Archive for February, 2012
AN INTRODUCTION TO MORTGAGE SECURITIZATION AND FORECLOSURES INVOLVING SECURITIZED TRUSTS
By LYNN E. SZYMONIAK, ESQ., ED., Fraud Digest (www.frauddigest.com)
LISA EPSTEIN, (foreclosurehamlet.org)
100 INTRODUCTORY FACTS ABOUT MORTGAGE SECURITIZATION
PREPARED FOR OCCUPY PALM BEACH
1. Most mortgages in the U.S. are owned by trusts.
2. The trusts are often referred to as “RMBS” trusts, an acronym standing for “residential mortgage-backed securities.”
3. The total U.S. mortgage debt is between $12 and $14 trillion. Of this, approximately $8 trillion was owned by trusts in 2008.
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Why is it important to learn about mortgage securitization?
Reason #1: Most of the foreclosures filed in the U.S. in the last 5 years were filed by mortgage-backed trusts. Most of the foreclosures filed in the next 5 years will be filed by mortgage-backed trusts.
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4. The trusts are made up of a bundle or pool of mortgages (often 5,000 – 8,000 mortgages per trust). The loans are almost always subprime loans. The value of the mortgages in each trust is usually between $500,000 and $2 billion.
5. Individual mortgages got packaged into RMBS Trusts; these RMBS trusts got bundled, sliced and sold as CDOs – collateralized debt obligations.
6. The mortgage loans in each pool – or RMBS Trust – usually include both first lien and second lien loans, and fixed-rate and adjustable rate loans.
7. There are different “layers” within each pile of loans, representing different qualities of loans. It is not unusual for each pile to have as many as 20 different layers – these layers are sometimes called classes or “tranches.”
8. Certificates are issued to investors to represent the purchase – so investors are often called “certificate holders.”
9. There are often minimum investment requirements – such as “Offered certificates must be purchased in minimum total investments of $100,000 per class.”
10. The loans are selected for each pool by a particular date, often called the “closing date” of the trust. Some trusts include a schedule or listing of all of the loans in the trust by the closing date. While a trust may substitute loans into the pool after the closing date, there are restrictions on such substitutions.
11. The pool of loans is described in a “prospectus” – a printed document that describes the business enterprise that is distributed to prospective buyers, investors and participants (similar to the glossy brochure distributed by new car dealers describing the features of the car.”
12. Many representations (promises) are made to the potential buyers regarding the loans in each pool in both the prospectus and the Pooling and Servicing Agreement (described more fully below). The following, for example, are taken from the prospectus for Soundview Home Loan Trust 2006-OPT2:
Mortgage Loans with Prepayment Charges:
74.60%Fixed-Rate Mortgage Loans:
15.61%Second lien Mortgage Loans:
4.18%Interest Only Mortgage Loans:
16.94%Range of Remaining Term to Stated Maturities:
116–360 MonthsWeighted Average Remaining Term to Stated Maturity:
357 MonthsRange of Original Principal Balances:
$15,000–$1,620,000Average Original Principal Balance:
$201,215Range of Current Mortgage Rates:
5.350%–14.30%Weighted Average Credit Score of the Mortgage Loans:
622Weighted Average Current Mortgage Rate:
8.49%Weighted Average Gross Margin of the Adjustable-Rate Mortgage Loans:
6.50%Weighted Average Maximum Mortgage Rate of the Adjustable-Rate Mortgage Loans:
14.43%Weighted Average Minimum Mortgage Rate of the Adjustable-Rate Mortgage Loans:
8.42%Weighted Average Initial Rate Adjustment Cap of the Adjustable-Rate Mortgage Loans:
2.99%Weighted Average Periodic Rate Adjustment Cap of the Adjustable-Rate Mortgage Loans:
1.00%Weighted Average Months Until Next Adjustment Date for the Adjustable-Rate Mortgage Loans:
25 MonthsGeographic Concentration in Excess of 5%:
California:
26.02%Florida:
11.81%New York:
10.90%New Jersey:
5.80%Massachusetts:
5.10%
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SOME OF THE LAWS INVOLVED IN RMBS TRUSTS
13. In 1960 the government enacted the Real Estate Investment Trust Act of 1960. This act allowed the creation of the real estate investment trusts (REIT) to encourage real estate investment.
