Showing newest 3 of 9 posts from 11/1/09 - 11/8/09. Show older posts
Showing newest 3 of 9 posts from 11/1/09 - 11/8/09. Show older posts

Nov 7, 2009

Foreclosure Rights

ATTACHEMENT

Causes of Action

WAIVER AND ESTOPPEL

The defendant claims the plaintiff, by offering a stay of the matter of a detainer and holdover action is saying one thing but does another," intending to gain advantage of timing and favor of the court. Plaintiff should be held by to what was first said. If the plaintiff told or promised defendant to set aside the matter indefinitely and / or continue the matter subject to informing the court the defendant would be in reliance of this understanding and therefore be unaware of the judgment entered against defendant.

LACHES

The plaintiff has failed to act promptly to enforce their rights. Defendant claims the plaintiff has intentionally waited a long time to file its Notice of Sale and action for unlawful detainer without providing any good reason for the delay, abandoning its claims' and causing defendant undue duress and willful mental anguish. Defendant has endured a difficult time from commencement of the 30 days window for Plaintiff to adhere to California cc29235 to present time and this made it all but harder to defend its case,

CONTRACT VOID AS AGAINST PUBLIC POLICY

Plaintiffs filing for unlawful detainer action must merely demonstrate where clean title can transfer under the deed of trust and a beneficiary's right to accelerate provided by power of sale granted to it. Plaintiff's willingness to circumvent the borrower's rights to payback the entire obligation under a plan of relief and modified contract is deceptive and willful avoidance of California Amended Civil Code 2923.5. Therefore avoidance of a reasonable effort to cure the problem caused at origination shall subject defendants to predatory servicing and a wrongful recovery seen as a fraud against the court where plaintiff is in reliance on the court's limited jurisdiction whereby the deed is rendered unenforceable as a security where it rests in a defective state.

ANTICIPATORY REPUDIATION

Where the Plaintiff has transferred and conferred its title, the conveyance is subject to a claim of a voidable transfer. The defect condition of the deed is from breach of Plaintiffs duties under a Power of Sale and civil code 2923.5. Therefore the sale the sale must fail and be subject to rescission of the notice of sale. Plaintiff cancelled the agreement to merely offer a reasonable effort to accommodate the defendants desire to "explore all options" and fulfill the term statutory requirements for avoiding any defective claims against title and transfer in a recovery under a power of sale. Plaintiff is cognizant of the court's jurisdiction citing the plaintiff's advantage in a recovery while having only a slight burden for using even a minimum level of reasonable effort in satisfying its obligation under ccc §2923.5. Plaintiff having acted within a term prior to 30 days elected to pull out of the offer with no substantial evidence shown as cause of denial or reasons for not granting relief and precluded defendant from any chance to perform or fulfill their part of the proposed contract offer.

IMPROPER NOTICE OF BREACH

Plaintiff did not advise or communicate anything before rescinding the offer suing for violating the terms of the contract, and therefore denied Defendant any the opportunity to cure the problem. In this notice of breach the plaintiffs performance of the contract would satisfy it terms subject to circumvention by the Plaintiffs caused solely by a failure to provide notice while being deprived of any opportunity to fix the problem.


FAILURE TO EXHAUST

ADMINISTRATIVE REMEDIES

You may use this defense if the plaintiff was supposed to pursue different administrative avenues but failed to do so before suing you. This defense is most commonly used by government agencies or businesses.

FAILURE TO PURSUE ALTERNATIVE

DISPUTE RESOLUTION (ADR)

You may use this defense if the lender suing you failed to request mediation or arbitration as required before filing a lawsuit.

CAUTION: If you think this affirmative defense applies to you, and you want to enforce an arbitration clause in the contract which is the subject of the lawsuit, filing an answer alone, without filing a petition to compel arbitration at the same time, may cause you to waive your right to have the dispute resolved through arbitration. You can get a form for filing a petition to compel arbitration from the court's Self-Help Legal Access Center.

LACK OF PRIVITIES

You can raise this defense if there was no contract or agreement between you and the lender suing you, or the debt was not properly assigned to the party suing you.

STATUTE OF FRAUDS

The "Statute of Frauds" is a law that requires many different types of contracts be in writing. There are some exceptions to the Statute of Frauds, but if you think the claim the plaintiff is suing you for arose out of an agreement that was required by law to be in writing, but was not in writing, this defense may apply to you.

