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Report from the Epicenter of Fraudclosures: It's Dark as a Dungeon Deep Down in the Mine
Can There Be a Rescue of US Workers Facing Foreclosure and Unemployment?
Most deeper issues go uncovered. Luis Campos, Director of the School of Anthropology at Chile’s Universidad Academia de Humanismo Cristiano, points out, “more buried than the miners themselves, the demands and the rights of the indigenous population continue to be flouted and unrecognized in our country.”
Many unsafe mines worldwide are still at risk from China to Zambia.
Who woulda thunk—certainly not the 1300 “journalists” on the scene–that this mine disaster had its origins in the era when Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger helped snuff out an emerging popular democracy in the name of protecting what West Palm Beach-based writer and former economic “hit man,” John Perkins, calls the corporatocracy.
Historian Juan Cole poses these questions:
“Are copper and gold mine owners stronger in relation to workers and have they escaped government regulation because the US engineered a coup in 1973 to destroy the Chilean Left?
“Was the San Esteban mining company’s ability to marginalize the union and to disregard input from the workers rooted in American-imposed corporate privilege? In other words, was the trapping of these workers in the first place Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger’s fault?”
That deep hole in that Chile mine was caused in part by a gold rush there—triggered, in turn by, a global financial crisis MADE IN THE USA. It had its counterparts in the US and, not just among those 29 miners who perished in the Big Main mine in West Virginia, last April, a disaster that was supposed to lead to new safety rules that the Republicans have been insidiously blocking.
There is another hole we need to focus on. Millions of us are trapped in our own mines, "underwater” in homes that have lost value with bills we cannot afford, trapped in unemployment, in jobs that are gone and not coming back. Poverty is up and the noxious Newt Gingrich wants to end the food stamps that so many now depend on.
There is no rescue in sight, and the human plight of most of the millions affected takes part outside of media sight.
The gaggle of reporters that covered the mine rescue as a human-interest story—not a political issue—missed the back-story there, just as they miss our own here.
Far fewer reporters are covering this crisis?
Here in Floriduh, one epicenter of the housing catastrophe, homeowners were shell-shocked by the latest fraudclosure crime wave. Denise Richardson writes in the Sun Sentinel
“Last I knew, knowingly signing documents fraudulently and using them in a court of law is frowned on, right? It’s criminal, isn’t it? Or is it only criminal if you are a homeowner and not a bank? Seems we’ve gone to great lengths to create and then accept a double standard here.
Perhaps these financial crimes—yes, that’s what they are, crimes—continue to happen because we never addressed the real problems to begin with. You can’t fix a problem you don’t acknowledge. Does anyone believe that was done to help protect the rights of homeowners? Let’s call it what it is: fraud.”
An attorney in Deerfield Beach Fla., representing 3000 foreclosure victims, has taken hundreds of depositions from Bank employees who admit they knew nothing about the details of the evictions they signed off on. Many are now being put down as “Burger King Kids” yet they know more about real whoppers than this lot knows about real estate. RealtyTrac reports that foreclosure and REO homes accounted for 24 percent of all residential sales during the second quarter? That is huge!
Here in relatively affluent Palm Beach County, homeowners are Number l in the state for the average number of loans in foreclosure that are delinquent. It has the fourth highest number of foreclosures, 45,829 with an average delinquency of 623 days. You will recall that Bernie Madoff once turned Palm Beach into a hunting ground for his ponzi scheme.
This situation is worse than we realize, and not just for the people most directly affected. No one knows how much the banks will lose in the class action suits, fines and legal actions to come. Some think it could be tens of billions suggesting another bailout may be in the offing, probably by the Federal Reserve Bank.
Paul Krugman questions whether the banks had the right to seize many of these homes, arguing, “The mortgage mess is making nonsense of claims that we have effective contract enforcement — in fact, the question is whether our economy is governed by any kind of rule of law.”
Buried in the Business section, on page B-8 of the New York Times, way down in an article saying the banks may be on the hook for billions, was this very revealing paragraph speaking to a problem that I have been raising for years making clear the fraud problem is not just with foreclosures.