14. In 1984 the government passed the Secondary Mortgage Market Enhancement Act (SMMEA) to improve the marketability of REITS.
15. The Tax Reform Act of 1986 allowed the creation of the tax-free Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduit (REMIC) special purpose vehicle for the express purpose of issuing pass-through investments.
16. The Tax Reform Act significantly contributed to the savings and loan crisis of the 1980s and 1990s that resulted in the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA), which changed the regulation of the savings and loan industry and encouraged loan origination.
17. Investors invest in a pool of mortgage loans. As homeowners pay of the underlying mortgage loans, the investors receive payments of interest and principal. These payments are usually made monthly or quarterly.
18. There are special tax rules that apply to these trusts. Because the money coming in to the trusts is passed through to investors, the trusts are not required to pay tax on the money that flows into the trusts (the mortgage payments from homeowners). Investors pay tax when they receive their return on the investments.
19. RMBS Trusts are securities; the Securities and Exchange Commission regulate mortgage-backed trusts.
20. On January 7, 2005, the SEC published Regulation AB, a final rule to codify requirements for the registration, disclosure and reporting for all publicly registered asset-backed securities including mortgage-backed securities. Regulation AB consists of 24 “Items” relating to the operation and reporting requirements for mortgage-backed trusts. There have been numerous revisions to Regulation AB.
21. RMBS Trusts also have special tax consequences; the IRS also regulates RMBS Trusts.
22. The majority of mortgage securities were issued by the U.S. government, by the Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae) or by government-sponsored entities (GSEs) such as the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac). These entities also very often guarantee some or all of the loans in RMBS trusts.
23. The vast majority of the RMBS trusts were created between 2004 and 2008.
24. The revenue from the trusts are predicted (but not guaranteed) to last for 25 – 30 years.
25. Servicers are paid by monthly fees from the trusts usually by a formula – for example: “Servicer will be paid a monthly fee equal to one-twelfth of 0.30% multiplied by the Aggregate Principal Balance of the mortgage loans as of the first day of the related due period for the first 10 due periods…0.65% for all due periods thereafter.”
26. The Servicer may purchase all of the loans and any REO properties and “retire the certificates” (end the payments) when the total loan balance equal or is less than 10% of the original loan balance.
27. Typical representations made to investors:
the credit scores for at least 5,000 of the 7,500 loans in the trust will be above 600;
at least 7,000 of the 7,500 loans will not mature for at least 355 months;
at least 5,500 of the loans are for single-family detached homes;
at least 6,500 of the 7,500 loans will have been made to homeowners who will use the homes as their primary residence;
the average combined loan-to-value ratio of the loans was 77% (the loan was made for only 77% of the value of the home);
at least 5,000 of the 7,500 loans were full documentation loans;
the current mortgage rates for at least 70% of the loans were between 7% and 10%.
28. Servicers also are responsible for issuing periodic reports to investors advising of the performance of the loans in the trust (investor reports).
29. Mortgage loans were classified as follows:
a. full documentation;
b. stated income documentation;
c. no documentation;
d. lite documentation;
e. business bank statements.
30. Some of the major producers of RMBS Trusts from 2004-2007 included:
· Lehman Brothers
· Morgan Stanley
· Credit Suisse
· Merrill Lynch
· Deutsche Bank
· Goldman Sachs
· Bear Stearns
· JPMorgan
· CitiGroup
· Barclays
31. The names of trusts often contain short-hand information regarding that particular trust. GSAMP Trust 2006-S3, for example, stands for Goldman Sachs Alternative Mortgage Products Trust, created in 2006. Other examples:
CWALT is shorthand for Countrywide Alternative Loan Trust.
CWABS is shorthand for Countrywide Asset-Backed Securities.
Other trusts have friendly names such as Harborview or Soundview.
32. The three biggest mortgage companies in the U.S. in 2005 were:
· American Home Mortgage in Melville, NY
· Countrywide Mortgage in Calabasas, CA
· Option One Mortgage Corporation in Irvine, CA
Almost all of these loans were bundled into RMBS trusts. Other mortgage companies that were major producers of mortgages for RMBS trusts included:
· Ameriquest Mortgage, a/k/a Long Beach Mortgage Company
· Citi Residential Lending
· Dietech (owned by GMAC)
· Fairbanks Capital
· Fremont Investment & Loan
· GMAC Financial
· New Century Mortgage Company
· NovaStar Financial
This is a very short list – there were many, many other big lenders.
