Showing posts with label Foreclosure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foreclosure. Show all posts

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Tricks Banks Use to Drive Homeowners Into Foreclosure

Banks have become just mortgage servicing agents and foreclosure of your home is their new business model. Protect your home by learning about the tricks they play.
Most homeowners are unaware that their mortgage banks make more money from foreclosure than actual payment.  Mortgage banks give as few modifications as possible and comply minimally with statutes put in place to protect borrowers, all while employing tricks to “cash in” on homeowners’ defaults, pushing them to foreclosure.  The banks take the risk of litigation because few people sue, but getting legal assistance as soon as possible can make the difference between homeowners asserting their rights or losing their homes while being bulldozed by the bank.

Read full article here...

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

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Monday, January 21, 2013

Henry Cisneros: The nation understimated impact of foreclosure crisis


By Susana Baumann
voxxi

A former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Henry Cisneros believes the banking sector has not done all they could in the foreclosure crisis

The debate over the real estate bubble and the consequential foreclosure wave that swept the nation has been reinstated as regulators announced an $8.5 billion bank settlement with 10 major banks led by regulators of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.

Adducing that the review process was too costly—an estimated $1.5 billion has been paid to consultants and third party reviewers—and it was taking too much time—the review has been ongoing for over a year. Regulators decided to stop the investigation and spread $3.3 billion among 3.8 million homeowners. The balance will help with loan modification programs to homeowners still underwater or struggling with payments.

“It is unfortunate that this settlement is about abuses that occurred in the recovery process but it is not part of the long term solution. It was a necessary step but not a great contribution to solve the problem of foreclosures,” Henry Cisneros, former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and former Mayor of San Antonio, Texas, told VOXXI.

Cisneros believes the entire nation underestimated the impact of the foreclosure crisis in the overall economic recovery process not only zapping consumer confidence but also leaving homeowners threatened by foreclosures hanging from the banking and financial sector.

The crisis kept prices low in the real estate market, dragging sales and preventing new home builders from competing with those low prices. “The foreclosure was right at the front of the economic recovery and contributed greatly to the slowness and the flatness of the recovery,” Cisneros said. “Although in the last year and a half the Administration has really stepped up and launched a number of different programs, I believe the banking sector has not done all they could.”

Cisneros, like many borrowers’ advocate, sustains that banks could have done more with principal adjustment options, extensions and other approaches in refinancing mortgage loans to help those homeowners who wanted to stay in their homes but just needed some help.

“The process seems to have followed a pattern in which banks were not held accountable enough throughout this whole crisis. The Administration—from Secretary Geithner down—probably felt the turndown was so severe that they couldn’t put the banks over the cliff, but I know some people would disagree with this reason,” Cisneros stated.

Henry Cisneros’ career and impact on Latino community
As former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development—office he held between 1993 and 1997— Henry Cisneros considers that the focus should have been on the housing dimension of the crisis and not on the stimulus. “The core was the housing aspect of the crisis since the onset,” he affirmed.

During his time in office at the federal level—and throughout his life—Cisneros has been known for his tireless battle for fair housing policies and economic improvement for low-income Americans. He extended access to home loans and penalized an increasing number of lenders who discriminated against ethnic or minority borrowers by easing the process to file fair lending complaints.

Cisneros held this office during the first Clinton Administration. He had cross paths with the Clintons at the time he was Mayor of San Antonio and Bill Clinton was Governor of Arkansas.

“Clinton had invited me to speak at several events regarding public health clinics and strategies when he started to refine his national public health thinking, and we got to know each other,” Cisneros said.

From 1981 to 1989, Cisneros was elected for four terms as the second Hispanic Mayor of San Antonio. His time in office was dedicated to enhance the economics of the city, from reducing poverty to increasing wages and economic momentum.

Being that San Antonio is a largely Latino populated city—55 percent of its inhabitants are of Hispanic origin—Henry Cisneros campaigned among his community extensively, but once he became Mayor he had to make a practical decision. “I had to decide how much time I gave to a national Latino agenda and how much attention to being a good Mayor for all citizens in San Antonio, traditional Texans, African-Americans, Asians and Latinos equally,” he said.

