logo

Despite settlement, no end in sight to Foreclosuregate

image
Author: Chris Hinyub
Created: 17 February, 2012
Updated: 13 October, 2022
2 min read

An audit of hundreds of foreclosures in San Francisco by the city's assessor-recorder reveals that 99 percent of loans contain at least one irregularity. Auditors uncovered "what appear to be one or more clear violations of law" in a vast majority (84 percent) of cases.

The audit was commissioned by the office of Phil Ting last Fall after homeowners involved in foreclosure suits complained to Ting that their property records contained inconsistencies or were missing documents. Nearly 400 of the 2,400 foreclosure sales that took place citywide between January 2009 and October 2011 were included in the audit. Ting's office calls the report the "first public study to provide a rigorous, quantifiable analysis of foreclosure practices" in California.

The audit found that corporations who lacked the proper legal standing to foreclose were allowed to do so anyway in 85 percent of cases. It also revealed that 82 percent of the loans contained “suspicious activity," including “backdating” and “fabrication of documents." The mortgage servicers involved in the foreclosures were not identified in the report.

"State law dictates how the mortgage industry must file those records," reads a statement from Ting's office."How can we expect homeowners to have a fighting chance of saving their homes when they can’t even find who currently owns their debt?”

The auditors say in their report that the results paint an “accurate picture” of the mortgage industry's failure to comply with state foreclosure laws.

Ting announced the results on Wednesday, almost one week after a coalition of state attorney generals settled with the nation's five largest banks on a multi-billion dollar package. A portion of the $18 billion secured for California by State AG Kamala Harris will go to reducing principals on loans and a much smaller part toward damages to homeowners who lost their homes as a result of mortgage fraud. In exchange, the banks are to be released from civil liability for fraudulent lending practices.

The analysts said in their report that the settlement "does not resolve most of the issues" that were uncovered. Ting has turned over the report to the city attorney, San Francisco district attorney and Harris's office.

Latest articles

White House
No Labels' Failed Presidential Math and Why It Should Focus Its Efforts on Reforming the System Instead
Earlier this month, No Labels officially ended its plans to field a bipartisan “Unity Ticket” in the 2024 presidential election. While most campaigns end due to a lack of voter support or funding, No Labels’s campaign suffered the unique problem of lacking a candidate....
26 April, 2024
-
6 min read
2024 ballot
Pew: Half of US Voters Would Replace Trump AND Biden on the Ballot If Given Chance
US voters are largely unhappy with the options the two major parties have given them in the 2024 presidential election. While Hillary Clinton says these voters need to get over themselves, Pew Research has found that she is talking to most of the country....
25 April, 2024
-
2 min read
voting
Breaking Down the Numbers: Independent Voter Suppression in Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania held its primary elections Tuesday, which effectively acted as the general election in most cases. However, statewide, over a million voters had to sit on the sidelines because of the state's closed primary rules....
24 April, 2024
-
3 min read