Little discipline for foreclosure lawyers
MIKE SCHNEIDER, Associated Press, By MIKE SCHNEIDER and GARY FINEOUT, Associated Press
Updated 2:35 pm, Thursday, May 2, 2013
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Since
Florida's mortgage crisis began about six years ago, banks have agreed to pay
millions of dollars to settle allegations that they wrongfully foreclosed on
thousands of homeowners. Prosecutors have charged loan servicers with filing
fraudulent documents on behalf of banks.
But the law firms and lawyers
that homeowners and judges contend took part in those same practices? Some
critics are accusing Attorney General Pam
Bondi and the Florida
Bar of not going after them hard enough.
More than two years after
wrongdoing by lawyers caused banks to stop foreclosures temporarily, these
lawyers and their firms, which handled hundreds of thousands of foreclosures,
have been accused of falsifying documents through fake signatures and backdating
records and not giving homeowners proper notice that they faced foreclosure. Yet
they continue to practice without facing any type of discipline, either from the
criminal justice system or the
Bar.
Bondi says her attorneys' hands
were tied after an appellate court blocked an investigative subpoena from her
office, saying it lacked authority under the state's unfair trade practices law.
Because of the court decision, she said any discipline would have to come from
the Bar, which so far has initiated disciplinary proceedings against two
attorneys out of more than 330 cases it has investigated.
Attorneys for homeowners say
there are other ways Bondi could go after firms that engaged in fraudulent
practices other than using the unfair trade practices act. State prosecutors
could have gone after subsidiaries of the law firms or pursued criminal
investigative subpoenas.
"The door was left wide open and
the AG did nothing," said attorney Tom
Ice, who has represented homeowners who say they were cheated.
Added attorney Matt
Weidner, "You have an attorney general shrugging her shoulders and walking
away. How is this allowed to occur?"
Bondi said she would do more if
she could.
"I'm all about prosecuting bad
lawyers, believe me," she said.
In a statement Thursday, Bondi
said she was among the attorney generals who reached a nationwide $25 billion
settlement with five lenders over foreclosure abuses.
"As attorney general I've worked
aggressively to punish and remedy foreclosure-related wrongdoing, and any
assertion to the contrary is flatly untrue," Bondi said.
A bill that would have
overturned the court decision and subjected law firms to Florida's deceptive and
unfair trade practices act went nowhere this legislative session.
Meanwhile, the Florida
House has passed a separate bill would speed up the foreclosure process,
which many already consider too complicated and rushed for most homeowners —
even those with a solid claim to stay in their homes. Among other provisions,
the bill reduces the amount of time for banks to go after foreclosure homeowners
on deficiency judgments from five years to one year.
The Senate has until Friday to
pass the measure.
The proposal and a related
debate among lawyers, judges and politicians over how to inject more
accountability into the system, illustrate the troubles still facing Florida as
it slowly emerges from years of housing woes.
It also leaves questions about
whether homeowners are any safer from some of the practices that have made
matters worse. Florida had the nation's highest foreclosure rate last year, with
one in every 32 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing, and homeowners and
their lawyers say some of the questionable practices still go on. Those
practices include failing to do proper research to make sure a house deserves to
be foreclosed on, not giving proper notice to homeowners that their property
faces a foreclosure and moving forward with a foreclosure proceeding against a
homeowner at the same the homeowner is trying to negotiate an agreement with
the bank.
Documents provided in response
to a records request by The
Associated Press show that Bondi's office has received more than 200
foreclosure-related complaints from homeowners regarding eight law firms since
mid-2011 through the end of 2012. Of those, almost 90 were filed in the year
since the appellate court ruling forced Bondi's office to drop its probes.
A handful of Florida firms that
have handled hundreds of thousands of foreclosures have been accused by
homeowners, judges, other lawyers and former employees of, among other things,
attesting to the accuracy of affidavits where the signer hadn't read a word, and
of holding mass signings of documents by "robo-signers," workers who sometimes
faked signatures.
In one complaint filed with both
Bondi's office and the Bar, Bryan and Ileana
Russell said they received eviction notices last year from the law firm
Shapiro, Fishman & Gache, even though they have bank records proving they
have never missed a mortgage payment. Without their knowledge, two firms were
hired to put their house on the market and notify utilities to turn off their
electricity and water. The firms also posted notices demanding that the Russells
leave their suburban Tampa home.
The Russells' attorney
discovered that a mistake had been made and that the bank pursuing the
foreclosure had no standing to file the lawsuit. The Russells eventually got the
power company to transfer the account back to their names and persuaded a judge
to grant them "quiet title," an action establishing that the property belongs to
them and "quiets" any future claims.
If the Shapiro attorney who was
working at the bank's behest had done any research on the property, she would
have discovered the same thing, said Bryan
Russell, a reserve lieutenant colonel in the Air Force. The Florida
Supreme Court ordered in 2010 that all foreclosure complaints must be
investigated to make sure the allegations are true.
"It was absolutely insane. It
was constant harassment," Ileana Russell said.
Shapiro attorneys didn't respond
to multiple emails and phone calls.
In another example, a former
employee of Fort Lauderdale lawyer David
Stern testified that misconduct was rampant at Stern's
firm, which handled more than 140,000 foreclosure cases around the state. Kelly
Scott said in a 2010 deposition to state investigators that key documents
that had been missing would mysteriously reappear just in time; that workers
would backdate documents; and hide problem cases from their clients, including
lending giants Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac.
In late January, a month after
inquiries from the AP, the Florida Bar found probable cause for 17 counts
against Stern. The alleged violations include misconduct and failure to
supervise non-lawyers properly. Some of the complaints were more than two years
old and two even came from judges.
A formal complaint was sent this
month to the Florida Supreme Court, which will ultimately decide whether Stern
committed the violations and determine any punishment, which could include a
public reprimand or disbarment.
Stern's attorney Jeffrey Tew
said in a recent telephone interview that Stern never did
anything unethical.
"I don't think the Bar is going
to be able to prove that David did anything to merit sanctions or punishment,"
Tew said.
Marshall
Watson, the other attorney with a pending disciplinary action, could face a
91-day suspension from practicing law. He entered a conditional guilty plea to
the Bar complaint last December.
The Bar asserted that Watson,
whose firm was handling over 66,000 cases by the end of 2009, had failed to
supervise properly his employees and failed to maintain acceptable operating
policies. The Bar said Watson's firm failed to timely cancel foreclosure sales,
missed case management conferences and filed unverified
foreclosure complaints.
Watson didn't respond to an
email and phone call from The Associated Press seeking comment.
Ken Marvin, the head of lawyer
regulation for the Florida Bar, said the cases his group reviewed usually lacked
evidence of wrongdoing. Senior attorneys at three of the firms say the most
recent complaints are without merit.
Former Florida Bar president Mayanne
Downs says the group takes swift action if there is immediate harm to the
public. It is meticulous in its investigations, which have a six-year limit, and
"speed is not the No. 1 concern," she added.
"I don't know how much the
foreclosure problems were caused by ethical breaches as opposed to negligence,
and I don't know where those fault lines are," Downs said. "But I can tell you
this ... Those wheels may grind more slowly than all of us would hope in a
perfect world. But they get their man or woman, if they should be gotten."
___
Follow Mike Schneider at http://twitter.com/MikeSchneiderAP
and Gary Fineout at http://twitter.com/fineout
.
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/news/crime/article/Little-discipline-for-foreclosure-lawyers-4482781.php#ixzz2SVwlj1fl
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