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  • How It's Being Done

    April 24, 2009
    Tracking Loans Through a Firm That Holds Millions
    By MIKE McINTIRE

    Judge Walt Logan had seen enough. As a county judge in Florida, he had 28 cases pending in which an entity called MERS wanted to foreclose on homeowners even though it had never lent them any money.

    MERS, a tiny data-management company, claimed the right to foreclose, but would not explain how it came to possess the mortgage notes originally issued by banks. Judge Logan summoned a MERS lawyer to the Pinellas County courthouse and insisted that that fundamental question be answered before he permitted the drastic step of seizing someone’s home.
    “You don’t think that’s reasonable?” the judge asked.

    “I don’t,” the lawyer replied. “And in fact, not only do I think it’s not reasonable, often that’s going to be impossible.”

    Judge Logan had entered the murky realm of MERS. Although the average person has never heard of it, MERS — short for Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems — holds 60 million mortgages on American homes, through a legal maneuver that has saved banks more than $1 billion over the last decade but made life maddeningly difficult for some troubled homeowners.

    Created by lenders seeking to save millions of dollars on paperwork and public recording fees every time a loan changes hands, MERS is a confidential computer registry for trading mortgage loans. From an office in the Washington suburbs, it played an integral, if unsung, role in the proliferation of mortgage-backed securities that fueled the housing boom. But with the collapse of the housing market, the name of MERS has been popping up on foreclosure notices and on court dockets across the country, raising many questions about the way this controversial but legal process obscures the tortuous paths of mortgage ownership.

    If MERS began as a convenience, it has, in effect, become a corporate cloak: no matter how many times a mortgage is bundled, sliced up or resold, the public record often begins and ends with MERS. In the last few years, banks have initiated tens of thousands of foreclosures in the name of MERS — about 13,000 in the New York region alone since 2005 — confounding homeowners seeking relief directly from lenders and judges trying to help borrowers untangle loan ownership. What is more, the way MERS obscures loan ownership makes it difficult for communities to identify predatory lenders whose practices led to the high foreclosure rates that have blighted some neighborhoods.

    In Brooklyn, an elderly homeowner pursuing fraud claims had to go to court to learn the identity of the bank holding his mortgage note, which was concealed in the MERS system. In distressed neighborhoods of Atlanta, where MERS appeared as the most frequent filer of foreclosures, advocates wanting to engage lenders “face a challenge even finding someone with whom to begin the conversation,” according to a reportby NeighborWorks America, a community development group.

    To a number of critics, MERS has served to cushion banks from the fallout of their reckless lending practices.

    “I’m convinced that part of the scheme here is to exhaust the resources of consumers and their advocates,” said Marie McDonnell, a mortgage analyst in Orleans, Mass., who is a consultant for lawyers suing lenders. “This system removes transparency over what’s happening to these mortgage obligations and sows confusion, which can only benefit the banks.”
    A recent visitor to the MERS offices in Reston, Va., found the receptionist answering a telephone call from a befuddled borrower: “I’m sorry, ma’am, we can’t help you with your loan.”

    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/24/bu...ZLlGLugTvP0ZPQ

  • #2
    Re: How It's Being Done

    I had read of a judge who had denied a forclosure because the party could not produce the note. I'm surprised this doesn't get more coverage. Well I guess I'm not that suprised.

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    • #3
      Re: How It's Being Done

      "MERS" is Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. MERS is a separate corporation that is acting solely as a nominee for Lender and Lender's successors and assigns. MERS is the mortgagee under this Security Instrument. MERS is organized and existing under the laws of Delaware, and has an address and telephone number of P.O. Box 2026, Flint, MI 48501-2026, tel. (888) 679-MERS.

      Mers is growing in popularity, and probably the only growing business left in Flint Michigan.
      It adds a layer of anonymity.

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      • #4
        Re: How It's Being Done

        Originally posted by cjppjc View Post
        I had read of a judge who had denied a forclosure because the party could not produce the note. I'm surprised this doesn't get more coverage. Well I guess I'm not that suprised.
        I wonder how feasible it would be for a homeowner to find out what security their home is bundled in (identified by a CUSIP#). If you could find all the other homeowners that are also tied into that CUSIP, couldnt you theoretically purchase that security back from the "owners" at pennies on the dollar since the market has essentially collapsed?

        How in the heck could you ever begin this process, because it seems entirely feasible and would be incredible if you could accomplish it...
        Every interest bearing loan is mathematically impossible to pay back.

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        • #5
          Re: How It's Being Done

          Originally posted by ricket View Post
          How in the heck could you ever begin this process, because it seems entirely feasible and would be incredible if you could accomplish it...

          In Texas the county seat has the deed records, and will usually show you under the borrowers name when the deed was transfered to MERS

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          • #6
            Re: How It's Being Done

            Guess we shouldn't be surprised. Setting up electronic tracking is one thing; but then withholding identify of mortgage holder from homeowner and not being able or willing to answer questions is something else. Judges need to throw these cases out if MERS hasn't already provided full disclosure to homeowners, and then make sure they have no recourse. Disclosure problem would be fixed instantly.

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