Friday, April 23, 2010
SAMPLE INTRODUCTION LETTER AND REVIEW BY EXPERT WITNESS
[Recipient Name]
[Title]
[Company Name]
[Street Address]
[City, ST ZIP Code]
Dear[Recipient Name]:
Re: subject property transfer to surrender possession situated in the city of Fallbrook, County of San Diego, State of California. 1551 green canyon road. and detached guest house.
Attention Senior Counsel;
I am engaged herein as an expert witness and charged with overseeing a special inquisition into allegations of deceptive accounting practices and claims of fraud under Genreally Accepted Accounting Principals.
You will agree the foreclosure time line and requirements for proper recovery governing the domicile for the subject property is straightforward in a power of sale. Consumer homeowners who are seriously delinquent will find they may of may not have claims against a lender for a variety of reasons. Violations are considered under various agencies and rules as follows under 15 U.S.C. §§ 45(a), 53(b), and 56(a), Section 108(c) of the Truth in Lending Act (“TILA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1607(c), Section 704(c) of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (“ECOA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1691c(c), and Section 621(a) of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1681s(a),
I am not an attorney and have nothing to do with any claims by a Plaintiff seeking relief by rescission, restitution, reformation, and disgorgement, against defendants for engaging in unfair or deceptive acts or practices in violation of Section 5(a) of the FTC Act, as amended,15 U.S.C. § 45(a), acts or practices in violation of the TILA, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1601-1666j, as amended, and the TILA’s implementing Regulation Z, 12 C.F.R. § 226, as amended, acts or practices in violation of the ECOA’s implementing Regulation B, 12 C.F.R. § 202, as amended, and acts or practices in violation of the FCRA, 15 U.S.C. § 1681a-1681u, as amended.
Claims against a beneficial interest as the originating lender or successor and assigns with regards to the above allegations are not the subject of this letter.
I am assigned to provide analysis for establishing the true beneficial interest or holder and merely seek to verify the parties’ right to recover its collateral.
The public outrage subject of a lawful assignment, use or a nominal interest or right to substitute an agent or trustee is puzzling to me. Parties that can evidence standing in a foreclosure are “always” certain and verifiable from the transferring parties accounting records and the registrant or “sellers” published earnings reports.
The information is evidenced by 8 K and 10 K earnings reports. These reports under the SEC enforcement are also verifiable from IRS code and tax deferred status filings. If possible, an analysis of the accounting and general ledger will assist in showing sufficient evidence of the assets ownership by its carry value and owners basis in the asset.
What excited the interest of the trustor and their counsel is the revelation a credit was used by the winning bid. The fact the beneficiary and transferee are one in the same with the selling parties, appointed by nominal interest or substitution.
The fact the winning bid was a controlled bid offers a legitimate contention for calling this inquiry and potential for a broader investigation. Another problem is based upon concerns the sale of the subject by your office was conducted by a “credit” bid.
How is an assets sold by the lender at origination and shown on the balance sheet of the investors used to acquire the property foreclosure. Therefore are you saying as trustee this sale was for “at then” consideration or current consideration?
Therefore the seller’s general ledger will show the proper allocation of journal entries (debit and credits) to or from the beneficiaries, successors and prior investors and identify where a credit was originated.
According to public reduced there is a chance the asset I question was charged to future earning and that would reduce its basis in the asset down to zero. Therein you would have to reestablish the basis for an orphaned asset and maybe this is where the credit came from? That general ledger will establish a “basis” in the asset in question and therein determine the true holder in due course at time subsequent to transfers by foreclosure.
Its imperative to remember that the trustee’s actions are subject to some minimum level due diligence and this is obviously basis accounting rules being discussed here. Recent foreclosure activity handled by your office is never the less confusing and potentially a signal towards the alleged beneficiary of record, having circumvented Generally Accepted Accounting Principals. The rules and guidelines under the Federal Accounting Standards Board are substantial for reporting revenue and the right to earnings and losses from the ownership of the asst in question. Since 1973, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) has set standards to govern the preparation of financial reports and is officially recognized as authoritative by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. Financial Accounting Standards or FAS 140 govern the accounting rules for transfers and servicing of financial assets. FA S 140 was originally implemented in September of2000. It replaced the old FASB Statement No. 125 and revised the standards of accounting for securitizations and other transfers of financial assets and collateral.5
FAS 140 require certain disclosures, based on consistent application of a financial-components approach that focuses on control. Under this approach, after a transfer of financial assets, an entity recognizes the financial and servicing assets it controls and the liabilities it has incurred while derecognizing financial assets when control has been surrendered, and derecognizes liabilities when extinguished. This generally assumes the seller of the asset is a Federal Savings Bank operating under the ownership of its parent a nationally chartered FDIC member bank (NA).
