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THE WHO’S WHO PUTS OUT A WHAT’S WHAT ON MERS AND MERSCORP

By Dave Krieger

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The following op-ed piece is being issued following my review of Consent Order #2011-044, issued yesterday (04.13.2011) by the “Band of 5”. You can decide for yourself what this Consent Order really stipulates. The one thing I find it does NOT stipulate, is how nearly 70 million titles to real property in America (between MERS and LPS) have clouds on them, which by most standards, would render these properties unmarketable as to clear title! This Consent Order says NOTHING about the mess already made and who bears the responsibility for cleaning it up! (My analysis is in italics, not legal advice … just my analysis.)

This Order is one of 10 Consent Orders issued by the OCC. These agreements cover unsound and unsafe banking and foreclosure procedures of Bank of America, Citibank, HSBC Bank, JPMorgan Chase Bank, LPS/DOCX, MetLife Bank, MERSCORP/MERS, PNC Bank, US Bank NA and Wells Fargo Bank, NA (and remember Wells Fargo heavily stated, “We didn’t do that!”)

The Order (which if you want to read all 31 pages of it you can download the .pdf here) was issued jointly by the Comptroller of the Currency (“OCC”), the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (the “Fed”), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”), the Office of Thrift Supervision (“OTS”) and the Federal Housing Finance Agency (“FHFA”, which now oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as its conservator). The release of this Order on Page 2 refers to this Order “as part of an interagency horizontal review” (which the author surmises here is nothing more than an interagency horizontal mambo to cover someone’s butt).

As a side note … Lender Processing Services, Inc. and its now-defunct subsidiary DOCX are still being scrutinized by the USDOJ for possible criminal action. The recent release of the 60 Minutes episode which featured Florida attorney and fraud investigator Lynn Szymoniak and its specific coverage of one “Linda Green” also surely set off warning bells with many uninformed borrowers. Yes, Linda Green actually exists … as BOTH a man … a woman … and many other unknown John and Jane Does who can write her name!

This Consent Order basically states what we’ve already known in the hinterland … that MERSCORP and MERS’s blind authority has wreaked havoc on the chains of titles of millions of pieces of property, something the United States Government has done NOTHING to correct. Basically, because quiet title actions are “states’ rights” actions, it would seem the 10th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution forbids the U.S. Government from sticking its nose in such affairs; not that we don’t expect it will try to at some point.

The Order also states that MERS and MERSCORP “have begun implementing procedures to remediate the practices addressed in this Order”. By mutual consent, stated within this Order, “MERS and MERSCORP have committed to take all necessary and appropriate steps to remedy the deficiencies and unsafe or unsound practices identified by the Band of 5”

[the Agencies]. Bear in mind that “agencies” operate under administrative jurisdiction. You as a property owner brought this administrative jurisdiction upon yourself when you signed a mortgage or deed of trust with MERS’s name on it! Geez … did I get your attention now?

Hence, we move onto “ARTICLE I – JURISDICTION”. Did you not see that one coming?

First, this Order defines (and you have to look at definitions) MERS and MERSCORP being providers to “Examined Members” (such as Fannie and Freddie) under the meaning of the Bank Service Company Act. This is the statute that the Band of 5 claims they can “examine” the behaviors of MERS and MERSCORP (the way I read it).

Second, this Order also says that MERS acts as an “agent for lenders with respect to serving as mortgagee in a nominee capacity for the lender” (it does NOT define what a “nominee” is) and goes on to state that the examination was conducted because the Band of 5 says they have the authority to do it.

Third, the Band of 5 also claims it has the authority to enter into this Consent Order. This makes the “interagency horizontal mambo” a little more palatable, doesn’t it?

Then we move onto “ARTICLE II – AGENCIES’ FINDINGS (it took them three pages just to get to this point).

And the very first sentence is: “The Agencies find, and MERS and MERSCORP neither admit nor deny, the following:” (well … what did you expect from a stipulated consent order anyway?)

(1) They just officially announced that MERS is a wholly-owned subsidiary of MERSCORP. They just NOW figured this out? Then they announce that MERSCORP’s shareholders include Fannie and Freddie and a host of other federally-regulated financial institutions, not to mention servicers and all of other “other secondary entities” covered under the term “participants”.

