.

Again, Americans care more about the economy than the war. They do not like higher tax. We must find a way to get the Bush tax cut permanent, and then get another tax cut.

71   Peter P   2008 Feb 25, 2:22am  

Republicans are influenced by the cheap labor and further disgust me because on top of that they then turn around when it is convenient and say “these people are here illegally. They are not entitled to workers comp or disability, or fair labor laws…..etc.”

But they proposed the Guest Worker Program, which would take care of that issue.

72   HARM   2008 Feb 25, 2:25am  

Lots of heated partisan rhetoric all around. Let's all take a collective deep breath and re-examine the facts, shall we?

Obama is not a Muslim terrorist, despite his infamous middle name "Hussein". Despite what you may have heard on Rush or Savage Nation, he is not related to either Saddam Hussein, or Osama bin Laden. He did not attend a madrassa when living in Indonesia as a child, but instead attended Catholic or non-religious schools. His Kenyan grandfather was a muslim, yes, but American Obama is a Christian. Regardless of what you may have read in biased, partisan "expose" smear pieces from The New York Sun, he is not some kind of Arab "Manchurian candidate" trying to transform the U.S. into a radical Wahhabi Muslim nation with Luis Farrakhan as the new American Imam.

Obama sets record straight on his religion"
Foes Use Obama's Muslim Ties to Fuel Rumors About Him

He is not pro-bailout, and in fact was recently criticized from extremely pro-bailout Hillary for being "to the right of President Bush" on the subject. This should make us all like him more, not less.

Clinton: Obama "Right Of" Bush On Housing Crisis

73   Peter P   2008 Feb 25, 2:27am  

This is how they “won” the 2000 and 2004 elections, by setting up strawmen (abortion, generic holiness, national security, gay marriage)

Those are real issues faces by many Americans.

At least, republicans know what the definition of the word 'is' is.

74   Peter P   2008 Feb 25, 2:29am  

I believe Obama can be a fine president. It is just that he looks like someone who will raise tax.

75   HARM   2008 Feb 25, 2:33am  

I don't think McCain is the Devil-in-disguise, either. Though his extreme hawkish stand on Iraq and his Illegal Amnesty proposal (recall it was named the "McCain-Kennedy" bill --as in Ted Kennedy) have compromised him to such an extent I doubt I can bring myself to vote for him.

76   Peter P   2008 Feb 25, 2:48am  

If they were smart, they would fix their credit, trade that piece of shit in and lease a Prius for $300/month.

If they were smart (financially savvy), they would not be in that predicament.

77   Peter P   2008 Feb 25, 2:50am  

Admittedly, it is dynamic so no matter what happens you have winners and losers.

Yes. Instead of striving for a "fair" society, we should try to become the winners in an "unfair" society.

78   Malcolm   2008 Feb 25, 3:01am  

Peter P Says:
February 25th, 2008 at 10:22 am
"But they proposed the Guest Worker Program, which would take care of that issue."

Right, but that then falls into the dreaded 'A' word category.

79   Malcolm   2008 Feb 25, 3:04am  

Peter P Says:
February 25th, 2008 at 10:50 am
"Yes. Instead of striving for a “fair” society, we should try to become the winners in an “unfair” society."

I struggle with this. Are poor people poor because of the system or because of decisions? I always seem to end up concluding it is due to their own decisions. Big oil isn't turning middle class people into poor people.

80   HARM   2008 Feb 25, 3:22am  

I struggle with this. Are poor people poor because of the system or because of decisions?

As someone who grew up dirt poor (something Randy H and I have in common), I can attest that it's a little of both. Bad personal choices may or may not have gotten your parents where they are, but children of poor parents must surmount incredible odds in order to rise above the muck of their upbringing --unlike their privileged elite peers, for whom success is all but guaranteed (think the Hiltons & Trumps).

The problem with being born poor --even if you're the most brilliant, inventive mind on the planet-- is, it stunts your opportunities and limits your options. Being born poor means you do not get to attend the best schools, just whatever public school in the neighborhood where you live. Being born poor means you do not get to attend top Universities, unless you are so brilliant, you are one of the lucky scholarship "Lotto" winners (and even then, you get looked down upon by snobby, rich legacy classmates as some sort of "welfare" case). Being born poor means you do *not* get the prep school/Ivy league friends growing up, who can later provide the backbone of a business network/rich insider's club. Being born poor means, you get to spend a very significant part of your critical early adult years paying off debts incurred for higher education, and paying for Prodigal parents (see SQT's earlier posts).

