Tag Archives: JPMorgan Chase

Chase: Don’t foreclose on Helen Bailey – In Memory – Black History


                                                              JPMorgan Chase launched a new website associating the company with Martin Luther King. But it’s planning to foreclose on Helen Bailey, a civil rights hero, in just weeks. Tell Chase to stop the foreclosure immediately.

A new Chase website honors Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and declares: “the values he espoused are the values that JPMorgan Chase also tries to stand for around the world.”

But as the bank wraps itself in the King brand, Chase planned to kick Helen Bailey (a 78-year-old grandmother who marched for civil rights and spent her life working with disabled children) out of her house on February 15th — right in the middle of Black History Month.

Occupy Nashville is fighting back. And they know that enough publicity on Chase’s hypocrisy will embarrass the bank into letting Ms. Bailey keep her home. Nearly 50,000 Change.org members have already spoken out, and Chase moved back Ms. Bailey’s foreclosure back one month in response — more people can speak out now and stop it completely.

Click here to sign the petition demanding that Chase stop foreclosing on civil rights activist Helen Bailey.

Helen and her attorney have struggled to find any solution that would stop Chase’s drive to foreclose. When Helen asked to modify her high-interest loan, Chase refused. When Helen found another lender who’d buy the home for just $9,000 less than what Chase said the home was worth, letting her live there for free, Chase refused. When Helen found someone else who’d buy her home and let Helen rent it, Chase refused again.

This isn’t an isolated incident. A former Chase banker — James Theckston — told Nick Kristof of the New York Times that his bank repeatedly pushed dangerous subprime mortgage loans on minority borrowers, then tried to cover up the racial disparity. Now, 25% of all minority borrowers are in foreclosure or deeply behind on payments. It’s a crisis.

But it’s one of our best opportunities to fight back. You can help Occupy Nashville keep Ms. Bailey in her home, and highlight the growing movement of communities standing up to foreclosures.

Click here to sign the petition.

Thanks for being a change-maker,

Jess and the Change.org team

P.S. Ms. Bailey isn’t alone in fighting for justice in a tough economy. Can you sign these other urgent petitions from Change.org members?

Wells Fargo


Wells Fargo vs. Bernetta Adolph

Tell your Friends

Bernetta Adolph taking action against Wells Fargo.

CFS Logo Connect with the Campaign for a Fair Settlement

Bernetta Adolph is a member of CFS partner Home Defenders League. We thought you’d want to hear about her story and help her and thousands of others fight back against Wells Fargo.
–Brian, Campaign for a Fair Settlement


Retired. Cancer survivor. Disabled. Single mother. Senior. And Wells Fargo is about to steal my home.
My name is Bernetta Adolph, a retired employee of the City of San Francisco, and I’ve lived in my home for almost 20 years. My trouble with Wells Fargo started when I took out a loan against my house in order to ensure my only son could afford a good education.
Click here to tell Wells Fargo to keep me in my home and add your voice thousands of others taking dramatic action against Wells Fargo across California and Minnesota on Wednesday the 27th!
It turns out the loan to provide for my son’s future was designed to ruin my own. It was predatory, calculated to strip my equity and set me up for failure. When I tried to work with Wells to fix the loan, they offered a modification so small it didn’t make any difference. Then they started trying to take my house. The stress hastened my blindness and continues to aggravate my health problems.
But I’m far from the only one to have suffered at the hands of Wells Fargo bankers. Here’s what I’ve found out:

  • Wells Fargo is foreclosing on more people in California than any other bank. [1]
  • Wells Fargo paid $175 million to settle a lawsuit by the U.S. Department of Justice alleging that it targeted African-American and Latino borrowers for high-cost loans. [2]
  • From 2008-2010 Wells Fargo received $17.9 Billion in tax subsidies from you and me. [3]

These reasons plus stopping the theft of my home are why I’m proud that the Campaign for a Fair Settlement is joining with me, the Home Defenders League, and my home-state organization, the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment, to take on Wells Fargo directly by demonstrating at their branches and headquarters all over the state.You can add your voice to our direct actions by signing the petition here.
Not only that, but we’re also teaming up with Neighborhoods Organizing for Change,Occupy Homes MN, and Minnesotans for a Fair Economy to make the message as powerful as possible. Those groups are leading a huge day of action against Wells in Minneapolis the same time we’ll be taking them on in California. Here’s what we’re demanding:

  • Deliver on promised relief through full implementation of AG settlement and other programs.
  • Broadly implement of loan modifications by resetting mortgages to fair market value.
  • Restore our stolen wealth by ending predatory practices, ending discriminatory lending and paying your fair share of taxes.