Generally, a transfer of financial assets in which the transferor surrenders control over those assets is accounted for as a sale to the extent that consideration, other than beneficial interest in the transferred assets, is received in the exchange. A transferor has surrendered control if all of the following conditions are met. First the transferred assets have been isolated from the transferor, and they are presumptively beyond the reach of the transferor and its creditors. Each transferee has the right to pledge or exchange the assets it received, and there is no condition on its right to pledge or exchange.
The facts are as follows:
Transferor does not retain control over the transferred assets through either an agreement that both entitles and obligates the transferor to repurchase or redeem the assets before their maturity or the ability unilaterally to cause the holder to return the specific assets. Upon review of a number of your recovery efforts, I become lost.
This correspondence merely is asking for some reasonable explanation for your client circumventing published accounting rules and for your office foregoing its due diligence requirements imposed upon you by the State where and when conducting the transfer of title by foreclosure. I pay little attention to the rights of a successor and assigns by way of the recorded assignment and or authority bestowed to a substitute a trustee. The Grant Deed upon Sale or other recorded instruments’ issued by your office are relied on to give some indication of the true beneficial interest you transferred and collateral you allege to represent.
Here is what I am finding from recent sales conducted by your office:
1. The Transferee and beneficiary are one in the same. How can this be when the “seller” is also one in the same (notwithstanding an appointment of a nominal interest)?
2. How can the parties conduct an Open Market Bid and lawful transfer where the Beneficiary’s the winning bid?
3. If no bidders are successful in bidding the subject property how is it the beneficiary is willing to pay, in lawful consideration, for an asset they allege to already own?
4. Do you believe the sale in foreclosure will satisfy accounting rule FAS 140 for repurchasing an asset in an open market bid exchange?
5. How do you accept a “credit bid” as lawful consideration whereby the balance sheet for the beneficiary must already show basis for the asset held in inventory?
6. Where, did the credit originate from?
7. Bifurcation is an abstract and seldom used term sometimes found in a securitization. By the lenders own admission it has separated a deed or mortgage from the obligation due to a fractionalized interest held by the investors who purchased the asset.
8. Are you alleging to have rejoined at foreclosure sale what the original lender has separated? The questions are asked pursuant to complete avoidance of the Securities and Exchange Commissions take on the subject matter.
9. Pro Tanto is a Latin term with several meaning that range from eminent domain to compelling a cosigner make good on the obligation of another. Therefore, was the subject property sold and purchased by the alleged beneficiary transferred “pro tanto”?
10. Finally, why is your office not recording a transfer tax for these transfer, deemed by you r client to be a bonefide sale?
I have had several conversations with the Washington Bureau of the FDIC and questioned them about these practices permitted by the lender and or its custodial trustee. To date they cannot understand the rationale being used and question such practices.
I will not forward the following correspondence to any agencies for their review until I speak with you for possible misunderstandings and further clarification. The Federal Agencies who may have interest in this subject matter will none the less require the Grant Deed upon Sale to evidence my findings.
I would appreciate the opportunity to speak with you on the matter herein.
Sincerely,
[Your Name]
Enclosure
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Mortgages originated and sold to investment trusts used aggressive accounting to commit fraud
Mortgage holders now face a new wave of problems for borrower loans sold into an indentured trust. An ordinary repurchase agreement is a common form of short-term financing and has no impact on the balance sheet. A company sells a bond or other, usually liquid, asset to a lender at market value for cash, and then repurchases the asset a few days later.
Maher Soliman, a Los Angeles based analyst has been a staunch advocate against the sale of assets to the trust and claims securitization was a breech that materially and adversely affects the interests of the security holders in the mortgage loan. a Repo [105] transactions usually occurred just before the end of a quarter so that, for a few days before the end of the quarter, the company’s net leverage ratio, a number that is used by ratings agencies, appeared to be lower than it actually was. A few days after the quarter ended, Investment Banks would repurchase the assets and the net leverage ratio would go back up.