PAROLE EVIDENCE RULE

The law states that when a lenders staff put their agreements in writing, the written contract takes priority over whatever else is said in relation to the agreement. If the plaintiff's claims are based on a verbal statement that contradicts, or falls outside the written terms of the agreement, you may raise this defense.

FRUSTRATION OF PURPOSE

If enforcement of the actual contract goes against the very purpose of the agreement you made with the party suing you, you may raise this defense.

FAILURE OF CONDITION PRECEDENT

Sometimes one party's performance of a contract is dependent on someone else first performing an obligation, or something else happening first. If someone else was required to do something before you had to perform your obligations under the contract but failed to do it, or something was required to happen before you had to perform but it did not happen, you may raise this defense.

BREACH BY PLAINTIFF

If the lender suing you broke their end of the contract first, and you believe you were therefore excused from performing your part, you can raise this defense.

ANTICIPATORY REPUDIATION

If the Lender suing you cancelled the offer for a modification contract, or pulled out of the deal before you had a chance to perform your part of the contract, you can raise this defense.

ATTORNEY'S FEES NOT RECOVERABLE

The law only allows the winning side in a lawsuit to be reimbursed the money they paid for attorney's fees if the contract upon which the lawsuit is based says that the winning side can recover attorney's fees, or a statute (law) says the winning side can recover attorney's fees. If the plaintiff has asked for reimbursement of attorney's fees but there is no contract provision or law that entitles plaintiff to recover attorney's fees, you can raise this defense.


EXPERT.WITNESS@LIVE .COM






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HOME EQUITY LINE OF CREDIT

Home Equity Lines Of Credit May Be Dischargeable Even When Borrower LiesA bankruptcy ruling from the Northern District of California could have enormous impact to the subprime loan crisis. Despite finding that the borrowers lied and would otherwise not be eligible for a bankruptcy discharge, the Court concluded that typical "liar loans" which underlie much of the subprime crisis are dischargeable because no lender would have reasonably relied on the representations contained in the loan application.

Home Equity Lines Of Credit May Be Dischargeable Even When Borrower LiesA bankruptcy ruling from the Northern District of California could have enormous impact to the subprime loan crisis. Despite finding that the borrowers lied and would otherwise not be eligible for a bankruptcy discharge, the Court concluded that typical "liar loans" which underlie much of the subprime crisis are dischargeable because no lender would have reasonably relied on the representations contained in the loan application.

Judge Leslie Tchaikovsky, a bankruptcy judge in the Northern District of California (National City Bank v. Hill, United States Bankruptcy Court, Northern District of California, Case No. A.P. 07-4106 (May 28, 2008)) issued a ruling that could have enormous impact on future lending practices and workouts in the current subprime meltdown. The underlying circumstances are typical. In the words of the ruling, "This adversary proceeding is a poster child for some of the practices that have led to the current crisis in our housing market. Indeed. The debtors, the Hills, bought their home in El Sobrante, California, twenty years ago for $220,000. After at least five refinances, their total debt on the home at the time they filed for Chapter 7 in April of 2007 was $683,000."

The case involves a borrower pursued by a subordinate lender attempting to collect a subprime mortgage. The subprime second trust deed was a "stated income" or "liar" loan. In these borrowing situations, the borrower is not required to document his income with income tax returns, pay stubs, or other records. The first trust deed foreclosed on the home at the amount owed to the senior lender. The line of credit lender (who was in a second position) then pursued the borrower. The borrower filed bankruptcy, but the lender objected to a debt discharge based on §523(a)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code. Under this section, debts obtained under "false pretenses, a false representation, or actual fraud" are not dischargeable.

The lender argued that the debt should be non-dischargeable because the debtors made material false representations (namely, lying about their income). The Court concluded that the debtors had lied to the bank, but the Court then held that the bank did not "reasonably rely" on the misrepresentations. Stated otherwise, if you make a "liar loan", you cannot make claims about the lies. In the Court's words:

"However, the Bank's suit fails due to its failure to prove the sixth element of its claim: i.e., the reasonableness of its reliance. As stated above, the reasonableness of a creditor's reliance is judged by an objective standard. In general, a lender's reliance is reasonable if it followed its normal business practices. However, this may not be enough if those practices deviate from industry standards or if the creditor ignored a "red flag." See Cohn, 54 F.3d at 1117. Here, it is highly questionable whether the industry standards - as those standards are reflected by the Guidelines - were objectively reasonable. However, even if they were, the Bank clearly deviated to some extent from those standards. In addition, the Bank ignored a "red flag" that should have called for more investigation concerning the accuracy of the income figures. …

