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Why attorneys don’t “rat out” judges … and other stuff!

(OP-ED) — The content posted on this website is for educational purposes only and does not purport to render legal advice or guarantee any legal conclusion of law or legal outcome.

There’s this nationwide “thing” called the American Bar Association. In each state, there’s another “thing” dubbed the “State Bar Association”. Each State (Incorporated) has some sort of judicial review board; however, the number of judges being brought before said boards has diminished of late. And here we thought the legal community would police itself; however, there may be reasons for why more judges aren’t “taken to task” for their misdeeds. It’s the “good ‘ol boy club”.

The American Bar Association (“ABA) has laid out Judicial Canons for judges to abide by. The legal codes promulgated by the ABA also mandates that attorneys report judges for alleged misconduct. This isn’t happening as regularly as it should because the attorneys AND the judges are all members of the same clique … the Bar. No one wants to be considered disloyal and/or risk having a judge pissed off enough to “go after” the lawyer’s bar card for ratting him/her out. Even worse, the attorney has to face that judge time and again and the judge will rule against them for snitching to the Bar or Judicial Review panel about the judge’s lack of candor or egregious behavior in court.

That’s the primary reason many homeowners have become frustrated after paying foreclosure defense lawyers gobs of money for services rendered only to find out later that they’ve hit the proverbial “brick wall” and the attorney can’t help them any further because the attorney won’t risk being complained about to the Bar. Many attorneys have told me that Bar attorneys are what they are because “they can’t get a job in the real world”, so they get paid to “supervise the behavior” of other attorneys, which in essence, puts them on a power trip.

Many Bar Associations have consumer advocacy boards within them, which have civilians on their boards in the hopes that these folks will help the Bar boards to take a more practical look at the complaints to see if they lack merit or it’s simply some consumer bitching about the way the judge ruled or what their attorney did to them (or didn’t do for them) that caused their case to be dismissed. In other words, “We’ll take your money because you’ve got a great case!” and … like a used car salesman, once they’ve raided your bank account/credit cards and maxed you out of funds, when the next payment demand can’t be met, they withdraw from your case and the judge lets them do it.

When it comes to foreclosure defense, the game is no different, which is one reason I cannot accept that “point of no return” where the attorney becomes indifferent to the client because the client wants justice and can’t get it through the “standard” channels. A lot of this is due to a lack of education and a rigging of the case law across the various states and federal government.

ARTICLE 1 ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM

Attorneys are not quick to admit that the game is being played in the Administrative Court system. After all, Article 1:10:1 of the Constitution does say, “… the obligation of a contract shall not be impaired”. If you are facing foreclosure, the excuse given is, “Well, you signed the mortgage or deed of trust and Note, so therefore, you’re in default and your home is fair game!” Homeowners who have a lot of equity don’t realize how the cards were dealt in the first place … and neither do their attorneys.

Judges play along with the “narrative” established by the banks, mostly because their state pension funds are invested in these pools of mortgages. That frankly is a bad move on the part of the State in investing in these toxic hedge funds. What the homeowners who face foreclosure don’t realize is that a majority of the loans were securitized and securitization in of itself, comes with caveats, unknown to both the homeowners and their lawyers.

Because the judges and attorneys coming before them do not fully understand the tenets of the Uniform Commercial Code (Articles 3, 8 and 9) and how securitization operates, they tend to adhere to the banks’ narratives. This frustrates the attorneys because once they find out the truth, the judges ignore their amended pleadings. At that juncture, the homeowner facing foreclosure is at a complete disadvantage.

Bar complaints and Judicial Review complaints are disregarded if they’re based on the judge’s ruling and not on the judge’s bias, prejudice or egregious behavior, which is where the rubber meets the road.

