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To: Kartographer

I’m a Florida admitted attorney, and I must agree that Stern is inexcusable. Without defending him in the least - you have to look at the “foreclosure defense” bar as well. In Florida, from start to finish, a judicial foreclosure can take from 2-5 years. Most of those taking 5 years had 9 yards of procedural maneuvers to simply delay the inevitable.

The robo-signing, the forged signatures are outrageous, but I’m not going to be able to generate a lot of sympathy for people who are, in effect, living in their homes for years, rent-free. When you trace back the losses to lenders - all the way to their final resting place in our financial system, there is a pretty good chance that taxpayers dollars are involved. It’s a mess all the way around.


3 posted on 02/06/2011 5:38:12 PM PST by Wally_Kalbacken
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To: Wally_Kalbacken

When you trace back the losses to lenders - all the way to their final resting place in our financial system.....
************************************************

Can you name one instance where a originating bank (pretending to be a lender) , has allowed discovery or actually disclosed the true lenders identity that table funded the loans? I have never seen anything “traced back” ... I just want to know where BofA , WF , GS and others are hiding their gains .. maybe the Caymens or Bahamas.. Sterns money is in the Caymens.. maybe he’ll take “Su Casa Es Mi Casa” on one final trip to the Caymens to visit his stash ,, if his Chinese backers don’t murder him.


6 posted on 02/06/2011 5:57:50 PM PST by Neidermeyer
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To: Wally_Kalbacken

I’m a Florida admitted attorney, and I must agree that Stern is inexcusable. Without defending him in the least - you have to look at the “foreclosure defense” bar as well. In Florida, from start to finish, a judicial foreclosure can take from 2-5 years. Most of those taking 5 years had 9 yards of procedural maneuvers to simply delay the inevitable.

The robo-signing, the forged signatures are outrageous, but I’m not going to be able to generate a lot of sympathy for people who are, in effect, living in their homes for years, rent-free. When you trace back the losses to lenders - all the way to their final resting place in our financial system, there is a pretty good chance that taxpayers dollars are involved. It’s a mess all the way around.


Stern was taking in $18,000,000 a MONTH ...

Defend that, please.


8 posted on 02/06/2011 7:06:04 PM PST by DontTreadOnMe2009 (So stop treading on me already!)
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To: Wally_Kalbacken
I’m a Florida admitted attorney

How's that go? Do you just stand up and say "My name is Wally_Kallbacken and I am an attorney" like AA or what?

9 posted on 02/06/2011 7:16:39 PM PST by RegulatorCountry
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To: Wally_Kalbacken; Kartographer; All

“The robo-signing, the forged signatures are outrageous, but I’m not going to be able to generate a lot of sympathy for people who are, in effect, living in their homes for years, rent-free. When you trace back the losses to lenders - all the way to their final resting place in our financial system, there is a pretty good chance that taxpayers dollars are involved. It’s a mess all the way around.”

The wheels of justice turn slowly sometimes but since we are supposed to be a nation of laws unless we want to go the banana republic route ordinary people have just as much right to use the court system no matter how long it takes.

I have more sympathy for those people who according to the article tried to have their loans modified and then were taken advantage of by this guy.

And I have more sympathy for the people who tried to keep their homes with modifications then I do for the banks that stopped using prudent lending standards and developed these toxic loans then infected the financial system. Who should know better a Banker who has knowledge of what all those lending terms mean or a Borrower?

The Bankers didn’t care they were slicing them up and then selling them to unwary investors as AAA. The Borrower’s were being told they could refinance or sell when they reset by lenders, brokers, the media. It was the thing to do buy before they couldn’t. The loan officer tried to talk my daughter into one of those loans I advised her against it but they pushed hard.

Another reason this is so important is the title. People have a right to have a clean title when they finish paying off their loans. Even if people are buying a foreclosed home they could otherwise end up a victim of the banks who developed and used MERS.

You are right about taxpayer dollars being involved not only from the bail out but the banks are dumping the loans unto the taxpayers through the GSE’s and even the one’s sued for put back’s by the GSE’s because of the banks practices we are only getting a lousy penny on the dollar. The people who were foreclosed on they get to help pay for the banks bad deeds not only with the loss of their homes but their taxes.

Unlimited credit for GSEs seen as backdoor bailout

http://www.reuters.com/article/2010/01/05/us-usa-housing-bailout-idUSTRE6044YU20100105

Banks accepted and bundled ‘deficient’ loans
Mortgages rejected by due-diligence firm were lumped in, crisis panel says

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/banks-accepted-rejected-loans-crisis-panel-2011-01-28?reflink=MW_news_stmp

Lousy penny on the dollar to taxpayers

http://finance.fortune.cnn.com/2011/01/03/is-fannie-bailing-out-the-banks/


10 posted on 02/06/2011 8:45:58 PM PST by FromLori (FromLori">)
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