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Homeowners’ Rebellion: Could 62 Million Homes Be Foreclosure-Proof?

The financial juggling that helped cause the 2008 crisis may be coming back to haunt banks—and help homeowners.

Public home auction, photo by Sarah Gilbert

Photo by Sarah Gilbert

Over 62 million mortgages are now held in the name of MERS, an electronic recording system devised by and for the convenience of the mortgage industry. A California bankruptcy court, following landmark cases in other jurisdictions, recently held that this electronic shortcut makes it impossible for banks to establish their ownership of property titles—and therefore to foreclose on mortgaged properties. The logical result could be 62 million homes that are foreclosure-proof.


Mortgages bundled into securities were a favorite investment of speculators at the height of the financial bubble leading up to the crash of 2008. The securities changed hands frequently, and the companies profiting from mortgage payments were often not the same parties that negotiated the loans. At the heart of this disconnect was the Mortgage Electronic Registration System, or MERS, a company that serves as the mortgagee of record for lenders, allowing properties to change hands without the necessity of recording each transfer.

A committed homeowner movement to tear off the predatory mask called MERS could yet turn the tide.

MERS was convenient for the mortgage industry, but courts are now questioning the impact of all of this financial juggling when it comes to mortgage ownership. To foreclose on real property, the plaintiff must be able to establish the chain of title entitling it to relief. But MERS has acknowledged, and recent cases have held, that MERS is a mere “nominee”—an entity appointed by the true owner simply for the purpose of holding property in order to facilitate transactions. Recent court opinions stress that this defect is not just a procedural but is a substantive failure, one that is fatal to the plaintiff’s legal ability to foreclose.

That means hordes of victims of predatory lending could end up owning their homes free and clear—while the financial industry could end up skewered on its own sword.

California Precedent

The latest of these court decisions came down in California on May 20, 2010, in a bankruptcy case called In re Walker, Case no. 10-21656-E–11. The court held that MERS could not foreclose because it was a mere nominee; and that as a result, plaintiff Citibank could not collect on its claim. The judge opined:

Since no evidence of MERS’ ownership of the underlying note has been offered, and other courts have concluded that MERS does not own the underlying notes, this court is convinced that MERS had no interest it could transfer to Citibank. Since MERS did not own the underlying note, it could not transfer the beneficial interest of the Deed of Trust to another. Any attempt to transfer the beneficial interest of a trust deed without ownership of the underlying note is void under California law.

In support, the judge cited In Re Vargas (California Bankruptcy Court); Landmark v. Kesler (Kansas Supreme Court); LaSalle Bank v. Lamy (a New York case); and In Re Foreclosure Cases (the “Boyko” decision from Ohio Federal Court). (For more on these earlier cases, see here, here and here.) The court concluded:

Since the claimant, Citibank, has not established that it is the owner of the promissory note secured by the trust deed, Citibank is unable to assert a claim for payment in this case.

The broad impact the case could have on California foreclosures is suggested by attorney Jeff Barnes, who writes:

This opinion . . . serves as a legal basis to challenge any foreclosure in California based on a MERS assignment; to seek to void any MERS assignment of the Deed of Trust or the note to a third party for purposes of foreclosure; and should be sufficient for a borrower to not only obtain a TRO [temporary restraining order] against a Trustee’s Sale, but also a Preliminary Injunction barring any sale pending any litigation filed by the borrower challenging a foreclosure based on a MERS assignment.

While not binding on courts in other jurisdictions, the ruling could serve as persuasive precedent there as well, because the court cited non-bankruptcy cases related to the lack of authority of MERS, and because the opinion is consistent with prior rulings in Idaho and Nevada Bankruptcy courts on the same issue.

What Could This Mean for Homeowners?

Foreclosure protest, photo by Fibonacci Blue

The Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign holds a rally and press conference against the foreclosure of a house in Minneapolis.

