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Ray Vargas Tale Parallels Mortgage Meltdown CERRITOS, Calif. (By Mike Stuckey, MsNBC) February 17, 2010 — Questions linger here, as ripe and nagging as the odor that once wafted over this former dairy capital: Who is trying to seize the home of Ray Vargas, child of the Great Depression, D-Day veteran and loving husband who just wanted to do right by his dying wife? And are they entitled to it? In bankruptcy court documents, the party attempting to foreclose is identified as Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems Inc., or MERS, a small Vienna, Va.-based company employed by lenders to streamline the resale of mortgage loans and servicing rights. In that role, MERS claims an interest in tens of millions of U.S. home loans and the legal right to foreclose on those in default. But MERS never gave Vargas a loan. It never collected money from him or recorded his payments. It had no ability to modify his loan. What it did have was a copy of a document that named it a “beneficiary” of the mortgage on his home and a “nominee” for the lender and “lender’s successors and assigns.” But it has never identified the current holder of the loan. 'It makes me sick'
While such documentation has allowed
many foreclosures to proceed around the
nation, the judge in Vargas’ case threw
MERS for a loop, ruling that the company
had no right to attempt to seize his
home on behalf of unnamed plaintiffs.
As a Navy corpsman during World War II,
he went ashore with the third assault
wave at Utah Beach on D-Day to pluck his
fallen buddies from the sand and patch
them up as best he could. Later, he
owned a painting business and took on
big jobs, like the restoration of the
Queen Mary, the steamship turned hotel,
in nearby Long Beach.
The happiness ended in 2000, when
Ophelia was stricken with Parkinson’s,
Alzheimer’s, brain tumors and a stroke
that left her bedridden, unable to
speak. She required expensive
around-the-clock care, but Vargas was
determined not to put her in a nursing
home.
By the time Ophelia Vargas died on Jan.
4, 2005, the expenses for her care had
maxed out the reverse mortgage. And Ray
Vargas had become a target of services
that cull through land records to
provide sales leads to mortgage brokers.
To anyone familiar with property values
in Cerritos, the public information on
Vargas’ loan might as well have been a
banner saying, “Elderly homeowner with
lots of equity to cash out.”
With that, he was trapped in a rapid
cycle of refinancing that saw four
lenders hold notes to his house in 2005
alone.
In that time, his debt grew from
$213,555 to $745,000. To tap his
$531,445 in equity, Vargas paid at least
$123,237 in loan origination fees and
prepayment penalties. He paid at least
$60,000 in interest as he struggled to
make minimum payments on the loans,
giving the money right back to the
lenders he had borrowed it from.
Thousands more in unpaid interest was
added to his debt.
After the reverse mortgage, all of the
loans to Vargas had one or more signs of
predatory lending, practices not illegal
unless they cross the line into fraud.
However, federal officials have long
warned of their harmful potential.
"Predatory lending threatens to turn the
American dream of homeownership into an
American nightmare," then-assistant HUD
Secretary William Apgar warned in
congressional testimony in 2002.
Because they made so many loans like
those provided to Vargas — and others
that were even more reckless — Downey
and Washington Mutual failed and were
seized by federal regulators last year.
The collapse of WaMu, with $307 billion
in assets, was by far the largest bank
failure in U.S. history.
The final two loans on Vargas’ house
were made by Freedom Home Mortgage Corp.
of New Jersey, a first loan of $630,000
and a second of $115,000. They were made
Oct. 3, 2006, and obligate him to pay
over $3,700 a month — well more than
double his income. Within months, he was
unable to keep up with the payments. By
early last year, foreclosure had begun.
“A lot of the subprime lending,
particularly the predatory loans, would
not have occurred if the lenders had not
been able to dump those loans into the
securitization meat grinder,” said Bert
Ely, a Cato Institute scholar and an
expert on financial regulation.