Based on the foregoing, the Court concludes that either the Bank did not rely on the Debtors representations concerning their income or that its reliance was not reasonable based on an objective standard. In fact, the minimal verification required by an "income stated" loan, as established by the Guidelines, suggests that this type of loan is essentially an "asset based" loan. In other words, the Court surmises that the Bank made the loan principally in reliance on the value of the collateral: i.e., the House. If so, the Bank obtained the appraisal upon which it principally relied in making the loan. Subsequent events strongly suggest that the appraisal was inflated. However, under these circumstances, the Debtors cannot be blamed for the Bank's loss, and the Bank's claim should be discharged." (Emphasis added)

Precisely because the loans are subject to such abuse, we have previously called for Congress to outlaw liar loans. Fulcrum Inquiry is a financial consulting firm that performs forensic accounting and economic studies, appraisals and financial investigations.


 


 

Nov 4, 2009

COMPLAINT FOR WRONGFUL FORECLOSURE






Dated this November 10, 2009


CASE NO: _______












NATURE OF THE ACTION


  1. This case arises out of Defendants' egregious and ongoing and far reaching fraudulent schemes for improper use of of Plaintiff's identity, negligent and/or intentional misrepresentation of appraised fair market value upon which Plaintiff was contractually bound to rely and factually entitled to rely, fraud in the inducement, fraud in the execution, usury, and breaches of contractual and fiduciary obligations as Mortgagee or "Trustee" on the Deed of Trust, "Mortgage Brokers," "Loan Originators," "Loan Seller","Mortgage Aggregator," "Trustee of Pooled Assets", "Trustee or officers of Structured Investment Vehicle", "Investment Banker", "Trustee of Special Purpose Vehicle/Issuer of Certificates of 'Asset-backed Certificates'", "Seller of 'Asset-Backed' Certificates (shares or bonds)," "Special Servicer" and Trustee, respectively, of certain mortgage loans pooled together in a trust fund.


2. The participants in the securitization scheme described herein have devised business plans to reap millions of dollars in profits at the expense of Plaintiff and other investors in certain

trust funds 3. In addition to seeking compensatory, consequential and other damages, Plaintiff seeks declaratory relief as to what (if any) party, entity or individual or group thereof is the owner

of the promissory note executed at the time of the loan closing, and whether the Deed of Trust (Mortgage) secures any obligation of the Plaintiff, and A Mandatory Injunction requiring reconveyance of the subject property to the Plaintiff or, in the alternative a Final

Judgment granting Plaintiff Quiet Title in the subject property.



FACTS

SUMMARY OF THE FACTS OF THIS CASE

4. Plaintiff is the nominal payor on the subject promissory Note. The Loan Seller is a financial institution that was paid a fee to pose as a residential mortgage lender, when in fact the source of loan funds and the actual lender (Investors in Certificates) and underwriter

(Mortgage Aggregator and Investment Banker) were other parties whose identities and receipt of fees and profits were withheld from Plaintiff at Closing and despite numerous requests continue to be withheld from Plaintiff by the Defendants contrary to the requirements of Federal Law and applicable State Law.

5. Unknown to Plaintiff, the Loan Seller, acting as principal in its relationships with the "independent appraiser" of the property and the mortgage broker and mortgage originator, induced the Plaintiff into a transaction that did not and could not meet normal underwriting

standards for a residential mortgage. The Loan Seller posed as a conventional mortgage lender thus leading Plaintiff to reasonably believe that the Loan Seller, the mortgage broker, and the loan originator had an interest in the success( repayment of the loan) of the transaction that Plaintiff was induced to believe was being executed at the time of the "closing" of the subject loan transaction.

6. In fact, the Loan Seller, mortgage broker, appraiser, loan originator, title agent, escrow agent and Trustee on the Deed of Trust, had no financial stake (i.e., liability) in the transaction and

no interest other than obtaining Plaintiff's signature on a "loan" that could never be repaid, contrary to representations and assurances from the conspiring participants in this fraudulent scheme. In fact, the "Appraisal" was intentionally and knowingly inflated along with other loan data to justify the closing of the "loan transaction."

