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Editor’s Comment:
Dear Kathleen,
Thank you very much for taking my call this morning.
The question that Neil F. Garfield, Esq. had asked AZ Attorney General Tom Horne at Darrell Blomberg’s meeting was:
Why is the Arizona Attorney General not prosecuting the banks and servicers for corruption and racketeering by submitting false credit bids from non-creditors at foreclosure auctions?
Please feel free to browse Mr. Garfield’s web blog, www.LivingLies.wordpress.com as you may find much of the research and many of the articles to be relevant and of interest.
Mr. Garfield wishes the following comments and observations to be added, in order to clarify the question being asked.
It should probably be noted that in my own research and from the research from at least two dozen other lawyers whose practice concentrates in real property and foreclosures have all reached the same conclusion. The submission of a credit bid by a stranger to the transaction is a fraudulent act. A credit bid is only permissible in the event that the party seeking to offer the bid meets the following criteria:
1. The homeowner borrower owes money to the alleged creditor
2. The money that is owed to the alleged creditor arises out of a transaction in which the homeowner borrower agreed to the power of sale regarding that debt
3. Any other creditor would be as much a stranger to the transaction as a non-creditor
Our group is also in agreement that:
4. Acceptance of the credit bid is an ultra vires act.
5. The deed issued in foreclosure under such circumstances is a wild deed requiring the title registrar to attach a statement from the office of the title registrar (for example Helen Purcell) stating that the deed does not meet the requirements of statute and therefore does not meet the requirements for recording.
6. In the event that nobody else is permitted to bid, the auction violates Arizona statutes.
And we arrived at the following conclusions:
7. In the event that there is no cash bid and the only “bid” was accepted as a cash bid from either a non-creditor or a creditor whose debt is not secured by the power of sale, no sale has legally occurred.
8. The applicable statutes preventing the corruption of the title chain by such illegal means include the filing of false documents, grand theft, and evasion of the payment of required fees.
9. This phenomenon is extremely wide spread and based upon surveys conducted by our office and dozens of other offices (including an independent audit of the title registry of San Francisco county) strongly suggest that the vast majority of foreclosures in Arizona resulted in illegal auctions, illegal acceptance of a bid, and illegal issuance of a deed on foreclosure-which resulted in many cases in illegal evictions.
10. Federal and State-equivalent RICO may also apply, as well as Federal mail fraud which should be referred to the US Attorney.
CONSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGE TO THE NON-JUDICIAL SALE STATUTE AS APPLIED.
It should also be noted that all the same attorneys agreed that the use of an instrument called “Substitution of Trustee” was improper in most cases in that it removed a trustee owing a duty to both the debtor and the creditor and replaced the old trustee with an entity owned or controlled by the creditor.
This is the equivalent of allowing the creditor to appoint itself as Trustee.
In virtually all cases in which a securitization claim was involved in the attempted foreclosure the Substitution of Trustee was used exactly in the manner described in this paragraph. This method of applying the powers set forth in the Deed of Trust is obviously unconstitutional as applied.
Constitutional scholars agree that the legislature has wide discretion in substituting one form of due process for another. In this case, non-judicial sale was permitted on the premise that an independent trustee would exercise the ministerial duties of what had previously been a burden on the judiciary.
However, the ability of any creditor or non-creditor to claim the status of being the successor payee on a promissory note, being the secured party on the Deed of Trust, and having the right to substitute trustees does not confer on such a party the right to appoint itself as the trustee, auctioneer, and signatory on the Deed upon foreclosure nor to have submitted a credit bid.
We are very interested in your reply. If your office has any cogent reasons for disagreement with the above analysis, we would like to “hear back from you” as you promised at Mr. Blomberg’s meeting 22 days ago. We would encourage you to stay in touch with Mr. Blomberg or myself with regard to your progress in this matter in as much as we are considering a constitutional challenge not to the statute, but to the application of the statute on the above stated grounds.
Thank you for your time and consideration,
Sincerely
Neil F Garfield esq
licensed in Florida #229318


