The New York AG was involved in negotiating the first $25 Billion settlement last year, and now he has notified the Settlement Monitors that he will sue the banks for failing to honor the agreement.
“Wells Fargo and Bank of America have flagrantly violated those obligations, putting hundreds of homeowners across New York at greater risk of foreclosure,” Schneiderman said in a statement. “I intend to use every tool available to my office to hold these companies accountable.”
“Like General Schneiderman, I continue to believe there are areas in which the banks must improve their treatment of their customers,” Joe Smith, monitor of the National Mortgage Settlement, said Monday. As part of the settlement, Smith may conduct reviews of the banks’ compliance and report them to the public. “As Monitor, I intend to use the full breadth of my power under the Settlement to hold the banks accountable,” he said.
Advocacy groups have grown weary of the settlement. At the time the deal was reached, consumer advocates were pleased that it included extensive servicing standards to prevent a repeat of the types of abusive foreclosure practices that ran rampant during the housing crisis. But within months of the agreement, housing counselors started to receive complaints that servicers were back to their old behavior.
The settlement monitor, Joseph Smith, says his office received 5,818 consumer complaints about servicers through February and hundreds more that came from professionals such as lawyers.When oh when does somebody go to jail?
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments are moderated for relevance and civility. Spam is discarded.