“Inside the investment houses, several traders said nerves were frazzled further by worries that banks could face much bigger mortgage related losses, not from foreclosures, but because of questions about how the money was lent in the first place. If it turns out that mortgages were bundled together and sold improperly, more holders could sue the banks and force them to buy back tens of billions in mortgage-backed securities.”
Frazzled nerves so far seem the worst punishment the banksters have tasted. They have just decided to reward themselves with a new round of raises and bonuses worth $144 billion with few criticisms. The Government has meanwhile just “settled” for $73 million with Countrywide, the leading predatory lender. That means that a prosecution of its top executives, the poster boys for mortgage criminality, will be dropped. Notes the website Housing Doom:
“Even having to pay $77.5 million, Mozilo still nets $61.5 million, just between November 2006 and October 2007. Maybe “crime doesn’t pay,” but one of the lessons of the housing bust is that fraud does.”
What should be done? Webster Tarpley speaks for many in calling for a national moratorium on foreclosures, a course of action rejected by the White House:
“The current chaos in home foreclosures is once again the direct responsibility of the zombie bankers themselves, who have neglected all traditional legal and accounting standards concerning the necessary paper trails in their frenzied desire to securitize mortgage loans and make them into toxic derivatives in the form of asset-backed securities and mortgage backed securities. The zombie bankers, already the recipients of $24 trillion of public largess in the form of the various bailouts, have turned out to be incompetent even in the technical aspects of their own thieving racket.
But the chaos in the bankers’ filing systems is nothing compared to the chaos created by the millions of foreclosures they have engineered, based on adjustable-rate mortgages and similar misleading contracts which never should have been legal in the first place. For some time, it has been evident that the defense of the American middle class requires a blanket, orderly, federal freeze (or moratorium) on all foreclosures on primary residences, similar to the New Deal protections offered to family farms by the landmark Frazier-Lemke Act of 1935-1949 during the previous depression.”
Ellen Brown, author of Web of Debt, goes further in Yes Magazine, asking if it is “Time to Break Up the Too-Big-to-Fail Banks"
“Popular financial analysts, crippling bank losses from foreclosure flaws appear to be imminent and unavoidable. The defects prompting the “RoboSigning Scandal” are not mere technicalities but are inherent to the securitization process. They cannot be cured. This deep-seated fraud is already explicitly outlined in publicly available lawsuits.
There is, however, no need to panic, no need for TARP II, and no need for legislation to further conceal the fraud and push the inevitable failure of the too-big-to-fail banks into the future.”
The faux populists of the Tea Party right have been silent on the issue. Glenn Beck dropped all populist pretensions by calling on followers to give money to the Chamber of Commerce so they can better pursue a corporate agenda. One Republican here assured me that Barney Frank caused the whole financial crisis and that he will be tossed out of office in the midterm election. (He didn’t just blame him—he hates him!) At the same time, one right wing website did publish a detailed denunciation of housing fraud.
http://dailycaller.com/2010/10/14/thedc-op-ed-one-nation-under-fraud/
As depressing as the lack of any real ongoing mass-based populist movement of the left or the right is another reality that the Washington Post finally spills even as millions of Americans buy into the illusion that new politicians can save us while angry voters here in Florida prepare to vote the Tea Party in to office:
“Let us tell you an Ugly Truth about the economy, a truth that no one in power or who aspires to power wants to share with you, at least until after the midterm elections are over. It’s this: There is nothing that the U.S. government or the Federal Reserve or tax cutters can do to make our economic pain vanish overnight.”
So what will it be? More money for the banks to bring them under control, more illegal foreclosures, or some type of justice for homeowners? Will this crisis lead us to demand action to break up these financial behemoths or will we just sit by and watch a new crisis sweep us deeper into our own mines of despair?
- Posted in
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40 Comments so far
Show AllAre you asking, Danny, if the major players in the political-economic system are going to allow democratic "reform" of the very system that privileges them, the answer is no. If you are asking what are "we" going to do about this, I'm all ears - got any suggestions?
Let the "Market" deal with this, and allow the lawyers to gnaw: between them, they just might bring the whole house of cards down. But the Fed won't allow the market to work its magic, so I'm putting my faith in the lawyers. Never thought I'd say that, but having witnessed what a friend of mine whose house was being foreclosed on, accomplished with the help of a good lawyer, I've changed my mind: at the moment, not only have they staved off foreclosure, but there's a pretty good chance the bank will owe them a lot of money.Lawyers gnawing: it's happening all over the country, and the latest banking scandal over "robo-signing" may take years to work out.This doesn't constitute a plan of action, but it sure does open up opportunities,no?