(2) They formally define that MERSCORP operates a national electronic registry. Remember this as part of their policies and procedures! They further identify 31-million active residential mortgage loans on the current MERS system. The author would surmise here that these are most likely the bifurcated notes that homeowners continue to pay not, despite the fact that “legally”, within their respective chain of titles, which is problematic anyway.

(3) This set of findings admits that MERS has infiltrated the local land records on behalf of its membership. This Order states that MERS “takes action as mortgagee through documents executed by “certifying officers” … you know, those robosignors you’ve heard about that really have no personal knowledge of anything they sign, usually borne out in depositions past.

This section (Page 4) goes onto say that MERS’s designations of these “certifying officers” as able to execute “legal documents” in the name of MERS, such as mortgage assignments and lien releases.” Well … these are the subject of the legal challenges to date that are going to topple the ‘house of cards’!

Up to this point in my analysis, it appears that this official “Consent Order” makes the “findings” agreed to by MERS and MERSCORP … including their fundamental screw-ups which could affect your very own chain of title to your real property!

When you move onto Page 5 of this Order, you find that MERS and MERSCORP screwed up the processes by failing to monitor what their underlings (who number some 40 people internally) were doing … not to mention the some-20,000 robo-officers out there that claim they know what’s going on with your loan!

When you get to Paragraph 5 of the Order (remember this is an “agreed-to” Order folks, without admitting or denying anything, the findings indicate that “MERS and MERSCORP engaged in unsafe or unsound practices that expose them and their ‘examined members’ to unacceptable operational, compliance, legal, and reputational risks.”

So now we move onto “Article III – Compliance Committee” … which is what all Cease and Desist Orders stipulate, right? Not here. By the end of April, 2011 (or thereabouts), the Boards of Directors of MERS and MERSCORP (which now don’t officially include R. K. Arnold and a major contributing factor of William Hultman, who was replaced by Sharon Horstkamp (not to be confused with ‘Mein Kampf’), get to form and maintain a committee to comply with the terms of this Order, including written progress reports (‘I will not cloud title.’ ‘I will not cloud title.’ ‘I will not cloud title.’) Geez, another committee? Go figure.

Every set of findings has to include an “Action Plan”, right? Well … this one does!

“ARTICLE IV – ACTION PLAN” … the Order gives MERS and MERSCORP ninety (90) days to develop an “action plan” for submission to the Band of 5. Once approved, MERS and MERSCORP can’t deviate from it. Sorry folks, the chain of title is already affected … what action plan other than quieting it is going to fix it? How about the major banks start up their own title companies to white-wash over the clouds, eh? Watch for this development!

Maybe you should read Page 8 … it gets dicey here … especially the part about involving MERS and MERSCORP’s decision-making policies for the need for “additional capital”, “control of funding and liquidity risk”, plans to “reduce discretionary expenses and improve and sustain earnings” … albeit this inures to the benefits of its “members”!

Then we present … “TA-DAH!” … “development and implementation of a comprehensive litigation strategy to effectively manage lawsuits and legal challenges involving MERS and MERSCORP, regardless of whether either is a named party, including early identification and tracking of such lawsuits and challenges;”

I would surmise that this “tracking” would include every single residential mortgage loan, numbering nearly 70-million strong, in which the borrower would one day ‘wake up’ from his sound sleep and analyze his chain of title only to find ‘issues’ with it … not to mention the backlash from a MERS foreclosure wherein judges are going to rely more on Carpenter v. Longan than they ever have in American history!

The Order also makes reference to MERS’s informing its members NOT to foreclose in the name of MERS anymore. (Announcement 2011-01; 02/16/2011).

By the time you get to Page 10, your head is spinning with directives.
By the time you get to “ARTICLE V – BOARD AND MANAGEMENT SUPERVISION”, you finally come to realize that the U.S. Government, through the Band of 5, has not only intervened in MERS and MERSCORP operations, it’s telling them that they’re going to monitor their progress in helping them to “circle the wagons”. If you read between the lines, you will recognize that the Band of 5 knows that an onslaught of litigation is going to be commenced within the next two years and they have to help MERS and MERSCORP gear up for by making sure that its “house is in order”!