The story first posted by AccountingWEB in Firm News,Watchdog on 03/15/2010, details an auditor examination focused on Repo 105 agreements that differed from ordinary repurchase agreements because investment firms valued the assets pledged in the repurchase agreement at 105 percent of the cash received. , less than their market value. Because the assets were worth more than the cash received, Investment Banks claimed that FAS 140 – Accounting for Transfers and Servicing of Financial Assets and Extinguishments of Liabilities –allowed it to book the transactions as sales. Its called derecognition and if disallowed you have a hypothecation or leveraged debt according to Soliman.
Investment Banks like Lehman began using the Repo 105 agreements in 2001. In 2008, as the firm was collapsing, Investment Banks used Repo 105 transactions to move $50 billion of assets from its balance sheet.
A court examiner report detailed the steps Investment Banks took when no American law firm would give its blessing to the Repo 105 transactions. Investment Banks turned to British law firm Linklaters LLP, which gave Investment Banks a letter stating that the transaction could be recorded as a sale under British law. The 2006 version of the letter, used by Valukas, stated, “This opinion is limited to English law as applied by the English courts and is given on the basis that it will be governed by and construed in accordance with English law.”
All of Investment Banks’s Repo 105 transactions were then conducted by the London arm of the firm. According to The New York Times, the court examiner’s report stated that Investment Banks would transfer the Repo 105 assets to London. European lenders were among the principle counterparties, including Barclays of Britain, UBS of Switzerland, KBC Bank of Belgium, and Mizuho Bank and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group of Japan.
Claims of negligence and malpractice against Ernst & Young could be made, the report stated, in connection with its audits of Investment Banks and a failure to act upon claims from a whistleblower that Investment Banks's accounting for a trade known as "Repo 105" was misleading, The Wall Street Journal reported.
A spokesman for Ernst & Young said the firm reviewed the accounting for the Investment Banks's Repo 105 deals "on a number of occasions,” according to The Wall Street Journal. “Our view was, and continues to be, that Investment Banks's accounting policy for these repo transactions complied with generally accepted accounting principles. The examiner has not concluded otherwise."
Ernst & Young was informed about the potential impact of the Repo 105 transactions in an interview on June 12, 2008, with Matthew Lee, a former senior vice president at Investment Banks, according to the Wall Street Journal. Lee had sent a letter to senior management in May warning about “tens of billions of dollars of unsubstantiated balances, which may or may not be ‘bad’ or non-performing assets or real liabilities.” In the letter, Lee also expressed concern about Investment Banks’s accounting systems and personnel, and “potential misstatements of material facts.”
Following receipt of the letter, Investment Banks’s board of directors asked Ernst & Young to interview Lee. During the interview, Lee raised the issue of the Repo 105 maneuver, saying that Investment Banks was moving as much as $50 billion off its balance sheet using the transaction. Ernst & Young did not report back to the board of directors before Investment Banks collapsed three months later. Lee discussed the interview with the court examiner.
Valukas, who is a former federal prosecutor and an attorney in private practice with Jenner & Block LLP, said there were other factors besides the Repo 105 accounting which contributed to Investment Banks’s failure. These included the financial decline, the risk-taking culture of investment banking, and the failure on the part of government agencies to anticipate and mitigate the situation.
Goldman Sachs, Barclays Capital, and other banks said they did not use repos to hide liabilities on their balance sheets,The New York Times reported.
The court examiner spent 14 months preparing the report, which cost the government $35 million.
The trustee will promptly notify the relevant seller, servicer on behalf of the seller or the servicer as a beneficiary of any breach of any representation or warranty made by it in respect of a mortgage loan it sold.
The master servicer will make cash advances with respect to delinquent payments of principal and interest on the mortgage loans to the extent the master servicer reasonably believes that the cash advances can be repaid from future payments on the mortgage loans. These cash advances are only intended to maintain a regular flow of scheduled interest and principal payments on the certificates and are not intended to guarantee or insure against losses.
In question is the special purpose entity who is the depositor and will purchase the mortgage loans in the mortgage pool as depositor from the contributing source i.e. Seller’s Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. and one or more other affiliated with Countrywide Financial Corporation. (each of which is referred to in its prospectus supplement as a “Seller”) pursuant to a pooling and servicing agreement among the sellers, master servicer, the depositor and say The Bank of New York, as trustee. Soliman believes this will cause the mortgage loans to look as if they are assigned to the trustee for the benefit of the holders of the certificates.