7. Plaintiff relied upon the due diligence of the apparent "Lender" (i.e., actually the Loan Seller) in executing the and accepting the closing documents. In fact, no "lender" was involved in

the closing in the sense of an entity performing due diligence and evaluation pursuant to national standards for underwriting and evaluating risk of loaning money in a residential loan

closing.

8. Thus no bank or other financial institution actually performing under the standards, rules and regulations governing such institutions was the "lender" which is the basis for Plaintiff's cause of action for usury, to wit: that the inflated appraisal added an undisclosed cost to the loan which when added to the other terms, disclosed and undisclosed, and amortized over the real expected life of the "loan" exceeds the limits set by the State legislature for usury and is not subject to exemption because the presence of a financial institution in the transaction was a ruse in which the form of the transaction covered over and mislead the Plaintiff as to the real parties in interest and the fees generated by the production of the subject "loan transaction." Their purpose was solely to collect fees, rebates, kickbacks and profits that were never

disclosed to Plaintiff and have only recently been discovered by Plaintiff through

consultation with experts in securitization of residential mortgage loans, and diligent research

including the filings of some parties with the Securities and exchange Commission which

disclose the normal manner of operating this fraudulent scheme.

0. Plaintiff has repeatedly requested and demanded compliance with Qualified Written Requests under Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, the Truth in Lending Act, and other applicable state and Federal Statutes which the Defendants have either ignored or refused to acknowledge or refused to resolve, copies of which demands are attached hereto as Exhibits and incorporated herein.

1. Plaintiff's Counsel and other professionals hired by Plaintiff have conducted interviews with witnesses and have personally observed the practices and facts alleged herein. Besides theobvious theft of identity which lies at the core of the pattern of conduct defining the Defendants' illegal and fraudulent scheme, it is observably obvious that the property was appraised improperly, never verified despite "stringent" underwriting standards imposed by Government Sponsored Entities (interim investors) with which the Defendants purported to comply (and did not) to wit: the appraisal report attached hereto and incorporated herein clearly shows the fair market value of the site (without improvements) quadrupling in less than 24 months and then returning to original value within 6 months after the closing of the "loan" transaction.

2. Further, no less than three legal persons apparently claim to have performed the appraisal only two of which are shown to have received compensation and one of which is already admitted as merely being a pass-through vehicle of Quicken Loans by which Quicken Loans could claim, but not earn, additional undisclosed fees. Upon information and believe Defendant (name) may have performed the only review for appraisal services although the appraisal report was apparently produced by Defendant Cornerstone for a fee of $450 onto which the stamped signature of Defendant Quintero appears. Quintero does not claim to be an employee of Cornerstone and is believed by Plaintiff to be an "independent contractor". The settlement statement also reports an appraisal fee to Defendant TSI, which is a vehicle through which Quicken Loans improperly charges borrowers undisclosed fees and does not perform any work whatsoever.

3.The Loan Seller was named as the Payee on the subject promissory note and the beneficiary under the mortgage terms allegedly securing the performance under the subject note. The "Trustee" was named as the Trustee on the Deed of Trust executed at the time of the alleged"closing" of the "loan transaction." In accordance with State law, the Deed and terms of security were recorded in the county records.

4.Notwithstanding the above, and without the knowledge of the Plaintiff, the Loan Seller had entered into Assignment and Assumption Agreements with one or more parties and Pooling and Service Agreements with one or more parties including but not limited to the mortgage aggregator prior to or contemporaneously with the "Closing" of the subject "loan transaction."

14.1. Under the terms of these agreements, the Loan Seller received a sum of money, usually on receiving an application for a loan equal to the gross amount of the loan sought by Plaintiff plus a fee of 2.5% or more which was allocated to the subject loan transaction. 15.Contrary to the documents presented before and during the "closing" of the "loan transaction" the Loan Seller was neither the source of funding nor the "Lender."

15.1. Thus at the time of recording, the source of funding and the "Lender" was a different entity than the nominal mortgagee or beneficiary under the deed of trust and was neither named nor disclosed in any fashion.

15.2. The security for the "loan" thus secured an obligation that had been paid in full by a third party. Said third party(ies) was acting as a financial institution or "Lender" without even having been chartered or registered to do so despite regulations to the contrary from laws and rules of State or Federal authorities and/or agencies.

16.Some form of documentation represented by the Loan Seller to the Mortgage Aggregator was presented before or contemporaneously with the "closing" of the loan" transaction. In some cases the documentation included actual copies of the documents presented at "Closing."