His accomplishments really turned around the—at the time—tenth largest U.S. city, bringing federal and private funding to achieve economic development, revitalize downtown areas, build a 65000-seat stadium and attract companies and technology to create jobs and train skilled human resources.

San Antonio, now the seventh largest city in America, employs one of every six workers in the health care and bioscience industries, an effort Cisneros launched as Mayor. He also sought global investments mainly from Mexico and Japan to develop manufacturing and technology ventures, and extended infrastructure to integrate poor surrounding areas.

During his time, the city attracted two major players from the entertainment industry: the SeaWorld San Antonio, a 250-acre marine mammal park, aquarium and theme park; and Six Flags Fiesta Texas, the famous theme park owned by Six Flags. Both projects increased tourism traffic and enhanced the hospitality industry.

But maybe his main accomplishment was to create collaborative efforts to resolve old racial and ethnic tension in the community.

“I grew up in a city that suffered from many years of discrimination and economic disparity and there was great unfairness in the city. I also grew up at the time the Civil Rights movement was sweeping the country. Dr. King, Julian Bond, Barbara Jordan, Andrew Young and other leaders were my heroes. While I was not at the forefront of the Latinos Civil Rights, I thought we could use institutions of government, business and the city to improve the agenda of voting rights, civil rights and economic opportunities for all,” he said.

“I’m glad to say that San Antonio is a very different place today, works have continued and it is a very progressive city. I’m happy to see it being led by Major Julian Castro,” Cisneros affirmed



Read more: http://www.voxxi.com/henry-cisneros-impact-foreclosure-crisis/#ixzz2IeUQmRm6

Posted by Carlos Marroquin

Thursday, January 17, 2013

New Rules Aimed To Protect Homeowners From Foreclosure

By Les Christie

NEW YORK (CNNMoney)
Federal officials issued new rules for mortgage servicers Thursday aimed at protecting homeowners facing foreclosure. But consumer groups say the rules don't do enough to help prevent borrowers from unnecessarily losing their homes.
Since the housing crisis began, many mortgage servicers -- which collect payments for the owner of the loan and handle things like loan modifications and foreclosures -- have been ill equipped to handle the flood of delinquent loans, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau said.

"In too many cases, it has led to unnecessary foreclosures," said CFPB director Richard Cordray. "Our rules ensure fair treatment for all borrowers and establish strong protections for those struggling to save their homes."

Among the new rules are restrictions that prohibit servicers from foreclosing on borrowers who are seeking loan modifications and rules that require them to explore all alternatives to foreclosure. There are also guidelines for issuing clear, straightforward mortgage statements.

Yet, consumer advocates say the new rules don't go far enough.

"While the establishment of industry-wide standards is important, the failure to require meaningful loan modification protections is a retreat from current safeguards under the soon-to-expire HAMP loan modification program," the consumer rights organization said.

Requiring servicers to lower rates on loans or postpone payments would help prevent qualified borrowers from being unnecessarily foreclosed on, the organization said.

Still, the rules, which take effect in January 2014, address many of the problems borrowers face. Here's a rundown of the new requirements:

Restrictions on foreclosure proceedings while borrower seeks a mortgage modification: Referred to as "dual-tracking," servicers will no longer be able to start foreclosure proceedings on borrowers while they are actively seeking a loan modification or other alternative to foreclosure. To give borrowers time to apply for a modification, servicers cannot file the first foreclosure notice until the borrower falls at least 120 days behind on payments.

No foreclosure sales until alternatives are considered: If a borrower applies for a loan modification at least 37 days before their foreclosure auction is scheduled, the servicer must consider and respond to the request. They also must give the borrower enough time to accept an alternative to foreclosure before proceeding with the sale.