Add your voice and tell Wells Fargo to keep me in my home and pay us back!
Since his inauguration in January, we’ve been pushing President Obama to use the first 100 days of his second term to finally hold Wall Street banks like Wells Fargo accountable for breaking our economy. This is the week we broaden the “100 Days to Fix What Wall Street Broke” campaign to Wall Street itself. They are the ones with our savings and our homes. It’s time for them to pay us back. Starting with Wells Fargo.
Click here to tell Wells Fargo it’s time to pay us back!
In solidarity,
Bernetta Adolph, ACCE and Home Defenders League member
 
[1] Based on statistics found in Foreclosure Radar, http://www.foreclosureradar.com [2] http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2012/July/12-dag-869.html [3] http://www.ctj.org/taxjusticedigest/archive/2011/11/tax_dodger_wells_fargo.php#.USfd0zDWi3w

Economy: Foreclosure Fraud Fallout


Late last year, several of the nation’s largest banks were forced to implement foreclosure moratoriums after it came to light that they were short-circuiting the foreclosure process through, among other abuses, the use of “robo-signers.” These bank officials were approving thousands of foreclosures per day, without verifying basic information and documentation. “I had no idea what I was signing,” said one employee from Bank of America. “We had no knowledge of whether the foreclosure could proceed or couldn’t, but regardless, we signed the documents to get these foreclosures out of the way.” The bank’s circumventing of due process resulted in improper foreclosures (and even led to instances of homeowners who didn’t have mortgages receiving foreclosure notices). As a result of the foreclosure fraud scandal, a bipartisan group of Attorneys General, alongside the Department of Justice, the Treasury Department, and federal bank regulators, launched an investigation into the banks’ mortgage practices. For several months now, the AGs have been working on a settlement, under which the banks would pay a penalty for their mortgage misdeeds, with the money being used to provide relief to troubled homeowners. However, the settlement talks have bogged down, with some conservative AGs siding with the banks and regulators breaking off to forge their own settlements with the banks, even as new information comes forward showing that abuses in the mortgage servicing arena are significant and ongoing.

THE SETTLEMENT: As the New York Times’ Gretchen Morgenson wrote, “evidence of extensive and abusive servicing practices does in fact exist. It is piling up at the offices of the United States Trustee Program, the arm of the Justice Department that monitors the bankruptcy system. … The findings should dispel any notion that toxic servicing practices were atypical or have done no harm.” For instance, one bank claimed that a borrower owed $52,043, but documentation showed that the borrower actually owed the bank just $3,156. Furthermore, a report from the Department of Housing and Urban Development‘s inspector general alleges that banks have been “defrauding taxpayers in their handling of foreclosures on homes purchased with government-backed loans.” The AGs have suggested that the banks pay $20 billion in a settlement for their mortgage abuses, while the banks have counter-offered by saying that they will pay $5 billion. However, a report from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau shows that the nation’s five largest mortgage servicers have saved more than $20 billion “by taking shortcuts in processing troubled borrowers’ home loans,” making even the AGs’ figure seem conservative. The goal of the AGs and the Obama administration is to put the money towards relief for troubled homeowners, including reducing loan principal for underwater homeowners (homeowners who owe more on their mortgage than their house is worth). Currently, nearly 30 percent of homeowners are underwater. As Center for American Progress Housing Policy Adviser Alon Cohen notes, some of the funds should also go towards mortgage mediation, which as he points out, “is working to help thousands of homeowners keep their homes while returning greater value to investors and communities than they would see in foreclosure.”

THE GOP DEFECTORS: Initially, all 50 Attorneys General joined the investigation into the banks’ foreclosure practices. However, several Republican AGs have since defected, voicing their opposition to monetary penalties in general and, more specifically, using that money to reduce loan amounts. Radical Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinnelli (R) derided loan modifications as “welfare,” while Georgia Attorney General Sam Olens (R) said, “I’m a little concerned that this process disengages the normal market forces.” Several Republican AGs joined Cuccinnelli in a letter stating that reducing loan principal “rewards those who simply choose not to pay their mortgage.” These AGs have also met with representatives of the banking industry to discuss reasons to oppose helping underwater homeowners (and they’ve all received large donations from the banking industry). Of course, many homeowners are underwater through no fault of their own: Wall Street malfeasance and a lack of prudent regulation caused a housing bubble to grow and burst, plunging home prices steeply downward. Also, as Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman noted, the proposed settlement only calls for modifications that benefit bank and homeowners alike. Not content to sit on the sidelines and let the AGs do their work, some congressional Republicans have also criticized the settlement, with Sen. Richard Shelby (AL) calling it “nothing less than a regulatory shakedown.”