I expect this is nothing but another attempt to try and slow the crash of real estate. A few tidbits of "hope" scattered here and there.
It'll be hard to tell who the real "winners" are...those evicted or those resigned to live as prisoners in devalued homes –for the rest of their lives.
I say the lawyers are the winners, as always. Thats just how our system works.
As far as the suckers who just had to buy even though the deal looked too good to be real, well it wasn't.. Lesson learned, go bankrupt, and teach your kids the foolishness of greed, as you tuck them in their bunk beds in your two bedroom Apt.
I grew up in a two bedroom apt, didn't kill me. I just never developed a massive sence of entitlement.
>^^<
A revived glass-steagall, and a "posse" of lawyers/regulators/bank examiners, with the wolfish predisposition of Elliot Ness & his gang of "Untouchables", would do the necessary gnawing. Bring your helmets & flak-vests, guys. We need some fearless G-men who would dare "cross swords" with the banksters.
Naw, as long as Bernakie, Oilybomber, and the congress criminals cover for them it won't happen.. Ever!
>^^<
Amerika has hit a new low: lawyers are now our only hope.
~sigh~
For many a year I've been telling people that I consider the large financial institutions criminal conspiracies -- this after working in the corporate headquarters of one of the biggies for many years.
Here's another pessimistic outlook on the whole situation.
http://kunstler.com/blog/2010/10/wait-for-it.html
Kitaj asks a good question. What can be done about it? Go the Ted Rall route and advocate insurrection? I can't even think about that possibility without remembering the Branch Dividians. "People Power" only works if the military refuses to take up arms against the people attempting to grab power. Anyone think that's a possibility here?
Two quote John Lennon: "You say you got a real solution, well, we'd all love to hear the plan. You ask me for a contribution, well, we're all doing what we can."
For many a year I have been telling people that I consider the large financial institutions criminal conspiracies. The responses I get from Dems and Repugs range from "regulating them will stifle innovation" to "sounds like a conspriacy theory".
The real question is: What will it take to remedy the epidemic of delusion syndrome a majority of Americans appear to be afflicted with ?
As John Lennon sang in one of his best compositions (Working Class Hero) forty years ago: "First you must learn how to smile as you kill, if you want to be like the folks on the hill"
It' wern't nothin, but american greed/hope for the american dream, That's why it's called a dream, it's unatainable to most, something to aspire to.
Not your bloody birthright! The sheeple won't learn unless the pay the price.
>^^<
"What can be done about it?"
Does "France" ring a bell? Every effort doesn't have to be an armed on. Just call a general strike and see the bastards run for cover. Many a tyrannical government has been brought down that way. Hell, the Argentinians did it back in the early 2000s with pots and pans.
"So what will it be? ...Will this crisis lead us to demand action... or will we just sit by and watch...?"
You can demand action. You can sit by and watch. Neither will prevent the economic collapse that is about to happen.
What to do? Figure out how to live without money.
If you have any extra cash, go buy some gold and silver!
And what happens when the ones that hold the stakes on the gold and silver decide that it's their time to manipulate and profit from that?
They've been manipulating the price and still can't seem to hold it down to keep their fiat currency looking like it's worth anything.
It's a whole new ballgame. The Wall Street confidence game is coming to an end. Lot's of small individual investors have been buying gold over the last 10 years. And they are demanding the physical stuff, not paper ETFs.
You can Boomerang yourself right over to GATA: http://www.gata.org/ It's worth investing time in if you hope to have anything after the global currencies collapse.
Buy canned food and survival books! you can't eat gold or silver!
>^^<
"breaking mega-banks into smaller banks" is hardly a solution.
i'd say:
live OFF the capitalist grid as much as you can manage.
practice the alternative way of life as much as you can.
of course you need to understand how differently these two ways of life are constituted.
Is this an attempt by TPTB to ultimately destroy all property rights, and usher in Agenda 21?? Funny how we're always given the "incompetent" argument while they amass greater wealth and control.