While the 37-day rule provides additional protections to borrowers in judicial foreclosure states, where courts review foreclosure cases, it does little to help those who live in non-judicial states, said Alys Cohen, a staff attorney with the National Consumer Law Center. Many homeowners in non-judicial states, like California and Arizona, won't know the sale date until it's too late since sales in these states are often scheduled with less than 37 days' notice.

"[T]he rules give servicers an opportunity to manipulate the system," said Cohen.

Consumer advocates also say the rules do not allow for appeals of a loan modification review when they are submitted within 90 days of a foreclosure sale. "If the data is wrong, the borrower is just out of luck," said Mike Calhoun, president of the Center for Responsible Lending.


Consider all foreclosure alternatives: After a borrower has missed two consecutive payments, the servicer must send a written notice with examples of alternatives to foreclosure the borrower can pursue.

In addition, servicers must consider all available foreclosure alternatives as opposed to the ones that are just financially favorable to the servicer. These options may range from deferred payments to loan modifications.

Provide direct access to help: Servicers will be required to provide borrowers with easy access to employees who are dedicated and empowered to help them.


Publish clear mortgage statements: Servicers will have to break down mortgage payments by principal, interest, fees, and escrow (to pay property taxes and insurance premiums) and include the amount and due date of the next payment, recent transactions and alerts about fees.

Offer early warnings on rate hikes: For most adjustable-rate mortgages, servicers must notify borrowers about upcoming interest rate changes that will affect their payments. If the new payment is unaffordable, servicers must provide information about alternatives and counseling.

Avoid overpriced "force-placed" insurance: Mortgage borrowers are nearly always required to insure their homes but if they don't have coverage, their servicers can buy insurance for them and charge the premiums to the borrower. This "force-placed" insurance can be very expensive and the CFPB would require servicers to give advance notice and pricing information before putting clients into this coverage. If servicers buy the insurance but receive evidence that it was not needed, they must terminate it within 15 days and refund the premiums.

Credit payments and correct errors quickly: Servicers must credit a consumer's account on the date a payment arrives. They will also have 7 business days to respond to written requests from borrowers to pay off the balances of their mortgages.

Also, within 30 days, servicers must conduct an investigation and either correct an error or dispute it.

Maintain accurate, accessible documents and information: Servicers must store borrowers' information in a way that allows it to be easily accessible. They must also have policies and procedures in place to ensure that they can provide timely and accurate information to borrowers, investors, and in any foreclosure proceeding, the courts.

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Fraudulent "Indepedent" Foreclosure Review

Foreclosure Crisis

Banks and Government Fail Homeowners
Foreclosure CrisisBanks and the government have fallen short in helping homeowners in danger of foreclosure.
Latest Stories in this ProjectExec Who Allegedly Enabled Fraud Runs Chase’s Effort to Compensate Foreclosure VictimsRead the Documents Treasury Has Been Keeping SecretSecret Documents Show Weak Oversight of Key Foreclosure ProgramWhy Florida is Sitting on $300 Million Meant to Help HomeownersWhere Are the Foreclosure Deal Millions Going in Your State?Full Coverage

Cheat Sheet: BofA Supplied Default Answers for ‘Independent’ Foreclosure Claims Reviewers

The Independent Foreclosure Review, the government's main effort to compensate homeowners for harm by banks, is supposed to be independent from the banks. But in Bank of America's case, it wasn't. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)



By Paul Keil,
ProPublica

The Independent Foreclosure Review is the government's main effort to compensate homeowners for harm they suffered at the hands of banks — and, as its name indicates, it's supposed to be independent.

But until recently, that was hardly the case with Bank of America. Supposedly independent, third-party reviewers would sit at a computer, analyzing each homeowner's case by going through hundreds of questions, such as whether the bank had properly reviewed a homeowner for a modification or had charged bogus fees. But the reviewers weren't starting from a blank slate. Bank of America employees had already supplied the answers, which the reviewers would have to override if they did not agree.

No evidence has emerged that Bank of America pressured reviewers to accept its answers, and the bank did not supply answers for the final questions: whether the bank should pay compensation and, if so, how much. But those ultimate determinations depended on responses to the preceding questions, and for reviewers the path of least effort was to accept the bank's answers.