Photo by Fibonacci Blue

Earlier cases focused on the inability of MERS to produce a promissory note or assignment establishing that it was entitled to relief, but most courts have considered this a mere procedural defect and continue to look the other way on MERS’ technical lack of standing to sue. The more recent cases, however, are looking at something more serious. If MERS is not the title holder of properties held in its name, the chain of title has been broken, and no one may have standing to sue. In MERS v. Nebraska Department of Banking and Finance, MERS insisted that it had no actionable interest in title, and the court agreed.

An August 2010 article in Mother Jones titled “Fannie and Freddie’s Foreclosure Barons” exposes a widespread practice of “foreclosure mills” in backdating assignments after foreclosures have been filed. Not only is this perjury, a prosecutable offense, but if MERS was never the title holder, there is nothing to assign. The defaulting homeowners could wind up with free and clear title.

In Jacksonville, Florida, legal aid attorney April Charney has been using the missing-note argument ever since she first identified that weakness in the lenders’ case in 2004. Five years later, she says, some of the homeowners she’s helped are still in their homes. According to a Huffington Post article titled “‘Produce the Note’ Movement Helps Stall Foreclosures”:

Because of the missing ownership documentation, Charney is now starting to file quiet title actions, hoping to get her homeowner clients full title to their homes (a quiet title action ‘quiets’ all other claims). Charney says she’s helped thousands of homeowners delay or prevent foreclosure, and trained thousands of lawyers across the country on how to protect homeowners and battle in court.

Criminal Charges?

"MERS was and is used in a way so that the average consumer, or even legal professional, can never determine who or what was or is ultimately receiving the benefits of any mortgage payments."

Other suits go beyond merely challenging title to alleging criminal activity. On July 26, 2010, a class action was filed in Florida seeking relief against MERS and an associated legal firm for racketeering and mail fraud. It alleges that the defendants used “the artifice of MERS to sabotage the judicial process to the detriment of borrowers;” that “to perpetuate the scheme, MERS was and is used in a way so that the average consumer, or even legal professional, can never determine who or what was or is ultimately receiving the benefits of any mortgage payments;” that the scheme depended on “the MERS artifice and the ability to generate any necessary ‘assignment’ which flowed from it;” and that “by engaging in a pattern of racketeering activity, specifically ‘mail or wire fraud,’ the Defendants . . . participated in a criminal enterprise affecting interstate commerce.”

Local governments deprived of filing fees may also be getting into the act, at least through representatives suing on their behalf. Qui tam actions allow for a private party or “whistle blower” to bring suit on behalf of the government for a past or present fraud on it. In State of California ex rel. Barrett R. Bates, filed May 10, 2010, the plaintiff qui tam sued on behalf of a long list of local governments in California against MERS and a number of lenders, including Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo, for “wrongfully bypass[ing] the counties’ recording requirements; divest[ing] the borrowers of the right to know who owned the promissory note . . .; and record[ing] false documents to initiate and pursue non-judicial foreclosures, and to otherwise decrease or avoid payment of fees to the Counties and the Cities where the real estate is located.” The complaint notes that “MERS claims to have ‘saved’ at least $2.4 billion dollars in recording costs,” meaning it has helped avoid billions of dollars in fees otherwise accruing to local governments. The plaintiff sues for treble damages for all recording fees not paid during the past ten years, and for civil penalties of between $5,000 and $10,000 for each unpaid or underpaid recording fee and each false document recorded during that period, potentially a hefty sum. Similar suits have been filed by the same plaintiff qui tam in Nevada and Tennessee.

By Their Own Sword: MERS’ Role in the Financial Crisis

MERS is, according to its website, “an innovative process that simplifies the way mortgage ownership and servicing rights are originated, sold and tracked. Created by the real estate finance industry, MERS eliminates the need to prepare and record assignments when trading residential and commercial mortgage loans.” Or as Karl Denninger puts it, “MERS’ own website claims that it exists for the purpose of circumventing assignments and documenting ownership!”

Foreclosure, photo by Kevin DooleyTaking Financial Reform Into Our Own Hands
Why we can't let this financial reform bill be our only response to the economic crisis.