By the foregoing statement, I refer to Page 10, Paragraph (1), subsection (iii), which in essence, beefs up the parts of the MERS process dealing with assignments and/or foreclosure services; which also requires that “certifying officers” complete a “certification process”. Geez, is this going to make robo-signing more ‘official’ than before?

Does this appear that now the Band of 5 is going to actually ‘condone’ MERS’s past behaviors?

Page 11, subparagraph (d) is pretty clear about HOW a certifying officer for MERS gets to become “more qualified” to sign affidavits so that these MERS mortgages can be more easily foreclosed upon … and this is the more scathing epitome of wagon-circling.

ARTICLE VI – COMMUNICATIONS RELATING TO LEGAL PROCEEDINGS … this looks to be nothing more than issuing reports containing a summarization of court cases for and against MERS and its members; and to develop a tracking process for all of the lawsuits where MERS or MERSCORP is involved.

And just what the heck does “analysis and recommendations concerning litigation contingency reserves” have to do with the price of beans? If 100,000 people file separate quiet title actions against MERS, MERSCORP and its members per year; multiply that number times a minimum of $200,000 in legal fees (because outside foreclosure mills are going to read this as ‘billable hours’) for each year each party maintains its position in each suit [that’s $20-billion a year, minimum]; multiply 70,000,000 potentially-clouded titles times the potential number of those who can afford to bring a quiet title action … and you have legal costs on one side of the coin in defense of over as many potential clouds on title of better than one-tenth of the nation’s total gross domestic product! And Florida wants to eliminate 2,800 clerical positions in its court systems in an effort to cut costs? Great time to be in the legal profession, huh? Definition of “insanity”: Doing the same thing you’ve been doing for the last 12 years expecting different results. (The last 12 years is from the time MERS-3 was ‘conceived’ and put into operation.)

I pity the errors and omissions carriers for the title companies and all of the “trustees” out there that have to have E&O coverage. How many lawsuits will be effectuated before the E&O carriers refuse to insure? How many title companies will need to be sued before they “get the message”?

This author predicts that the United States Supreme Court will declare MERS’s practices as contributory in the systemic clouding of millions of titles to American property … and it will come via a writ of certiorari out of a quiet title action; even in light of this Order!
By the time I got to “ARTICLE VIII – QUALITY ASSURANCE AND DATA INTEGRITY”, it became clear to me that the Band of 5 is trying to protect MERS and MERSCORP; however, there is no guaranteed quality when: (1) consumers do not know who owns their loan; (2) MERS posts a disclaimer on its website stating it’s not responsible for the accuracy of the content therein, especially when this Order asks for a plan of elimination of certain elements of date currently reported by Members of MERS and MERSCORP that are not related to the two of them; and (3) when this electronic database is allowed to continue to operate AND allowed to continue to circumvent county recordation fees and to insure proper assignments to chain of title.

By the time I got to “ARTICLE IX – eREGISTRY”, I was freaking out. You gotta be kidding?
MERSCORP has to get an independent, external review of and recommendations regarding the electronic registration of notes? What is this? The next step in making every state judicial system eCOMPLIANT? Wouldn’t that work counterproductive to the established registry we’ve come to know and love as our state property recordation system?

“I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take it anymore!” [Peter Finch, in the movie Network]

“ARTICLE X – COMMUNICATIONS PLAN” purports to beef up the lines of communications between MERSCORP and its members of issues involving litigation with MERS, MERSCORP and its membership collectively, whether it be offensive or defensive.

“ARTICLE XI – APPROVAL, IMPLEMENTATION AND REPORTS” pretty much describes how the Deputy Comptroller (of the OCC) shall oversee implementation of the Action Plan.

“ARTICLE IXX – COMPLIANCE AND EXTENSIONS OF TIME” gives MERS and MERSCORP the right to whine at the Deputy Comptroller if it can’t meet and of the deadlines on this deal. Well … what did you expect from a mutual consent order?

“ARTICLE XIII – OTHER PROVISIONS” looks to be more of the same monitoring provisions until you get to Paragraph (3), any of the Band of 5 can exit this Order if they think they’ve met their goals in helping MERS and MERSCORP maintain its system of ‘status quo’. Paragraph 6 however doesn’t make this a ‘binding contract’ between the Band of 5 and MERS/MERSCORP. Paragraph 9 of this section makes the Order binding on MERS and MERSCORP. Paragraph 10 insists they consented to the Order WITHOUT a formal proceeding being filed.