When attorneys are faced with the inevitable, they bail on the client … “Oh, well, it was a good run while it lasted.” (How many of you have heard that?) Or, in the alternative, the attorney wants another $10,000 to appeal what the homeowner considers a “bad decision” on the part of the judge, who the homeowner thinks wasn’t presented with all the facts. This is why pro se litigants get into trouble in today’s court system because they tend not to realize HOW the game is being played against them. As a result, they tend to complicate things by operating “outside the box” when the “system” clearly offers them options when the homeowners are faced with obvious bias on the part of the Court and their attorney won’t do anything about it.

FRAUD VITIATES CONTRACTS

There is a real U.S. Supreme Court case that posits the foregoing headline …

United States v. Throckmorton, 98 U.S. 61, 66 (1878), which states:

“Fraud vitiates every thing, and a judgment equally with a contract — that is, a judgment obtained directly by fraud, and not merely a judgment founded on a fraudulent instrument; for in general the court will not go again into the merits of an action for the purpose of detecting and annulling the fraud. . . . Likewise, there are few exceptions to the rule that equity will not go behind the judgment to interpose in the cause itself, but only when there was some hindrance besides the negligence of the defendant in presenting the defense in the legal action. There is an old case in South Carolina to the effect that fraud in obtaining a bill of sale would justify equitable interference as to the judgment obtained thereon. But I judge it stands almost or quite alone, and has no weight as to the judgment obtained thereon. But I judge it stands almost or quite alone, and has no weight as a precedent.”

The case he refers to is Crauford v. Crauford, 4 Desau. (S.C.) 176. See also Bigelow on Fraud 170- 172.

WHERE HOMEOWNERS FAIL

Homeowners are not well versed in securitization. That puts them on a level playing field with both the attorney they retain to represent them in a foreclosure case as well as the judge hearing it (unless you’re in the Southern or Eastern U.S. District Courts in New York, where the judges are very well versed in the subject matter and demand the attorneys plead their cases succinctly in order to get the desired ruling).

Most securitized mortgage contracts have commonalities:

  1. MERS is involved. You’ll find an 18-digit MIN (mortgage identification number) on Page 1 of your contract.
  2. Paragraph 25 (or something similar) declares that the homeowners (borrowers) waive their right to a jury trial (opting for a trial to the bench, where the judge who is uninformed gets to give away their homes).
  3. The homeowner is referenced within the Note and Mortgage (Deed of Trust) as the “Borrower”, when in fact, that’s not true.
  4. The homeowner was unaware that all of his credit and financial information (credit history, credit scores, financial documents and loan application) were turned into a dataset and securitized the moment the application was submitted to the securitization loan broker, who then went out, using the dataset, and committed identity theft on Wall Street, pimping the newly-converted bond (what the dataset became when it was entered into the MERS System®) across the secondary mortgage markets, looking for a mortgage pool to fund the mortgage broker’s loan application (the real “Borrower” was the mortgage loan broker).
  5. The homeowner (as “Borrower”) does not realize that Wall Street and the originating lender were making money off the dataset/bond from the time the homeowner submitted the loan application.

If the homeowner failed to “close” the deal (at the title company), the bond was still out in the secondary mortgage market, being pimped to investors as a legitimate, qualified loan when in fact, it was never consummated by the unsuspecting homeowner.

Now I’ve run across two cases where the loans were never consummated or drawn down on (both were Home Equity Lines of Credit or HELOCs) and the homeowners either lost their home or are about to if they don’t do something drastic to stop the foreclosure.

The foreclosure defense attorneys have no idea of any of this (well, very few do). The majority of the practicing lawyers and judges out there do not know the necessary fundamentals of securitization of mortgage loans, because if they did, the outcome would probably be the same as the Credit River case (First National Bank of Montgomery v. Jerome Daly, 1968).

Unfortunately, the judge in the case died under mysterious circumstances and the case documents magically disappeared and Daly was eventually disbarred. If that doesn’t give conspiracy theorists something to talk about … well … the banking system in America doesn’t tolerate the arguments Daly posited in his own case. The U.S. Government has made agreements with the private Federal Reserve Bank to protect it at all costs and in 1999, when MERS Version 3 became a corporate reality, then- President William Jefferson Clinton signed the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act into law, which effectively repealed the Glass-Steagall Act of 1934 and allowed the banks to play in the securitization markets.