33. There are 5 major groups involved in securitization: originators, depositors, sponsors, master servicers and trustees.
34. The companies that make the loans, the mortgagee, are known as the ORIGINATORS in the securitization process.
35. Loan originators often sold the loans to depositors the very same day that these loans were made or within just a few days of the closing date of the loan.
36. Loan originators very often did not lend their own money to the homeowner/borrower. The originators were often financed by “warehouse lenders.” These warehouse lenders were financial institution that extended a line of credit to the originator to fund a mortgage. The loan typically lasted from the time it was originated until it was sold into the securitization market.
37. The companies that select the loans from the various mortgage companies and sell the loans to the trusts are called the Depositors.
38. The companies that direct the creation of the trusts are called the Sponsors.
39. The companies that are responsible for continuing to collect payments on the loans, notifying delinquent mortgagees, foreclosing on collateral (if any), performing data processing functions, preparing periodic reports to investors and Rating Agencies and taking other actions are called the servicers. The Servicer is often also an affiliate of the Originator. Servicing is often the most lucrative role in securitization.
40. The companies (banks) that operate the trust after it is created are called the Trustees. Duties of the trustee for an ABS transaction typically include:
· Receiving and releasing assets
· Receiving data and collections from servicers
· Remitting funds
· Distributing reports to investors
Trustees have the authority - but typically are not required - to take action to enforce breaches of representations and warranties.
41. Approximately eight big banks serve or served as Trustees for the majority of trusts: Bank of America, Bank of New York Mellon, Citibank, Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, GMAC/Ally, HSBC Bank, JP Morgan Chase and Wells Fargo.
42. Bank of New York Mellon is the world’s largest custody bank, with $26 Trillion in assets under custody and administration. (Reuters, February 16, 2012, “U.S. SEC pressures BNY Mellon for better disclosure.”)
43. Trustees do not keep the mortgage documents themselves – they hire other banks to serve as Document Custodians. Example: Wells Fargo serves as Document Custodian for most of the Deutsche Bank trusts.
44. In most trusts, a bank other than the Trustee Bank or the Document Custodian Bank, serves as Master Servicer. The operation of most trusts, therefore, involves three banks, serving in different roles.
45. Trustees frequently change, in part due to bank failures and mergers.
46. Each trust has a set of rules, set forth in a document called the Pooling and Servicing Agreement or PSA. A PSA, or similar agreement, is the governing document of a securitization transaction. Such an agreement sets forth the relationship among the parties and the assets, including, for example, the capital structure of the transaction, the eligibility criteria for the assets, the manner in which cash flows from those assets are to be distributed to note holders, and the definitions for an event of default.
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Why is it important to learn about mortgage securitization?
Reason #2: The major investors in RMBS Trusts are pension funds, banks, insurance companies and state and local governments. The fate of the economy is inextricably tied to the fate of mortgage-backed trusts.
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47. The PSA for every trust includes many provisions regarding the loan documents that the trust must obtain and safeguard in a “mortgage file.” These documents almost always include the promissory note, endorsed in blank or to the trust, the mortgage, an assignment of mortgage to the trust and a title insurance policy.
48. Mortgage-backed trusts include the following or equivalent language regarding Assignments: “Assignments of the Mortgage Loans to the Trustee (or its nominee) will not be recorded in any jurisdiction, but will be delivered to the Trustee in recordable form, so that they can be recorded in the event recordation is necessary in connection with the servicing of a Mortgage Loan.”
49. The SEC is the major source of information about a particular trust. Information usually available from the SEC about each trust includes the Prospectus, the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, and Annual Reports.
50. Each Prospectus and PSA includes promises to investors about the quality of the loans and the loan documentation. These promises are called Representations and Warranties.
51. Key representations and warranties concern origination, servicing, underwriting standards, due diligence, and related documentation. The PSA usually limits the rights of investors to sue for breaches of these representations and warranties. The Depositor typically makes representations and warranties to the Trustee in the PSA in which mortgage loans are conveyed.