The last of this document is for the actual Order of Stipulation and for signatures of the parties, because, after all, we have to make this look ‘official’, don’t we? Now what do you think all of this accomplished? Is MERS and MERSCORP shut down? Hardly. In fact, the U.S. government, by and through its agents, is sticking its nose into MERS and MERSCORP’s business, in essence helping it to circle the wagons to defend future litigation. And we all know what happens when you have government involvement … more paperwork … more procedures … more studies … more committees … more expense … more litigation … more employees …

This Order did NOTHING for the consumer/homeowner/borrower/taxpayer. It did everything to perpetuate the MERS system. If you signed a MERS mortgage, it’s your problem! Conveying clear title to property? That’s your problem too!

IS THE MERS “HOUSE OF CARDS” STARTING TO TUMBLE?

By Dave Krieger (OpEd)

A lot of events have come into play lately that makes me wonder that very thing …

FIRST GLANCE:

I was invited to Gwen Caranchini’s federal settlement conference last week (02/18) in Kansas City. Wow! I hadn’t seen the new federal courthouse in the Western District of Missouri in years (since it was built); such architecture. One would wonder what exactly was supposed to happen in such a conference. I was soon to find out: nothing.

Of significance however, was my introduction to MERS’s representative and their attorney. Within a minute, they had discovered I was the one in the same person that posts pieces on this website and wrote a book on the proverbial mess I claim (as well as others in the legal profession) they made in the chains of titles to now over 66-million pieces of real property in the United States of America. It’s amazing how much of a mess that really is when you look at it in detail. One would have to ask just exactly what these title companies are supposed to insure and … how much new risk are they placing themselves in?

When we got into the federal magistrate’s courtroom and the introductions of the key players were finished, MERS’s attorney stood up with raised voice and proclaimed that he and his client didn’t feel I needed to be there and thus voiced his objection. Moi? I rattled their cage? L’il ‘ole me? Gwen found it hilarious. So what if I run a blog site? I’m not going to tell you what went on behind closed doors … because I told the judge I wouldn’t … and nothing happened anyway. The question is … why did my presence get their panties in a bunch? They acted like I snuck up behind them and gave them a proverbial wedgie; and all I did was say “hello”. Clearly, I didn’t make their day. The judge was very cordial … and told MERS I was staying.

TAKE TWO:

On the way up to Kansas City, I had over an hour to re-read and mark up key points in the Ferrel Agard case that had just recently come out of the Eastern District of New York in Central Islip. Judge Robert Grossman had handed MERS a ruling they weren’t anticipating and as a result (I personally believe) William Hultman is no longer the Secretary-Treasurer of MERS (he’s now a Senior VP and corporate manager); Sharon Horstkamp, who previously served as MERS’s General Counsel, has taken over those duties.

One would think that if a state judge ruled that a homeowner failed to plead his foreclosure case and was further found to be in default (by not showing up), then why the need to file bankruptcy? Why the need for MERS to stick its nose in to the “cage of a pit bull” only to get it “bit off”? What did MERS hope to accomplish by defending its position as a “nominee” in a case that was already moot due to res judicata and further due to applications of the Rooker-Feldman Doctrine? Judge Grossman handed MERS its proverbial walking papers as far as agency is concerned. It will be interesting to see how MERS’s counsel pooh-poohs that ruling.
In this case, MERS can’t be sore about the ruling because as Grossman cited Kesler (Kansas) … I would have to ask which part of the elephant did MERS (acting as the blind man in the Indian legend that described the parts of an elephant he touched) actually touch and exactly who in that organization is now going to clean up the mess left behind in touching the elephant’s tail?

THIRD TIME’S A CHARM:

No sooner did the ink dry on the Agard decision … MERS put out a press release (Number 2011-01) indicating it was revamping its membership rules. Coincidence? You be the judge.