Danny -
WE NEED YOUR CONTINUING ASSISTANCE!!!
Please keep these foreclosure crimes surging to a tipping point for satisfactory homeowner resolution. Millions of families are devastated, including my own.
Politicians will obey the banksters' gag orders, and corporate-controlled media will send this issue on to the great oil-spill-in-the-sky. Fraud, what fraud??
This is a job for GUANTANAMO! Waterboard Wall Street.
.
.
.
http://rortybomb.wordpress.com/2010/10/08/foreclosure-fraud-for-dummies-1-the-chains-and-the-stakes/
The link is to a 5-part series with the interesting name of =Foreclosure Fraud for Dummies=. It is written by Mike Konczal with diagrams and flow charts that support comprehension of what the bastards did.
Trylon
Bank of America will aggressively resume foreclosures next week. CNBC has stated that congress will pass law(s) that will retroactively shield banks from lawsuits.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101018/ap_on_bi_ge/us_bank_of_america_foreclosures
In the meantime, commecial real estate is being quietly and generously bailed out.
http://www.mybudget360.com/fed-extends-a-helping-hand-to-hilton-hotels-and-owns-malls-across-the-country-cre-florida-apartments-50percent-off/
This country is lost.....
Not to worry, this is just getting started.
Bank of America posts $7.7B loss on special charge
Bank of America says it lost $7.7B because of a charge tied to credit, debit card reform
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Bank-of-America-posts-77B-apf-4096614857.html?x=0
Time to bail them out...again!
TARP 2 is covert, not for public discussion. In addition to like being lied to, the American populace likes mindlessness, the inability to or to know how to, discern thoughts from facts. Mindlessness is orchestrated by the government, business, and pretend christian preachers[harlots] whom recite false doctrines[babel]to their congregations of fools whom have just been abused, lied to and called foul names and then the harlot preachers beg for donations and the fools give them money.
What? they think we'll revolt? with what prey tell? Maybe we can throw shoes!?! Problem is they'll be throwing back lead! All you can do is play the corrupt game with the loaded dice they give you, otherwise they throw you out of the game.
>^^<
It's pretty much a lost cause. America decided that it didn't want government in our lives, or government interference with business. As Americans, we did decide that regardless of the circumstances, people have to take personal responsibility for their own decisions, and if things turn out badly, well, that's your problem. We fired Nanny Government. We have liberated corporations so that they are free to grow and make the country wealthy. Remember?
One thing people need to understand is that the majority of today's poor WERE once middle class, so if you lose your home, and then everything else, don't think there is anything different or special about you. There's not. More of today's comfortable middle class will be joining the homeless, and they are no more or less to blame for their poverty than former welfare recipients were. There are some things many of us learned the hard way: Americans care about the deserving poor, but believe that no one who is poor is deserving. Get used to that fact. You'll be treated much as you have treated the poor. Breath a sigh of relief that you, at least, won't be faced with the threat of welfare dependency (or food and shelter dependency, for that matter). If you lose your home, be prepared for the accusations; no excuses are acceptable. Not in America, not when it comes to poverty.
Just another reason why we must rid ourselves of Obama.
He still does not have a clue.
I am typing this blog in my Detroit condo which is scheduled to be foreclosed this Wednesday, October 23rd. I bought this 1 bed, 2 ba condo in a historically preserved former hotel (right next to the Det Inst of Arts (I could hear my deceased father saying: location, location, location) for around $160,000 at the end of 2005. I loved living here, it was a close commute to my law job at the Wayne County Sheriff's Civil Division (where my primary duty was to ensure that the Sheriff's foreclosure process complied with state statute!!!) and things were going great......UNTIL the crash! FAST FORWARD: I lost my job in August 2009, my condo's taxable value plummeted to $3276 (double that for the "real" value of ~$7600!!!!!) NO TYPOS FOLKS! I had to declare Chapter 7 and in my search for work (~500 resumes sent out for law/social work positions, I have received two response ltrs which said, BOTTOM LINE I'm overqualified!! SO having gone "full circle" in the truest sense of the term, I can honestly say I don't know how we are going to survive.....at least with capitalism as our national anthem.....I know capitalism has to go: it doesn't work, it attracts predators in lending, insurance, people making money off our money (not theirs), condo/realty companies, the corner grocery, the local gas station.....you get the idea......this country needs radical change. Let's start with taxing the rich to the hilt, rounding up the tea-baggers in Boston's harbor and pleading with the Scandinavian countries to allow all of us altruists and idealists to seek asylum there!!!!!