MERS was developed in the early 1990s by a number of financial entities, including Bank of America, Countrywide, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac, allegedly to allow consumers to pay less for mortgage loans. That did not actually happen, but what MERS did allow was the securitization and shuffling around of mortgages behind a veil of anonymity. The result was not only to cheat local governments out of their recording fees but to defeat the purpose of the recording laws, which was to guarantee purchasers clean title. Worse, MERS facilitated an explosion of predatory lending in which lenders could not be held to account because they could not be identified, either by the preyed-upon borrowers or by the investors seduced into buying bundles of worthless mortgages. As alleged in a Nevada class action called Lopez vs. Executive Trustee Services, et al.:

Before MERS, it would not have been possible for mortgages with no market value . . . to be sold at a profit or collateralized and sold as mortgage-backed securities. Before MERS, it would not have been possible for the Defendant banks and AIG to conceal from government regulators the extent of risk of financial losses those entities faced from the predatory origination of residential loans and the fraudulent re-sale and securitization of those otherwise non-marketable loans. Before MERS, the actual beneficiary of every Deed of Trust on every parcel in the United States and the State of Nevada could be readily ascertained by merely reviewing the public records at the local recorder’s office where documents reflecting any ownership interest in real property are kept....

After MERS, . . . the servicing rights were transferred after the origination of the loan to an entity so large that communication with the servicer became difficult if not impossible .... The servicer was interested in only one thing – making a profit from the foreclosure of the borrower’s residence – so that the entire predatory cycle of fraudulent origination, resale, and securitization of yet another predatory loan could occur again. This is the legacy of MERS, and the entire scheme was predicated upon the fraudulent designation of MERS as the ‘beneficiary’ under millions of deeds of trust in Nevada and other states.

Axing the Bankers’ Money Tree

If courts overwhelmed with foreclosures decide to take up the cause, the result could be millions of struggling homeowners with the banks off their backs, and millions of homes no longer on the books of some too-big-to-fail banks. Without those assets, the banks could again be looking at bankruptcy. As was pointed out in a San Francisco Chronicle article by attorney Sean Olender following the October 2007 Boyko [pdf] decision:

The ticking time bomb in the U.S. banking system is not resetting subprime mortgage rates. The real problem is the contractual ability of investors in mortgage bonds to require banks to buy back the loans at face value if there was fraud in the origination process.

. . . The loans at issue dwarf the capital available at the largest U.S. banks combined, and investor lawsuits would raise stunning liability sufficient to cause even the largest U.S. banks to fail . . . .

 Nationalization of these giant banks might be the next logical step—a step that some commentators said should have been taken in the first place. When the banking system of Sweden collapsed following a housing bubble in the 1990s, nationalization of the banks worked out very well for that country.

The Swedish banks were largely privatized again when they got back on their feet, but it might be a good idea to keep some banks as publicly-owned entities, on the model of the Commonwealth Bank of Australia. For most of the 20th century it served as a “people’s bank,” making low interest loans to consumers and businesses through branches all over the country.

With the strengthened position of Wall Street following the 2008 bailout and the tepid 2010 banking reform bill, the U.S. is far from nationalizing its mega-banks now. But a committed homeowner movement to tear off the predatory mask called MERS could yet turn the tide. While courts are not likely to let 62 million homeowners off scot free, the defect in title created by MERS could give them significant new leverage at the bargaining table.


Ellen BrownEllen Brown wrote this article for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas with practical actions. Ellen developed her research skills as an attorney practicing civil litigation in Los Angeles. In Web of Debt, her latest of eleven books, she shows how the Federal Reserve and "the money trust" have usurped the power to create money from the people themselves, and how we the people can get it back. Her websites are webofdebt.com, ellenbrown.com, and public-banking.com.

YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Brown, E. (2010, August 17). Homeowners’ Rebellion: Could 62 Million Homes Be Foreclosure-Proof?. Retrieved February 03, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://www.yesmagazine.org/new-economy/homeowners-rebellion-could-62-million-homes-be-foreclosure-proof. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


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Reader Comments

An Alternative to Capitalism (which we need here in the USA)

Posted by John Steinsvold at Aug 19, 2010 09:29 AM
The following link takes you to an essay titled: "Home of the Brave?" which was published by the Athenaeum Library of Philosophy:

http://evans-experientialis[…]webspace.com/steinsvold.htm

John Steinsvold


CASE IN POINT: FORECLOSURE MILLS, JUDICIAL FRAUD, CONSUMER EXPLOITATION, GOVERNMENT SHAMS (an abstract)

Posted by Barbara Ann Jackson at Aug 19, 2010 10:03 AM
"Unscrupulous foreclosure mill activities are more criminally exploitive than what becomes reported –not only in Florida. Appalling collection abuses have resulted in mill lawyers (or their affiliates) obtaining ownership of fraudulently foreclosed properties via purported bids at “simulated” auctions. Certain fraudulently auctioned properties become “flipped” illegally to Freddie Mac. Some mill lawyers file into court records fee-making pleadings (summary judgments, etc) when Freddie Mac is not party to cases, and they bill $$$$ fees pretending to represent Freddie Mac. As manifest throughout my website, mills have cooperation and applause of federal and state courts.
                        
Through falsified Bankruptcy Court pleadings, some foreclosure mill lawyers wrongfully, illegally impede homeowners’ restructuring debts, and discovery of the actual owners of mortgage notes. Such lawyers file falsified bankruptcy “Lift Stay” motions in names of either defunct lenders or lenders with no ownership of property notes. To the contrary, bankruptcy “lift stays” should not be granted where there's no “standing” since “ranking” and “secured debt” factors come into play. False bankruptcy pleadings not only help illegal property repossessions, any other creditors whom debtors owe, becomes deprived wrongfully of entitled shares of proceeds from those auction frauds; and ILLEGITIMATE “deficiency judgments” ; and third party debt-buyers seeking money after unfairly low bids resulted in large debt balances are also problems.

Plus, foreclosure mills work in concert with Wells Fargo. Among other things, Wells Fargo has tax advantage from fraudulent foreclosure proceedings after placing distressed homeowners’ names / social security numbers on false IRS (acquisition) form 1099-A’s, even when no lawful “acquisition” of properties occurred; such homeowners wrongfully become forced to explain these turn of events to the IRS after surprise receipts of tax bills.

People who think that people who can no longer afford their mortgage should pack up and move out, ignore that it is unjust to render people homeless by use of intentional, dishonest, illegal foreclosure proceedings. Foreclosure mill illegalities like Attorney David J. Stern’s actually accounts for “illegal foreclosures” and “Tent Cities” which could be Anyplace, USA. Consider: Former homeowners Lawrence and Linda Elin, gave up their home after becoming victims of Bernie Madoff. (Former Wells Fargo executive Cheronda Guyton held parties after the Elins moved out; and astonishingly, “Collin Equities” permitted Guyton personal, free access to that home. A foreclosure auction had not occurred which made “Collin” proprietor of property that supposedly ‘went back’ to Wells Fargo (how did Collin get it?) The point being, it is possible that the Elins unwittingly aided a foreclosure fraud which displaced them –people unknowingly do it all the time! These situations are salient reasons why foreclosure fraud (on farmers, businesses, as well as residences) MUST be investigated;” it can cripple peoples’ abilities to move forward with their lives for a very long time –and the cloaked perpetrators are often millionaires; those perpetrators are as bad as, or worse than Bernie Madoff.

Because it is imperative to expose the variations of noxious foreclosure shams; and I have been offering / pleading that My True Story (with Prima Facie proof!) be used in Case Study about deceptive foreclosures and judicial biases. I have not relished all my personal costs in almost 5 years of trying to tell the story (my own, as well as others) of how the judicial system is being utilized by the banking industry (knowingly and unknowingly, because sometimes the lenders don’t know the foreclosure mills are handing them dirty titles) to devastate people whose circumstances causes them difficulty with repaying debts. **SEE this entire article @ http://www.lawgrace.org/[…]/

ADDENDUM TO "Case In Point. . ."

