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Open letter to readers: Today and tomorrow

By Lynda Waddington | 11.17.11

Wednesday was a difficult day for The American Independent News Network, which is the larger entity that operates The Iowa Independent. Our chief executive and founder announced two of our sister sites would close and their content would be moved to The American Independent.

ACS lockout continues; plan emerges to repeal sugar protections

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By Virginia Chamlee | 11.15.11

A recently introduced bill could have far-reaching impact on the U.S. sugar industry, including American Crystal Sugar, a farmer-owned cooperative that locked out 1,300 Midwest workers on Aug. 1.

Cain campaign: Farmers know more about regulations than EPA

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By Andrew Duffelmeyer | 11.15.11

The chairman for Herman Cain’s Iowa effort says the campaign “relied more on the word of farmers than Washington regulators” in deciding to run an ad containing claims the Environmental Protection Agency says are false.

Mathis wins, Democrats maintain Senate control

Liz Mathis
By Lynda Waddington | 11.08.11

The Iowa Senate will remain under the control of a slim 26-25 Democratic majority when it reconvenes in January 2012.

Press Release

PR: Nation should work to address veterans’ challenges

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

BRUCE BRALEY RELEASE — As US involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan ends, it’s more important than ever that our nation works to address the challenges faced by the men and women who fought there.

PR: Honoring veterans, help in hiring

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

CHUCK GRASSLEY RELEASE — A difficult job market is challenging the soldiers, sailors and airmen who have protected America’s interests by serving in the Armed Forces.

PR: In honor of America’s veterans

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

TOM LATHAM RELEASE — No one has done more to secure the freedom enjoyed by every single American than our veterans and those currently serving in the armed services.

PR: Honoring and supporting our nation’s veterans

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

DAVE LOEBSACK RELEASE — Veterans Day is an opportunity to reflect on the service of generations of veterans and to honor the sacrifices they and their families have made so that we may live in peace and freedom here at home.

Lawsuit accuses Wells Fargo of discrimination by neighborhood

By Mary Kane | 09.10.09 | 11:15 am

Just a year ago, the theory that poor and minority borrowers were to blame for the housing crisis took hold with a vengeance, and so did the belief that the government forced lenders to make subprime mortgages to meet affordable housing goals. The view took on greater prominence in the heat of a presidential campaign, and an obscure anti-redlining law known as the Community Reinvestment Act became a scapegoat for subprime lending and the collapse of the mortgage market.

wells fargo 2Things have changed quite a bit since then, as the spotlight has shifted to lenders and their behavior during the boom. States and cities continue to aggressively pursue subprime lending discrimination suits, and judges across the country are signaling a willingness to move forward with some cases. As the lawsuits wind their way through the court system, more details and allegations about the inner workings of the subprime world are emerging. And as startling as some of the charges already have been — a former loan officer for Wells Fargo testified in one affidavit that employees regularly referred to minority borrowers as “mud people” and called subprime mortgages “ghetto loans,” — there’s even more ahead, said David Berenbaum, executive vice president of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition.

“The ‘smoking guns’ are coming out,” Berenbaum said, referring to possible evidence that lenders targeted minority communities and borrowers for higher priced loans. “And I expect more and more of these smoking guns to become apparent.”

In the latest development, a Superior Court Judge in Los Angeles recently certified a 2005 lending discrimination lawsuit against Wells Fargo as a class action case. The suit contends that area managers at the bank refused access in some minority neighborhoods to a software program that allowed for discounted prices on mortgage loans. Barry Cappello, a partner with Cappello & Noel in Santa Barbara, which represents some 10,000 to 20,000 borrowers in the suit, said he believes it is the first subprime lending discrimination suit in California to be classified as a class action.

According to Cappello, Wells Fargo introduced a program in 2002 called “Loan Economics,” which gave loan officers the authority to offer discounts to loan applicants. The savings on lower fees and interest rates could be significant, ranging from $500 to as much as $10,000 per loan. The suit claims that the Los Angeles area Wells Fargo manager refused to allow loan officers operating in certain minority neighborhoods to offer the program. Borrowers in predominantly white neighborhoods were given access to the software.

Cappello said the suit stemmed from complaints by black and Hispanic loan officers for Wells Fargo, who said they asked to use the software in their branches but upper management refused.

Wells Fargo is fighting the suit and has denied all the charges. In a statement, the bank said, “We are disappointed in this ruling and intend to vigorously defend this matter as the case proceeds. The decision does not indicate the court believes the underlying allegations have any merit. We feel the allegations represent a complete mischaracterization of our long-standing commitment to responsible lending and the pricing practices and tools we use. The policies, systems and controls we have in place ensure race is not a factor in the pricing or products we offer.”