52. Investors and insurance companies began to file major lawsuits against trust creators in 2009.
53. The most common claims against the creators of trusts include the following:
Failure to disclose risks such as failure to disclose loans in default at time of closing;
Disregard of underwriting guidelines such as disregard of LTV guidelines, or debt-to-income ratios; and
Failure to conduct due diligence such as representing that due diligence was performed when it was not.
54. The PSAs usually include anti-lawsuit provisions that limit the circumstances under which a lawsuit may be filed against the trust creators. Example:
Greenwich Fin. Svcs. Distressed Mortgage Fund 3, LLC, et al. v. Countrywide Fin. Corp. (NY Supreme Court, Oct. 2010).
Complaint was dismissed because plaintiffs did not comply with anti-suit provision that required certificate-holders to (1) make a demand upon the Trustee on behalf of 25 percent of the certificate holders, (2) offer Trustee proper indemnity, and (3) wait 60 days for Trustee to commence lawsuit.
55. Examples of major lawsuits against trust creators include the following:
MBIA v. Morgan Stanley (New York State Court May 26, 2011)
MBIA alleged that it was defrauded into insuring mortgage loans, and presented evidence that 97% of the loans in a sample did not meet stated underwriting criteria.
The court found that plaintiff adequately pled “material and pervasive non- compliance with the Seller’s underwriting Guide and the mortgage loan representations.”
Boilermakers Nat’l Annuity Trust Fund v. WAMU Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series AR1 (W.D. Wash. Sept. 28, 2010)
Plaintiff alleged that defendant failed to disclose that mortgage loans were not originated in accordance with underwriting guidelines, resulting in violations of the Securities Act of 1933.
The court found that Plaintiff had adequately pled facts suggesting that underwriting standards were abandoned.
Syncora Guarantee Inc. v. EMC Mortgage Corp. (S.D.N.Y. March 25, 2011)
Syncora, which provided a financial guarantee to investors in RMBS, filed a lawsuit seeking to require EMC (the seller of the mortgages underlying the RMBS) to repurchase the loans on a pool-wide basis.
Syncora alleged that a sample of 400 mortgage loans had 85% breaches. Syncora also demanded that EMC cure breaches in 1300 loans; EMC acknowledged only 20 breaching loans.
56. RMBS Trusts have ratings, like many other securities.
57. Allegations have been made that the trust creators manipulated the ratings.
China Development Industrial Bank v. Morgan Stanley & Co. (Sup. Ct. N.Y. Feb 25, 2011).
CDIB alleged that Morgan Stanley manipulated the rating agencies’ models.
In denying Morgan Stanley’s motion to dismiss, the court noted that the alleged corruption of the ratings process “could not have been discovered by any degree of due diligence or analysis performed by the most sophisticated of investors.”
58. Some lawsuits have focused on the undisclosed involvement of “short” parties in the loan selection process:
SEC v. Goldman Sachs & Co. (S.D.N.Y. decision June 10, 2011)
The court declined to dismiss federal securities fraud claims against Goldman employee (Tourre) based on Goldman’s alleged failure to disclose to CDO investors that a hedge fund strongly influenced collateral selection while it was it was “shorting” the CDO.
SEC v. J.P. Morgan Securities LLC (S.D.N.Y. complaint June 21, 2011)
The SEC simultaneously sued and settled with JPM for $153.6 million. The SEC alleged in its complaint that JPM arranged and sold a CDO to investors while representing “that the investment portfolio of [the CDO] was selected by the [CDO’s collateral manger]” but failed to disclose that a hedge fund with a $600 million short interest in the CDO “played a significant role in the portfolio selection process.”
59. At least one lawsuit by investors has focused in part upon the trusts’ failure to obtain and keep the original loan documents as promised to investors.
Oklahoma Police Pension and Retirement System v. U.S. Bank National Association (S.D.N.Y. complaint Nov., 2008)
60. Courts may pay strict attention to the many disclaimers in the Prospectuses and the PSAs.
Plumbers’ Union Local No. 12 Pension Fund, et al. v. Nomura Asset Acceptance Corporation (D.Ma. complaint Jan. 31, 2008)
With respect to the plaintiffs’ allegations concerning the mortgage originators’ underwriting standards, District of Massachusetts Judge Richard G. Stearns found that the offering documents contained a “fusillade of cautionary statements” that “abound with warnings about the potential perils.” Judge Stearns noted that plaintiffs’ contention that they were not “on notice” of those perils “begs credulity.” (This was reversed, in part, on appeal.)
