Questions Raised On Cozy Relationship Between Colorado Foreclosure Mill, Local Public Officials Charged With Overseeing 'Forced Sale' Auctions
In Denver, Colorado, The Denver Post reports:
- Colorado's most prolific foreclosure attorney has for years given thousands of dollars to a group representing the public officials charged with impartially overseeing his industry.
- Shortly after the money started flowing to the Public Trustees' Association of Colorado, trustees began awarding lucrative no-bid contracts to a computer software company in which the attorney, Lawrence Castle, holds an interest. That company, Government Technology Systems, has since donated tens of thousands of dollars more to the trustees' association — $20,000 last year alone — funds used in part to pay for dozens of hotel rooms for trustees attending their convention at a Black Hawk casino in June.
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- Though the trustees say there is no connection between the payments to their association — which last year amounted to four times the money raised through membership dues — and the no-bid contracts given to GTS, some say ethical questions could be raised by the relationship.
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- "I'm not so sure his involvement with CPTA is a great idea, and the perception of his being a foreclosure attorney working so closely with us could be a bad one," Pueblo County public trustee Nick Gradisar said. "The idea is we're an impartial third party and not in favor of the borrower or the lender."
- The contracts awarded to GTS are to manage a county's entire foreclosure system, a document- driven process worth millions of dollars to the software company that handles it. GTS is paid $45 for every foreclosure case filed in a county, and totals have reached record numbers in recent years. GTS is contracted to run eight of the state's 12 biggest counties, where the bulk of the foreclosures are filed.
For more, see Attorney's ties to county trustees in Colorado raise questions (Board's patron is also a partner).
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