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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: This Is What Brian and Ilsa Said To Their Bank: “Show Me The Note, Motherfucker!” Note to new readers and kind fans: My outrage at the Mortgage Mess made me swear quite a bit in my last post about this issuea lot of people thought it detracted from my arguments. Therefore, like a junkie easing off the horse, Im going to set goals for myself: Not more than half a dozen swear words in this postdeal? The one in the title counts as the first. GL So the week before last, I wrote about Brian and Ilsa, a retired couple in their mid-to-late sixties, living in a house in the Southwest that hadunremarkablygone underwater. ©2010 by the crazy/brilliant WilliamBanzai7. Used with permission. (Not me swearing blame the middle finger on Billy-B7.) They had tried to refinance their home mortgage, under the auspices of the HAMP, the Home Affordable Modification Program. HAMP was part of the Financial Stability Act of 2009the famed Stimulus Package. Under this program, the principal of Brian and Ilsas mortgage loan would remain the samethey would not be getting a free ride. (Some readers mistakenly thought that they would. See note at bottom.) But though the principal of their mortgage loan would remain the same, the period of their mortgage would be extendedand the loan itself would be refinanced with a lowered mortgage rate of 2.75%, from the 6.25% of the original mortgage. Therefore, their monthly payments would go down roughly 40%a significant amount for them, especially after their retirement savings had taken a big hit following the Global Financial Crisis. What had been dreadful about Brian and Ilsas case was that, though they qualified for HAMPand indeed, HAMP had contacted them, at least initiallythey were given the bureaucratic runaround for several months, before they were finally allowed into the program. And then, three months after their mortgage had been lowered, with no warning, they were told that they in fact did not qualifyeven though the program fit them like a glove. Indeed, the program had been tailored for people exactly like them: Retirees, who had suffered unforseen medical expenses on top of having their house go underwater. People who werent looking for a handout, but just to refinance so as to take advantage of the now-lower interest rates, and thereby lower their monthly payments. But now, the bank was saying that they didnt qualify. Out of the blue, no explanation, no appeal, nothing: They simply no longer qualified. To add insult to injury, they were also told that not only did they owe the difference in mortgage paymentsthey also now owed a penalty fee, for incomplete payment. Brian and Ilsa tried complaining about the unfairness of the situation, but once again, they were given the runaround. Then, they and I both discovered that a lot of the people who were initially said to qualify for HAMP in fact did not qualifythey were added to the program so that banks and servicers could collect Federal government bonuses, then bumped off the program once their three-month trial mod was over. It didnt matter if they qualified or notit was all just some sort of sick game with these people, done so that they could get some of that Federal government bonus money. The proof of this was the undisputed testimony of a whistleblowerwhose testimony was of course ignored by the mainstream media. After all this heartbreak and frustrationand fearBrian and Ilsa had reached the end of their tether: Ilsa had said, essentially, Fuckit, and was urging her husband Brian for them to strategically default. Brian was wavering, though he was as equally outraged as his wife. The point of my piece was, If and when solid upstanding middle-class people such as Brian and Ilsa ever do throw in the towel and let out a collective Fuckit, then its curtains for the American Republic: You cannot have a viable society where the backbone of the country thinks that following the rules and the law is for suckers and chumps. With the facts of their story in hand, I went off and wrote up my piece, posted itand watched as it garnered 50,000 hits in a matter of daysover 70,000 hits as of today, eleven days laterand its still going strong. Im a pretty good writerbut Im not that good of a writer: Clearly, my piece touched a nerve. Touched a nerve? More like gouged it out, put electrodes to it, then went all Abu Ghraib on itthats how vehement some of the reactions to my piece were. Life goes on. Between when I last spoke to Brian and Ilsa, and when the reactions to my post started rolling in, Brian and Ilsas story continued, of course and it took quite the amazing turn over the last couple of weeks. And we have you to thank, Ilsa told me. Oh? I said. Yes indeed, said Brianand then he explained: While interviewing them, I had also been working on my The Second