Posted by Barbara Ann Jackson at Aug 27, 2010 08:56 AM
THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT ILLUMINATES my "Case In Point" article [it is an abstract from my Newsblaze piece (see link below)]:

“My story is not a sour grapes foreclosure story; I am not so much calling attention to loss of a home, but rather, to nearly irreparable wrongs that occurred in connection with real estate extortion. My true verifiable story is about how -like an overrun creature lying in the street, my brutal adversaries maimed and left me there! And while I wince in pain, I anguish also for others who have been wronged by brutes. I do not have any other choice except to raise my pen and voice until vindication arrives; and authorities stop the wrongdoers from continuing their harms. Moreover, my situation has little to do with whether I have forgiven them, but it is about my lack of freedom and impediments to my ability to pursue happiness and employment to jobs of my choice.

“For 4 years, I fought through the court systems to prevent the fraudulent taking of my home. In so doing, I was repeatedly ravished by merciless litigators. They caused me lost jobs and blacklisting. I was always vilified and made to seem like a crazy outcast. I was persecuted and castigated by judges; I spent lots of ill-affordable money in legal costs; my privacy was shockingly, repeatedly invaded; I was falsely arrested; at one occasion, I was so tormented, I went to the bathroom on myself; and my freedom yet remains in jeopardy. Also, there's an amazing plethora of distorted humiliating documents and statements about me in New Orleans federal court records.

“Foreclosure mill attorney, Adcock, deliberately filed a foreclosure in the name of an entity which (GE Capital Mortgage Services, Inc) did not have standing for my New Orleans mortgage loan. Although I did not know why Adcock committed that fraud and other frauds, I recognized that my home was being taken through illegal means. I filed judicial challenges, in which I asserted and proved the foreclosure was impossible due to the foreclosure plaintiff's non-existence. (I might not have been inclined to fight so hard for my home if it were not for the deceptive method in which I could lose it.) The frauds were the red flags that led me to search and find out there was no "perfected lien" on my home; and that a novated loan document was not lawfully enforceable." *Read entire article @ http://newsblaze.com/[…]/topstory.html

losing my home to freddie mac--HELP ME

Posted by Leland at May 02, 2011 01:20 PM
I lost my job of 15 yrs just after buying my family dream home, i put down 60,000 and got aloan for 100,000 them got behind on payments.I received a call from federal home morgage auditors which in the long was a scan they told me they would deal with the bank and get me a lower payment but don't talk with the bank we do it all well it came down to me getting a notice for auction on my home,so me all dum found finlly got a hold of wells and they said to send a HARDSHIP letter ,and i told then it might not make it in time so they gave me there fax number ,so about an hour later i was at fed-x fax off the letter.So i wait a few day and then pull up the house and it show it was return to freddie mac.I ahd talked to wells and freddie sent letters and also offer them 20.000 to catch up with my default payments of around 10,000 ,but they want my house not my money can you help me save my failys home from these bankers it's not right for someone to get a home and lose it all I gave them 60,000 when i move in.and now they are going to throw me out in the street with alot of stuff for a house but no house or place to put it and my family.HELP ME PLEASE SO I CAN HELP MY FAMILY THANK YOU LELAND HILLIER 971-207=5323

"Homeowners' Rebellion: Could 62 Million Homes Be Foreclosure-Proof?"

Posted by Joseph A. Mungai at Aug 20, 2010 12:49 AM
Moments ago I found advertising on the MERS’ website that states they are the “proper party that can lawfully foreclose as the mortgagee and note-holder of a mortgage loan.” Is this false advertising?

http://www.mersinc.org/Foreclosures/index.aspx
(MERS) FORECLOSURES:

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (“MERS”) is a proper party that can lawfully foreclose as the mortgagee and note-holder of a mortgage loan. MERS Membership Rule 8 provides required guidelines that must be followed when MERS is the foreclosing entity. Please click here to access the Rules of Membership, and reference the Rule 8 requirements.