61. Regulation of RMBS Trusts by the SEC was done almost solely on the honor system. The trusts prepared reports and filed these with the SEC, and almost no verification of these reports was done by the SEC.
62. The trusts were continually down-graded by the rating agencies.
63. Current investigations by the Federal Task Force co-chaired by New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman are focusing on whether there were criminal violations in the packaging of these loans, and criminal acts by servicers relating to foreclosures by the trusts
64. Many of the people now responsible for investigating the creation and operation of trusts were previously involved in the creation and operation of these trusts. Example: Robert Khuzami, Director of Enforcement for the SEC, was previously General Counsel for the Americas for Deutsche Bank from 2004-2009. Khuzami thus supervised Greg Lippman, a senior trader at Deutsche, who helped create and fuel the market for mortgage-backed securities.
65. Greg Lippman was perhaps the most famous of all traders who made tens of millions of dollars betting AGAINST the continued strong performance of the U.S. housing market. He has been singled out for his misconduct in Congressional reports. He is known for being brash, crass and unscrupulous.
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Why is it important to learn about mortgage securitization?
Reason #3: The RMBS Trusts now own more homes in most counties than any other property owner.
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66. The majority of trusts have less than 40% of performing loans remaining in the trusts. This means that most trusts will stop producing income for investors about 20 years sooner than expected.
67. A study of 37 trusts from three popular series of trusts, American Home Mortgage Assets Trusts, American Home Mortgage Investment Trusts and Soundview Home Loan Trusts, showed the following:
Of the 37 trusts, 18 had 25% or less of performing loans remaining.
Of the 37 trusts, 8 had 26% - 30% of performing loans remaining.
Of the 37 trusts, 11 had 31% - 38% of performing loans remaining.
There were a combined total of 228,203 loans in these trusts at inception.
As of November, 2011, there were a combined total of 51,798 (22.7%) performing loans in these trusts.
The combined collateral value of the loans in these trusts at inception was over $61 Billion: $61,441,128,225.
Of the 37 trusts, Soundview Home Loan Trust 2007-OPT5 had the highest percentage of performing loans remaining in the trust: 38%. American Home Mortgage Assets Trust 2005-2 had the lowest percentage of performing loans remaining in the trust: 10.5%.
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THE INVESTORS IN MORTGAGE-BACKED TRUSTS
68. Investment banks invested heavily in mortgage-backed securities. Example: Merrill Lynch reported on January 17, 2008, an $8.6 billion net loss from write-downs on its subprime investments.
69. Pension fund managers, public and private, invested heavily in mortgage-backed securities. Ohio’s former Attorney General Richard Cordray filed 8 major lawsuits, and to date has recovered over $2 billion for Ohio pension funds.
70. Insurance companies were major investors in RMBS trusts. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners recently estimated that insurance companies have investments of half a trillion dollars in mortgage-backed securities.
71. Local governments, counties and municipalities invested heavily in mortgage-backed securities.
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LIES TOLD TO INVESTORS
72. The information in the prospectuses and the PSAs was often false. The average credit scores of borrowers in the loan pool were much lower than represented. There were many more “no documentation” or “stated income” loans than disclosed. There were much fewer “full documentation” loans than disclosed.
73. The information about the loan to value ratios was often also falsely stated. Home values were inflated during appraisals to make it appear that there was a much higher homeowner investment/equity in the home.
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INACCURATE/FALSE INFORMATION IN INVESTOR REPORTS
74. The investor reports often contain inaccurate and false information about the loans in the trust.
75. The status of the loans is often wrongly reported in the investor reports. Loans may be reported as delinquent, in foreclosure, in bankruptcy, or trustee-owned when the records of the clerk of the court indicate a different status for these same loans.
76. The investor reports often do not disclose that a loan/home has been sold to a new buyer through short sale or foreclosure auction.