The case could go to trial in about a year, Cappello said.

More lawsuits are expected in the near future over the treatment of Hispanic borrowers in Arizona and Texas, who were offered high-cost loans they didn’t understand at misleadingly low teaser rates, then refinanced into even more expensive loans than their initial mortgages, Cappello said.

Wells Fargo, the nation’s largest home lender, also has been a target of lawsuits elsewhere. Last month, Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan sued the lender, alleging that blacks and Hispanics were sold high-cost subprime loans more frequently than white borrowers with similar incomes. The suit contended loan officers were offered incentives by the bank to steer borrowers into the more expensive loans, and that white borrowers generally received the lower-cost prime mortgages.

Some borrowers thought they were getting prime loans from Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, the suit also charged. But their loans actually came from Wells Fargo Financial, the bank’s subprime unit.

In Iowa, two watchdog groups charged this week that minority homeowners in Des Moines were three times more likely to receive high cost subprime loans from Wells Fargo than white homeowners.

In June, the New York Times reported on affidavits from a 2008 lawsuit by the city of Baltimore against Wells Fargo over subprime lending, which charged that the bank targeted blacks in Baltimore and suburban Maryland for high-interest subprime loans. Former loan officers testified in affidavits about using terms like “mud people” and “ghetto loans.” The bank also had an emerging markets unit that pinpointed black churches as fertile ground for selling subprime loans, according to the former officers. And in March, the NAACP filed suits in federal court in California against Wells Fargo and HSBC, alleging minority borrowers were more likely to be issued higher rate subprime loans than white borrowers with similar credit scores and qualifications. Both banks have strongly denied the charges. The NAACP also has pending litigation against nearly a dozen other banks and lenders over subprime lending discrimination.

Should the charges in the lawsuits be proven, it would amount to massive violations of the Fair Housing Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, and other fair housing and lending laws, Berenbaum noted. Enforcing fair lending laws has been “an issue the government has failed to address over the past decade,” he said. Lenders could face criminal penalties from the government for violating fair housing laws, and they could be subject to punitive damages and fines from government lawsuits.

Big lenders like Wells Fargo and HSBC are obvious targets for suits because of their size and the amount of lending they did. In addition, many other lenders and originators of subprime loans have gone out of business, complicating efforts to address allegations of lending discrimination through lawsuits.

That leaves a major question regarding all the lending still unanswered, Berenbaum said: Where has the U.S. government been? The Federal Reserve reported in 2005 that an analysis of federal mortgage data found that blacks and Hispanics were more likely to receive higher interest rates on mortgage loans – and that it intended to examine the practices of 200 lenders as a result.

But nothing’s happened since that announcement, Berenbaum noted. Instead, as the years go on, and the government takes no action, allegations about price differences in mortgage loans based on the race of borrowers and their neighborhoods continue to grow.

Mary Kane covers the economy for the Washington Independent, a Center for Independent Media site.

Comments

  • BarbaraAnnJackson

    Settling only for Wells Fargo’s internal investigations concerning mortgage matters and Cheronda Guyton is equivalent to allowing Bernie Madoff to be his own adjudicator

    Former Wells Fargo senior vice president, Cheronda Guyton’s personal use of a Miami home, unwittingly exposed an example of deceits associated with foreclosure. (Albeit, failure to pay a mortgage usually means valid loss of one’s home, like the Miami homeowner victims of Ponzi Scheme operator Bernie Madoff.) Evidence shows that a major agenda of lenders like Wells Fargo is to have distressed properties transferred out of borrowers’ names, after which those mortgage companies can flip, sometimes fraudulently, real estates. Also, easily verifiable facts prove that often various nonessential people (sometimes straw purchasers) get slices of a foreclosure ‘pie’ (pie used here to typify ‘case’); and in many situations when there’s this pie available, fraud, criminal extortion, and other illegal, outrageous activities becomes utilized to ensure homeowner becomes ousted. Further, Wells Fargo appears to have no qualms about blighted neighborhoods, especially if with each form 1099-A acquisition it files into the IRS, it receives tax credits and benefits –but there’s more!

    Madoff said he would not have succeeded in committing his multibillion dollar scheme had people paid attention and took actions appropriate to Madoff’s right-in-front-your-face activities. For too long, the same has been true of WF. It’s like a fox guarding the hen house.

    A somber look at certain deceptive mortgage lender practices will reveal that a critical objective of foreclosure is NOT necessarily so that the lender can regain its security interests by reselling properties, but rather for flipping, or for illegally receiving IRS tax advantages, or various frauds, or for deceiving Wall Street, or personal purposes such as Guyton’s (or perhaps Collin Equities), or any other participant connected with distressed property. When red flags flare such as the Guyton embarrassment, WF conducts its own investigation –and cover up.