According to Maher Soliman, “If the loans were not assigned at the time of delivery and closing of the pooling of assets, then the loans remained the property of the seller” . Under FAS 140 these assets were alleged to be sold for the benfit of the shareholders and the seller booked a gain on sale.
Anton R. Valukas, the U.S. bankruptcy court-appointed examiner of failed investment bank Investment Banks Bros., charged with determining the causes of the largest bankruptcy filing in U.S. history, has found that the company used “materially misleading” accounting to make its balance sheet look stronger than it really was.
Valukas concluded that “colorable claims” could be made against some former Investment Banks executives and Ernst & Young, Investment Banks’s auditor, “meaning that enough evidence existed against both parties that could lead to the awarding of damages in a trial,”The New York Times reported. He added that Investment Banks’s directors were not aware of the accounting engineering.
Soliman says this news could result in certain borrowers now being susceptible to a foreclosure but capable of bringing claims under a receivership to trusts formed over the last 8 years.
According to the examiner’s 2,200 page report, issued late last week, Investment Banks designed a repurchase agreement, Repo 105, which relied on a very aggressive interpretation of an accounting rule, FAS 140, which allowed the company to classify Repo 105 transactions as sales. Under accounting rules, when the assets were treated as sales, Investment Banks could remove them from their balance sheets.
Maher Soliman
Examiner
Experts Corner: Another FDIC Bank Failure
American Marine Bank
News of another FDIC member bank falling under the FDIC control was published late this week. The “
Our question is to whom? Who is the holder in due course?The purpose of this analysis and discussion of the FDIC are subject to the various parties’ who have interest in your loan. It’s about their representations, conduct and decisions made while enforcing a foreclosure. Making a bad decision or employing conduct viewed to be deceptive will cause any transaction or enforcement of a right to a security to be rendered voidable.
Furthermore the asset may suffer from malfeasance and willful error and omissions causing the loan to be valued far below its market value due to serious impairment. Successfully demonstrating in court the reasons why your loan has become so seriously impaired that the real security, a deed of trust or mortgage, will fall into a judicial abyss and subject the true holder in due course to lose its rights to in a recovery of the asset in a foreclosure. In other words the right to accelerate and foreclose becomes lost to the transaction
Your loan was likely sold after it originated. A sale of the asset versus a government backed insurance guaranty is the single most controversial component of the subprime lenders dilemma.
A bonifide sale and transfer must be evidenced which differentiates the private label loans from the GSE or Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac class of loans delivered to Wall Street.
In a true sale the lender who sold it is lost to the privileges and rights to the asset forever. So I guess the question is not so much about a foreclosure due to a breach and delinquent obligation. This discussion is for us to understand to “whom” you owe the money and what right do they have to enforce the obligation and right to foreclose? Lawful Transfers
A “transfer” is the “streets” vernacular for booking a sale of a loan or pool of loans. The transfer of an asset by the lender to a less than arms investor is routinely conducted solely for accounting purposes. None the less it’s a sale that is forever entered in to the books.
The purpose of this analysis and discussion of the FDIC are subject to the various parties’ representations and decision making that may cause the asset to become so impaired that the real security, a deed of trust or mortgage becomes lost to the transaction. My last sale as a trader was a transfer of a bulk pool of “toxic waste” was back in 2001. The loans acquired and sold under my direction were never really that bad as we had one of the lowest delinquency rates in the region for sub prime assets sold and serviced. What I do know or at least remember from my days of bulk whole loan trading was from selling to the same major market leaders who are in trouble today.
Let’s back up for a moment to consider how accountants arrive at a specific value. A valuation is necessary for a foreclosure to take place just as it is for the original loan to be sold. A sale involves a contract and the essential elements f the law amongst the two parties. The first is consideration (money) and the second is the intent of the parties for lawful exchange and or transfer.
Consideration is required for transferring any good or service amongst one party to another, including a sale of a bulk pool of mortgage loan receivables.
If a mortgage is valued at par then you typically measure its worth at the combined cost to date or basis in the asset. A true and more accurate valuation is based upon the market and what one will pay assuming demand. It’s the true inherent value of a gallon of milk that will force someone to go elsewhere or not to drink milk at all. The same rationale holds true for an asset such as a closed mortgage receivable subject to its ability to attract a fair price in an open market. A mark to market value is entered by an accountant prior to sale if the owner is seeking to value the worth of the assets it holds.