This practice only ended a month after ProPublica published a story showing that Bank of America was doing much of the work itself [1]. When that story was published, ProPublica hadn't yet learned that the answers the bank supplied showed up on the reviewers' computer screens as defaults, and Bank of America strenuously denied that it had compromised the integrity of the review. Since November, the reviewers now begin their analysis without the bank's answers.

Bank of America spokesman Dan Frahm confirmed the change: "Steps were taken" so that the independent reviewer, Promontory Financial Group, "could not view answers supplied by the Bank of America Claim Researcher."

Frahm maintained, however, that the change didn't mean the reviews completed under the prior system were tainted. Promontory's employees have always had the ability to "override any answer supplied by the Bank of America Claim Researcher," he said.

Advocates for homeowners aren't convinced. "It's hard to imagine" that Promontory's reviewers weren't influenced by having the bank's answers right in front of them, said Alys Cohen of the National Consumer Law Center. "As a result it seems obvious that the earlier reviews should be re-reviewed."

Potential Conflict of Interest

The Independent Foreclosure Review is the government's largest program to compensate victims of the banks' foreclosure abuses. 4.4 million homeowners are eligible, but homeowners must submit a claim to ensure they're covered by the review [2]. As of the end of November, only 315,000 homeowners had done so, according to regulators, a low response rate [3] of about seven percent.

Victims could receive up to $125,000 in cash compensation or, if possible, get their home back [4]. The review is overseen by the nation's bank regulators, who were spurred to action in 2011 by the robo-signing scandal [5].

The review has been dogged by criticism since the outset, partly because of how it works. Banks hire and pay consultants to be the independent, third-party reviewers. Bank regulators must approve them, which the regulators say ensures the independence of the review [6]. But critics argue [7] that the consulting firms have other contracts with the banks and so have a conflict of interest: If the consultants anger the banks, they may lose future business.

For its "independent consultant," Bank of America hired Promontory. Promontory is also conducting the review for Wells Fargo, which has the second largest number of loans eligible for review (about 933,000 [8]) after Bank of America (1.3 million [9]) of all the banks.

"A Technical Change"

As ProPublica reported in October, all four of the country's largest banks planned to participate heavily in evaluating whether homeowners were harmed [10], according to their contracts with the consultants. Of course, homeowners claiming their bank abused them were never told the same bank would be integrally involved in the review.

In October, ProPublica uncovered internal [11] Bank of America memos [12] and emails indicating that, while Promontory made the ultimate decision as to a homeowner's compensation, the bank was doing much of the review work itself [1].

When ProPublica first presented this evidence to Promontory, Bank of America, and the bank's primary regulator, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, all three initially denied that Promontory was using analysis performed by the bank's own employees.

Now, even as Promontory and Bank of America confirmed they had changed their system to make the bank's analysis invisible to Promontory's reviewers, both companies insisted that the independence of the reviews had never been compromised.

"Promontory resources have always reviewed the files, performed all tests, and reached independent conclusions, without input or influence from Bank of America," said Promontory spokeswoman Debra Cope. "A technical change was made in November with respect to the visibility of information uploaded by Bank of America file preparers.... Although these responses were previously visible to Promontory reviewers, they never had any bearing on Promontory's independent testing processes."

OCC spokesman Bryan Hubbard said the OCC has a policy of not commenting on specific institutions, but added, "as we have stressed before, the OCC expects the independent consultants to exercise their independence in reviewing and evaluating each file. Our examiners are ensuring that occurs."

The NCLC's Cohen said the core problem with the Independent Foreclosure Review is that it is largely being handled in secret.

"At the end of the day, if the regulators and servicers want to put this behind them, they need the public to believe this is legitimate. Without transparency, you can't have real accountability."

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Foreclosure Crisis Hitting Older Americans Hard

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- More than 1.5 million older Americans already have lost their homes, with millions more at risk as the national housing crisis takes its toll on those who are among the worst positioned to weather the storm, a new AARP report says.  Older African Americans and Hispanics are the hardest hit.

