SunTrust foreclosed on your home? You could get money

justiceleague00's avatarJustice League

RICHMOND, Va. –

People in Virginia who lost their homes because SunTrust Bank foreclosed on them could be eligible for payment, under a $550 million SunTrust national mortgage foreclosure settlement.

There are approximately 3,050 qualified borrowers who lost their homes between January 1, 2008 and December 31, 2013.

They’re urged to respond and get a packet from Attorney General Mark Herring that includes a one-page claim form. That form must be returned by June 4th.

The AG’s office says SunTrust agreed to a $550 million national settlement with the federal government, Commonwealth of Virginia, 48 other states, and the District of Columbia after investigations alleging numerous violations in its servicing of mortgages and its foreclosure practices.

Read on.

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Distressed homeowners oppose bills narrowing liability of banks in mortgage disputes

God Bless Pat Freeland! Amen!

justiceleague00's avatarJustice League

Lincoln homeowner Pat Freeland told a House committee Thursday that when Bank of America officials said they were modifying her mortgage to avoid foreclosure, they lied — and that lawmakers shouldn’t vote for a pair of bills protecting the banks from liability.

 “I’m telling you right now, as long as our hometown banks are selling these loans to megabanks, we are at risk as homeowners,” she said. “What we had was not free-flowing communication with our banker, but free-flowing lies.”

Freeland joined several homeowners and attorneys testifying against Senate bills 280 and 281, which would narrow the liability of banks for their lending practices and forbid the award of punitive damages in consumer-protection lawsuits.

They said if the two bills had been in effect, many Montana homeowners who sued Bank of America and other lenders for misleading them on the status of their distressed mortgage would have had no legal…

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Don’t Mess With Mother Nature – “Your Fate – Not Mine”

A new mantra for foreclosure victims – a message for corrupt banks, theirs attorneys, complicit politicians and bad judges: “How you choose to live each day, whether you regard or disregard me doesn’t really matter to me one way or the other, your actions will determine your fate – not mine…”

Legislation to Extend Tax Relief to Distressed Homeowners Currently in House, Senate Committees

justiceleague00's avatarJustice League

Two similar pieces of legislation introduced last month in the House and Senate that would extend tax relief to homeowners who are underwater on their mortgage loans have been referred to committees and are waiting to be heard.

Congressman Tom Reed (R-New York) introduced the Mortgage Forgiveness Tax Relief Act of 2015 (H.R. 1002) on February 13, and that bill is now being heard in the House Committee on Ways and Means. Two weeks later, Senators Debbie Stabenow (D-Michigan) and Dean Heller (R-Nevada) introduced a similar bill (S. 608), which is currently in the Senate Banking Committee. Both bills would extend relief to homeowners on forgiven mortgage debt – the remaining mortgage balance when a borrower sells a home in a short sale to avoid foreclosure. The bills would allow homeowners to exclude the forgiven debt from federal income tax forms and not report it as…

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Emails Reveal Lobbyist Had Undisclosed Role In Andrew Cuomo Financial Crisis Investigation

Follow the money!

justiceleague00's avatarJustice League

Great reporting from Propublica!

Howard Glaser, a lobbyist and longtime confidant to Andrew Cuomo, previously denied he was involved in the then-attorney general’s investigations. Newly obtained emails show otherwise.

The Albany Times Union co-published a version of this story.

Previously undisclosed emails by a mortgage industry lobbyist doubling as a consultant for then Attorney General Andrew Cuomo show the lobbyist played a self-described “critical role” in one of Cuomo’s signature financial crisis investigations.

The emails from 2007 and 2008 detail how the lobbyist, longtime Cuomo confidantHoward Glaser, was involved in an investigation of mortgage industry players that included Glaser’s own clients.

In one email, Glaser touted his influence over a Cuomo deal that weakened rules to prevent misdeeds in the mortgage market. That deal, with mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, reflected Glaser’s “significant, critical, and…

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Indiana AG Urges Lawmakers Not to Eliminate Foreclosure ‘Settlement Conferences’

Makes me proud to have Hoosier roots!

justiceleague00's avatarJustice League

Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller is trying to stop legislation that would eliminate a consumer protection known as the “settlement conference,” which is a homeowner’s final recourse before their home goes to foreclosure, according to anannouncement on Zoeller’s website.

So far, the proposal has not received sufficient discussion or debate in committee or floor sessions, according to Zoeller. He urged Indiana lawmakers to stop the proposal before it gets any further in order to keep the settlement conference intact as a consumer option to avoid foreclosure and help them stay in their homes.

“After the foreclosure crisis exposed the unethical practices of major mortgage servicers, my office worked extremely hard in our multistate investigation against five major banks to create new consumer protections for distressed homeowners,” Zoeller said. “The right created by law to a court-supervised settlement conference and face-to-face meeting between borrowers and lenders has helped thousands of…

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Citing ‘Alice,’ Judge Crushes Four HP Patents | The Recorder

Well – wonder how that affects all those bank patents that are linked to the securitization and to foreclosure scheme?

Alina's avatarAlina's Blog

U.S. District Judge Beth Freeman of the Northern District of California on Tuesday sided with lawyers for ServiceNow Inc. that four HP patents related to IT outsourcing cover abstract ideas which cannot be patented. Freeman’s decision rested heavily on the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Alice v. CLS Bank, which set a high bar for the patentability of certain computer-implemented inventions.
UC-Hastings College of Law Professor Robin Feldman said she wasn’t surprised to see Alice wielded successfully against a Silicon Valley stalwart like HP. Established tech companies, as well as so-called patent trolls, have “applied for the type of broadly worded patents that were slapped down in Alice,” she said.
“Everyone has been hedging bets in recent years, but patent rules must apply to all,” Feldman said. “Innovation benefits from elimination of this style of patenting, and that is good for the Valley.”

via Citing ‘Alice,’ Judge Crushes Four HP…

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Bill for banks not consumers

justiceleague00's avatarJustice League

BY BEN CARTER

“HB 470 is dead,” the text said. As an attorney who has represented hundreds of homeowners since the foreclosure crisis struck Kentucky in 2008, I breathed a sigh of relief.

House Bill 470, likely to be back in next legislative session in some version, would have removed the protection of judicial oversight from the majority of foreclosures.

When the bill was filed, consumers, consumer advocates (led by the Kentucky Equal Justice Center), and consumer attorneys across Kentucky mobilized to explain to legislators why removing judges from the foreclosure process would be so harmful to homeowners facing foreclosure.

So, I was surprised to see Ballard Cassady, president and CEO of the Kentucky Bankers Association, claim that “Kentucky bankers are the only ones concerned with protecting consumers.” This statement is as self-absorbed as HB 470 was self-serving for the mortgage servicing industry.

While KBA claims that it would allow…

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