In mortgage foreclosure cases, the plaintiff has standing as the holder of the note and the mortgage. When MERS forecloses, MERS is the mortgagee and it is the holder of the note because a MERS officer will be in possession of the original note endorsed in blank, which makes MERS a holder of the bearer paper. MERS will not foreclose unless the note is endorsed in blank and held by MERS.

The MERS Legal Primer provides a sampling of cases that address the standing of MERS to foreclose its mortgages. These cases are not meant to be an exhaustive list involving MERS but are merely to serve as a primer for the legal arguments.

How do you find out ?

Posted by Doug Horan at Sep 08, 2010 02:28 PM
There is a good chance that people have one of the loans and Deed of Trust by MERS but how can you go about finding out if you do?


MERS Bank Fraud

Posted by Lynn Chase at Sep 13, 2010 09:16 PM
You can find out if your Note is registerd with MERS by going to thier website. They have a link for MERS for homeowners. You can search your loan through your name social security number loan number etc. Also if you read your Note it will say MERS is the nominee beneficiary and THEE BENEFICIARY (that will be in all cap and bold) My loan closed Dec. 18, 2006. In the county of record it was recorded one way and on the same day at the same time (the day I closed escrow) it was filed with MERS under different entities, Who owns my Note? The so called pretender lender pre sold my "promise to pay" and invloved my contract in a securities offering and never disclosed one thing about it to me. I was involved in an offering and should have at least been told that my biggest investment an American can make in thier lifetim wouold now be exposed to the whims of Wall street. A mere air commodity (i.e. my promise to pay) with no real value only potential value (i.e. if I pay) and I was not told that my house could drop like a bad stock and leave me with an upside down mortgage where I owe more than it is worth. Why should I pay that? Whats my motivation? So investors who bought my "promise" will benefit on the security transaction on my house (that wasn't even disclosed ot me much less was I given a prospectus!)that wouldn't have been over priced to begin with if not for the securities that banks sold and had thier bed partners stamp AAA? So they set this all up and now thanks to the bankruptcy reform Avt of 2005 now a court can't even "cram down" the loan to current market value so I can stay in my house when BK laws were enacted precisley to help people keep thier homes? Oh but now the banks will "short sell to some other guy" but not you, the homeowner that they (the banks) already made 3 to 20 times already the amount of your loan, no not you, you don't get to benefit. What a bunch of illuminati crap if I ever heard it. International crony banker scum bag's. REVOLT!!!!!!!!

Loan

Posted by Dale at Sep 13, 2010 12:58 PM
I too would like to know how to find out if my Deed of Trust is held by MERS

MERS

Posted by Robert at Sep 14, 2010 02:34 AM
Check your Deed of Trust or Security Deed stating that MERS is the Nomonee for Lender.

Homeowners’ Rebellion

Posted by alex s gabor at Sep 13, 2010 07:46 PM
Ellen Brown in my opinion is the foremost legal authority on the global mortgage meltdown which started in 2007 (see the Real Estate Depression of 2007 written by Alex S. Gabor). Stay tuned to stories related to the $500 Trillion Claims with the SEC by the Infinite Freedom Foundation!

MERS home in Foreclosure

Posted by Kathy at Sep 16, 2010 08:58 AM
Our home is in pre-forclosure. After seeing this information on Fox News this week, I went back and looked at our recently received default paperwork, and yes indeed our loan is now with MERS! We were never informed of this, since our signing in 2004. The notice was sent to us via, c/o ETS Services, which seems to do their mailing.

Is there any way with this new information we can negotiate a 'deal' to keep our home at the recently bank assessed amount, which is 191% less than the mortage balance? Is there any leverage to use, or just to sit and wait until possibly down the road we could own our home 'free and clear' as mentioned? Are there any homeowner options available under these circumstances? As we are in this situation, we surely don't have expendable cash to put towards lawyers, but hoping there are options.