What I have a big problem with is those pesky signing agreements that MERS seems to think legally hold water. If you want to establish an agent-principal relationship (in this case, it’s with over 20,000 alleged “signors” all claiming to be either a “Vice President” or an “Assistant Secretary”) with someone that may have no real, actual knowledge of what they’re signing (robosignor), how in the heck can you indemnify the principal that gave you as a robosignor that authority in the first place? Hey MERS! How’s your errors and omissions insurance? If I were an insurance carrier, I’d dump you like a hot potato! That’s just my opinion!

Just because you have a “new and improved” Corporate Resolution Management System (acronym: CRMS) in the works … doesn’t make you any less of a principal and thus expose your liability when your so-called “signors” claim to indemnify you in their signing agreements. What most attorneys I think will start doing (is that the little bird out there talking to me again?) is challenging your signing agreements as being worthless. Really … can you delegate authority to a signor through a corporate resolution, allowing them to sign as “virtual subagents” of MERS, using MERS rubber stamps to give the examiner some semblance of authority for what your agents did … and if it’s discovered that your agents acted recklessly and with wanton disregard in signing and electronically filing these documents in courthouses all over America (wire fraud?) thus proven to be fraudulent … how is it you’re not liable for giving them that authority by corporate resolution? Law of Agency 101

DON’T PISS OFF AN IRISHMAN!

I can tell you with a certainty that the temper of the Irish is something not to be messed with …

I knew it was only a matter of time before someone in a position of power, namely, one John O’Brien, the Registrar of Deeds for Southern Essex District for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, would declare he’s ready to enter the ring with MERS. In the wake of numerous qui tam actions taken around the country, word has it that Christopher L. Peterson, noted Professor of Law at S. J. Quinney School of Law at the University of Utah, who is assisting the qui tams in California and Nevada is a hopeful candidate in some capacity by Mass-AG Martha Coakley’s office coming after the electronic database for over $200,000,000 in unpaid assignment fees that should have been recorded in the state’s real property registers, but weren’t.

If I’m not mistaken, didn’t some corporate entity named MERS, tell its subscribers in “The Building Blocks of MERS” (a computer-generated slide show extolling the virtues of itself) that they MUST record their notices and assignments in the county recorders’ offices?
O’Brien has stated that the lost recording fees owed to county recorders nationwide could run into the billions of dollars. (On the phone, John sounds like a pissed-off JFK … and he’s mad!)

“The fact that they deliberately chose to create a for-profit private cyber Registry of Deeds whose only purpose was to avoid paying the same fees as everyone else and keeping the public in the dark as to who was the rightful owner of the mortgage clearly demonstrates to me that this was a scheme of epic proportions”, according to O’Brien.

According to O’Brien’s Assistant, Kevin Harvey, who I spoke with shortly before writing this piece, says Peterson is a familiar face in this state with this help on other cases. Time to put the gloves on … Geez, those Irishmen can fight, can’t they? Keep your eyes on Massachusetts!

THE LAST STRAW:

• For every anti-MERS ruling that the foreclosure defense consortium tosses at MERS, MERS PR Department retorts with its own claims of victorious rulings that give it impetus to do what it’s doing. One thing is clear here … there is an entire chain of case law out there (across the entire U.S.) that is totally inconsistent as to what MERS’s real authority is; thus further adding to the confusion (perhaps by design?). My take on this is that before this is over, SCOTUS is going to have this mess dumped into its lap.

• The citizenry is already up in arms about the attempted passage of legislation being defeated in the Commonwealth of Virginia thanks to MERS and the Virginia Bankers Association. Come to find out, when banker-legislators hold key positions of power, how do you expect the tide to turn in favor of the homeowner?

• In Arizona, legislation reforming the Deed of Trust Act has moved from the Senate to the House, despite an appearance from Hultman and the state banking interests … the Senate committee vote: 4 Yeas, 0 Nays, 2 Abstentions.

• A major rally is planned up in Seattle this weekend, along with testimony that is on-going in Olympia in an effort to make significant changes to its Deed of Trust Act, pitting disgruntled homeowners against legislators. The outcome is questionable?

• Last week, several more documents that were purported to have been signed by MERS agents were turned over to the DOJ in Central Florida by attorneys in Arizona and Washington State, as the feds continue their investigation into LPS/DOCX and robosigning frauds. Linda Green? Are you out there?

