Government releases Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC) interviews

Every foreclosure judge and attorney should be mandated to read these interviews.

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The federal government has posted hundreds of pages of interviews and research from the government’s official effort to get to the bottom of the financial crisis.

The National Archives Friday made public research documents from the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC), a governmental panel charged with finding who was to blame for the financial collapse of 2008 and 2009.

The newly released documents include a host of interview notes and transcripts with FCIC staff and major players in the world of finance. Among the transcripts released are former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and Goldman Sachs chief executive Lloyd Blankfein.

The documents are coming to light now because the country recently passed the five-year anniversary of the FCIC issuing its official report, which came out in January 2011. The Archives noted that Friday’s release was just a sample of the FCIC’s work, which eventually took…

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Deutsche Bank Chiefs Cite Government on Mistrust Issue, FAZ Says

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Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government is partly to blame for market mistrust in Deutsche Bank AG because it spearheaded implementation of new liability rules for bondholders in a law passed last year, the lender’s Co-Chief Executive Officers John Cryan and Juergen Fitschen told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.

While the government has solved the problem of liability capital, it created other problems that only exist in Germany and that “makes us a special case internationally,” Cryan told the newspaper. Fitschen said “national solo efforts” by the government that aren’t matched elsewhere don’t help.

Litigation issues are another reason why financial markets mistrust Deutsche Bank, with the greatest litigation risks stemming from the U.S., FAZ cited Cryan as saying. Deutsche Bank will also carefully examine its set-up in Russia after transactions with Russian shares raised questions as to how effective the lender’s “systems and controls” are, Cryan said.

Both CEOs see no need…

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Injecting Integrity into the Mortgage Business

This is good to know because you can’t clean it up if you don’t understand it. And we all know how intentionally convoluted the mortgage racket was made. Most big developers did the same thing – this was not unusual. The slime was not in the construction and sales. The corruption is in the software used by Wall Street that had turned off its built-in fraud detection. No one knew what was really going on or how the pension funds and unions were being attacked. Wall Street saw unions as a problem for business and it appears wanted to end them or severely cripple their strong organizations. Wall Street thrived in over-leveraging business by manipulating their pension funds that were not properly protected. IMHO these were intentional acts stemming from Wall Street top management and cleverly covered up and silenced in a shroud of exorbitant bonus $$$, lavish and deviate lifestyle.

No one knew the real inner circle. Mortgage brokers were given a slew of computer programs with relaxed controls from each of the major pretender lenders. Brokers were encouraged to make loans with the same promises homeowners were given – “don’t worry you can refinance in a couple of years as long as you keep up good credit” and “real estate has been going up for 70 years.” No one on the outside knew that the investors were being told by the hedge funds that the trusts were empty, appraisals intentionally inflated, and/or based on defaulting algorithms. Credit cash flow had stopped but investment banks still had money to finish up filling trusts – business as usual was the same mantra until Lehman was taken down.

Whether you like Trump or not, in his defense he was never in the Wall Street inner circle. He would not have known any better than any of the rest of us what was transpiring behind the securitization curtain – or that the 1990s brought with it a powerful doom that caused over 10 years of un-prosecuted corruption. My guess is Trump sees it now. Maybe he realizes that status quo is never going to fix it.

But take notice – no one in the media asks him directly about Wall Street. And as for his bankruptcies – it is remarkable that his companies emerged from Chapter 11. Again, this is conjecture – but like homeowners, Trump was over-leveraged in debt – likely an intentional Wall Street system with no safeguards. Foreclosure and re-sale is how they stay liquid. So, no doubt Trump understands how to save a company so deeply leveraged in debt and maybe that’s what it will take to save America… just look at the trillion$ our taxpayers have heaped on their backs.

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By Lynn Szymoniak March 7, 2016

March 7, 2016

Trump Mortgage was a company started in 2006 and closed 18 months later, following a scandal that involved significant over-stating of the credentials of the company’s president, E.J. Ridings.   When Trump Mortgage closed, Donald Trump licensed his name to First Meridian Mortgage as his next partner in the residential mortgage business.  How well did First Meridian Mortgage, a/k/a Trump Financial, operate?

First Meridian Mortgage made money, but not because of its careful lending practices.  First Meridian Mortgage made money by selling its loans to big banks and securities companies so that the loans could be included in residential mortgage-backed trusts that were being created and sold at breakneck speed from 2004 through the first half of 2007.

Donald Trump asserted when Trump Mortgage began that he wanted to inject integrity into the mortgage industry.  The mortgages made by First Meridian…

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