Leg Down of Americas Death Spiral postthe one where I swore up a storm. In that piece, I discussed the mechanics of the Mortgage Mess, and how a seemingly trivial issuechain-of-titlecould well clog up the system and bring a collapse in the mortgage market. I had explained how the banks, in their urge to securitize, had been sloppy with the mortgage notes. I explained how, potentially, this could mean that homeowners with mortgages might well be able to get out of their debt, since no one could now show who legally owned the note. Not just people in foreclosureseveryone with a mortgage that had been improperly handled. While interviewing Brian and Ilsa, I had talked about these issues to them, at some length. Whenever they needed to take a break from telling me their own storywhich as you can imagine got them wound up to high heaven with frustration and worryI would stop and tell them about the Mortgage Mess, and what I was finding out about it: The crooked law firms manufacturing documents, the shyster banks who ownedoutrightCongress. The whole sordid mess. Also, talking to Brian and Ilsa about the ins and outs of the Mortgage Mess was my way of wrapping my head around the complicated issues at hand, and making sense of it before I wrote about it. I thought that Brian and Ilsa were only half-listening to me, out of politeness, whenever I rambled on about MBSs and chain-of-title and MERS and all the rest of itbut they paid me a lot more attention than I realized, at the time. (Note to selfconsider adding another aphorism: Always assume people are listening to you more closely than you realize, even if they seem to be distracted.) Underwater Homeowners A desperate person with a little bit of knowledge can be a dangerous thingas Wells Fargo, Brian and Ilsas bank, soon found out. Last Monday, October 4, after I had finished interviewing them and was busy writing my original post on the pair, Brian mulled over what I had told him about chain-of-title and the Mortgage MessI can just see him, head lowered, looking up: The epitome of the Kubrick Stare. Brian dashed off an e-mail to his bank that nighta quick post, where he explicitly said, I want to see the loan note where it says I owe you money, or else Im contacting my lawyer and halting payment on my mortgage. The very next day, someone from Wells Fargo called them. Not a machine, not a customer service rep in Indiaan actual, honest-to-God, alive-and-kicking bank executive. She apologized profusely about the HAMP screw upsaid that Brian and Ilsa qualified, they qualified, they qualified!, and that she would be the one to straighten out their situation. Brian and Ilsa couldnt talk that Tuesday, when the bank executive called. And for various reasons, they couldnt talk Wednesday eitherthey finally talked to the bank executive on Thursday . . . . . . and during those three days, it was the executive who chased them: Two e-mails to their AOL account, two phone calls on their answering machine. On Thursday, when they spoke, the bank executive was sweetness and lightshe told them that Ilsa and Brian qualified for HAMP, that they would get refinanced, that they would not have to pay the difference in mortgage of the last three monthsYour lower mortgage rate is locked in! And as to the $84 penalty fee, which had driven Brian in particular up the wall: It was waived. Ilsa told me, It was the nicest conversation weve ever had with a bank executive. The executive promised to have the papers drawn up, ready to be signed before November 1. Thats right: November first. After dicking them around for months on end, Wells Fargo all of a sudden went from turtle-speed to light-speedto warp-speedboom!just like that. They didnt even engage thrusters, Captainit was warp drive the instant Brian e-mailed that threat. Threat?, you say. What threat was that? The threat Brian laid down, in the e-mail he sent Monday night: Show me the note, motherfucker! That threat. As I discussed in some detail in my Second Leg Down piece, the process of creating Mortgage Backed Securities inherently created ambiguity as to the note holder. This ambiguity in and of itself was not the problemthe problem was, along the way, the chain of title of the note was broken in a lot of mortgages. Thousands of themmaybe even millions. At the same time, there was massive fraud by so-called foreclosure millsbottom-feeding law firms hired by the banks to carry out the judicial process necessary for foreclosure and eviction. According to credible reporting (as I have mentioned, Yves Smith at naked capitalism has been all over this), the foreclosure mills were not only falsifying signatures, but they were outright fabricating documentsin short, committing massive perjury. So between these two issuesbroken chain-of-title, and systematic document forgery by the foreclosure millsall of a sudden, the banks have a massive problem on their hands: Legally, their ownership of the note can be challengedand if the blatant illegalities of the foreclosure mills touched the particular note, then its foreclosure could be in question. All of a sudden, massive numbers of foreclosures and mortgages could be called into question. So when Brian e-mailed and asked about the note of his mortgage loan? That was like a cattle prod to the crotchthat woke up Wells Fargo. There was a reason the bank executive called them back the very next day, and warp-speeded their HAMP refinance: Brian and Ilsas note is probably either lost, or its been irretrievably besmirched by the broken chain-of-title mess, or the foreclosure mills mess, or perhaps both. By refinancing, a new note is generated on Brian and Ilsas mortgage loan: Pristine and copacetic. They have to sign this new note in order to get the refinance. It doesnt matter how the loan is refinancedunder HAMP auspices, or by any other meansonce the homeowners sign on the line which is dotted, all of Wells Fargos troubles with that particular loan vanish but they have to get people like Brian and Ilsa to sign: No tickee, no laundry. I explained this issue to Brian and Ilsa, and furthermore told them that, insofar as their relationship with the bank is concerned, theyre in the drivers seat: If they wanted to? They could insist on seeing the note, hire lawyers, and take this to courtwhere Wells Fargo would lose. The bank would lose because, once Well Fargo fails to produce their note, or the notes chain-of-title is shown to be irremediably broken, the judge would be left with no choice but to declare that Wells Fargo has no standing to foreclose and evict Brian and Ilsa from their home. If Wells Fargo cant produce a valid note, who are they to claim Brian and Ilsa owe them money? This is how Brian and Ilsaand the millions of other homeowners with mortgages, not just people being foreclosed uponcould wind up with their house scot-free, while the banksand the Mortgage Backed Security holderswould be left eating the losses. (Very important note: In my previous post, I skipped these specific legal steps, concerning how exactly homeowners could potentially wind up walking away from their mortgage loans, yet keeping their houses. Most important of all, I failed to explain how a broken chain-of-title nullifies a banks standing in court to bring about foreclosure and eviction proceedings. This failure of mine happened because I was so into the material that I didnt realize that ordinary readers might not see or know the specific steps that would lead to a homeowner giving the shaft to their bank. I hope I have clarified the issue with the above explanation. Please accept my apology, and excuse my mistake.) If you play your cards right, I told Brian and Ilsa over the phone, you could get your house for free. Like I said in my first post about them: Brian and Ilsa are salt-of-the-earth people. But we took out a mortgagewe owe that money, said Brian. Ilsa said, All we want is what we were offered: A lower monthly mortgage payment. Then Brian added, We dont want to take advantage of anybodythat would be wrong. Wells Fargo is luckyhow many other people are going to act as decently as Brian and Ilsa? Actually, thats the wrong question: Which of the banks, or the bank executives, deserve to be treated so decently? I cant think of a one. Note on comments: In the discussion section of my first post on Brian and Ilsas situation, there were a disproportionate number of anonymous comments trashing the couple I described, calling them, in effect, dead-beats and free-loaders. Ive come to suspect that many of these anonymous comments trashing Brian and Ilsa were written by trolls working for public relations firms and other shills of the banks. This has been happening on a lot of other blogs that have been discussing (and inevitably criticizing) the banks for their behavior. An old girlfriend who works in public relations has told me that its an open secret in the business that a couple of the big PR firms in fact have in-house task forces doing internet and blogosphere damage control for the banksand getting huge retainers for their troubles. But she had no proof, so this is basically hearsayalbeit informed hearsay. Because they are essentially on the Federal government dole, the Too Big To Fail banks ought to be subject to scrutiny and oversight, as regards any attempt to manipulate public perception by way of public relations firms. I would call for the TBTF banks to be audited, to see that they are in fact not spending public monies in order to manipulate public perceptionbut really, at this stage, whats the point? Note on swearing: See? Only four swear words in the whole post! A new record! As to my use of the word hell, thats not a swear wordthats where were all going, if this Mortgage Mess isnt straightened out.
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