Denver foreclosure attorney forced to answer AG’s subpoena for billing records

Don’t we all know a few attorneys like that?!

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Denver foreclosure attorney forced to answer AG’s subpoena for billing records

With a handful of foreclosure lawyers listening intently from the back of the courtroom, a Denver District Court judge Thursday ordered one of their colleagues to comply with a state investigation into their billing practices — after denying efforts to close the case from the public.

Judge Edward Bronfin said lawyer Robert Hopp Jr. must gather the paperwork subpoenaed by Attorney General John Suthers’ office in its investigation of lawyers specializing in foreclosures and provide it within 60 days.

Before that, Bronfin denied Hopp’s request to keep the case from the public, saying the investigation had an “overriding public interest” that superseded Hopp’s privacy rights.

Hopp had complied somewhat with attorney general subpoenas issued months ago but has held back some of the most critical documents investigators said they need to determine whether the lawyer was padding his bills…

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NBC Censors Video of Elizabeth Warren Taking CNBC to the Woodshed

justiceleague00's avatarJustice League

NBC Censors Video of Elizabeth Warren Taking CNBC to the Woodshed

Last last week, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) delivered a masterful defense of her proposed update to the bank-regulating Glass-Steagall Act on CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” effectively shutting down co-anchor Brian Sullivan’s claim that government can’t do anything to rein in financial risk.

A clip of the interview went viral earlier this week after it was posted on Sen. Warren’s official YouTube account, amassing some 700,000 views in a matter of days.

And that’s when NBC Universal decided to have it removed.

 

Here’s a transcript of Sen. Warren’s remarks, courtesy of AmericaBlog:

ELIZABETH WARREN: From 1797 to 1933, the American banking system crashed about every 15 years. In 1933, we put good reforms in place, for which Glass-Steagall was the centerpiece, and from 1933 to the early 1980s, that’s a 50 year period, we didn’t have any…

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