Estimating value based on the future worth of an asset is something that continues to attract criticism whereby a historical valuation is entered based on a discounted future value. A presumption of value is calculated in a variety of ways sometimes using an internal rate of return offset by depreciation. In the mortgage industry I call this type of valuation complete lunacy. And this is where things get interesting with taking a look back at the cause of the mess we are now in.
Generally Accepted Accounting Principals aka “GAAP” allows us a standard to apply a historical value on a loan which is necessary for estimating consistency as with the life of a loan. The terms of the note say 30 years but we know that homeowners rarely keep a loan to term. Valuations use variables such as prepayment velocity or life based on a traditional or historic early payoff.
The CPR is the measurement of prepayment speed determine from reversion (sale of a home) refinance or the opposite end of the spectrum which is delinquency and default. Mortgages originated over the last decade were attributed an estimated holding time or CPR of say 60 months. Other things that influence price and for understanding the lenders desire to become fixated with the sub prime mortgage sector are subject to ethical scrutiny. I am referring to extreme maximum leverage used to buy loans and the introduction of something called accounting practices such as derecongnition. The latter is suspect, according to many accountants, as it offer no real value to a transfer and subject to entering a “gain on sale.”
The "streets" ability to substantiate its reporting methods. The Expert Witness must have among other things a legal understanding and verifiable accounting practices background. So figure an offshore investor will take a coupon of 1% at twice the current alternative which was a US Treasury. So I guess a WAC of 8% would yield on $100,000 certificate up to $800,000 in capital investment. Or is that $100,000 yielding 8 separate $100,000 certificates?
What ever it is its six of one and half a dozen of the other. It makes me want to run to the Hampton's and buy the biggest home they can offer. It makes me want to find the worse of the worse credit and put them into a loan.....any loan.
The problem with this madness conducted under the great GWB (and side kick “Don't call me Cheney call me "Dick”) administration is the regulatory absence for the bubble Wall Street elite would eventually pop.
The money raised was at a huge multiple and was causing CDO product to suffer from heavy demand internationally in a market that had long exceeded capacity. ( . . . .It makes me cringe and recall the old Keystone Kops silent flicks; remember the morons running around that said nothing and were always trying to help while and causing even more chaos …..Anyway!
I cannot pinpoint of fully grasp the role of the FDIC here but fear we may have an accounting play that shows the bank lines were actually used as “paid in capital” . It’s called derecongnition under GAAP and FASB accounting pronouncements for isolating the source and use of funds.
Will this help your arguments to save your home? YOU BET IT WILL! The big question is where the logic here is and why would the bank regulators let this happen? These Pretender Lenders were not pretenders at all. I call them “Tender Lenders” who tendered a note like currency instead of parking it in a vault like the asset it is. Therefore when tendered the check is electronically debited (hmm) and treated like a cancelled check.
The lost note is not a coat lost by a child at school. It’s lost to the payee who failed to deliver to the payor that check evidencing a debit stamped paid in full.
Hey, Barney just a minute . . . Hey, Wilma I’m home!!!!! So lets say these guys raised volumes of cash at huge multiples and did so with FDIC capitalization or tax payer insured capital contributions into a “NewCo” or De novo or S*P* E*.
If so, I feel the SPE is more like an STD and its all absolute "Bull Crepes". Where did these guys put all the capitalization anyway from money and stock…Huh? Especially with all these stringent FDIC risk weight capital set aside requirements. It’s a regulatory capital priority and basic fiscal mandate enforced by the OTS.
I got to know, where did they "Deposit" the money and stock ...do you know? I am referring to the "Deposits by the Wall Street “Depositors” you see. Deposited, Depositor, Depository, Restroom, tell me Wendy! Where’s the beef! Howard, who goofed I must known, who goofed!
Hey! ....wait a minute!!!....D*E*P*O*S*I*T*O*R*S! Yikes…OMG! How much more can we take!
So back to the failure of another institution, one of Americas and Pacific Northwest’s finest! American Marine Bank. So who do we bring an action against now? FDIC say’s “for all questions regarding “new” loans and the lending policies of the new successor call Columbia State Bank, and to please contact your branch office.
They continue that shares of American Marine Bank were owned by its holding company, AMB Financial Services Corporation, Bainbridge Island, WA. The holding company was not included in the closing of the bank or the resulting receivership. So if you are a shareholder of AMB Financial Services Corporation, please do not contact or file a claim with the Receiver. You may contact AMB Financial Services Corporation directly for information. How convenient is that….a BK waiting to happen.
