Homeowner Suffers Horrific Injustice at the Hands of JPMorgan Chase
For over two years I’ve had a front row seat for the foreclosure
crisis, the by-product of our government’s complete mishandling of the
worst economic downturn in seventy years.
During that time I’ve been exposed to some pretty horrific things…
people living in their cars with a child sleeping in the trunk… the
eviction of an 89 year-old couple… I’ve gotten to know what that fear
sounds like and feels like… the fear of losing one’s home while the
country talks about you as being nothing more than an “irresponsible
borrower,” someone who never should have bought your home in the first
place, even though you may have lived in it for 30 years.
What I saw this past week, however, was something new for me… I’d
heard of things like this happening before, written about them, even.
But, I had never seen anything like it, up close and personal.
As a warning… this
story is not for the squeamish. If you’re pregnant, or have heart
disease, or just want to go on pretending that your country is still a
place of which you’re proud… it’s better that you click off now… because
this one isn’t going to make you laugh.
An Anaheim couple with an eight year-old daughter has lost their
home… that would be one way of phrasing it. Another way to describe
what happened would be to say that JPMorgan Chase, an outfit that I now
see clearly is significantly worse than any crime family… has thus far
been permitted by the courts and the laws in California to STEAL an
Anaheim couple’s home.
Why do I say that Chase stole it? Well, there are lots of reasons,
but I think the one that tops my list would have to be, because they
never missed or were late on a payment… in every single month that
JPMorgan Chase told the couple to make a payment… they paid the exact
amount they were told to pay… on time and as agreed… never missed even
one… never were late, not even once.
“We trusted the bank,” the Mom says, “like idiots.”
The husband in this family worked for the City of Placentia in
Southern California for some 27 years. The wife and mother has her own
small business. Their adorable eight year-old daughter, whose life is
about to be inalterably changed at the hand of JPMorgan Chase, goes to
school near by and loves her home. Her parents haven’t told her
anything about this yet, and I pray to God they never have to… that
JPMorgan Chase comes forward and stops this egregious wrong that they
have let happen… that they have created.
I can barely tell this story… I can’t imagine it ever happening to
me… I can’t imagine it ever happening to anyone in this country… a place
I used to proudly think of as my country. Not so much anymore though.
The husband in this family became ill a few years ago… advanced
diabetes… his kidneys have failed, he’s on dialysis… heart disease… he’s
spent time on a respirator while hospitalized.
Yet, they’ve made it through everything, this family, through all of
that and more… stayed together… raised a daughter… found ways to laugh
and play together… they must love each other very much.
They had bought their 2-bedroom home in August of 2006… as it turns
out… terrible timing… but who knew that the bankers, who had leveraged
themselves 40-100 to one, were about to blame homeowners for their
defrauding of the investment community, bankrupting the global financial
system, and destroying the credit markets? Bernanke didn’t know…
Paulson didn’t know… personally, I think that lets this couple off the
hook about the whole should-have-known thing.
So, for three years they made their payments without fail. And maybe
if it would have just been the economy or just the medical bills, they
would have made it through this… but both was too much, and they
received a Notice of Default in July of 2009.
They applied to JPMorgan Chase for a loan modification, and Chase
granted them a trial modification in February of 2010. Chase told them
to pay $869 for three months, and entered them into another program in
May, telling them to make monthly payments of $1358.
They paid every month, on time every time… by cashier’s check, as
required by Chase. The trial modification paperwork said something to
the effect of:
“If all
payments are payments are made as agreed, we will reevaluate you to
determine if we can offer you a permanent modification.”
“We trusted the bank,” the Mom says, “like idiots.”
In August, they received a Notice of Sale. They called Chase… and
imagine their relief when they were told not to worry one bit about that
notice. Apparently, it was just the fault of Chase’s stupid computer
system that just spits things like that out without anyone telling it to
do so. False alarm, what a relief.
So, they paid their September payment… and paid their October payment… and it was around October 10
th
when they received another Notice of Sale. Again, they called Chase,
perhaps a little less nervous than the last time the same thing had
happened… and wouldn’t you know it… another false alarm… it was that
darn computer system again. Nothing to worry about, Chase told them…
just keep those payments coming.
Oh, but while we’ve got you on the phone, we need you to send in some
current paycheck stubs and other miscellaneous pieces of information,
which they did… and then did again… you know the standard operating
procedures for servicers by now I’m sure.
