Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are overseen by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. This agency is moving forward to sue more than a dozen of the largest banks in the country. The banks allegedly misrepresented information concerning mortgage securities they had sold during the course of the housing bubble. The lawsuit seeks several billion dollars in compensation. It is estimated that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac lost in excess of 30 billion dollars during the real estate bubble.
Attorney General Negotiating Settlement
In addition to this lawsuit, all 50 State Attorney Generals are in the process of negotiating a settlement that deals with the abuses of the large banks, including Bank of America, JP Morgan and Citibank, with regard to the mortgage process. It is anticipated the banks will pay in excess of 20 billion dollars in fines and penalties as a result of the negotiations with the Attorney General.
American International Group (AIG) Lawsuit
American International Group has brought litigation against Country Wide Financial, Bank of America and Merrill Lynch. They claim they misrepresented information concerning mortgage backed securities.
If you are a victim of the mortgage crisis in America, we can help you. We attend foreclosure court conferences on your behalf. We can submit an answer to your foreclosure proceeding that can include defenses involving defective mortgages, defective foreclosure lawsuits, predatory lending and other real estate related defenses. We are knowledgeable about federal laws and foreclosure. We will provide you at the time of the initial consultation with all of your foreclosure options. These options will include foreclosure related bankruptcies. The filing of either a Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy will stop foreclosures from moving forward. Filing a bankruptcy will alsostop debt collectors and collection lawyers that may be harassing you. There are many bankruptcy myths that are untrue. Bankruptcy will not permanently destroy your credit. We will be able to help you re-establish credit after filing a bankruptcy.
Call us for a free consultation, we can help you. Thank you for visiting our foreclosure blog.










Foreclosure rates have been climbing on Long Island for the past few months. The increase in foreclosure rates is related to lenders moving more vigorously to foreclose on homes after stopping for several months to review their practices to make sure they are in compliance with state and local laws. After employees from financial institutions admitted that they had signed foreclosure documents without reading them, New York state courts began requiring lenders and lawyers to scrutinize and check the paperwork they receive from their clients. State court judges have been aggressive in seeing to it that the lenders have all of the appropriate paperwork before they move forward with foreclosure proceedings.




