Saturday, October 23, 2010

Robo-Signing Scandal: Foreclosing Lenders Acting Like 'Hyenas On The Serengeti'???

An anonymous Guest Author on the blog, The Big Picture, recently referenced a (satirical) press release purportedly from Bank of America regarding its approach to handling foreclosures. An excerpt:

  • Bank of America announced that it has discovered a few trivial, easily-remedied technical problems with some of its mortgages. “We will stop foreclosure sales in some states until our assessment has been satisfactorily completed, or until the politicians whom we have compensated so generously do their damn jobs and get rid of those pesky laws and rights that are slowing us down."

On the issue of multiple lenders simultaneously foreclosing on the same property, the purported BofA statement continues:

  • "I know it is a bit confusing to citizens when our competitor HSBC and another bank simultaneously try to foreclose on the same property, especially when they are in a federal foreclosure prevention program. It’s sort of like one of those programs on Animal Planet where each hyena grabs a leg of the still twitching gazelle and tries to pull it away from the other hyenas. But that’s the way nature works—nobody asks those hyenas petty-minded questions about whether title to the gazelle was properly transferred, and to which hyena, and whether the title was properly notarized by an authorized local cheetah. Sometimes a company just has to sink its fangs into a customer, lock its jaws, which can exert a pressure of 1,000 pounds per square inch, brace its legs, yank, and see what tears loose. If we get the wrong gazelle, we will make every effort to compensate it for our erroneous gnawing, bone-crushing, and marrow-sucking.”

On the issue of due process, and the concern that JPMorgan may invade its turf, the purported statement continues:

  • "On the Serengeti, due process means that the gazelle runs as fast as it can and the pack keeps ripping small chunks off until the gazelle collapses due to shock and blood loss and inability to pay for a lawyer. There may have been some trivial, unimportant problems with the relevant documents, but we are confident that many of those gazelles really did owe us money, and we believe that our ripping them into pieces, digesting them, and regurgitating their horns and hooves is ecologically sound and generally in accord with the law of nature. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I will have to go mark the boundaries of my pack’s territory with the musk from my anal scent gland. We don’t want other hyena packs like J.P. Morgan invading our turf."

For more, including the response from a purported JP Morgan spokesperson, see Bank of America Announces That It Has Discovered Some Trivial Technical Problems With a Small Number of its Mortgages.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

too much truth, I wonder whatever happened to the Department of Justice? If they aren't using it anymore I've got a barely use copy of the Constitution that was used as a doormat by the last 6 presidents and i was wondering if I could store oaver at the DOJ.

Is America Inc. fiscally bankrupt or merely morally bankrupt?