I know, it’s not Chase’s fault… they’ve reportedly been having
trouble hiring minimum wage people for the last three years. Or was it
the investor’s who won’t let them modify? I can never remember which
lie was Chase’s favorite… Bank of America was having the phone problems…
Wells couldn’t stop their employees from losing stuff over and over…
Yep, Chase was the can’t-hire-anyone-and-investors-won’t-modify, I’m
almost positive.
Right around the third week of October, they come home to find a
notice of sale pinned to their front door. Oh my God… they called Chase
again. “Oh, just ignore it once again,” Chase lied. “You don’t have
to worry about that, silly, you’re under consideration for a loan
modification, why would we sell your house?”
A few more days and another notice on the door… Chase back on the
phone… but this time everything was different… Chase said they were
selling their home in ONE HOUR. To stop the sale, they would need to
get down to the courthouse with about twenty-five grand… in 55 minutes,
50… 45… 40…
I suppose we needed another vacant home in Anaheim in a hurry,
because predictably, the home went back to Fannie Mae at the Trustee
Sale. Gone, in the blink of an eye… sold October 21, 2010… just 21 days
after they had made their October payment. Chase had told them not to
worry… it was just the computer system… no one would sell their home.
And now it was gone.
“We trusted the bank,” the Mom says, “like idiots.”
The father has a hospital bed in the living room, he requires special
care… their daughter… in school close by… eight years old… is that
second or third grade?
The couple pleaded with Chase that day on the phone, I can only
imagine what that felt like for them on that day. Here’s what the mom
said to me:
We’re not
people who simply decided to skip out on our mortgage. We did everything
as upright and by the book as we were instructed to do by Chase yet we
still lost our home. On the day they took back the property, I called
Chase pleading for an alternative to this. Their reply to me was “I
suggest you find a new place to live.”
The Unlawful Detainer or UD hearing was the next indignity the couple
would suffer… and I haven’t been able to stop thinking about this next
part all week.
With the medical bills they were receiving, and the uncertainty about
the future, they didn’t feel they could afford a lawyer for the
Unlawful Detainer trial. As the date for the UD neared, the husband was
still in the hospital; he would be released roughly 48 hours before he
would have to be in court.
They found an attorney who would help them and she called the
opposing counsel, a lawyer from one of those scum-of-the-earth
foreclosure mills that have no doubt been making untold millions
intimidating homeowners, already scared to death and almost always
without counsel,
McCarthy & Holthus.
They look like rich young men who don’t care at all about what the
banks are doing to their neighbors… well, maybe not their neighbors…
they probably live in some zillion-dollar beach pad.
(Hey fellas…
looking forward to seeing you on Google! If you’ve been spending money
on SEO trying to rank up at the top, I’ve got outstanding news… I’m
going to put you right up there. May not be exactly what you had in
mind, but then I don’t give a rat’s ass what’s in your under-developed
minds.)
The couple’s lawyer asked the McCarthy & Holthus lawyer if there
could be a continuance as the husband would be only a day or two out of
the hospital…. they said they’d check with Fannie Mae… then said that
Fannie said no. I guess Fannie Mae, a bankrupt and tax-payer owned
mortgage company really wanted another empty condo in Anaheim.
The lawyer asked, what if the couple comes in and asks the judge for a
continuance, would McCarthy & Holthus object? No, she was told,
they would not object “vigorously.” So, the couple went to the UD
expecting to ask the judge for a continuance, she pushing him in his
wheelchair.
As soon as they walked in, another McCarthy & Malthus lawyer,
Kevin Mello was walking towards them. As he approached, the couple
overheard Kevin say to another, “I’m so sick of all these sob stories.”
Oh, no he didn’t… Oh, yes he did.
(And boy oh
boy, is Kevin going to regret saying that… LOL… Yoohoo, Kevy, baby… you
hang in the courthouse right near my house… do you know how lucky you’re
aren’t? I’m actually making a documentary about the foreclosure
crisis, and hadn’t yet cast the shithead. How lucky is that?)
Mello asked the couple when they could be out of their home. They
said that they would need six weeks. Mello made a call and said they
could have 30 days. The husband asked to talk to the judge, but our guy
Kevin said, “Why, the judge has no authority… he’ll tell you to be out
in 4 days… the bank has all the authority.”