"The Great Recession has been brutal for many older Americans," said Debra Whitman, AARP's policy chief. "This shows that home ownership doesn't guarantee financial security later in life."
Even working two jobs hasn't been enough to allow Jewel Lewis-Hall, 57, to make her monthly mortgage payments on time. Her husband has made little money since being laid off from his job at a farmers' market, and Lewis-Hall said her salary as a school cook falls short of what she needs to make the payments on her home in Washington.

Lewis-Hall and her husband have been making their payments late for about a year, but panic didn't set in until recently, when the word "foreclosure" showed up in a letter from the bank.

"You're used to living a certain way, but one thing leads to another," Lewis-Hall said. "It's not like I have a new car or anything. I'm driving one from 1991."

According to AARP:

* About 600,000 Americans who are 50 or older are in foreclosure.
* About 625,000 in the same age group are at least three months behind on their mortgages.
* About 3.5 million -- 16 percent of older homeowners -- are underwater, meaning the home value has gone down and homeowners now owe more than their homes are worth.

AARP said that over the past five years, the proportion of loans held by older Americans that are seriously delinquent jumped more than 450 percent.

Homeowners who are younger than 50 have a lower rate of serious delinquency than their older counterparts, and the rate is increasing at a faster pace for older Americans than for younger ones, according to AARP's analysis of more than 17 million mortgages.

Americans who are 50 or older are hard-pressed to recover from the collapse of the housing market that started in 2006 and was compounded by the recession that started in 2007. Eight in 10 of them own homes, but many live on fixed incomes, have little savings or already have burned through much of their retirement savings. They also have fewer working years left to build back what they may have lost.

Also, those who are forced to re-enter the workforce often find they can't command the same salary that they did in the past.

Older minorities are facing foreclosure rates that are almost double those faced by white borrowers of the same age, mirroring a nationwide trend seen in other age groups as well. Among older African Americans, 3.5 percent were in foreclosure at the end of 2011, and the rate was 3.9 percent for Hispanics. Just 1.9 percent of white homeowners were in foreclosure.

The issue has become so dire in U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings' Maryland district that he has assigned one of his 20 staffers to work fulltime to help struggling homeowners, and his office holds regular foreclosure prevention workshops. He said the federal government can do its part by promoting principal reduction and loan modification programs.

"These are people who in many instances have never missed a payment in 20 years," Cummings, a Democrat, said in an interview. "You see grown men crying because of the potential loss of a home."

Among older homeowners, those who are 75 or older are in the worst shape when it comes to foreclosures, the report showed. In 2007, one out of every 300 homeowners 75 or older was in foreclosure. Five years later, about one in 30 face that same fate.

Many of those oldest homeowners may have lost income they were counting on, such as the retirement benefits of a deceased spouse. In the meantime, their mortgage payments have stayed the same.  The situation is likely to get worse before it gets better, AARP officials predicted, because of a housing market that is recovering at a snail's pace.  "This crisis is far from over," Whitman said. "We need to think about more creative solutions now that we have this data."







Saturday, July 23, 2011

Real Estate | 'Robo-signing' of mortgage documents continues despite court cases

Lawmakers and enforcement agencies called for hearings and further investigations last week after learning that the illegal practice known as "robo-signing" has continued in the mortgage industry.

Read full article, Seattle Times:
Real Estate 'Robo-signing' of mortgage documents continues despite court cases Seattle Times Newspaper

Monday, July 11, 2011

HUD Emergency Homeowner Loan Program (EHLP)

The Federal Gov. is providing aid to homeowners who are experiencing a drop in income of at least 15% directly resulting from involuntary unemployment or underemployment due to adverse economic conditions and/or a medical emergency.

