Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
https://mfi-miami.com/2017/11/jpmorgan-chase-1/
JPMorgan Chase acquired Washington Mutual’s mortgage assets in 2008. Little did they know
that a decade later they would still be fighting costly foreclosure battles over them. These legal
battles have become so costly for JPMorgan Chase they began selling the loans and the
servicing rights at fire-sale prices.
JPMorgan Chase became so desperate to dump these mortgages, they are selling them in the
middle of foreclosure litigation. I have already had this happen in four of my foreclosure cases
involving old Washington Mutual loans.
JPMorgan Chase lawyers have also purposely postponed trial dates just so they could sell the
loan at top dollar.
Chase and their lawyers know most of these mortgages are unenforceable and are garbage.
They have their lawyers file the foreclosure anyway under the assumption that homeowners
and their lawyers are idiots. After all, most attorneys doing foreclosure defense are idiots.
Foreclosure mill attorneys are also betting they can intimidate the judge.
There are multiple ways to beat a foreclosure of an old Washington Mutual loan. However, its
a herculean endeavor that you don’t want to attempt as a Pro-Se litigant. I know because I
have kicked JPMorgan Chase’s ass on several of these files and I know what I’m doing.
I also have an external hard drive containing 500 GB of arguments, and depositions. The hard
drive also contains Linkedin profiles and dossiers of former Washington Mutual executives that
are no longer available. Who scrubbed them is up for debate but all evidence points to
JPMorgan Chase. A few of these former Washington Mutual executives went to work at
JPMorgan Chase during the financial crisis.
I have compiled the best and simplest ways to beat a foreclosure of an old Washington Mutual
Loan.
No Mortgage Assignment
In some cases, JPMorgan Chase failed to record mortgage assignments into their name with
the county. This creates a serious issue for the foreclosing party if the lien is still in Washington
Mutual’s name. As we all know, Washington Mutual has been officially dead for five years.
JPMorgan Chase cannot file any mortgage assignments. The FDIC only gave JPMorgan Chase
until December of 2014 to assign the liens away from Washington Mutual. JPM-Chase or the
current alleged debt holder would then have to bring a breach of contract civil suit. This opens
up a plethora of defenses not allowed under general foreclosure litigation.
Lawyers made these arguments until December of 2012 when the Michigan Supreme
Court ruled in Kim v JPMorgan Chase. The Court ruled that JPMorgan Chase was required to
record mortgage assignments on the public record. The court ruled JPMorgan Chase did not
acquire Washington Mutual as a corporate entity. Instead, they acquired assets of the company
through a third party, the FDIC. The court ruled a chain of ownership of the mortgage must be
recorded with the Register of Deeds. Other states soon followed. This created a mad dash by
JPMorgan Chase lawyers to record mortgage assignments.
In their mad dash to cover their ass, JPMorgan Chase lawyers ignored the white elephant in
the room. That elephant was the Washington Mutual bankruptcy that was playing out in federal
court in Delaware.
The Bankruptcy Court finalized plans to transfer all of all remaining Washington Mutual assets
to WMI Liquidating Trust. This order went into effective 3/19/2012. This was months before the
Kim ruling in Michigan.
The order also set a date to close out the FDIC responsibilities as the Receiver for Washington
Mutual. The court set the date of 12/23/2014 as the final day the FDIC could act as Attorney-
In-Fact for Washington Mutual.
The lawyers used by MFI-Miami successfully argued that mortgages assigned after 3/19/2012
needed to come from WMI Liquidating Trust. They argued the FDIC no longer had an interest.
They claimed that JPMorgan Chase’s acquisition of Washington Mutual assets from the FDIC
on 9/25/2008 allows them to claim “Operation of Law” under the FDIC Act.
JPMorgan Chase pointed to Section 11(d)(2)(G)(i)(II) of the FDIC Act. Lawyers argued
mortgage loans acquired from the FDIC were exempt from state recordation laws:
merge the insured depository institution with another insured depository institution; or
subject to clause (ii), transfer any asset or liability of the institution in default (including
assets and liabilities associated with any trust business) without any approval,
assignment, or consent with respect to such transfer.
Attorneys began attaching copies of the Purchase and Assumptions Agreements between the
FDIC and JPMorgan Chase from 9/25/2008.
Local courts ruled this section of the FDIC Act does not exempt JPMorgan Chase from state
recordation laws. One judge in Florida openly laughed when the JPMorgan Chase tried to argue
this. Apparently, others did as well. State courts across the county began shooting down this
argument by JPMorgan Chase lawyers.
Nearly half of the Washington Mutual loans currently in foreclosure were consummated after
November of 2006. Most of them contain Riley’s endorsement.
This was a big mystery until January of 2013 when Cynthia Riley sat for adeposition.
Riley admitted other people in her office used her stamp and she admitted she never stamped
any mortgage notes. Riley admitted in her deposition she was hired by JPMorgan Chase in
2009.
She remained employed at JPM-Chase until some time between October of 2014 and April of
2015. Attorney Daniel Milianattempted to force JPMorgan Chase to have her sit for a
deposition in theZacharakis case. Naturally, JPMorgan Chase dragged their feet with
responding to the motion for nearly 6 months. JPMorgan Chase then claimed her whereabouts
were unknown.
It appears JPMorgan Chase made sure her whereabouts would remain unknown. They
scrubbed the internet of any record of her connection with Washington Mutual or JPMorgan
Chase.
MFI-Miami discovered JPMorgan Chase was hiding a dirty secret. They were stamping these
Washington Mutual notes with the Cynthia Riley endorsement stamp between 2012 and 2014.
Several MFI-Miami clients had their 2009 or 2010 Washington Mutual foreclosure cases with
no endorsement stamp suddenly withdrawn. Only to have them refiled in 2013 or 2014 with
endorsed notes by Cynthia Riley.
JPMorgan Chase got really sloppy. JPMorgan Chase began compulsively stamping almost
every promissory note with Riley’s endorsement stamp. MFI-Miami has a file cabinet filled with
foreclosure files containing Riley’s stamp that weren’t consummated until months or years after
she left Washington Mutual.
JPM-Chase executives went into the basement storage room. They searched through old
Washington Mutual boxes and randomly dusted off the endorsement stamp of another former
Washington Mutual VP. This time, they picked former Vice President Jess Almanza.
Almanza served as Washington Mutual’s VP of Capital Markets/National Closing Operations
until July of 2006. He soon went to work for Bank of America after leaving Washington Mutual
according to hisLinkedin profile.
Almanza never went to work for JPM-Chase like Cynthia Riley. It appears Almanza’s
endorsement stamp was used without his consent.
JPM-Chase also sold off the servicing rights to any Washington Mutual loans they were
servicing to other mortgage servicers for a fraction of their value. Lone Star Fund’s Caliber
Home Loans bought the servicing rights to the majority of these. The rest seem to have landed
at Specialized Loan Servicing or Credit Suisse’s Select Portfolio Servicing.
Jami Dimon is probably sitting in his office high atop JPMorgan Chase headquarters on Park
Avenue laughing like a school girl.