Does it now, Kevin? The bank? Fannie Mae? The scandal-ridden,
morally and financially bankrupt, already absorbed into the federal
government, Fannie Mae?
Kevin had some papers he said that the couple needed to sign. They
said no, they didn’t want to sign anything. Kevin said they had no
choice… either sign or be out in four days. He put the documents in
front of them… they couldn’t move his hospital bed in 4 days… they
signed. Stipulated to a judgment and waved future claims.
When they appeared before the judge, he said that they should be GRATEFUL that the bank gave them 30 days.
When the couple tried to relay the story of the loan modification con
job and Chase lying and then the stealing of the home… well, they
didn’t use those terms, I did, but someone has to, right? Because
that’s what happened, and I don’t give a damn what other factors are
involved, that’s what happened, sure as shootin’.
And, even though I’ve been covering the inconceivable tragedy that is
the foreclosure crisis, after learning of what happened to this this
couple, I couldn’t help but wonder how or why this could possibly
happen… and no one cared… in this country… and no one cared. Because I
know I’ve been hard on the servicers, and deservedly so, but is it
really possible that they are actually inherently evil… are they
literally lying to everyone and intentionally try to sabotage the
nation? How could that be true? It couldn’t, right?
And something occurred to me, something that I had not previously considered. And maybe it’s important to consider.
Prior to the last three to four years tops, foreclosures were a very
different animal than what we have going on today, but I’m starting to
think that maybe a lot of people don’t know that. You see, prior to
this crisis, foreclosures were exceedingly rare. When someone got into
financial trouble they either sold their home, or borrowed against it to
get through the storm. But this housing market was pushed off a cliff,
the credit markets froze almost overnight, prices fell through the
floor and fast. People losing homes today bear no resemblance to the
foreclosures of the last 50 years… no resemblance whatsoever.
So, maybe our entire system, including the inadequate and fraudulent
documentation, and the incredibly uncaring and incompetent treatment of
the homeowners involved… maybe it’s happening because we haven’t stopped
to realize that although today we have foreclosures and years ago we
had foreclosures… they really shouldn’t be called the same thing because
they’re not the same thing. In fact, they’re so different they
shouldn’t share the same moniker.
Maybe we should call today’s foreclosures, fraudclosures… I mean,
like all the time… like as in someone call Webster’s. Maybe if our
society understood the substantive nature of the distinction, things
would improve… no? I think maybe yes. Like, do the bankers think that
today we’re just having more of the same foreclosures we had years ago…
same thing… just more of them? Because that’s not the case.
Because in the days before this crisis, you’d never modify a loan…
the person who went into foreclosure wasn’t a person that anyone would
ever consider modifying a loan for, because by the time they went into
foreclosure there was no hope for anything but repossession and after
that, of course, liquidation was a certainty. That’s not a description
of today’s situation.
Look, what happened to this couple… is it not the kind of thing that you might expect to happen in some totalitarian regime?
So, why is that okay with even one single American? We treat
criminals better than this. But today’s homeowners aren’t losing homes
for the same reasons as before, they’re not deadbeats, they’re victims.
And something has to be done to change this, because as sure as I’m
sitting here, what’s happening is going to end badly and I fear,
violently. People are going to get hurt… I don’t know how, when or
where… but no way does this just keep going and everyone’s okay.
Chase’s conduct was so offensive that a highly experienced trial attorney agreed to take their case.
A complaint will be filed on Tuesday in Orange County Superior court seeking compensatory and punitive damages.
The couple’s lawyer would later ask a McCarthy Holthus lawyer about
the apparent preference for coercion and intimidation, and she basically
replied by saying, “Hey, look… I’m not their lawyer, I’m the bank’s
lawyer. If they wanted a lawyer they should have had their own.” My
words, not hers… but that’s what she was saying.
No, I’m sorry McCarthy Holthus… on that point you’re entirely wrong.
I mean, everyone know you don’t need to pay a lawyer when you’re
applying for a loan modification… just ask the California State Bar, the
Attorney General’s office… President Obama… come on… everyone knows
that.
Mandelman out.
P.S. Hey bloggers…
Facebookers… please help me get the word out on this… post, repost,
tweet, re-tweet. I’m hoping Chase sees this and stops the eviction…
otherwise this couple could be fighting this from a homeless shelter.
We can’t save everybody, so let’s save one at a time.