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TRUSTS AND FORECLOSURES
77. Most trustees and trust servicers refuse to modify trust-owned loans and instead foreclose whenever a loan is 90-days delinquent.
78. Most trustees use high volume, low quality law firms (“foreclosure mills”) to foreclose.
79. The law firms used by the trusts are often dictated by a list of “approved” law firms selected by FANNIE and FREDDIE.
80. According to a New York Times report in October, 2011, Fannie Mae learned as early as 2003 of extensive foreclosure abuses among the law firms it had hired to remove troubled borrowers from their homes. Fannie Mae did little to correct the firms’ practices.
81. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac approved law firms included some of the worst of the worst such as New York’s Steven Baum law firm (where employees at a firm Halloween party dressed as homeless people) or Florida’s Law Offices of David Stern where employees signed tens of thousands of documents to use as proof in their own foreclosure cases.
82. Fannie Maw and Freddie Mac gave incentives to law firms for the speed of foreclosures, with a pervasive disregard for legal requirements and honest practices.
83. Fannie and Freddie auditors may have themselves received incentives from the law firms they hired including expensive tickets to sporting events and elaborate restaurant meals to give law firms advance notice of audits and the files that would be audited.
84. In hundreds of thousands of other cases, the servicers for trusts used an outside vendor, Lender Processing Services (LPS), to handle their foreclosures.
85. LPS maintains a network of lawyers similar to the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac approved lawyer vendor list. LPS has been accused by bankruptcy trustees and private litigants of requiring participating lawyers to kick-back fees to LPS from foreclosures.
86. The servicers often run-up costs when a loan in a trust goes in to foreclosure by greatly over-insuring the property, and adding monthly maintenance fees (often for services not performed) and appraisal fees. All of these fees are subtracted from any money that eventually goes to the investors after the foreclosure is complete and the property is resold.
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TRUSTS, MORTGAGE LOAN DOCUMENTATION & OTHER ABUSES
87. In foreclosures, many trusts use(d) law firms and process servers that have been discredited because of fraudulent documents.
88. Although all states require that the homeowner by served with foreclosure documents at the start of the foreclosure, certain process serving companies often used by trusts engage in a practice known as “sewer service” where the homeowners are never actually served with the papers. (The term refers to foreclosure documents left in the sewers in front of homes.)
89. In many other foreclosures by trusts, the process server has falsely stated that the homeowner was not in active duty military service when the homeowner was actually a service member on active duty service in Iraq or Afghanistan.
90. Renters were also never told about a pending foreclosure of the home they were renting, although such notice and opportunity to be heard was required in almost every state. This home deterioration was so extreme that some municipalities filed lawsuits against trustees accusing trustees of being slumlords. This widespread failure to protect the homes (the trust assets) further drove down neighborhood home values, further deteriorating the value of the loans/homes in the trust.
91. Sales of foreclosed properties were often held without complying with state laws requiring advertising such sales so that the maximum price could be obtained for the homes, lessening any loss to investors.
92. Vacant homes were not protected or maintained, causing extreme loss of value of the homes as they were often looted and vandalized.
93. Many trusts never obtained the mortgage documents that were supposed to have been in the mortgage file kept by the document custodian. Endorsed notes and mortgage assignments were often missing from the mortgage files kept by the Document Custodian for the trusts.
94. In the case of many loans that were supposed to haven been registered with the Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems (“MERS”), showing the trust as the owner of the loan and mortgage, no such registration was made and the loan remained registered in the name of the loan originator.
95. Where loan documents were missing, many trusts concealed the missing documents problem, or missing MERS registration problem, by filing “replacement” documentation with the county registers of deeds and clerks of the courts.
96. In possibly thousands of cases, the ownership by the trust is never disclosed. The foreclosure is brought in the name of the originator even though the loan was only owned by the originator for a few hours, days or weeks.
97. In the case of MERS, many trusts changed the ownership of mortgages on the MERS registry to falsely reflect that the Trust acquired the mortgage at or about the time that the loan defaulted.
98. In possibly thousands of cases, the endorsements on notes have been falsified showing an endorsement in blank or an endorsement to the trusts when no such endorsement was ever obtained from the loan originator.
