California AG Announces Formation Of 25-Person Strike Force To Target Mortgage, Foreclosure Ripoffs Of Any Size
The Los Angeles Times reports:
- California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris, saying that years of unscrupulous lending still haunts the state, is creating a 25-person task force to target mortgage fraud of any size — from small operations that preyed on troubled borrowers to corporations that sold risky loans as safe
investments.(1)
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- Creation of the state's Mortgage Fraud Strike Force, [...] comes as other states turn up the heat on the lending industry. New York Atty. Gen. Eric Schneiderman is seeking records from three major Wall Street banks as part of a broad investigation into the mortgage crisis. Also, a months-long investigation by all 50 state attorneys general into the foreclosure practices of the nation's five largest mortgage servicers is continuing.
For more, see California creating mortgage fraud task force (The team of 17 lawyers and eight special agents from the state Department of Justice will pursue corporate fraud, scams and fraudulent lending practices, Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris says).
Thanks to Deontos for the heads-up on the story.
(1) Reportedly, the team of 17 lawyers and eight special agents from the state Department of Justice will pursue three major areas, Harris said in an interview:
- Corporate fraud, including instances in which bundled mortgages were sold as securities to the state or its pension funds under false pretenses. Harris said her office plans to prosecute some cases under California's False Claims Act, which she described as "one of those very powerful tools that California uniquely has … to pursue, in essence, what are false claims that are submitted to the state."
- Scams, including instances in which consultants, lawyers and others took fees from people in foreclosure, saying they would help the homeowners get loan modifications or other remedies, but delivered nothing.
- Fraudulent lending practices, including deceptive marketing, failure to fully disclose loan terms and qualifying people for loans who couldn't afford the terms.
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