In short, yes, some people end up poor because of bad personal chioices. However, being born poor is a tremendous disadvantage imposed on a person from birth that hard work, discipline, and smarts alone *may not* be enough to overcome.

81   Peter P   2008 Feb 25, 3:36am  

I agree that being born poor is a tremendous disadvantage. However, what are we going to do about it?

Strangely, US is known for its ruthless capitalism, yet it provides the best opportunities for upward mobility in the world.

hard work, discipline, and smarts alone *may not* be enough to overcome

The secret sauce has a "secret" ingredient: luck.

Note that luck needs not be random. It is definitely possible to attract luck.

82   Peter P   2008 Feb 25, 3:51am  

Did I mention that I have great respect for Oprah Winfrey?

83   northernvirginiarenter   2008 Feb 25, 4:01am  

Are poor people poor because of the system or because of decisions? I always seem to end up concluding it is due to their own decisions.

I always end up concluding that it is largely due to the system. Agreed that mobility is the key strength of our empire, and without it the entire system crashes. Our education system creates all kinds of barriers to mobility, our corporate culture does the same. Try to imagine how difficult it would be to "escape" out of the barrio if you are a young african american born to a dad in prison and a mother addicted to drugs. I think if Malcolm, Peter P, and myself were born in this state we would currently have lots of tats and neon under the floorboards. Maybe if we were lucky we'd be sitting on a nice pay option arm or two, maybe we'd have turned out to be subprime peddlers. If we were lucky enough to survive.

84   OO   2008 Feb 25, 4:03am  

It doesn't matter who will be the president. Here is the fate that the next President will have to succumb to be it Hillary or Obama or McCain.

1. Raise tax - or pull money out of his ass. If the next President doesn't raise tax, he will charge you more on the inflation tax, just simple as that. This is just the law of gravity that you cannot defy.
2. Massive bailout of the banking system - NO ONE in the oval office can bear to see the collapse of the financial system. All sorts of imaginable programs will be put in place, there is no consideration for moral hazard, because one needs to deal with the hazard right now.
3. Shut the door on illegal and legal immigration - this is a knee-jerk reaction for any country facing recession / depression.

In fact, if you do care about your job, you should welcome illegal immigration but NOT legal immigration. Because illegal immigrants are not those who can compete with you on job offers, legal ones are. Do you want the Congress to import another sharp guy just like you, a younger and healthier version, that can eat your lunch? I frankly don't dislike illegal immigrants, they clean my pool and mow the lawn for such a reasonable cost that I can hardly hate them.

85   FormerAptBroker   2008 Feb 25, 4:06am  

Malcolm Says:

> Are poor people poor because of the system or
> because of decisions?

Most poor people are poor because they are both lazy and stupid. The dirt poor are very lazy and very stupid.

Then HARM Says:

> The problem with being born poor –even if you’re the
> most brilliant, inventive mind on the planet– is, it stunts
> your opportunities and limits your options. Being born
> poor means you do not get to attend the best schools,
> just whatever public school in the neighborhood where
> you live.

If you are born poor it will be very hard to become “rich” but it is not hard to avoid being “poor”. My tree guy and my gutter/sheet metal guy both make over $200K a year and anyone with a basic skill like painting, plumbing or fencing can easily make over $100K a year with just basic smarts and a good work ethic…

86   Peter P   2008 Feb 25, 4:07am  

Our education system creates all kinds of barriers to mobility, our corporate culture does the same.

It is therefore necessary to think beyond what we were told.

Most top billionaires did not finish higher education when they created their own corporate culture.

If one considers making 300K - 1M a year "successful" then perhaps it is sufficient to have a "rich" dad paying for business school.

What is worse? Being born in a poor family or being born into a poor mindset?

87   Peter P   2008 Feb 25, 4:08am  

If the next President doesn’t raise tax, he will charge you more on the inflation tax, just simple as that.

I will take inflation "tax" any day. I want more after-tax money to buy gold.

