Archive for 'Corruption' Category
Feb 15, 2023

From LoanDepot quarterly report, 2022: The Company derives income primarily from gains on the origination and sale of loans to investors, income from loan servicing, and fees charged for settlement services related to the origination and sale of loans. Not one word about revenues or profits arising from the receipt of principal and interest from […]

Feb 10, 2023

Hat tip to summer chic Judicial Notice is a rule of evidence in which the court receives a written request to accept a document into evidence as proof of the truth of the matter asserted. In Foreclosures, the truth of the matter asserted is that there is an unpaid loan account, and the named plaintiff […]

Feb 2, 2023

The mortgage lien is designed to protect against financial loss — not to promote financial gain. If Wall Street wants to protect the financial gains it created from its crazy scheme using weapons of mass financial destruction, then the least it should do is share a little of that with homeowners, consumers, the government, and […]

Sep 26, 2022

Helping Homeowners Fight MERS Foreclosure Problems If your home is tied to a MERS foreclosure, things can get confusing. Many homeowners we helped didn’t realize that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems (MERS) may appeared on their loan even though it never owned or funded their mortgage. At Living Lies, we help homeowners uncover the truth about […]

May 25, 2022

The State of New York, along with many other states are struggling with problems arising from an array of legal fictions created by the courts to justify claims for administration, collection, and enforcement of virtual debts (instead of actual debts in the real world). These attempts violate the constitutional separation of powers under the Federal […]

May 5, 2022

since loss mitigation is a statutory condition precedent to foreclosure, there is a failure to comply with the condition that requires loss mitigation exhaustion before pursuing foreclosure, the steamrolling of homeowners is not just wrong, it is also a breach of statutory duty for which the homeowner can seek injunctive relief, damages, and attorney fees. […]

May 3, 2022

Why This “Boring” Statute Matters In a world where access to credit often outweighs access to savings, FCRA protections are crucial. History shows that dry statutes can bring down major offenders (think mail fraud in The Firm, tax evasion for Al Capone). Likewise, the FCRA can be the pressure point that changes outcomes for homeowners. […]

May 2, 2022

when the time comes that a judge enters an order or judgment containing findings of fact, for example, that the records of the designated “servicer” are not business records that are not exempt from the hearsay rule, the poop will hit the fan. I received multiple emails from lawyers and homeowners who were confused when […]

Apr 28, 2022

One of my constant comment contributors recently informed me and others that she was trying a new tack. She writes “My attorneys are making a demand that any refi money be placed with the Court and that the judge decides who he wants to pay.” This is very close to an Interpleader action which is […]

Apr 18, 2022

In homeowner finance, nearly all claims begin with notices from third parties—companies the homeowner has never dealt with before. My advice: challenge these letters, statements, and notices immediately. Doing so creates “tracks in the sand” that can be critical later in litigation. The Core Problem: Declaration of Default Without a Creditor Foreclosure law is clear: […]