16.1. In most cases it consisted of either forged blank notes or vague descriptions of the content of the notes that were placed into the pool of assets that would be "securitized."

16.2. Plaintiff has discovered numerous cases in which the "loan closing" either did not take place at all or included documentation substantially different than the original offer and acceptance and substantially different than what could have been reported to the Mortgage Aggregator prior to the "closing." Plaintiff has discovered numerous cases

in which foreclosure has proceeded despite the fact that no loan closing was ever

consummated, no papers were ever signed, or the loans were properly rescinded

properly under law.

17.Plaintiff does not know what version of documentation was presented to the Mortgage

Aggregator and if the Mortgage Aggregator took one or more varying descriptions of the

alleged "loan documents" into more than one pool of assets which was eventually sold for

the purpose of securitizing the assets of the pool which included the subject loan transaction

either once or more than once. Plaintiff has requested such information numerous times only

to be met with complete silence and defiance or obfuscation from the Defendants.

18.There is no assignment of the subject mortgage in the county records, but there is a non-recorded Pooling and Services" Agreement and a non-recorded Assignment and Assumption Agreement which appears to substitute the Trustee over the pooled assets for the nominal Trustee in the Deed of Trust.

18.1. The powers of this second Trustee were in turn transferred to either a Trustee for a Special Investment Vehicle (which performed the accounting and reporting of the pool assets) or to an investment bank Collateral Debt Obligation manager whose department performed the accounting and reporting of the pool assets.

18.2. The reporting of the pool assets consisted principally of descriptions of the notes "signed" by borrowers and limited descriptions of the general terms of the note such

that the note appeared to be more valuable than the initial terms of payment by the "borrower."

19.The note from the subject "loan transaction" was eventually allocated into a new corporation (Special Purpose Vehicle) formed for the express purpose of holding the pooled assets under certain terms.

19.1. The terms included the allocation of payments from one note to pay any deficiency in payment of another note in unrelated "loan transactions" contrary to the terms of each such note which required payments to be allocated to the principal, interest, escrow

and fees associated with only that specific "loan transaction."

19.2. Whether such "deficiency" was caused by the difference between the higher general

terms of description of the note or the lower actual payment requirements from the

"borrower" is not known, despite numerous requests for accounting and the refusal of

Defendants to provide any such information.

0.The Investment Banking firm arranged through payment for a false inflated appraisal of the

certificates and/or issuer of the certificates that would be sold to investors in much the same

way as it had procured the false appraisal of the property that "secured" the "loan

transaction." In addition, insurance was purchased from proceeds of this transaction, credit

default swaps were purchased from proceeds of this transaction, the investors investments

were "oversold" to create a reserve pool from which the SPV could pay deficiencies in

payments, and the SPV created cross-collateralization agreements and overcollateralization

of the pool assets to assure payments to the investors, thus creating co-obligors on the

payment stream due from the Plaintiff on the subject "loan transaction."

1.The pool assets, including the Plaintiff's subject "loan transaction " were pledged completely

to the owners of the "asset-backed securities." All the certificates were then transferred to a

Seller who in turn sold the certificates in varying denominations, each of which had slightly

different terms depending upon which segment of the pool (tranche) secured the investment.

2. If there is a holder in due course of the Plaintiff's note arising from the subject "loan

transaction" it is the investors who purchased said securities (certificates). Some of said

securities are held by the original purchaser thereof, others were sold at weekly auction

markets, others were paid by re-sales of property that was "secured", others were paid from

prepayments, others were paid by sale at full or partial price to the investment bank that

originated the entire transaction, some of which might be held by the Federal Reserve as non-

recourse collateral, and others might have been paid by one or more of the insurance, credit

default swaps, cross guarantees or cross collateralization of the segment of the pool that

secured the relevant investor who owned certificates backed by a pool of assets that included

the subject "loan transaction."

3. It is doubtful that any of the Defendants have any knowledge or have made any effort to

determine whether the putative holders in due course have been paid in whole or in part. It

can only be said with certainty that these Defendants seek to enforce loan documents for

which they have already been paid in full plus illegal fees for participating in an illegal scheme. These Defendants seek to add insult to injury by demanding ownership of the property in addition to the receipt of payment in full long before any delinquency or default

even allegedly occurred.