99. In hundreds of thousands of foreclosure cases nationwide, false fraudulent and often forged mortgage assignments to trusts were prepared and filed solely to give the trusts a legal advantage in the foreclosure litigation.
100. A major investigation of the abuses in mortgage securitization was announced in the 2012 State of the Union address.
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News Update - Mortgage Fraud
A valentine from Chief United States Bankruptcy Judge Karen S. Jennemann on Feburary 14, 2012:
The Court cannot avoid suspecting that the second allonge indeed was created solely to rebut the trustee‘s assertions in this litigation and did not previously exist. If so, the Court suggests Deutsche and Ms. Faber individually consider the possible consequences of propounding potentially false evidence and perjured testimony to the Court.
Muselman v. Deutsche Bank, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Middle District of Florida, Orlando Division, Case No. 6:10-bk-07828-KSJ. Document 67, page 8.
As gratifying as this recognition of fraudulent documents may be, it does raise the question: just what are the consequences of propounding false evidence and perjured testimony to the Court. With the exception of a few judges and a few decisions, there have been no consequences whatsoever.
PUTTING AN END TO MERS
What has changed in the world of mortgage assignments since the FDIC/OCC/Treasury Consent Orders?
When is a mortgage assignment actually an Affidavit posing as a mortgage assignment?
When will all Recorders of Deeds file Declaratory Judgment actions seeking to enjoin the filing of mortgage assignments by document preparers:
1. that falsely state the employer and/or address of the preparer or signer (or that only use the MERS title when the signer is not directly employed by MERS);
2. that fail to plainly set forth the date the mortgage was assigned to the assignee; or
3. that contain language about the holder of the note, such language being extraneous to an Assignment of Mortgage.
Why are such Declaratory Judgment actions needed?
This is the new language appearing on many mortgage assignments where Deutsche Bank National Trust Company is the Trustee the Trust is the Assignee and MERS is the Assignor:
This loan was held by the Assignee prior to the Assignee filing a foreclosure action on May 21, 2008. The date of the execution of this Assignment of Mortgage by the Assignor is not reflective of the date the loan was transferred to the Assignee. The execution of this document is a ministerial act to comply with the state law as to how the transfer is to be documented and is not reflective of the transfer date itself.
(Instrument #2011383648, Official Records, Hillsborough County, Florida.)
This is signed by Srbui Muradyan who is identified as Assistant Secretary, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as Nominee for WMC Mortgage Corp. This document was notarized in Ventura County, CA, on October 25, 2011.
According to a statement in the upper left-hand corner of the document, the preparer was Tanya D. Simpson, Esq., of the law firm Smith, Hiatt & Diaz, P.A., a foreclosure mill in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
The receiving trust is Soundview Home Loan Trust 2007-WMC1.
When was the mortgage assigned to the trust? That essential question is not addressed by the Mortgage Assignment.
The signer and preparer purport to know that the loan (note: not the mortgage - the loan - that is, the promissory note) was held by Deutsche Bank as Trustee prior to May 21, 2008.
How is a Bank of America employee competent to state when Deutsche Bank National Trust Company acquired a loan?
In reality, Srbui Muradyan works for Bank of America in California. On many other mortgage assignments, Muradyan’s name appears as the preparer and the address for Muradyan is 450 E. Boundry Street, Chapin, SC - the address of Corelogic, one of the newest and largest document preparers in the country. (See Assignment of Mortgage, Book 2011, Page 13758, Pottawattamie County, Iowa - available through a Google search.)
Muradyan’s signature is always notarized in Ventura County, CA.
These new Assignments fail to plainly set forth the date that the mortgage was assigned; the individuals signing use a MERS title, never revealing their actual employers; the address of the signers is either not provided or wrongly stated, making it that much more difficult for a homeowner in foreclosure to take a simple deposition.
The OCC Review Process is not working; banks and trusts continue to use the MERS guise to seize properties without proof of ownership. The language has become even more convoluted. Tens of thousands of MERS Mortgage Assignments continue to be filed each month throughout the country.
Attorneys General Beau Biden of Delaware, Martha Coakley of Massachusetts and Eric Schneiderman of New York have all sued MERS and a declaratory judgment and injunctive relief may be part of their overall strategy. Their actions, however, will only help the citizens of Delaware, Massachusetts and New York.
