This, along with the fact that Moody's and Standard and Poors are going to have to go to trial on their "rubberstamping" crap securities as AAA+ are some of the biggest legal tsunamis I've ever seen.
We are in a weird time in American History, and no one can possibly know how deep these phenomena run.
Bobbi Giguere had no luck in securing a loan modification from her mortgage servicer, Wells Fargo. For months, she had sent the bank the financial documents it requested to process her modification. But each time she called to check on the request, she was told to send her paperwork again.
âI submitted the paperwork three times, and nothing happened,â said Mrs. Giguere, 41, who has a high school education and worked as restaurant manager before losing her job.
On Thursday, something happened. She questioned a Wells Fargo official about the bankâs lack of response â under oath.
The spectacle of a high-ranking banking executive being grilled by an ordinary homeowner was the result of an unusual decision by Judge Randolph J. Haines of the United States Bankruptcy Court to summon a senior executive from Wells Fargo to appear in Mrs. Giguereâs bankruptcy case.
At the hearing, Judge Haines made it clear that he was acting out of concerns about Wells Fargoâs mortgage modification practices generally.
âThis is certainly not an isolated case,â he said. âThe kind of story I hear from this debtor is one that I and other bankruptcy judges around the country are hearing over and over and over again.â
More...
Judgesâ Frustration Grows With Mortgage Servicers
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/04/business/economy/04wells.html?_r=1&hpw
We are in a weird time in American History, and no one can possibly know how deep these phenomena run.
Bobbi Giguere had no luck in securing a loan modification from her mortgage servicer, Wells Fargo. For months, she had sent the bank the financial documents it requested to process her modification. But each time she called to check on the request, she was told to send her paperwork again.
âI submitted the paperwork three times, and nothing happened,â said Mrs. Giguere, 41, who has a high school education and worked as restaurant manager before losing her job.
On Thursday, something happened. She questioned a Wells Fargo official about the bankâs lack of response â under oath.
The spectacle of a high-ranking banking executive being grilled by an ordinary homeowner was the result of an unusual decision by Judge Randolph J. Haines of the United States Bankruptcy Court to summon a senior executive from Wells Fargo to appear in Mrs. Giguereâs bankruptcy case.
At the hearing, Judge Haines made it clear that he was acting out of concerns about Wells Fargoâs mortgage modification practices generally.
âThis is certainly not an isolated case,â he said. âThe kind of story I hear from this debtor is one that I and other bankruptcy judges around the country are hearing over and over and over again.â
More...
Judgesâ Frustration Grows With Mortgage Servicers
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/04/business/economy/04wells.html?_r=1&hpw