The FDIC claims it does offer a reference guide to deposit brokers acting as agents for their investor clientele. This web site outlines the FDIC's policies and procedures that must be followed by deposit brokers when filing for pass-through insurance coverage on custodial accounts deposited in a failed FDIC Insured Institution. Wait a minute here now just slow down. FDIC makes no mention of a lender consumer grievance, and tells us to call the broke parent of the bank. Now are these loans in question considered FDIC troubled assets? Okay, we cannot help you with a predator loan but we will be back to foreclose on you?
My heart is pounding right now and I cannot take anymore folks…..really! But on a more serious note, consider the following. A bad notary signature, broken promise by a “Tender Lender” or forged MERS document is not the argument to bet the house on (no pun intended) It won’t get you to the promised land so can the need for an audit. It won’t get you to the Promised Land, so here is my advice!
SAVE YOUR MONEY! . . . UNLESS YOU WANT TO BORE THE HELL OUT OF A JUDGE AND GET THROWN OUT OF COURT.
It’s time to step up or step down!
By "Toxic Waste Guru" (LOL)
M.Soliman
expert.witness@live.com
REQUIREMENTS OF THE APPLICABLE CUSTODIAN .
(ii) If Custodian determines that the documents in the MortgageFilefor a Delivered Mortgage Loan conform in all respects with Section3(b)(i),and unless otherwise notified by Buyer in accordance with Section3(b)(i),Custodian shall include such Mortgage Loan in the CustodialMortgage LoanSchedule issued to Buyer.
If the documents required in any Mortgagedonot conform (except as otherwise notified in Section 3(b)(i)),Custodianshall not include such Mortgage Loan in any Custodial Mortgage LoanSchedule. Custodian shall notify Sellers and Buyer of any documentsthatare missing, incomplete on their face or patently inconsistent andof anyMortgage Loans that do not satisfy the criteria listed above.Sellers shallpromptly deposit such missing documents with Custodian or completeorcorrect the documents as required by Section 3(a) or remove therelatedMortgage File from the Request for Certification.
On or prior tothePurchase Date and as a condition to purchase, except with respectto aWet-Ink Mortgage Loan, Custodian shall deliver to the Buyer anelectronicCustodial Mortgage Loan Schedule to the effect that the Custodianhasreceived the Mortgage File for each Purchased Mortgage Loan on theMortgageLoan Schedule and as to each Mortgage File, specifying any documendelivered and any original document that has not been received, andverifying the items listed in this Section 3(b).(c) As required by Section 3(a), Custodian shall deliver to Buyer,nolater than 3:00 p.m. Eastern Time on the related Purchase Date(provided, thatthe
Custodian has timely received the items required in Section2(b) herein),electronically or via facsimile, followed, if requested in writingby Buyer, byovernight courier, a Custodial Mortgage Loan Schedule havingappended thereto aschedule of all Mortgage Loans with respect to which Custodian hascompleted theprocedures set forth in Sections 3(a) and 3(b)(i) hereof andcertify that it isholding each related Mortgage File for the benefit of Buyer inaccordance withthe terms hereof.
Pleading (Not for Use) Lenders egregious, ongoing and far reaching fraudulent schemes
Fight Foreclosures Legally - Anti Predatory Lending Initiative
Lenders who Lied about Loan Modification Programs
Jun 23, 2010 ... The attorney will be able to cut through the lender lies and review the true financial status of the borrower in order to paint
THIS IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS LEGAL ADVICE!!
If you don’t file a timely response, the plaintiff can petition the court for a “default judgment” and possibly win the lawsuit simply because you failed to respond.
First call an Attorney Immediately. An attorney experienced in defending against the type of lawsuit you’ve been served with will undoubtedly be the best tool in your defense toolbox.
Lawyers are knowledgeable about the procedures involved in lawsuits and skilled at making persuasive arguments to a judge or a jury in your defense. An attorney can also help you try to settle the case out of court as an alternative.This blog only describes situational circumstances and no witness can offer legal advice. M.Soliman is an "expert witness" and not an attorney nor affiliated under a licensed prationer.
This web site does NOT advocate nor believe that modifications exist and will not be involvved in any modificiation or other short sale settlement offers.
Consult an attorney first for your specific problem. NO attorney-client relationship exists.
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