Invasion of the Home Snatchers...Rut Roh

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Keep on Rockin in the Free World
I know I know I'm a dinosaur, yes I still maintain a subscroption to Rolling Stone magazine.

Anyways it came in the mail today, and I just finished reading a mind-blowing piece.

Matt Taibbi: Courts Helping Banks Screw Over Homeowners

Retired judges are rushing through complex cases to speed foreclosures in Florida

The foreclosure lawyers down in Jacksonville had warned me, but I was skeptical. They told me the state of Florida had created a special super-high-speed housing court with a specific mandate to rubber-stamp the legally dicey foreclosures by corporate mortgage pushers like Deutsche Bank and JP Morgan Chase. This "rocket docket," as it is called in town, is presided over by retired judges who seem to have no clue about the insanely complex financial instruments they are ruling on — securitized mortgages and laby*rinthine derivative deals of a type that didn't even exist when most of them were active members of the bench. Their stated mission isn't to decide right and wrong, but to clear cases and blast human beings out of their homes with ultimate velocity. They certainly have no incentive to penetrate the profound criminal mysteries of the great American mortgage bubble of the 2000s, perhaps the most complex Ponzi scheme in human history — an epic mountain range of corporate fraud in which Wall Street megabanks conspired first to collect huge numbers of subprime mortgages, then to unload them on unsuspecting third parties like pensions, trade unions and insurance companies (and, ultimately, you and me, as taxpayers) in the guise of AAA-rated investments. Selling lead as gold, sh*t as Chanel No. 5, was the essence of the booming international fraud scheme that created most all of these now-failing home mortgages. The rocket docket wasn't created to investigate any of that. It exists to launder the crime and bury the evidence by speeding thousands of fraudulent and predatory loans to the ends of their life cycles, so that the houses attached to them can be sold again with clean paperwork. The judges, in fact, openly admit that their primary mission is not justice but speed. One Jacksonville judge, the Honorable A.C. Soud, even told a local newspaper that his goal is to resolve 25 cases per hour. Given the way the system is rigged, that means His Honor could well be throwing one ass on the street every 2.4 minutes.
Foreclosure lawyers told me one other thing about the rocket docket. The hearings, they said, aren't exactly public. "The judges might give you a hard time about watching," one lawyer warned. "They're not exactly anxious for people to know about this stuff." Inwardly, I laughed at this — it sounded like typical activist paranoia. The notion that a judge would try to prevent any citizen, much less a member of the media, from watching an open civil hearing sounded ridiculous. Fecked-up as everyone knows the state of Florida is, it couldn't be that bad. It isn't Indonesia. Right?
Rolling Stone Article continues here



Cliff Notes for those not into reading :

__________________
"The greatest danger for most of us is not that our aim is too high and we miss it, but that it is too low and we reach it." - Michelangelo.



Keep on Rockin in the Free World
It was featured on 60 minutes, I guess its ok for folks to pay attention now.

http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=4668112n

Weird this was originally aired on December 14, 2008 but was buried in the media as that was the day Bush had a shoe thrown at him, which dominated the news cycle.



Keep on Rockin in the Free World
Whoops posted wrong 60 minutes expose. I'll leave the other one up though, some good info there.


this is the one aired April 3rd

The next housing shock
As more and more Americans face mortgage foreclosure, banks' crucial ownership documents for the properties are often unclear and are sometimes even bogus, a condition that's causing lawsuits and hampering an already weak housing market. Scott Pelley reports.
Video available here in its entirety

http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?...ag=mncol;lst;1