Thank you for your thoughts, Kathy

Principal Mortgage Reduction

Posted by Todd at Sep 17, 2010 11:52 AM
It takes an initial review to determine but there are probably multiple issues with your loan that can keep it from foreclosure and get your principal amount reduced to 90-97% of the current underwater value. This is being utilized by people with many different defects and/or victims of other predatory lending practices. I can direct you to this resource if you would like to look into it.

Todd

Principle Mortgage reduction

Posted by Kathy at Sep 17, 2010 01:32 PM
That would be very appreciated Todd. Thank you. Kathy

Principal Mortgage Reduction

Posted by Todd at Oct 26, 2010 12:33 PM
Contact me for the information to get your mortgage situation reviewed at toddimme@yahoo.com

Principal mortgage reduction

Posted by grace at Oct 26, 2010 08:14 AM
Hello Tod,I read Your post on 09/17/2009 about PMR.Could You please direct me to this resource You mentioned? I want to find out about my mortgage. For some reason last post on that page I found You is dated 09/17/2010.Today is 10/26/2010. Thanks,Grace

Principal Mortgage Reduction

Posted by Pat at Jan 17, 2012 05:05 PM
Principal Mortgage Reduction

Posted by Todd at Sep 17, 2010 11:52 AM
It takes an initial review to determine but there are probably multiple issues with your loan that can keep it from foreclosure and get your principal amount reduced to 90-97% of the current underwater value. This is being utilized by people with many different defects and/or victims of other predatory lending practices. I can direct you to this resource if you would like to look into it.

I would be interested in this information as well. Pat

Home in Foreclosure

Posted by Sarin at Sep 23, 2011 11:36 PM
Hi Kathy,
I was wondering if you ever got things worked out with your mortgage and what was the outcome with the foreclosure? I am going thru the same thing right now and my home was a CALVet home loan and done in 04 as well. I also got a letter and had to send certified funds to ETS. Did you get anyone to help you or give any advice on options?

MERS

Posted by Jay at Nov 10, 2010 10:14 AM
I just looked it up.

MERS hold my mortgage. WHOOOPPPPE!!!!

I'm going to get my own stimulus.

MERS

Posted by Eli at Dec 07, 2010 01:31 PM
I had a rental property that was foreclosed on by MERS, bought by US Bank, then sold to an investment company. I filed a preservation of interest and lien under UCC rules but the investment company bought it anyway. But that was 2 years ago. Would the MERS issue enable me to get my property back?

I would appreciate referrals to a lawyers experienced in this area to litigate my case. Thanks.

Lawyer Referrals

Posted by KC at Dec 30, 2010 12:06 PM
In the event that all of the above seemingly applies in part with the illegal foreclosure of my disabled mothers home within the State of California, can anyone suggest any trustworthy lawyer referrals?

The residence is located in San Bernardino County. There is no question about it that my mother was victimized by a predatory loan, deceptive lending practices, MERS shenanigans (buying, selling, transferring of her property), illegal foreclosure of her home, and now the alleged "auctioning" of her property (Stealing of her home). My mother has not been served with an eviction notice yet but Investors have come to her home to try to tell her to get out 2 days before Christmas 2010.

For the record HomEQ Servicing, Ocwen have lied and cheated my mother.
When a written request for an itemized statement of all monies owed/paid/fee's etc was made including a request for copies of all original loan documents as well as a request to be notified of the holder of the promissory note, my mother received a letter stating that HomEq sold her account to Ocwen. This was after receiving a NOS. She was also told she had to start all over with the negotiating process and re-request all documentation despite having been given a notice of sale. We then learned that a title transfer had since been made according to county records during the foreclosure proceedings.

As the nightmare continues Ocwen refused to return my mothers phone calls, told her there was nothing she could do and when she requested her home loan documentation Ocwen even billed my mother $30.00 claiming that copies of her original home loan documents were sent to her in part with the illegal foreclosure of her home that of which were NEVER sent to her.Of course they generously waived the fee afterward for the missing ghost home loan documents.

Her house was foreclosed upon while she believed she was negotiating a modification. MERS of course is also involved. I am disgusted and the fact that here in California it seems to be alright to foreclose and evict without any judicial review is an atrocity. What is really going on?!