4. In order for these Defendants to maintain legal standing in connection with the subject loan transaction they are required to show the entire chain of title of the note and the entire chain

of title of the mortgage. They have refused to do this despite numerous requests, leading PLaintiff to concluded that the Defendants cannot produce such evidence of a complete chain of title or are intentionally withholding the information that would show breaks in such chain.

5.Plaintiff is left in the position of being in an adversary roceeding with ghosts. While these Defendants have informally offered or considered providing indemnification for any third party claims, the fact remains that any relief awarded these defendants, any standing allowed to these defendants would expose the Plaintiff to multiple claims and suits from an unknown number of parties and entities that all claim, possibly correctly, to the holders in due course.

Any grant of ac certificate of title to an entity other than Plaintiff or the nominal mortgagee creates an incurable defect in title.

26.There is no recording of any document in the county records which predates the Defendants' attempt to initiate foreclosure and/or eviction or which would authorize them to proceed.

Significance of REMIC

27.Mortgage backed Securities (MBS) Certificates are "pass through Certificates," where the Trust has elected to be treated as a Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduit ("REMIC") to enjoy the tax exempt status allowed under 15 U.S.C. §§806A-G.

27.1. REMIC regulations impose very strict limitations as to the nature of the investments a

REMIC trust may make (i.e. "permitted investments") and transactions which it may

not undertake (i.e. "prohibited transactions").

27.2. Any violation of REMIC regulations has significant tax implications for the Trust, as well as all Certificate holders. For example, any income realized by the Trust from a "prohibited transaction" is taxed at 100%.

27.2.1. The REMIC regulations also provide that any entity that causes the REMIC regulations to be violated is liable to the Trust and the Certificate holders for the entire amount of the tax.

27.3. Only income from "qualified mortgages" and "permitted investments" may enter a REMIC trust.

27.4. A "qualified mortgage" is an obligation (i.e. mortgage) which is principally secured by

an interest in real property which (1) was transferred to the Trust on the startup date,

(2) was purchased by the REMIC Trust within 3 months after the startup date or (3)

any qualified replacement mortgage.

27.5. Permitted investments are limited to:

27.5.1. Cash Flow Investments (i.e. temporary investment where the Trust holds money

it has received from qualified mortgages pending distribution to the

Certificateholders);

27.5.2. Qualified Reserve Assets (i.e. any intangible property which is held for

investment and is part of a reasonably required reserve to provide for full

payment of expenses of the REMIC or amounts due on regular interests in the

event of defaults on qualified mortgages or lower than expected returns on cash

flow investments.

27.5.2.1. These investments are for very defined purposes and are to be passive in

nature. They must be "reasonably required."

27.5.3. Liquidation Proceeds from "foreclosed property" which is acquired in connection with the default or imminent default of a "qualified mortgage" held by the Trust.

28. In order to maintain the REMIC status, the Trustee and the Servicers must ensure that the REMIC receives no income from any asset that is not a "Quailed Mortgage" or a "Permitted Investment." 26 U.S.C. § 806F(a)(2)(B). 28.1. Prohibited Transactions include the disposition of a qualified mortgage (except where the disposition is "incident to" the foreclosure, default, or imminent default of the mortgage); or the receipt of any income from an asset that is not a Qualified Mortgage

or a Permitted Investment. 26 U.S.C. § 860F(a)(2)(B).

28.2. Prohibited Transactions are taxed in an amount 100% of the REMIC's net income

from such prohibited transaction. 26 U.S.C. § 860F(a)(1).

28.3. Contributions of any "property" – e.g., cash, mortgages, etc. – made to the REMIC are

taxed at 100% of the contribution, except for the four following exceptions:

28.3.1. Contributions to facilitate a "clean up call" (i.e. the redemption of a class of

28.3.2. regular interest, when by reason of prior payments with respect to those interests

28.3.3. the administrative costs associated with servicing that class outweigh the

benefits

28.3.4. of maintaining the class). Reg. § 1.860G-2(j)(1).

28.3.5. Any cash payment in the nature of a guarantee, such as payments to the REMIC Any violation of REMIC regulations will defeat the privileged tax status and will subject the REMIC to 100% taxation, plus penalties and interest. These taxes and penalties are ultimately borne by the Certificate holders. under a surety bond, letter of credit or insurance policy.

28.3.6. Any cash contribution during the three month period after the start-up day; and Any cash contribution to a qualified reserve fund made by a holder of a residual interest. On a monthly basis, the Investment Banking firm and/or its agents, servants or employees compiled, individually and in concert, oversaw and approved all the information contained in the Distribution Reports and electronically sent same to certain parties.