For more info visit:

HUD Emergency Homeowner Loan Program (EHLP)

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Foreclosure Crisis: The Banksters PR Machine

As the Foreclosure, Housing crisis continues and drags on, Banks maintain their PR war against the victims.  Just last week, Bank of America announced the opening of more "Help Centers" to assist homeowners with their mortgages.  We know the results of such "Help Centers", the homeowner is asked to bring all the documentation, fill out a massive paperwork and to wait for a decision on a later date.  What happens next has been broadly publicized,  Paperwork is lost, misplaced or simple rejected.  In some cases, as a matter of PR, some mortgages are only on  "Temporal Modification".   At the end of the day, the numbers don't lie, homeowners are not helped.

The Banks have enjoyed billions in bailouts from taxpayers, but like the story of the snake that was found almost dead, you took it in, help her to health and when back to life, the snake will always be a snake, it will come back to bite.

http://www.xtranormal.com/watch/8320643/bankster-v-deadbeat-debate

Sunday, April 24, 2011

It's Time To File Your Complaint: The Review Of Foreclosure Practices

Recently Federal Regulators ordered Banks to review 2009-2010 Foreclosures. Possible compensations may be on the works to millions of foreclosed victims. If you are a homeowner who have suffered a questionable foreclosure during the above dates, we advice that you file your complain with your State Attorney so that you stay on record as a victim of a questionable foreclosure.  Remember, our elected officials need to hear from those who elected them to Office.  Call, write and make appointments to let them know how the Banksters have stolen from you.

  1. Local Consumer Agencies
  2. State Attorney Generals
  3. Licensing entities
  4. Banking entities
  5. Better Business Bureau
  6. Newspapers
  7. SEC Filings
  8. State Corporate Filings
  9. State and Federal Representatives
  10. Congressional Oversight Panel
 DON'T LET THE CRIMINALS GET AWAY WITH WHAT THEY HAVE DONE TO YOU AND YOUR FAMILY!

Details are being worked on how they will go ahead with the reviews. Homeowners and advocates are watching developments. ProPublica is also closely watching developments, and they are also taking your stories. 

We will continue to follow this story.

Documents from the Regulators’ Review of Foreclosure Practices - ProPublica

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Navigating The Legal System Alone

Homeowners across America continue to struggle and  fight for their homes  in every City of the United States of America.   While homeowners seek for help and assistance from our Government Agencies, Representatives and Public Officials , the  Banks continue to push Citizens out of their homes without challenge and  opposition.  The Court System is broke and can not handle the wave of cases they face.

In case you don't know, Criminal cases, such as murders, rape and  battery take priority over Fraud and Illegal Evictions.  The Banksters know this very well. They enjoy the unlimited financial resources they have and pay  top dollar Attorneys to  fight homeowners and steal their homes.   This problems  are not publicized  at all.

Homeowners left to fight alone
The Obama Administration and the 50 State Attorney's General  have turned their backs on helping homeowners when it comes to "Legal Representation".  Advocates have asked that "Legal Representation" be part of settlements with Banks and so far they have closed their ears to our requests.   The banks  are full aware of this and knowing that,  they have rolled and pushed families out into the streets without challenge. 

Again, homeowners have  become victims of the system that is supposed to protect  them.   Lets not  forget,  "Homeowners pay for the  Justice System to operate and to uphold Law in this Country", yet they can not get a fair shake when it comes to Justice.

Again we ask, why tax payers have  to pay for the sins of the Banks?  Why do we have to "Bail them out"? Why are victimized Homeowners not given free Legal Assistance to have fair and equal representation when fighting their cases?
http://www.law.com/jsp/nylj/PubArticleNY.jsp?id=1202479622248&Lippman_Encourages_More_Civil_Pro_Bono

More is expected
The Hawaii State Bar Association announced today of a program allowing their young attorneys assist homeowners in their legal affairs with their homes. That is good, but not enough.

Government Agencies, Elected Officials  Attorney Generals and Bar Associations need to step up and help victimized homeowners.  We need a Legal System that is Just and Equal to all.  It's time to do  the right thing in the name of Justice.

