attorney-general

Huffington Post…

JPMorgan Chase & Co., UBS AG and Deutsche Bank AG are being probed in an expanded investigation by New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman into mortgage securitization, according to a person familiar with the matter.

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More Big Banks Added To Mortgage Securities Investigation

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Huffington Post…

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — A for-profit university operated by real estate mogul Donald Trump is being investigated by the New York Attorney General’s office. A spokesman for the Trump Entrepreneurial Initiative acknowledged receiving an inquiry from Attorney General Eric Schneiderman’s office and said the organization would cooperate with the probe. A person familiar with the situation tells The Associated Press that Schneiderman’s office is looking into claims that the developer and TV host exaggerated Trump University’s success. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the probe hasn’t yet been made public. The person says Schneiderman is investigating four other for-profit schools in a case looking at deceptive business practices. He’s found more than a dozen credible complaints. Trump announced Monday he would not pursue a presidential bid. The investigation was first reported by The New York Times.

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‘Trump University’ Under Investigation For ‘Deceptive Business Practices’

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David M. Abromowitz: Lemons Into Lemonade? Turning Flawed Foreclosures Into Mediated Modifications

November 7, 2010

Is anyone surprised? A mortgage finance industry built on sloppy paperwork, which reaped record profits processing consumers as if they were so many sheep to be fleeced, is caught churning out foreclosures built on sloppy paperwork, so homeowners can be dispossessed on the cheap. It is tempting to wish upon lenders all the retribution that our legal system can rain down. The Attorneys General of all 50 states, hardly a monolithic group politically, are so incensed that they have joined together and launched a full bore coordinated investigation into whether vast numbers of foreclosures were prosecuted based on false certifications and other violations of law. The US Attorney General is gearing up for a similar investigation into the possibility of rampant fraud or other criminal violations Private consumer watchdogs have long been raising similar allegations in defending borrowers facing foreclosure. We stand on the verge of massive litigation that could dwarf the tobacco cases and other national consumer protection efforts. Yet we still have a weak economy to think about, and widespread turmoil in the housing market doesn’t help. Millions of home owners may have had their legal rights violated, but tens of millions of Americans are also anxious about their home values; nearly 30 percent of homeowners with mortgages are drowning “underwater”. Even more worry about their ability to pay their mortgages, Lawsuits that drag on for years may some day bring justice for some borrowers. But in the meantime, how do other borrowers hang on? And what is the impact on the rest of us if home prices plummet again, as a cloud of uncertainty keeps the home buying market perpetually overcast? The best result from litigation therefore may be mediation. As the 50-state Attorney General task force faces off against a range of lenders and loan servicers, both sides should keep the ultimate goal in mind. Is the goal of the AGs to prove that wrongdoing was done? Or is it to get each home owner a fair hearing for his or her individual situation, one that offers a chance to work out a modification or other alternative to foreclosure? Do the lenders want to simply keep insisting they have done nothing wrong that really matters in the hopes of simply adding to the tidal wave of foreclosures? Or do they want to clear the air, restore the public’s confidence in them, and move forward to alternatives to foreclosure? Promisingly, reports so far indicate that the coalition of the AGs is focused more on modifications than reparations: “Instead of paying a huge fine, maybe have the servicers adequately fund a serious modification process,” lead Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller suggested. Hopefully recent election results won’t diminish their resolve or their unity. The AGs should insist on a remedy that has proven a valuable antidote against unnecessary foreclosures: mandatory mediation. As reports by the Center for American Progress and others have shown, states and cities “with fully implemented [mandatory mediation] programs such as Connecticut, Philadelphia, and Nevada report settlement rates nearing 75 percent, with the majority of homeowners remaining in their homes.” Unlike robo-signing and other practices that blindly push through foreclosures and ignore alternatives, mediation programs give the borrower a chance to sit face to face with a lender and a neutral third party and analyze the individual facts of each case. Borrower evidence of ability to pay a modified amount, which seems repeatedly to get lost in the foreclosure shuffle, suddenly cannot be ignored. And perhaps not surprisingly, even when foreclosure is the fair result, cases resolve faster once borrowers have had a chance to be heard in person. Mandatory mediation clears the system, something we desperately need. It does so in a way that feels fairer than what is currently transpiring. But if it’s so sensible, why would this alternative to the current crisis need to be mandated? Voluntary loan modification programs have fallen far short for years now. While many factors contributed to the logjam, it is clear that the incentives and the very structure of the home mortgage finance system tilt the table towards foreclosure as the route most mortgage servicers will follow. Most servicers work for investors who own pools of mortgages. The complicated agreements governing how servicers handle their work compensate foreclosure more than mediation. It takes more time, knowledge and staffing for a servicer to process modifications than it does to call up lawyers and start a foreclosure. And while foreclosure may yield less money for investors in the long run when all the costs are factored in, many of the foreclosure costs come “off the top” from the foreclosure sale, and are not borne by the servicer making the decisions. In short, the mortgage pooling system that was set up to encourage private money to flow into mortgages and make them cheaper for consumers is now a virtual doomsday machine for the economy. Unfortunately, Congressional forces believing in an unfettered financial system, even when it operates out of control to the detriment of all of us, have blocked attempts at bankruptcy reform and other proposals that could have stopped millions of foreclosures. The Attorneys General, however, wield a different club, one based on current law and requiring no action at the federal level. And in today’s Washington climate, that just may be the advantage needed to unlock the national foreclosure mess. David M. Abromowitz is a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress, www.americanprogress.org, and has written extensively on the foreclosue crisis.