There is no question about the fact my mother is behind in her mortgage, however there is also no question that the foreclosure of my mothers home is illegal and criminal. What average person just trying to keep their heads above water can understand what is going on well enough to defend themselves, their families, and their homes from the deceptive home lending/foreclosing/stealing practices that are taking place all over America? We need lawyers to step up and help protect the heart of America, to protect "the people" where the legal system is failing us right now.

Thank you

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MERS

Posted by Dale at Feb 04, 2011 02:01 PM
If there is anyone who has been helped by an attorney for MERS, I would appreciate their info, I have a home in MERS in foreclosure
Thank you

2006

Posted by sandra at Feb 27, 2011 12:39 AM
We purchased our home in 2006 at the inflated value with the pretense we could re-finance at a lower fixed interest rate in a year before the adjustable interest rate kicked in. We were locked into a 3 year pre-payment penalty, but the market was still rising and the new loan would pay that.
Before the year was up, the developer of the subdivision sold their last model homes at a substantial loss, well below the current market value at that time, even as a re-sale.
This move lowered the market value of our homes in the subdivision, preventing re-finance and re-sale because our homes became upside down within the year.
Then the interest rates kicked in which meant unavoidable foreclosure for some. The developer’s had us locked in.
Now, here is what happened in our community:
1. The developer’s mortgage company assigned the mortgages to MERS and assigned a servicer that is not named on any of the documents.
2. The developers deliberately lowered the market value of our community financed by their mortgage company by selling the last of the houses below current market value.
3. The developer’s mortgage company sold the mortgage to another bank, but we are still paying the servicer that does not know who the new owner of the note is.
4. The developer’s mortgage company contacted homeowners to offer re-financing when no other banks would because we were upside down.
Is this a cycle of deception that may have been duplicated by developers/mortgagers across the nation causing the crash? Are we supposed to pay an entity that claims ownership or the right to service when another entity may appear at a later date, with the appropriate paperwork, stating they’ve received nothing and want payment in full?

Sign the petition/ Share the petition

Posted by Douglas Park at Mar 09, 2011 01:27 PM
Sign the petition/ Share the petition

Hello Again, there seems to be a great deal of people finally standing up against this deceptive business practice. I ask that all of you sign this petition and help get the movement needed to allow this to grow into a full pledged campaign, we need your help!


( http://www.change.org/petit[…]losure-deception#signatures )

It'll just take a minute! Once you're done, please ask your friends to sign the petition as well.

Grassroots movements succeed because people like you are willing to spread the word!

One Million Loan Revolt- Share, follow & Fight back!

If the link is broken, go to www.change.org and look for (One-Million-Loan-Revolt), please help this grow!

Electronic recording

Posted by Kim at Dec 31, 2011 08:14 PM
We now know the mess the MERS electronic recording caused, but what about all of the states that now allow notary and real estate related functions to be done electronically over the internet? One company controls the servicing and implementation of that system, like MERS, which could lead to easy hacking/and or corruption. We hear of documents being changed and forged by crooked lenders. Has anyone ever had an issue with something being forged that was filed electronically with your county regarding your real estate? This isn't the filing of already traditionally recorded and notarized documents like laws have required for over a century, but the recording itself. The very act that is supposed to be closely supervised and validated by authorized representatives of government. I'd like to hear of anyone has been in the middle of having a good case against a lender using the produce the note defense and had the lender alter locally filed documents that were filed electronically. This could be an under the radar strategy to get out of the hot royal mess by lenders with the cooperation of government officials. Any government entity usually likes to pad their payrolls. Seems electronic recording would take some of them away instead, so it makes me suspicious.

MERS Scandal

Posted by Pat at Jan 17, 2012 02:42 PM
So I pulled a title report on our home in Utah to see if MERS appeared anywhere and they do...everywhere. Does this make them a suspect as described in this Article and if so where would we go to hire an attorney familiar with this issue in Utah? Pat 801-792-6970

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