Hawaii State Bar Association's young lawyers to hold legal clinics for public

Thursday, February 10, 2011

California New Program Brings Hope To Victimized Homeowners

"Keep Your Home California" new program is a reality.  Homeowners that are facing Foreclosure or have fallen behind are encourage to Apply for aid & assistance.

Primary objectives in "Keep Your Home California" programs include:

Preserving Home ownership for low and moderate income Homeowners in California by reducing the number of delinquencies and preventing avoidable Foreclosures.

Assisting in the stabilization of California Communities.

Homeowners can also benefit from this Program in leveraging negotiations with their Mortgage Servicers.

Read more about the programs  http://www.keepyourhomecalifornia.org/programs.htm

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Foreclosure/Housing Crisis: Is America Fighting Back?

Devastation
As 2011 rolled in, the Housing Devastation and Families in Crisis is taking a never seen toll. Banks have continue to hurt Families across the Nation and every single Neighborhood is taking a devastating hit. There are multiple Investigations going on by Multiple Agencies, however, People are feeling unsecured by the wavering of those investigating the Criminals. On December 14, 2010, the lead Attorney General of the 50-state foreclosure investigation, Iowa’s Tom Miller, said “We will put people in jail,” in response to questions during a meeting Tuesday with more than 100 people from 15 states representing community, faith, and labor organizations, foreclosure victims and struggling homeowners from across the country. Miller also agreed that principal reductions, loan modifications, and compensation for defrauded homeowners are necessary to clean up the mortgage mess created by the big banks. Again, Attorney General Miller had promise that those that have been harmed by the issue should be compensated.

During the State of the Union, 2011, President Obama failed to mention anything about this issue. While President Obama was expected to focus largely on jobs and U.S. economic competitiveness in his State of the Union, a Democratic senator wanted to hear the president talk about how to more strongly stem the tide of housing foreclosures across the country. Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) last week wrote Obama, urging him to do so. The freshman highlighted the well-reported troubles with Obama’s existing program to combat foreclosures, and proposes a six-point plan to keep Americans from losing their homes. Ignoring the Issue will only make it worse and taking any side of the Criminals can only add to the problem. It is an issue that should be at the very front of every Politician Agenda. Yes, we are very discourage that this issue continues to be "Whitewashed" by our leaders.

Just weeks after taking the reins of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, Darrell Issa is locking horns with the ranking Democrat on the committee investigating the banks' role in the foreclosure crisis. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) said his attempts to make banks more accountable for the robo-signing fiasco, which led several banks to halt foreclosure actions in some states, are being stymied by Issa. "[Issa] is turning a blind eye to the alleged abuses by the mortgage service industry," Cummings told The Post through a representative. To play Partisan Politics on the issue would only bring an added anger towards the System and Politicians from every Victimized Homeowner. People want to believe that Crime does not pay and that those that are caught violating our Laws would be punished to the full extent of the very Law they violated.

Americans are watching. Our expectations are high that we will see justice for the millions of families who have lost their homes, the millions more who are at risk of foreclosure, and the neighborhoods across the country devastated by falling housing values and vacant properties as a result of widespread mortgage fraud.




Voices,
"In the end, all of us are paying a price for this home mortgage crisis. And all of us will pay an even steeper price if we allow this crisis to continue to deepen," President Obama explained. "But if we act boldly and swiftly to arrest this downward spiral, every American will benefit." -
President Obama

"We're serious about getting it right. This is our chance and we know that." - AG Miller

"You can count on us! You can count on 50 AGs." - AG Miller

"How long must the American people work 2nd jobs to stay in our homes." - Shirley Broomfield

"The foreclosure process should stop while modifications begin." - AG Miller

"The kind of fraud that got us into this crisis is intolerable. " - AG Miller

"So when people misrepresent the homeowners, they lie to them, they cheat them out of their homes...." - AG Miller

PLEASE SIGN PETITION AND TELL YOUR ATTORNEY GENERAL THAT "CRIME SHOULD NOT PAY"
www.showdowninamerica.org/crimeshouldntpay