Go to www.thepowerhour.com and download the archives of my last three shows. Seattle Attorney Matt Hale was on the last program with me discussing the failure of loan modifications; which by the way … the Federal Trade Commission has now ruled that attorneys cannot take advance fees from homeowners for doing loan modifications (especially ones that won’t or don’t work … they rarely do) with a lender. It’s an $11,000 fine for each day spent and $11,000 fine for signing and taking advance fees. This author feels the likelihood of loan mods in the wake of the MERS debacle are at a futile end. Most homeowners may find solace in quiet title litigation.

THE SHOCKWAVES OF THE IBANEZ-LaRACE CASE CREATE NATIONAL RIPPLE EFFECT; BANKS HAVE A REASON TO BE NERVOUS; E&O CARRIERS WATCH OUT!

By Dave Krieger

This opinion is based on legal research only and cannot be construed as legal advice!

IT’S HOMEOWNER-PLAINTIFF QUIET TITLE ACTION IN REVERSE

The point being here … if you didn’t learn anything about quieting titles in the book “Clouded Titles”, it would be best suited perhaps to espouse the deeds of U.S. Bank and Wells Fargo as they attempted to do what I call “a quiet title action in reverse”.

At first glance, this case involves procedural and agency relationship errors. For those of you in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, you’ll note from the slip order issued by the Massachusetts Supreme Court that the actions preceding their ruling were brought “in the Land Court under G.L. c. 240 § 6, which authorizes actions to quiet or establish the title to land situated in the commonwealth or to remove a cloud from the title thereto.”

The analysis by the High Court points to the law firms experienced with studying quiet title actions, yet the attorneys missed the boat on proving agency, which is a fundamental element of quiet title actions. Proving standing to foreclose on a mortgage or deed of trust is one thing; proving how you got the note to enforce on the other hand is part of what makes up the chain of title. When those assignments are not recorded, because they happen to be in the MERS system, or simply sold willy-nilly several times over without perfected security interests being recorded in the land records in the county where the property lies, you’ve got a problem. In these cases, the banks created their own problems without them even knowing it.
(more…)

H.R. 6460 IS A START; BUT ON THE RIGHT TRACK?

By Dave Krieger

When you first glance at page 1 of this House Bill, initiated by Ohio Congresswoman Marcy Kaptor, it’s almost as if you’d think, “Yes, there is a God!”

However, the “Transparency and Security in Mortgage Registration Act”, while nailing MERS in regards to prohibiting Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae from owning or guaranteeing any MERS mortgage where MERS is claiming to be the “mortgagee of record” (which is about 65,000,000 properties), also dabbles with the idea of a “federal land title system”, something this author thinks may shortchange our states’ rights to real property recordation. (more…)

NEW QUIET TITLE SUIT FILED IN MARICOPA COUNTY, AZ ON THE HEELS OF A QUIET TITLE ACTION THAT WAS REMANDED BACK TO SUPERIOR COURT IN PHOENIX

By Dave Krieger

The case is Easton v. Bosco et al with a case number of CV2010-054748; filed four days after U.S. District Court Judge Mark E. Aspey remanded a quiet title action back to the State Superior Court for Maricopa County, previously removed by Defendants First Horizon Home Loan Corporation and others to federal court, which the author views as a typical move to hide from state court discovery actions. (more…)

MERS TELECONFERENCE YIELDS SOME POSITIVE ACTION PLANS

By Dave Krieger

It was a telephone conference you would have just died to be on. It appears that county recorders are starting to take notice of the losses in revenue with MERS’s circumvention of their recordation systems. By best conservative projections out of this conference, John O’Brien, Essex County Massachusetts Register of Deeds head is foaming mad that MERS has skated off with (in the event of at least one recordation past the initial filing of the mortgage) with $1.95-million dollars a year that rightfully belongs to Essex County. (more…)

IT DOESN’T CHANGE THE GAME … IT ONLY SHIFTS THE BLAME!

By Dave Krieger

The title insurance companies have shifted the blame … to the lenders. What did you expect? Just visit the county courthouse and examine the records of a given homeowner who has a MERS mortgage or deed of trust and you’ll still find problems in the chain of title.

