Sunday, April 28, 2013

While Wronged Homeowners Got 300 Apiece in Foreclosure Settlement, Consultants Who Helped Protect Banks Got 2 Billion | Matt Taibbi | Rolling Stone

 From this piece:
The obscene greed-and-arrogance stories emanating from Wall Street are piling up so fast, it's getting hard to keep up. This one is from last week, but I missed it – it's about the foreclosure/robo-signing settlement that was concluded earlier this year.  The upshot of this story is that in advance of that notorious settlement, the government ordered banks to hire "independent" consultants to examine their loan files to see just exactly how corrupt they were.  Now it comes out that not only were these consultants not so independent, not only did they very likely skew the numbers seriously in favor of the banks, and not only were these few consultants paid over $2 billion (over 20 percent of the entire settlement amount) while the average homeowner only received $300 in the deal – in addition to all of that, it appears that federal regulators will not turn over the evidence of impropriety they discovered during these reviews to homeowners who may want to sue the banks.  In other words, the government not only ordered the banks to hire consultants who may have gamed the foreclosure settlement in favor of the banks, but the regulators themselves are hiding the information from the public in order to shield the banks from further lawsuits.




While Wronged Homeowners Got 300 Apiece in Foreclosure Settlement, Consultants Who Helped Protect Banks Got 2 Billion | Matt Taibbi | Rolling Stone

4 comments:

  1. I am always shocked by stories like this. It doesn't seem like it could be possible for this to happen. The greed is disgusting

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  2. This is a pretty crazy story, and stories like these are the reason why people don't like bankers/banking.

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  3. Apparently money is the root of evil.

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  4. While being in this class, I have definitely developed a strong "dislike" for regulators. I believe that there is a strong correlation between their work and what bankers want to portray. There is constant signs of corruption and dishonesty that allow bankers to get off easy or portray false reports. This story has just further enhanced my "dislike" for the regulation system and "independent" consultants.

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