With more than 3,000 member companies
and 57 million registered mortgages
covering about 50 percent of all new
loans, the 45-employee MERS controls and
disseminates information on loans made
to a majority of American homeowners.
MERS would not disclose how many
foreclosure cases it is currently
bringing.
MERS officials and their attorney,
Domeyer, declined requests for
interviews. MERS also declined to answer
numerous questions submitted via e-mail,
including who is actually the current
owner of the loan, although it did
provide a prepared statement that said
in part, “Numerous state and federal
courts have affirmed the right of MERS
to be the mortgagee in the public land
records and its ability to move for
relief from stay and foreclose.” But
Arnold’s statement also acknowledged
MERS’ guidelines for foreclosure
appeared not to have been followed in
Vargas’ case.
Vargas said the signatures on the loans are not his and he never met with anyone from Monta Vista nor received settlement statements explaining the transactions. Among the few papers Vargas has from Monta Vista are a letter and two check stubs showing he received about $48,000 for cashing out $95,000 in equity. It is unclear where the rest of the funds went. Martha Lozano, owner of Monta Vista, was located in nearby Tustin. She said she was running a new company, Debt Solutions, which helps trouble borrowers seek loan modifications from lenders. She said she could find no records in her computer system indicating her old firm, which employed 50 to 60 people, had done business with Vargas. She said any paperwork on Vargas’ transactions had likely been stolen during a burglary at a storage unit. Lozano said many homeowners in foreclosure “now want to blame us for everything that is happening to them.” But she defended the option ARMs sold to Vargas and others, saying, “You sell what the lender is advertising.” Asked if she would have sold such a loan to her father, Lozano quickly replied, “No way!” As to the claim of forgery, when tracked down the public notary swore Vargas had signed the documents. He said he had no recollection of the transaction. Thomas Montaghami of Anaheim, Calif., said he is no longer a notary. He said he had lost records notaries are supposed to keep to explain how they verified the identities of people whose signatures they notarized. Montaghami said he had informed authorities of the loss of his records as required, but officials at the Secretary of State’s Office in Sacramento said they had no record of that. Shown a signature that MERS claimed was his on the loan it tried to foreclose, Vargas laughed. “That’s not mine.” His attention was diverted by the ringing phone, a telemarketer trying to sell Vargas on refinancing his home. “It’s an everyday thing,” he said. “They’re the vultures coming to pick over the bones.” The gallows humor fits Vargas’ lack of bitterness at his plight. A guy who began adulthood carting the dead and wounded away from Normandy may have a greater capacity for forgiveness than most. Even if he loses the house, he reckons, it was out of love for his dear Ophelia. “We were married 57 years,” he said, softly, his eyes lighting upon an urn on his mantle. “Her ashes are right there. She will be buried with me when God calls me.” |
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Why We Should Welcome McConnell's Demand for Hearings on Rescinding 14th Amendment
WASHINGTON (By Congressman Luis Gutierrez) August 5, 2010 — The "your papers, please" hysteria spreading through the Republican Party has reached a new low. Now, they want to corrupt the U.S. Constitution to promote their opposition to immigrants and immigration. Senior leaders in the House and Senate are introducing legislation and calling for hearings to explore whether we should change the U.S. Constitution to ensure that more people in the United States are denied citizenship or legal immigration status.
Specifically, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell joined an array of Republican lawmakers who feel we should examine whether to rescind all or part of the 14th amendment to the Constitution to prevent some children born in the U.S. from being granted U.S. citizenship.
The
pro-life,
pro-family
Republicans
are now
pro-neonatal
detention
and
deportation.
It isn't
enough to
drive out
the people
not born
here, now
they want to
drive out
the ones
that were.
Which side
is for
immigrants
taking
personal
responsibility
and getting
right with
the law and
which side
is just
blowing
smoke in an
election
year. |
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Published, Web Design, & Hosted by The Jon Garrido Network, Santa Fe, New Mexico and Washington D.C. |
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