A practical suggestion, investigate Bay City.
"I loved living here, it was a close commute to my law job at the Wayne County Sheriff's Civil Division (where my primary duty was to ensure that the Sheriff's foreclosure process complied with state statute!!!) and things were going great......UNTIL the crash!"
Karma is a bitch and doesn't discriminate.
Best of luck to you.
Let me get this right, you paid $160k for a 1bdr apt! In Detroit! in 2006! the writing was already on the wall in Detroit!!! not to mention that's like 30yrs rent on a one bedroom apt!
But I guess they didn't teach finance in law school? Just goes to show education can't endow common sense. Sorry but the only one to blame for this, looks at you in the mirror. Hopefully your young and can make good use of this lesson in a few years...
Sorry, but blowing smoke up your rear ain't gonna help you, learn and do better next time.
>^^<
there will be a bloody fight.
who will be standing when it's over is to be seen.
BTW, this Wednesday is October 20th, not the 23rd!
Sorry to hear about your situation. Hopefully things will improve for you shortly. I came across this certified letter that was sent to Bank of America and thought that in your line of work you might find it interesting.
http://dailybail.com/home/uh-oh-bank-of-america-could-be-forced-to-pay-20-billion-to-b.html
According to CNN, Bank of America is resuming its foreclosures this week. "'This is an even better outcome than we previously thought,' said Paul Miller, an analyst at FBR Capital Markets."
(http://money.cnn.com/2010/10/18/news/companies/BOA_resumes_foreclosures/index.htm?hpt=T2)
Mr.Miller's upbeat enthusiasm for foreclosures seems unlikely to be shared by the majority of Americans, but it's good to know how the financial markets really feel.
My conspiracy theories don't run as deep and wide as most here. I agree there were terrible abuses in the variable rate loans made, and inflated appraisals, and phony documentation supplied by lenders, and I don't want to excuse all that. If lawsuits can bring justice for those people it will discourage such abuses in the future. But these loans are a minority of loans, even in the states where the worst abuses occurred. We have a far larger number of loans where the problem is that the borrower is discouraged about current values, or unemployed, or both.
To deal with unemployment, we need strong measures to bring jobs back to America, we need to start buying American exclusively, and we need to have some faith that property values will come back as more people are able to pay their mortgages.
In determining propery values, individual property owners are actually facing a crisis comparable to the "mark to market" crisis the banks faced late in 2008. They are being conditioned to think that their property is only worth as much as the most run-down abandoned fixer-upper that just changed hands in the neighborhood. They are grossly underestimating the long-term value of their properties and making faulty decisions based on that. The same short-sightedness is affecting appraisals in refinances and loan modifications. In the mark-to-market crisis, banks were finally told that it was legitimate to value their securities at long-term value, not just the price of the last sale. The same reasoning should apply to real estate.
We're used to the fact that stocks go up and down in value, and so do commodities and precious metals and currencies. Well, so do houses and commercial properties!! Not so good for the digestion or sleep always, but not a reason to give up on property if it's been carefully selected and has valuable features. In many cases it will ultimately be seen that extraordinary efforts to maintain ownership and meet obligations will be the wisest step a property owner can take.
Finally, the voice of reason.
"We're used to the fact that stocks go up and down in value, and so do commodities and precious metals and currencies." Its the old supply and speculation argument. Just because we are used to it doesn't make it right. To many people are accepting half truths to the detriment of their sanity or we could call it chronic stress. The so called "Global Economy" is an example where people have accepted it without hardly any thought or questioning of the long term consequences. Something the younger generation will come to realize.
Can there be a rescue? Yes.
Will there be a rescue? Waaaa haaaa...
Many thanks to Schechter for writing an excellent analysis.
I read the piece on the "right-wing site". It was longer and very good, so I decided to check out the other pieces on the site. One of them was a long diatribe about how the federal government is responsible for the current financial situation. They seemed unable to see any contradiction between the two articles. Amazing ! ! !
Jim Shea