While the many Linda Greens may have retired their pens in Alpharetta, there are hundreds more taking their places, still using MERS titles, still pretending to be bank officers when they are untrained clerks working for document mills.
Another solution is legislative: the Truth in Mortgage Documents Act previously discussed in Fraud Digest.
The simplest solution is for judges everywhere to reject these misleading documents and sanction the filers.
The end of MERS is long overdue.
News Updates - Mortgage Fraud
Action Date: February 7, 2012
Location: Boone Country, MO
DocX, LLC, a mortgage document company and a subsidiary of Lender Processing Services (“LPS”) in Jacksonville, Florida, was indicted on February 6, 2012, by a grand jury in Boone County, Missouri. Lorraine O’Reilly Brown, a former Senior Vice President of Lender Processing Services, and the founder of DocX, was also indicted. This was the first case in which a senior officer of a mortgage document company was charged with crimes relating to mortgage document preparation.
Brown and DocX were each charged with 68 counts of forgery, a class C felony in Missouri and 67 counts of False Declaration, a Class B misdemeanor.
The felony charges can each carry a term of imprisonment not to exceed seven years and a fine not to exceed $5,000 or double the gain from the crime up to $20,000. The misdemeanor charges each carry a term not to exceed six months, and a fine of $500 or double the gain up to $20,000.
The case will be prosecuted by Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster. “Today’s indictment reflects our firm conviction that when you sign your name to a legal document, it matters,” Koster said. “Mass-producing fraudulent signatures on millions of real estate documents across America constitutes forgery. When you file those documents in our state, you are committing a crime under Missouri law.
The indictment focuses on Deeds of Release, documents issued by banks and mortgage companies when a homeowner/borrower successfully pays off their loan. In some states, these are also called Satisfaction of Mortgages. The documents examined by the grand jury and identified in the indictments were signed by many different people signing the name Linda Green. This practice was first exposed in a segment of 60 Minutes that aired in 2011.
Other employees of a subsidiary of Lender Processing Services were indicted in 2011 in Nevada by Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto. These employees notarized mortgage documents that had been signed by LPS employees using false names and false job titles.
LPS has steadfastly defended these practices and even coined a term, calling the forgeries “surrogate signing.” Regarding the use of false job titles, LPS has defended this practice by saying such titles were authorized by corporate resolutions from many different banks and mortgage companies.
But while publicly defending these practices, lawyers working for LPS have been filing thousands of “corrective” mortgage assignments in county records throughout the country. In tens of thousands of cases, employees signed the name Linda Green to mortgage documents and identified Green as an officer of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems (“MERS”) though the real Linda Green did not qualify to serve as a MERS certifying officer because she was not an officer of her actual employer.
Conferring of officer titles to non-employees via corporate resolutions was one of the many practices challenged in a civil lawsuit brought by Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan against another mortgage document mill, Nationwide Title Clearing, on February 2, 2012.
Employees in the DocX office signed names to mortgage documents 4,000 times a day for several years. They most often signed false names and false officer titles to mortgage satisfactions and mortgage assignments. The assignments were very often used in foreclosure cases to prove that residential mortgage-backed trusts owned the mortgages and had the right to foreclose even though the trusts had never obtained the necessary documents during the securitization process.
These practices will be a significant part of the examination to be conducted by the mortgage securitization fraud task force, announced by President Obama during the State of the Union address. The taskforce will be co-chaired by New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman who filed a lawsuit against MERS and three major banks on February 3, 2012. The New York lawsuit was similar to the lawsuits filed by Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden on October 27, 2011 and by Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley in December, 2011.
According to the lawsuit filed by Attorney General Biden, “MERS engaged and continues to engage in a range of deceptive trade practices that sow confusion among consumers, investors, and other stakeholders in the mortgage finance system, damage the integrity of Delaware’s land records, and lead to unlawful foreclosure practices.”
The DocX mortgage documents permeate the records of almost every county recorder in the country. From July 1, 2008 through December 31, 2009, 1,742 DocX mortgage assignments were filed in Palm Beach County, transferring mortgages valued at $560,239,797. Deutsche Bank National Trust Company and American Home Mortgage Servicing were two of the most frequent users of the DocX documents, but over 30 banks and mortgage companies were clients of DocX.