Wednesday, August 04, 2010

S. Florida Foreclosure Mill Faces Civil RICO Charges In Suit Seeking Class Action Status; Allegations Include Manufacturing Phony Mortgage Assignments

In Fort Lauderdale, Florida, The Palm Beach Post reports:
  • Florida's purported largest foreclosure law firm filed thousands of documents to take people's homes that contained deceptive and intentionally ambiguous information, according to a proposed class action lawsuit.

  • The suit, filed last month in U.S. District Court, Southern District of Florida, says David J. Stern and his Plantation-based legal team violated the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act by generating fraudulent mortgage assignments when pursuing foreclosures. An assignment is held by the entity that has the right to receive mortgage payments.

  • Stern's practice, which the lawsuit claims filed up to 7,000 new foreclosure cases in Florida every month last year, is also alleged to have pursued foreclosures for lenders that didn't own the debt on the homes. "There really is no proper plaintiff to sue and foreclose and that's what this charade is designed to cover," said Fort Lauderdale Attorney Kenneth Eric Trent, who is seeking class action status and filed the suit on behalf of Oakland Park resident Ignacio Damian Figueroa. "There is no real holder of the note and the mortgage anymore because they broke it up and sold it to 10, 12, 20 people."

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  • Tracking the true owner of the debt sometimes can be a challenge. When pressed for proof of debt ownership, Trent said Stern's office would create an assignment signed by a Stern employee instead of a representative of the lender attempting to foreclose. "The assignments were meaningless shells designed to pull the wool over the eyes of the judiciary and ease the burden upon the unknown real parties of interest," the lawsuit states.

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  • Trent also named the Mortgage Electronic Registration Service Corp. as a defendant. The private entity, known as MERS, was created by banks in 1995 to track mortgage ownership electronically and reduce paper documents. Trent says MERS helps hide the identity of loan ownership and that it conspired with Stern to "confuse everyone as to who owned what."

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  • West Palm Beach foreclosure defense Attorney Thomas Ice found 21 examples last year of assignments from Stern's office that had been executed with a date before the notary's commission was issued. In a deposition, a Stern employee agreed with Ice that "sloppiness" was to blame for the irregularity.

For the story, see Lawsuit claims that Florida's largest foreclosure firm faked documents.

For the lawsuit, see Figueroa v. Merscorp, et al.

In a related story, see Daily Business Review: Homeowner files fraud suit against firm, lawyer:

  • An unrelated class action suit filed in 2007, which claims Stern’s firm overcharged borrowers, is pending in Palm Beach Circuit Court. Judge Thomas Barkdull recently certified the case as a class action. The suit claims the firm charged excessive fees to borrowers being foreclosed by Wells Fargo, a Stern client. The lead plaintiff is Loren Banner, who sought to pay the bank the money he owed and get his mortgage reinstated. Stern’s firm sent him a reinstatement letter that included charges for services his firm didn’t provide, according to the suit.