Most of the readers of this blog pretty much understand what a “stacked deck” is, but the attorneys and judges don’t care. The way they see it, the way the “system” mandates it, you the homeowner, signed a contract at the closing table, declaring that you were lawfully seized of the property before entering into a mortgage contract, therefore, you had the right to convey an interest in the property (and not the property itself) to the “Lender” (which in securitization was actually the “Borrower”). The homeowner, not realizing he’d been duped the moment he turned in his mortgage loan application, showed up at the closing table and locked himself into a contract that had already been making money as a bond in the secondary mortgage markets!

In many instances, the alleged loans were “insured” against default, which meant that once the homeowner (who thought he was the “Borrower”) quit making his mortgage payments, the Servicer filed a claim with the insurance company and was paid face value of the mortgage (less 27% administrative costs).

WHAT THE HOMEOWNER WASN’T TOLD …

The unsuspecting homeowner was not told that …

  1. He was a third-party accommodation to a mortgage securitization contract.
  2. His mortgage loan was actually bonded and securitized before he went to the closing table.
  3. The mortgage “lender” was the real “borrower” and not the homeowner.
  4. The mortgage “lender” was completely reimbursed for the 5% funds it put up at the front end of the deal, meaning the securitized mortgage broker was free to go out and repeat the process again with a new “sucker”.
  5. The “mortgage securitization loan broker” misrepresented to the homeowner that the homeowner was the “borrower” when in fact, the loan broker signed agreements (through its servicer) to enter the MERS System® without the knowledge and consent of the borrower, concealing the fact that upon submission of the loan application and BEFORE signing the contract and being awarded a DEED to the property the homeowner was making a loan application to buy, the homeowner (as Borrower) unknowingly signed and encumbered a property he didn’t have the right to convey in the first place because the secondary mortgage markets were already making money off of his signature.

WAS THIS FRAUD?

OR WAS THIS FRAUDULENT CONCEALMENT AND FRAUDULENT MISREPRESENTATION?

Better look up the elements of each before proceeding.

It’s not all about the judge’s ruling either. It’s about the attorney’s being afraid to tell the truth in a way the judge can understand.

Dave Krieger is the host of The Krieger Files, airing Monday-Friday on LibertyNewsRadio.com and on Global Star 3 satellite (Ch. 1) at 8:00 a.m. Central time.

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Happy New Year!

It’s 2024 and already, people in the left-wing media are attempting to fear monger We the People with all sorts of diatribe involving some new COVID variant or an alleged Black Swan event, slated to happen right before this year’s elections.

Already, Trump was removed from the ballot unilaterally in Maine, while Colorado took temporary action to halt that state’s Supreme Court rulings to keep Trump off the ballot, still, the U.S. Supremes should not disappoint. We can’t just hang our hat on one law (Art. 14, Sec. 3) rather than what really matters (Art. 14 Sec. 5) within the Constitution now can we?

We have bigger fish to fry in our own back yards, don’t we?

There’s no doubt in my mind that if Trump doesn’t get re-elected that America will be facing (literally) four more years of hell on earth. Not the greatest New Year’s forecast, eh? What I don’t agree with is the Hegelian Dialectic that has been (and continues to be) played on We the People.

So, if I can keep this short and sweet … let this New Year be the year of success for each of you that read this post, to your endeavors to reach out to your immediate community and make a difference, as small as it may seem. Take care of family matters, especially when it comes to preparedness for the future.

