Monday, November 29, 2010

DOJ Document 'Scrubbers' Intensify Efforts In Search Of Lenders' Paperwork Screw-Ups, Improper Practices In Homeowners' Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Cases

The Wall Street Journal reports:
  • The Justice Department and other federal agencies have intensified their review of the banking industry's foreclosure documentation problems, using their powers over bankruptcy proceedings to scrutinize the treatment of troubled mortgages.

  • A key part of the effort is the Justice Department Trustee Program, the federal watchdog overseeing bankruptcies, which has launched a broad review of Chapter 13 bankruptcy filings by homeowners trying to halt foreclosure proceedings.

  • A U.S. official said Wednesday that 17 federal Trustee offices around the nation have recently stepped up efforts to scrub Chapter 13 filing documents, looking for documentation errors or improper practices such as inflated fees. Under Chapter 13 bankruptcy, a borrower seeks to halt foreclosure and comes up with a plan to catch up with their mortgage debt within five years.

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  • The increased federal scrutiny puts more pressure on the banking industry, which is already dealing with probes by 50 state attorneys general into allegations of the improper use of "robo-signers" to foreclose on homes. The industry is also bracing for the results of a separate probe by the Federal Housing Administration, which is scrutinizing the way banks process mortgage payments.

For more, see U.S. Looks Deeper Into Foreclosures.