what are we supposed to do?
Posted by admin on May 31st, 2010
After 18 months of trying for a loan modification through Wells Fargo Bank, and after 8 months of working with a group fighting lenders, it is painfully clear that we have been duped across the nation. (The image is of the binder I have been keeping since December 2008. Wells Fargo lost one of my payments in 2007; it took weeks to straighten that out. So it seemed prudent to begin keeping a file of all correspondence with that lender. The binder is now six inches thick and weighs 20 pounds. My conclusion is that Wells Fargo is either insanely incompentent or frightenly corrupt — it is definitely one or the other or both, but their actions have nothing to do with good business practices and/or ethics.)
Yesterday, during a conversation with a worldly and knowledgable couple, who read the New York Times, Wall St. Journal, San Francisco Chronicle and the Marin Independent Journal, it was clear that they knew little of our national debacle (which has created an international debacle). Because newspapers cater to advertisers — even though they will swear they do NOT — the news you read is couched so as to not overly offend major advertisers and banks ARE major advertisers.
From Living Lies:
THE INCONVENIENT TRUTH: Profits piled up off-shore that are being repatriated on a gradual basis showing incredible gains at the Wall Street Banks that supposedly lost hundreds of billions of dollars. The truth is they never lost a dime. The truth is the loan was sold multiple times through multiple intermediaries each of whom in each “sale” were paid fees and profits vastly exceeding any prior compensation to those who arranged or made loans prior to securitization.
Second Hidden Yield Spread Premium: As I have pointed out before the hidden yield spread premium was jaw-dropping (when the loans were packaged by the aggregator and then sold to the Special Purpose Vehicle that issued and sold the mortgage-backed securities. This second YSP was sent off-shore to the Bahamas or the Caymans to Structured Investment Vehicles with their own trustees, who scattered the actual depository accounts all around the world. The beneficiaries were the 100 Club — the main players in the creation, promotions and protection of the scheme through government contacts, plausible deniability, and simple non-disclosure sometimes achieved through the sheer complexity of the arrangements.
Know Your Rights: The U.S. Constitution: And Fascinating Facts About It
If you are new to the fight to save your home, you are going to think some of us who have been in the midst of this for 1-2 years are nuts. We’re not. We are hard-working responsible citizens who are being trampled on by not only lenders, but sometimes by local officials, some of whom have interests in the very banks we are up against.One of my early stops in the effort to get help was to Legal Aid of Marin County. The director of that agency, Paul Cohen, who has received funds to help people, handed me a one-page sheet on when I could expect to lose my home. He offered no help. Were it up to Mr. Cohen, I would be living under a bridge in a tent with a feral cat or two. My Cohen and his Legal Aid are a disservice to community. Were it up to me, he would be seeking new employment. My surname is Jewish, thus this is not from any type of prejudice; he is simply incompetent, he had my life in his hands, and he did NOTHING. I’m at an age where recovering from losing my home would be impossible.
Nobody wants to acknowledge this fact because it would be admission that the con game is still on and that government is still part of it. They took many trillions of dollars to “bail out” banks that had arranged the bad loans but never underwrote them.
The repercussions of what lenders have done during the past decade is playing out across the nation. People who worked hard to grow and provide for their families are sinking.
From the New York Times:
. . . The mayor and former bank loan officers point a finger of blame at large national banks — in particular, Wells Fargo. During the last decade, they say, these banks singled out blacks in Memphis to sell them risky high-cost mortgages and consumer loans.
(Editor’s Note: I don’t think the banks were as picky as stories would have it. It seems to me that people of ALL races have been hurt and wrote about this as Equal Opportunity Prejudice!.) The group I work with — Families Fighting Forelosure is pretty well balanced between Black, Hispanic and White and everywhere from around 30 years of age to 73 years of age. There does not seem to be a common denominator except that, perhaps, we trusted our lenders and did not read every single word of those loan documents. I was just told that I have an interest-only loan. In my opinion, negative-am loans and/or interest-only loans are insane. How does one ever own one’s home. I would not have agreed to an interest-only loan . . . thus my reason for having a forensic audit undertaken.
The City of Memphis and Shelby County sued Wells Fargo late last year, asserting that the bank’s foreclosure rate in predominantly black neighborhoods was nearly seven times that of the foreclosure rate in predominantly white neighborhoods. Other banks, including Citibank and Countrywide, foreclosed in more equal measure.
In a recent regulatory filing, Wells Fargo hinted that its legal troubles could multiply. “Certain government entities are conducting investigations into the mortgage lending practices of various Wells Fargo affiliated entities, including whether borrowers were steered to more costly mortgage products,” the bank stated.
Wells Fargo officials are not backing down in the face of the legal attacks. They say the bank made more prime loans and has foreclosed on fewer homes than most banks, and that the worst offenders — those banks that handed out bushels of no-money-down, negative-amortization loans — have gone out of business.
Tags: corrupt lenders, living lies, slanting news

August 18th, 2010 at 8:56 pm
I was reading a few of your articles and just wondered if there was anything a person could do after (the banks) win their battle and get you out of your house after fighting with them for two years and sending everything they asked and hitting every dead end wall then they screw up your credit foreclose on your home. You don’t qualify for anything now and your home of six years is sold by them.
There is such a long list of how we feel on this subject. Is there a way to get anything fixed due to them messing everything up for us?