29.1. Based upon research performed by experts on behalf of the Plaintiff. the data regarding the number of bankruptcies, aggregate Special Servicing Fees, and aggregate Trust Fund Expenses was routinely incomplete, false, and/or misleading.

29.2. Further said report intentionally obfuscated the illegal allocation of payments, the failure to disclose payments, and the effect on the alleged obligation of the Plaintiff, to wit: despite numerous insurance products, credit default swaps, cross collateralization, over collateralization and polling at multiple levels, money received by some or all of these Defendants under the pretense of it being a "Mortgage Payment" was in fact retained, reserved, applied to non-performing loans to make them appear as though they were performing loans, or paid as fees to the enterprise Defendants described in this complaint.

29.3. Based upon the failure of the Defendants to respond, Plaintiff has every reason to believe that the party receiving the payments (Amtrust Bank) is neither the holder in due course of the note nor the owner of any rights under the mortgage provisions of the deed of trust. 29.3.1. Further, Plaintiff has every reason to believe that her payments are not being forwarded to the holder in due course of the note nor to any other authorized party.

29.3.2. Accordingly Plaintiff is in jeopardy, to wit: the true holder in due course and potentially dozens or even thousands of third parties could come forward claiming an unsatisfied interest in the promissory note and may or may not be subject to Plaintiffs various affirmative defenses and counterclaims. "transaction." for example, if the toxic waste paper wold under cover of Plaintiffʼs credit rating and identity was sold at an investment return of 6% and the mortgage note carried a principal balance of $300,000, the enterprise Defendants sold the "investment" certificates on that "loan" for approximately $740,000 and thus received $440,000 in illegal, fraudulent and undisclosed "profits" or "fees" in a $300,000 mortgage transaction.29.3.8.4. Thus the economics of mortgage origination changed, to wit: the worse the loan, the more money the enterprise defendants made as long as there were enough people, like Plaintiff, whose identify was used to hide the high volume ( and high profit) of toxic waste loans.

29.3.8.5. It was thus in the financial interest of the enterprise Defendants to create unrealistic and false market expectations, deceiving the public as a whole in specified geographical areas of the country that were identified by these enterprise Defendants as targets.

29.3.8.6. Since these illegal profits were not disclosed, the Plaintiff is entitled to an accounting and a pro rate share of the profits obtained by the illegal, improper and undisclosed use of her name, credit rating and identity.

29.3.8.7. Based upon the opinion of Plaintiffʼs experts, Plaintiffʼs share of said profits would be in excess of $1 million.

30. The Distribution Reports are supposed to accurately reflect the "financial health of the trust," and provide Certificate holders,with important data such as the number of loans in bankruptcy, the aggregate amount of special servicing fees, and the aggregate amounts of trust fund expenses. Each and every one of these categories is essential for to assess its profit and loss potential in the REMIC entity. Furthermore, this data is used by bond rating

agencies to assess the value of the Certificates.

31. Based upon the filings and information of the Plaintiff it appears that no accurate accounting has ever been presented to anyone and that therefore the identity and status of any putative holder in due course is completely shrouded in secrecy enforced by these Defendants, their

agents, servants and employees.

31.1. Unreported repurchases of certificates or classes of certificates would and did result in a profit to the REMIC that went unreported, and which was not credited to Borrowers where the repurchase was, as was usually the case, the far less than the original investment.

31.2. While the Plaintiff would never have entered into a transaction in which the true nature of this scheme was revealed, any profits, refunds, rebates, fees, points, costs or other income or gain should be credited on some basis to said borrowers including Plaintiff herein.

GENERAL ALLEGATIONS

32. The end result of the false and misleading representations and material omissions of Defendants as to the true nature of the mortgage loan actually being processed, which said Defendants had actual knowledge was in direct conflict with the original Uniform Residential

Loan Application, early TIL, and Plaintiff' stated intentions and directions to said Defendants at the time of original application for the loan, fraudulently caused Plaintiff to execute predatory loan documents.

33. At no time whatsoever did Defendants ever advise Plaintiff (nor, as far as Plaintiff can determine, any "investor" in certificates of mortgage-backed securities) that:

33.1. the mortgage loan being processed was not in their best interest;

33.2. the terms of the mortgage loan being processed were less favorable than the fixed-rate

loan which Defendants previously advised Plaintiff that they qualified for;

33.3. that the mortgage loan was an inter-temporal transaction (transaction where terms,

risks, or provisions at the commencement of the transaction differ at a later time) on which Plaintiff was providing cover for Defendants' illegal activities.

