Last week, I
detailed bombshell revelations
from Bank of America whistle-blowers, in which former employees of the
bank detailed systematic fraud and deceptive practices inside their loan
modification department — including bonuses and Target gift cards for
staff who racked up foreclosures.
Now, another new lawsuit,
featuring a separate whistle-blower, contains additional remarkable
revelations – and may shed light on Bank of America’s strategy in
getting out from under the mountain of legal exposure and costs in which
it now finds itself. Simply put, the bank seeks to pocket quick cash
and evade practices set forth in major settlements – by cashing out of
the subprime mortgage servicing business. The result would be to leave
struggling homeowners back at square one, with even fewer protections to
avoid foreclosure.
First, some background. Over the past year,
non-bank servicers like Nationstar and Ocwen have been
buying up servicing rights to millions of mortgages, gradually
positioning themselves
to become the biggest companies in the space. These non-bank servicers,
which process monthly payments and deal with foreclosures but do not
originate loans, have an asset not available to their big bank
colleagues: They haven’t yet been officially caught scamming customers.
Therefore, they are not a party to the
various servicer
settlements
brought by state and federal regulators, and they need not submit to
those settlement guidelines. This includes rules like establishing a
single point of contact for borrowers, stopping foreclosure operations
when a modification is in process (ending what is known as “dual track”)
and facilitating proper payment processing.
All of this has come to a head in a class-action lawsuit
filed
by Leonard Law Office in Massachusetts against Green Tree Servicing, a
non-bank servicer based in St. Paul, Minn. As detailed by an insider at
Bank of America in a
packet of documents, in January 2013, BofA sold servicing rights to 650,000 mortgages (worth $93 billion) to the parent company for Green Tree.
Like
Nationstar and Ocwen, Green Tree is not part of any servicing
settlements, nor do they have to abide by any guidelines set by those
agreements, even though the loans they purchased were subject to those
guidelines when they were in the hands of BofA. Moreover, as a non-bank
servicer, Green Tree has traditionally had less stringent oversight from
federal regulators, though the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is
fixing to
change that.
Of
course, servicers like Green Tree, Nationstar and Ocwen have terrible
reputations as among the worst servicers in the country (worse than Bank
of America, if you can imagine that). Among the charges Leonard Law
Office made against Green Tree were claims that the servicer imposed
illegal fees to process any kind of payment; failed to process mailed
payments on time; harassed borrowers by calling them at all hours of the
night and using abusive language to try to collect on debts; and
delayed or denied timely modifications. These practices violate such
federal laws as the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, the Telephone
Consumer Protections Act, and others. Complaints about Green Tree’s
practices litter theInternet.
And some complaints have gone to court, like the
case
of a Florida widow who claimed that Green Tree debt collectors called
her husband, as well as his co-workers and relatives, nine times a day
about a mortgage debt. Nationstar and Ocwen have seen their share of
complaints as well. One
innovative Ocwen scam involves sending homeowners a check for $3.50, and claiming that cashing the check automatically enrolls the customer in an
appliance insurance plan, which costs $54.95 a month.
Here’s
where Bank of America comes in. According to a bank insider, this is
part of a deliberate effort to flip the servicing rights for a quick
buck and get out from under the scrutiny of the various settlements.
“Brian Moynihan, Ron Sturzenegger and Tony Meola are well aware of the
reputations of these servicers,” says the insider, referring to Bank of
America’s CEO and two high-level executives. “Ron is a dealmaker, not an
operations guy. He was brought in to sell the stuff.”
Sturzenegger
runs Bank of America’s Legacy Asset Servicing Division, $1 trillion or
so of the shakiest loans at the bank. By selling off servicing rights,
suddenly the bank doesn’t have to comply with settlement practices, nor
do they have to increase staff for compliance purposes. So not only do
they get some ready cash, they lower their labor costs.
Sturzenegger
worked with Meola, the executive of Fulfillment Operations, to put
together the “Bulk Transfer Program,” selling off these mostly
delinquent loans to disreputable servicers like Green Tree and
Nationstar (the more reputable ones didn’t want any part of them). But
they only sold the “subservicing” rights. Non-bank servicers like Green
Tree service the loans, but Bank of America held onto the so-called
master servicing rights. This means that the bank still gets some of the
profits from servicing the loans, and none of the responsibility to
comply with settlements. Bank of America added a million-plus current
loans to the mix of shakier loans to sweeten the pot for the
subservicers.
In the most damning charge, the insider noted that,
“It may mean that any modification currently in process with BAC (Bank
of America) will not be recognized and the borrower will proceed into
foreclosure.” This is almost certainly true, and it’s a very
common practice.
Servicers who purchase servicing rights are not obligated to follow
through on prior agreements with homeowners on loan modifications that
have not yet been made permanent. So the homeowner, who thought they
were well on their way to saving their home, instead has to start all
over with a new servicer.
Here’s one
example
from a former Bank of America customer in Puget Sound, Wash., whose
switch to Green Tree voided his short sale and put him back in
modification hell. Even if the borrower was getting special treatment
because of a natural disaster like Hurricane Sandy, that treatment would
be voided once the new subservicer entered the picture. The Fitch
rating agency has recognized the danger of selling off distressed
servicing rights to these non-bank operations, saying in a
research note that
“the growth and outsized scale of larger nonbank servicers may pose
challenges to a potential orderly transfer of servicing.” Struggling
homeowners will bear the brunt of these challenges.
Once Charles
Giannotti, a friend of Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan, found out
that his servicing transferred to Nationstar, he emailed in a fit of
rage. “Are you aware of the fact that your bank is turning its customers
over to a processor that based on the complaints posted appears to not
only lack basic competency but also poor customer service?” Giannotti
fumed. This set off a flood of CYA emails within the bank from senior
executives, responding to Moynihan’s queries about the scheme.
Regardless
of how Bank of America resolves this situation, the damage to
homeowners has already been done. Homeowners don’t get to choose their
servicer – they just get passed around at the whim of big mortgage
companies. And every time the servicing rights get transferred, they
have to deal with a whole new set of practices. If they were fighting
foreclosure at the time of the switch, then they have to start over,
under typically disadvantageous circumstances. And that’s especially
true when their new servicer sits outside the glare of strict oversight.
Bank
of America’s reputation is already unsalvageable. But avoiding
requirements they were forced to make to homeowners to compensate for an
initial round of illegal practices, by selling the servicing rights off
to fly-by-night organizations that specialize in abusing customers,
just about takes the cake. And they’re profiting from it, too.
Lost is America -- The banks found a way to hide and steal our homes and the SEC, FDIC, CFPB, US AG, OCC, are all hiding their heads in the sand..but wait for it......Wall Street will soon go belly up and where does that leave everyone than?
Lets not leave out Roosevelt management , Rushmore, Archbay,York.. all thieves.
ReplyDelete