A foreclosed home in Salt Lake City, Utah. Photo: Monica Almeida / The New York Times) |
by:
Ellen Brown, Truthout | News Analysis
An electronic database called MERS (Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems) has created defects in the chain of title to over
half the homes in America. Counties have been cheated out of millions of
dollars in recording fees, and their title records are in hopeless
disarray. Meanwhile, foreclosed and abandoned homes are blighting
neighborhoods. Straightening out the records and restoring the homes to
occupancy is clearly in the public interest, and the burden is on local
government to do it. But how? New legal developments are presenting some
innovative alternatives.
John O'Brien is register of deeds for Southern Essex County,
Massachusetts. He is mad as hell and he isn't going to take it anymore.
He calls his land registry a "crime scene." A formal forensic audit of
the properties for which he is responsible found that:
-
Only 16 percent of the mortgage assignments were valid.
-
Twenty-seven percent of the invalid assignments were fraudulent, 35
percent were "robo-signed" and 10 percent violated the Massachusetts
Mortgage Fraud Statute.
-
The identity of financial institutions that are current owners of the
mortgages could be determined for only 287 out of 473 (60 percent).
- There were 683 missing assignments for the 287 traced mortgages, representing approximately $180,000 in lost recording fees per 1,000 mortgages whose current ownership could be traced.
At the root of the problem is that title has been recorded in the name
of a private entity called MERS as a mere placeholder for the true
owners. The owners are a faceless, changing pool of investors owning
indeterminate portions of sliced and diced securitized properties. Their
identities have been so well hidden that their claims to title are now
in doubt. According to the auditor:
What this means is that ... the institutions - including many pension funds - that purchased these mortgages don't actually own them.... READ MORE
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