88   GallopingCheetah   2008 Feb 25, 4:11am  

I like a socialist system. Even a feadal aristocratic system isn't as bad as a plutocracy. In the latter, men who should never procreate try very hard to make money and "succeed" in order to have a better shot at reproduction. Capitalists are ruthless and mean. It's because they were born with low level of testosterone to begin with. Men with high amount of T are dominant, but they are fair.

It's not that I came from a poor and/or uneducated family. But I have to say, "Fuck rich people." They are all greedy cowards. Sooner or later, the military caste in this country will have enough of it and stage a coup to topple the rich and their clowns (Obama that is).

89   FormerAptBroker   2008 Feb 25, 4:11am  

northernvirginiarenter Says:

> Try to imagine how difficult it would be to “escape” out
> of the barrio if you are a young african american born
> to a dad in prison and a mother addicted to drugs.

It will be very hard for a guy like this to get a job at a top 5 VC firm or get in to the Pacific Union Club, but not many people will ask about your Dad or Mom when hiring a painter. If you have a reputation of showing up on time and doing a good job cutting trees or painting apartments you will have plenty of work and make plenty of money…

90   OO   2008 Feb 25, 4:12am  

Unless you are already very well off, you won't benefit much from inflation, because your pay typically lags inflation, and gold has long gone off on a wild run, your after-tax money won't be able to buy much anyway.

Be it deflation or inflation or stagflation, only smart money on the top of the food chain will be able to benefit the most.

91   GallopingCheetah   2008 Feb 25, 4:16am  

please unmoderate my comment.

92   HARM   2008 Feb 25, 4:16am  

My tree guy and my gutter/sheet metal guy both make over $200K a year and anyone with a basic skill like painting, plumbing or fencing can easily make over $100K a year with just basic smarts and a good work ethic

So why isn't the median HH income aover $200k a year then --not even in "rich" Kalifornia? A: it's not really so easy to make that kind of money. Most painters & plumbers don't make that kind of money unless they own an established and profitable business that employs other craftsmen (who earn a lot less $), which is --surprise, surprise -- not so easy.

What is worse? Being born in a poor family or being born into a poor mindset?

A: Being born poor. Mindset can easily be changed with experience. Acquiring wealth from zero (despite FAB's apocryphal "tree guy and "gutter/sheet metal guy" making VP-level salaries), not so easily changed. ;-)

93   Peter P   2008 Feb 25, 4:17am  

and gold has long gone off on a wild run

Time will tell. Gee, I thought homes were expensive in 2000.

Gold is still way off its inflation-adjusted peak. When there is a gold bubble, you will feel it.

94   Peter P   2008 Feb 25, 4:20am  

Mindset can easily be changed with experience.

It is harder than you think. It takes enlightenment and a temporary abandonment of "reality" to change one's mindset.

Many poor people are so bitter that adopting the idea of "abundance" is all but impossible.

95   OO   2008 Feb 25, 4:20am  

Good trades persons are paid on CASH. That tells you why the "median" income is...low.

I have come across a few good contractors who do make quite a bit of money, perhaps not $200K, but certainly over $100K. They all accept cash only.

96   OO   2008 Feb 25, 4:23am  

And all these salons and restaurants that accept cash only...

We go to this hair stylist whose place is always full with customers, her price is very good but accepts cash only. She told me she shows IRS $1K a month in profit, hehe. I don't mind, since she passes on the savings to me.

97   HARM   2008 Feb 25, 4:23am  

Median Salary by Years Experience - Job: Painter, Construction and Maintenance (United States)
10-19 years $45,009

http://www.payscale.com/research/US/Job=Painter,_Construction_and_Maintenance/Salary

98   Peter P   2008 Feb 25, 4:26am  

HARM, 'job' and 'business' are very different concepts.

99   OO   2008 Feb 25, 4:27am  

HARM,

such a payscale survey is valid for all salaried jobs like ours. Not the case with sole proprietors who interact directly with the customers and negotiate price and service.

I know quite a couple restaurant owners who all declare $70-80K income on their return. Let me be frank, no one will work that hard for a mere $80K annual income.

There is a very big underground cash economy in the US that is outside of the IRS system. Salaryman like ourselves are unfortunately trapped.

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