On October 1, 2010, when Version 1.1 of the book was launched onto the Internet, the strategy was based on previous information (of the previous six months) that title companies were going to be “exposing” themselves to unnecessary risk by guaranteeing title insurance to properties whose titles were slandered or clouded. This meant that one could get a homeowner’s indemnity policy with conditions and exceptions and use it to potentially create prima facie evidence in a quiet title action. This method actually “stuck” in one case that appears to be headed for settlement soon. Insider information has revealed that a federal judge has seen this author’s work (as have some bank attorneys) and they were impressed with the clarity and understanding put forward in the author’s assessments. (more…)

WHAYYDA MEAN I CAN’T GET TITLE INSURANCE ON A SHORT SALE ?

By Dave Krieger

Not time for the “I told you so speech” … but the tell-tale signs that the title companies are starting to get nervous about insuring distressed properties is now starting to manifest itself. A Realtor for Keller-Williams in Kansas City had a $600,000 short sale cash buyer all ready to go. The house was worth over a million bucks and the bank agreed to let it go for substantially less and everyone (well almost everyone) was happy. Imagine the commission on a price tag like that … at 6% you’d be looking at splitting a $36,000 check 4 ways (generally) at $9,000 a pop. Now imagine the agony when you are told by Chicago Title that you are denied title insurance until the backlog of clouds on title gets cleared up. Chicago Title is one of many major players in the insurance game that is seeking to limit its exposure created by problems surrounding the broken chains of title that the securitization of residential mortgage-backed loans has created, especially with MERS dicing up the chains of title of over 62-million (or 60% of all current) mortgage loans electronically registered. (more…)

Dave Krieger appears on KVUE’s Midday newscast Consumervue segment.


Watch Dave Krieger on KVUE
Dave Krieger appears on KVUE’s Midday newscast Consumervue segment. Krieger speaks directly to homeowners who may be facing foreclosure through no fault of their own and the uncertain future our country faces as the plot “foreclosure mess” thickens. He reveals the motivation behind the book Clouded Titles and describes his personal experience dealing with quiet title action on two of his own properties. Dave address the subject of robo-signers and outlines a few examples of how his investigative efforts have turned up some unusual and questionable findings. He touches on the fact that Northwest Trustee Services is currently being investigated for wrongful disclosure. Anchor Olga Compos closes the interview by asking “how did we get into this foreclosure mess in the first place?” Krieger’s answer begins, “MERS …”

SPIN DOCTORS, SOOTHSAYERS … AND IS BANK OF AMERICA SOON TO BE “BK” OF AMERICA … AS IN CHAPTER 11 … AND WHAT THAT MEANS FOR YOU!


By Dave Krieger

The spin cycles are in motion and we haven’t even done the laundry yet. Reports are out that not only did Bank of America post third-quarter losses of $7.65-billion; the soothsayers are countering with “exposure scenarios”, showing $50-billion worth of risk (representing only 3% of the $2.1-trillion total) as good enough reason for Bank of America to seek Chapter 11 protection. It also appears that in this election season, a bailout or some other government “deal” is highly unlikely and would certainly exacerbate Bank of America’s problems.

I thought I was dreaming until I saw Chris Whalen’s posting and thought … gee, Bank of America certainly does have a liquidity problem to be forced to start up foreclosures again. One would certainly have to ask why the Obama administration just now announced intentions to launch a criminal investigation into all of this mess. Does someone in DC have a conscience? Or is this just another “CYA” as a cave to public pressure? With these kinds of pictures, the day traders would be “shorting” Bank of America stock and making a killing doing it.

One would have to wonder about the liquidity factor with all of this missing paperwork and the investors and insurance companies that certainly will be lining up to file fraud suits against the banking giant will certainly force some sort of decision. For BofA, it is significant. General Motors went into Chapter 11 after all and within three months they emerged stronger than ever. But then again, GM wasn’t proprietarily trading residential mortgage-backed securities on Wall Street either. This is a different animal.

My take? Bank of America’s decision to absorb Countrywide and Merrill-Lynch probably wasn’t one of their smartest moves. The paperwork issue that forced the moratorium of some of these foreclosures has forced Bank of America to go after over 100,000 more homes … and then comes the fun part. (more…)

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