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sabrina 1

(62,325 posts)
17. I see, you really have not been following this story.
Sat Mar 17, 2012, 04:20 PM
Mar 2012

Have you read the witness testimony in the Florida case? They deliberately forged documents. They knew what they were doing. The law mills were mostly responsible, but once the Banks were asked by people such as my friend, for the documents they were using to claim they could foreclose, and they refused to supply them, the fact is they knew those documents were forged but went ahead anyway.

There may have been some mistakes, but the vast majority of those where documents were forged, or where there were MERS transfers or both, were not mistakes. It was all about greed. They were betting on the failure of mortgages. The Bi-Partisan Senate Committee's two year investigation identified what they called 'possible criminal activity' on a large scale and referred their findings to the DOJ.

My friend has been contacted by the NY State AG and by the US Office of the Currency, a bit late since her home is gone, but she, along with tens of thousands of others, should never have lost their homes. They lost them because of corruption. Hopefully this can be rectified, but she can never get back her home, not to mention the person who now owns it, probably does not have the proper paperwork either.

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So? What happens now? KansDem Mar 2012 #1
let's all become notaries and onethatcares Mar 2012 #3
"notary fraud" is a misdemeanor banned from Kos Mar 2012 #4
I'm not following you, but what I'm trying to say is onethatcares Mar 2012 #7
If your house was taken with forged documents and that was the intent of forging them sabrina 1 Mar 2012 #10
It would be if that actually happened. But it has not. banned from Kos Mar 2012 #13
I see, you really have not been following this story. sabrina 1 Mar 2012 #17
Your friend might be interested in this : dixiegrrrrl Mar 2012 #24
Put a lien on their property. BOA must own something Vincardog Mar 2012 #5
Just forge what you need to OWN one of their buildings, you may have to pay a small fine but.... Dragonfli Mar 2012 #20
Exactly. I would pay a $2,500 fine to own a $25,000,000 building. Where are those papers? Vincardog Mar 2012 #21
This is what happens now kenny blankenship Mar 2012 #9
I didn't know that any bank denied robo-signings. Its common knowledge. banned from Kos Mar 2012 #2
Then you haven't been following this story. No one knew they had been robo-signing sabrina 1 Mar 2012 #11
Read again. I said banks never DENIED robo-signing. banned from Kos Mar 2012 #15
Outsourcing one's fraud keeps one's hands clean then, good to know Dragonfli Mar 2012 #22
And foreclosures continue to destroy lives! superpatriotman Mar 2012 #6
"the grand settlement" will now protect the banks and allow them to keep the stolen money Dragonfli Mar 2012 #14
I heard they forged signatures Politicalboi Mar 2012 #8
My bank transferred my mortgage around to different entities without any documentation whatsoever tridim Mar 2012 #12
They may have lost your original paperwork. banned from Kos Mar 2012 #16
I'm long since foreclosed tridim Mar 2012 #18
I hope you get a LOT of settlement money. banned from Kos Mar 2012 #19
Actually JPM Chase paid $0 for my house, when WaMu folded.. tridim Mar 2012 #23
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