    Wells Fargo announced firing Guyton, and it stated that no one else (implausible!) was involved with Guyton. However, no explanation was provided as to how or why –since the property had not been put on the market for public sale– Collin Equities, according to Guyton, wound up owning that Miami property after the Elins signed the property over to Wells Fargo. Could it be that –in like manner as Wells Fargo does things down here in Louisiana– Collin Equities was the straw buyer for the Elins property, or did some sort of “simulated sale” occur whereby the property deed became conveyed to Collin? And, considering Guyton’s brass to use that home, and her reference to Collin Equities, could there have been kickbacks / quid pro quo activity between them or any other firm of which Guyton oversaw property ownership transfers? And by the way, since Ms. Guyton was “responsible for commercial foreclosed properties,” doesn’t that indicate the person who is responsible for Residential foreclosed properties permitted Guyton to have access to the Elin property? (I have no such proof about Guyton, but I do have proof how fraudulent foreclosure conveyances are done. There’s a lot more to be known about how foreclosure conveyances, and how it serves to prevent property from being available (like the unavailable Elins property) for public bid.

    For too long, authorities have been satiated with Wells Fargo’s own internal inquiries –hopefully not because of enormous lobbying monies. Unlike Madoff, Wells Fargo has neither been caught, nor appropriate actions taken, despite in-your-face improprieties; and consumer complaints seem futile. Not until City Mayors (such as Baltimore) began suing WF, has there been such scrutiny serious enough to possibly unmask deliberate lending fraud.

    In some foreclosure cases, through disguise of a mortgage company’s name, a “collection attorney” can be (and some illegally are) the actual foreclosing plaintiff. Thus, intended goals of getting property transferred out of a borrower’s name, and attorney acquisition of property (via straw purchasing) in lieu of, or in addition to billable fees become achieved. This white collar fraud is pervasive! Also, not only can there be money in illegal confiscations of property, there are also lots of billable hours to be racked up from litigating against parties who oppose wrongful taking of their commercial or residential properties. A detailed description about enormous money made from foreclosure litigation is contained in the Dallas, Texas third amended complaint of the lawsuit entitled: Super Future Equities versus Wells Fargo.

    The reality that scores of lenders’ foreclosure cases including some of Wells Fargo’s are now being thrown out of court when lenders (via collection lawyers) file foreclosure or Bankruptcy court proceedings without proof of owning the note is another W F flag, especially since there is irrefutable evidence (see link below) that Wells Fargo intentionally engages in foreclosure frauds. Wherefore, it begs questions such as the following: How many people are unlawfully homeless, unlawfully evicted due to null foreclosure filings, or due to Bankruptcy Court “Lift Stay” motions that have been filed in the name of a lender which does not own the note, or a defunct lender? If courtroom judges simply give collection attorneys carte blanche approval to seize and sell [defaulted] property without judges bothering to determine whether the named mortgage company has lawful right to the property, how probable is it for an unscrupulous lawyer to use any company’s name to seize someone’s home? And how many lawyers (via straw buyers) wind up with those distressed properties until they flip them!? When mortgage companies receive form 1099-A tax advantages from the Internal Revenue; and when mortgage companies continually flip property while at the same time gain negotiable security for the same property, what incentive is there for such lenders to bother about blighted neighborhoods? Lastly, aside from the gust of foreclosures that were dismissed from courts, what untold numbers of people who lack legal knowledge or lack means to pay for legal representation have lost or will loose their homes unlawfully? For reasons such as the foregoing, a sweeping investigation of Wells Fargo is long overdue! Proof about Wells Fargo can be found via this web link:

    http://www.lawgrace.org/2008/08/08/my-august-8-…

    Barbara Ann Jackson
    Law & Grace, Inc

  • http://www.ashsolicitors.com/ Personal Injury Solicitors

    Really interesting and well written article.

  • http://www.ashsolicitors.com/ Personal Injury Solicitors

    Really interesting and well written article.

  • BarbaraAnnJackson
  • http://www.ashsolicitors.com/ Personal Injury Solicitors

    Really interesting and well written article.

  • KatherineRBrownton

    Chase Mortgage promises its customers it will close their house sale on time or they'll give you $300. Unfortunately, this program – Purchase Promise – is only available on purchase wells fargo bank locations mortgages and not for refinancing loans.Also, to qualify for the Purchase Promise you need to submit a full loan application with documentation at least 30 days prior to your closing date. You then must meet the underwriting conditions of your loan as quickly as possible.

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