THE SIDE DEAL: Another hurdle in the way of the AGs trying to reach a settlement is that two federal bank regulators — the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Reserve — brokered their own settlement with the banks, undermining the AG’s work. As Cohen noted, the regulators’ settlement is a weak one, as “There is no mention of penalties, and the servicers’ repeated focus on ‘processes’ is replaced by the terms ‘policies and procedures’ and ‘internal controls,’ nearly all of which presumably should already be in place.” The Fed and the OCC (which is notoriously cozy with the banks) only reviewed 100 mortgages before settling with the banks. FDIC Chair Sheila Bair questioned the thoroughness of the deal the OCC and the Fed struck, saying, “We do not yet really know the full extent of the problem.” “Flawed mortgage-banking processes have potentially infected millions of foreclosures, and the damages to be assessed against these operations could be significant and take years to materialize,” she said. Adding insult to injury, under the terms of the settlement, the banks are required to undergo a review of their mortgage operations, but they are allowed to hire their own reviewers and the results of those reviews are not going to be made public. As Bair pointed out, there is significant potential for conflict-of-interest, as these reviewers “may have other business with [banks] or future business they would like to do with them.” “This is a huge issue,” she said.

Two more banks move mountains


Rainforest Action Network
Tell PNC and UBS to go all the way and stop financing MTR
MTR in action
Take Action
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Two of the largest remaining financiers of mountaintop removal (MTR) coal mining have announced that they are taking a step in the right direction to end the devastating practice of blowing up mountaintops and poisoning drinking water for coal.

Pennsylvania-based PNC and Swiss banking giant UBS have both announced policies that will limit their funding of MTR.

PNC and UBS are following in the footsteps of six other banking giants–Bank of America, Citi, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and Credit Suisse—that many of you helped push in the right direction on MTR financing over the last two years.

Though this decision does not mean an immediate end to the financing of mountaintop mining, we are encouraged to see PNC and UBS take this step forward. Now let’s get ’em to go all the way!

Join us in urging PNC and UBS to completely cut all financing of mountaintop mining companies. Once your signatures are in, we’ll deliver your demands to PNC headquarters in Pittsburgh, as well as UBS headquarters in both Connecticut and Zurich. Sign this petition today!

Thanks for moving mountains in the banking world with us so that Appalachia’s mountains can stay right where they belong.

GFC team

For the mountains,

Amanda Starbuck, Annie Sartor and Scott Parkin
Global Finance Campaign Team

Our homes


Mortgage lenders are recklessly foreclosing on homes. Some are even breaking the law.

Help protect your home, or your friends’ and family’s, with this simple tool:

Click here

Dear Barbara,

The big banks are at it again. First they targeted minority communities with subprime loans and other predatory lending schemes, helping to make Black Americans and Latinos 70% more likely than Whites to be in foreclosure.1

Now we’re learning that the very same banks and mortgage lenders have been foreclosing on homes around the nation without verifying that they have the right to do so.2

The stories are horrifying: in Ohio, a bank foreclosed on a man after insisting for months that it didn’t hold his loan and refusing to accept his payments.3 In Florida, Bank of America tried to take a house away from a man who never even had a mortgage.4 The more we learn, the worse it gets.

If you’re a homeowner, one possible way to protect yourself from the banks’ bad behavior is to demand your note and make them prove they own your mortgage. A new online tool makes it easy. Check it out and please share this information with your friends and family. It could help to save your home or that of someone you love:

http://www.wheresthenote.com/colorofchange

The banks have been trying to write off their failure to properly verify ownership as a mere technicality. But it’s much more serious than that, and Attorneys General in all 50 states have banded together to investigate the illegal foreclosures, and several elected leaders have called for criminal charges to be filed against the banks.5,6

You would think that it would be easy to produce the documents needed for the banks to verify ownership. But during the real estate boom, banks cut corners with paperwork in order to make as many loans as possible, and then sold the loans to other lenders in complicated financial maneuvers designed to maximize the banks’ profits.

Now it has come to light that banks have been paying “foreclosure mills” to take homes away as quickly as possible, before homeowners even realize that anything might be amiss. And it appears that these foreclosure mills are operating without actually following the law — foreclosing without the proper legal documentation.7 In some cases, notaries responsible for verifying the documents aren’t even reading them.8 And in other cases, the documents are just being fabricated — made up to cover the banks’ tracks.9 This is foreclosure fraud. It’s not legal, and it’s not right.

Given their role in creating the foreclosure crisis through predatory practices and deception, banks should be doing what they can to avoid foreclosures and keep people in their homes. This could be done by lowering interest rates, or better yet — reducing the principal to reflect the crash in housing prices. Foreclosures are only further devastating communities already hard hit by record unemployment.

But the banks seem uninterested. It appears that they would rather commit mortgage fraud to protect their bottom line. That’s why it’s up to us to make sure that they’re following the law to the letter. And if enough of us do so, we’ll help to create a new financial environment where banks are held more accountable to homeowners and the legal system. If you have a mortgage, protect yourself and your family by demanding your note, and please share this information with your friends and family. It takes just a moment:

http://www.wheresthenote.com/colorofchange

Thanks and Peace,

— James, Gabriel, William, Dani, Natasha, and the rest of the ColorOfChange.org team
November 17th, 2010

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