An Inquiry into the Legal Standing of Rogue REMICS in Foreclosures

105 Pages Posted: 21 Jul 2016

See all articles by James Campbell

James Campbell

University of Washington, Bothell, Students

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Date Written: July 16, 2016

Abstract

The business of privatized mortgage loan securitization (Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduits or “REMICS”) is so arcane and specialized that few people outside of that realm of investment knowledge understand, or even care to understand how loan securitization functions. However, if the difference between a legitimate REMIC and a Rogue REMIC is adequately explained, one can begin to understand why Rogue REMICs must be exposed as unlawful enterprises whose affiliates are not only able to disregard existing federal securities and tax laws, but are also able to circumvent state and local foreclosure laws at will. These ongoing violations result from the intentional and commonplace shortcutting of the proper mortgage loan securitization processes during the several years preceding the 2008 financial crisis. This Inquiry will not focus primarily on how and why Rogue REMICS violate federal tax and securities laws; although those aspects are part of the discussion by necessity. I will argue that all Rogues lack the perquisite legal standing to prosecute both judicial and non-judicial foreclosures. I will present compelling evidence that, in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, foreclosures by Rogues may have exceeded 10% of all foreclosures. I will further argue that county officials may be violating state laws by recording the documents that impart false legal standing to the Rogues. I will conclude with a suggestion to homeowners on how to proceed if a mortgage assignment to a Rogue turns up in the local County public records.

Keywords: Remic, securitizwd trust, MBS, mortgage assignment, Independent foreclosure review, unlawful foreclosure,

Suggested Citation

Campbell, James, An Inquiry into the Legal Standing of Rogue REMICS in Foreclosures (July 16, 2016). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2810583 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2810583

James Campbell (Contact Author)

University of Washington, Bothell, Students ( email )

18115 Campus Way NE
Bothell, WA 98011
United States

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