It’s no secret that foreclosures are on the rise again. True, not as bad as post-2008; however, there are over 1.3-million shadow inventories that still plague our current housing market and cannot be sold because of excessive economic depletion (too old and need to be razed) or because the chain of title is so jacked up no reasonable investor would buy the property. The number of 90-day delinquencies in mortgage payments is on the rise, which means if the loan was securitized, the servicer and all the parties involved in the transaction are cashing in on credit default swaps, PMI and/or LPMI, default insurance and title insurance (Day 91). They’re making a killing and they’ve got every homeowner convinced that they owe money to some “lender” and because they haven’t paid, the mortgage-backed security wants its property back.

The entire scenario has been played out to the point that judges go right along with the scheme and know they’re going along with the scheme. Let’s play the reality out here shall we?

John and Jane Doe want to buy a home. They both work and have dutifully been paying $1800 a month rent for years without fail. Their credit scores are in the high 800’s. They own their cars outright and have minimal credit card debt. Their scenario sounds like the ultimate borrower for any lending institution, right?

Why do you think the term “table-funded lender” was coined?

Because the securitization gurus on Wall Street who created the mortgage-backed securities (another fictitious name for a “security”) required the originating broker (the “lender” shown on the mortgage or deed of trust) took John and Jane Doe’s credit application, credit history (and pulled their credit report with that) and all of their financial information and created a bond with it using the MERS System® (in most instances). The bond was already being traded on Wall Street BEFORE John and Jane Doe even signed any papers at the closing table.

The mortgage loan broker wanted 20% down payment as part of the deal. Let’s say John and Jane Doe’s purchased that home (under contract) for $200,000. 20% of that would be $40,000, right? At closing, where do you think those funds went?

To pay off the lender’s 5% “skin in the game” and reward the servicer and all of the players in the scheme with cash. But … the parties in the game didn’t bother to tell John and Jane Doe that their credit scores and history were converted into a security BEFORE the fact. They hadn’t been officially “approved” yet but their credit was so good, a bond was created and the investors of the mortgage-backed security thought that they were investing in John and Jane Doe’s future home and that if John and Jane Doe failed to pay, the home would be sold and they would be handsomely rewarded for their investment.

If you thought that the caper involving Wall Street magnate Bernie Madoff was a big deal, you ain’t seen nothing yet!

The entire mortgage-backed security industry lied to investors (via the Prospectus) and lied to the John and Jane Does of America, who thought they were the “borrowers”. Wrong again!

The “borrower” in the scheme is the originating lender, who was paid in full at closing. The originating lender took John and Jane Doe’s credit scores and financial information and turned it into a security (fraudulent concealment) without even telling them they were going to do that when the Does turned in their loan application to the originating lender (the loan broker). The loan broker then pledged the Does information into the MERS System® and turned their paperwork into a mortgage-backed security and represented to the Does at closing that the Does were the “borrowers”, when in fact, they weren’t (fraudulent misrepresentation).

When the loan broker put the Does information into the database (MERS) and put their loan into a pool of loans (applications, etc.) and created a security out of that, the NOTE was cancelled. Did you get that? The law says it is. But … no one bothered to tell John and Jane Doe that. And here all this time, John and Jane Doe thought that THEY were the borrowers. 

If John and Jane Doe work for 30 years to pay off their loan, look how much money the players in the Wall Street scheme make! Now multiply that sum by all of the supposed “borrowers” out there whose loans were similarly turned into a security. And now you know why there were so many loan officers and mortgage bankers on Wall Street throwing money away on booze, blow and hookers. All that money they were getting from down payments and future payments went right into the pockets of the servicers, who then kept paying the principal and interest to investors (until they no longer could because of the defaults). 

Enter the adjustable-rate mortgage. Within 2 years, these loans would readjust and the borrowers would default. Then the foreclosures start. Lather, rinse, repeat.

If you want the down and dirty and what the law says, visit my Substack page at dave krieger.substack.com. My new book DOOMED TO REPEAT is now posted there!

Now that you have a smattering of the truth … you can understand why the fed is so interested in turning our money supply into CDBC’s. Happy New Year! 2024 is about to get rough.

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