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Connecticut Halts All Bank Foreclosures

October 1, 2010

Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal on Friday ordered a moratorium on all foreclosures by all banks for 60 days–the most radical action taken by a state on issue of document irregularities. California also expanded the moratorium on foreclosures it announced last week on Ally Financial foreclosures to include those by J.P. Morgan Chase. Calling the companies’ review of key foreclosure documents “a ruse,” California Attorney General Jerry Brown (D) ordered J.P. Morgan to prove it is following the law before it continues foreclosures in the state.

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Video: Langevoort Warns Against Downplaying Wall Street Probes: Video

May 14, 2010

May 14 (Bloomberg) — Donald Langevoort, a law professor at Georgetown University, talks to Bloomberg’s Erik Schatzker and Deirdre Bolton about regulatory scrutiny on Wall Street and New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo’s investigation into whether eight banks provided misleading information to credit-rating companies. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Coffey Says Change Needed in Function of Rating Agencies: Video

May 14, 2010

May 14 (Bloomberg) — John “Sean” Coffey, the New York securities class-action plaintiffs’ lawyer who won a $6.15 billion settlement for WorldCom Inc. investors, talks with Bloomberg’s Deirdre Bolton about New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo’s subpoena of eight banks to see whether they misled credit-rating services about mortgage-backed securities. Coffey is one of several candidates to succeed Cuomo. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Countrywide cuts mortgage amounts for some

March 26, 2010

homeowners who had mortgages with Countrywide Financial Corp. including hundreds in Massachusetts will be able to reduce their debt under a $3 billion settlement agreement the company struck with Attorney General Martha Coakley. As part of the

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Threatened Legal Action Over NYC Rent Control Likely to Roil CMBS Market

February 2, 2010

Another half a billion dollars in CMBS debt looks even weaker this week after New York Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo announced his intent to sue Vantage Properties LLC, a major New York City multifamily landlord. Cuomo sent a five-day notice letter…

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Citigroup ‘Free’ Checking Accounts: Bank Scraps Plan To Charge New Fees For ‘Free’ Checking Accounts

February 1, 2010

NEW YORK, Feb 1 (Reuters) – Citigroup Inc (C.N) has shelved plans to impose new fees on more than a million customers nationwide who took out “free checking” accounts with its Citibank unit, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said.

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Citibank to Keep Free Checking Services Through 2010 in Cuomo Agreement

February 1, 2010

By Linda Shen Feb. 1 (Bloomberg) — Citigroup Inc. ’s Citibank agreed to delay for a year imposing fees on more than 1 million U.S. consumers who signed up for what was promoted as “free checking” accounts, the New York Attorney General’s office said. The lender also will maintain features of the accounts for consumers who signed up in 2009 for the rest of this year, Andrew Cuomo’s office said today in an e-mailed statement. The bank will delay charging fees on checks until Jan. 31, 2011. The New York Attorney General’s office said the per-check fees would have cost consumers “tens of millions of dollars,” and “Citibank is doing the right thing for their customers through this agreement.” Cuomo’s office last year began investigating Citibank’s plan to stop waiving monthly fees unless customers maintained a minimum balance. Cuomo’s office said Citibank in changing its policy failed to tell customers they would face per-check fees unless they had a minimum balance, according to a Feb. 1 letter from the Attorney General’s office to Citibank. “We are pleased to have resolved concerns by the New York Attorney General’s office about recent changes to our checking account fee waivers,” said Citigroup spokesman Robert Julavits in an e-mailed statement. He declined to disclose the settlement’s financial impact. The bank’s North American consumer-banking business collected $2.69 billion in fees last year, the company reported Jan. 19. Citigroup shares were unchanged at $3.32 at 3:30 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading . The stock has dropped 6.8 percent in the past 12 months. To contact the reporter on this story: Linda Shen in New York at lshen21@bloomberg.net JoAnne Norton at jnorton@bloomberg.net

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Former Louisiana Attorney General Charles C. Foti, Jr. Named Partner in Kahn Swick & Foti, LLC

December 3, 2009

NEW ORLEANS, LA–(Marketwire – December 3, 2009) – Former Louisiana Attorney General Charles C. Foti, Jr. has joined New Orleans law firm Kahn Swick & Foti, LLC (“KSF”) as a named partner, the firm announced today. General Foti will continue his work with KSF’s securities and consumer fraud practice groups, including KSF’s institutional client base. Charles C. Foti, Jr. was sworn in on January 12, 2004 as Louisiana’s Attorney General, after serving for 30 years as one of the most innovative law enforcement officials in the United States, Orleans Parish Criminal Sheriff. Prior to holding that position, he served for numerous years as an attorney for several local, state and federal agencies.

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US- Coventry, NY Attorney General, agree to settlement

October 1, 2009

US- Coventry, NY Attorney General, agree to settlement

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CA Subpoenas Three Ratings Agencies

September 20, 2009

The California Attorney General has subpoenaed three ratings agencies to determine if they violated state law by assigning high ratings to mortgagebacked securities

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BofA Snaps Back At Andrew Cuomo, Says It’s Not Hiding Behind Lawyers

September 9, 2009

Bank of America Corp. fired back at New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo on Tuesday with a letter calling his office’s allegations of wrongdoing “spurious” and claiming the bank is not hiding behind its lawyers by refusing to provide testimony on privileged discussions surrounding the purchase of Merrill Lynch & Co.

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Video: Inside Look – Seeking More Information on UBS Accounts

August 28, 2009

Exclusive Interview with Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal (Bloomberg News)

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