33.4. that Plaintiff would likely be placed in a position of default, foreclosure, and deficiency judgment regardless of whether she met her loan obligations once the true lender or true holder(s) in due course appeared;

33.5. that the originating "lender", that being Defendant Capital Mortgagebanc and/or Amtrust Bank and/or undisclosed third parties, had no intention of retaining ownership interest in the mortgage loan or fully servicing same and in fact may have and probable had already pre-sold the loan, prior to closing, to a third party mortgage aggregator pursuant to previously executed documentation (Assumption and assignment Agreement, Pooling

Services Agreement, etc. all executed prior to Plaintiff's "loan Closing."

33.6. that the mortgage loan was actually intended to be repeatedly sold and assigned to multiple third parties, including one or more mortgage aggregators and investment bankers (including but not limited to Defendants DOES 1-10), for the ultimate purpose of bundling the Plaintiff' mortgage with hundreds or perhaps thousands of others as

part of a companion, support, or other tranche in connection with the creation of a REMIC security known as a Collateralized Mortgage Obligation ("CMO"), also known as a "mortgage-backed security" to be sold by a securities firm (and which in fact ended up as collateral for Asset-Backed Securities Certificates, created the same year as the closing);

33.7. that the mortgage instrument and Promissory Note may be sold, transferred, or assigned separately to separate third parties so that the later "holder" of the Promissory Note may not be in privity with or have the legal right to foreclose in the event of default;

33.8. that in connection with the multiple downline resale and assignment of the mortgage and Promissory Note that assignees or purchasers of the Note may make "pay-downs" against the Note which may effect the true amount owed by the Plaintiff on the Note;

33.9. that a successive assignee or purchaser of the Note and Mortgage may not, upon assignment or purchase, unilaterally impose property insurance requirements different from those imposed as a condition of the original loan (also known as prohibition against increased forced-placed coverage) without the Plaintiff' prior notice and consent;

34.As a result of the closing and in connection therewith, Defendants placed the Plaintiff into a pool of a sub-prime adjustable rate mortgage programs, with Defendants intentionally misleading Plaintiff and the other borrowers and engaging in material omissions by failing to disclose to Plaintiff and other borrowers the fact that the nature of the mortgage loan applications had been materially changed without Plaintiff's knowledge or consent, and that Plaintiff was being placed into a pool where the usual loan was an adjustable rate mortgage

program despite borrowers not being fully qualified for such a program.

35.Prior to the closing, Defendant Capital Mortgagebanc and/or Amtrust Bank and/or undisclosed third

parties failed to provide to Plaintiff the preliminary disclosures required by the Truth-In-

Lending Act pursuant to 12 CFR (also known as and referred to herein as "Regulation Z) sec.

226.17 and 18, and failed to provide the preliminary disclosures required by the Real Estate

Settlement Procedures Act ("RESPA") pursuant to 24 FR sec. 3500.6 and 35007, otherwise

known as the GFE.

36.Defendant Capital Mortgagebanc and/or Amtrust Bank and/or undisclosed third parties also intentionally failed and/or refused to provide Plaintiff with various disclosures which would indicate to the Plaintiff that the consumer credit contract entered into was void, illegal, and predatory in nature due in part to the fact that the final TIL showed a "fixed rate" schedule of

payments, but did not provide the proper disclosures of the actual contractually-due amounts and rates.

37.Defendants failed and/or refused to provide a HUD-1 Settlement Statement at the closing which reflected the true cost of the consumer credit transaction. As Defendants failed to provide an accurate GFE or Itemization of Amount Financed ("IOAF"), there was no disclosure of a Yield Spread Premium ("YSP", which is required to be disclosed by the Truth-In-Lending Act) and thus no disclosure of the true cost of the loan.

38.As a direct and proximate result of these failures to disclose as required by the Truth-In– Lending Act, Defendant MOTION received a YSP in a substantial amount of without preliminary disclosure, which is a per se violation of 12 CFR sec. 226.4(a), 226.17 and 18(d) d (c)(1)(iii). The YSP raised the interest rate which was completely unknown to or approved by the Plaintiff, as they did not received the required GFE or IOAF.

39. In addition, the completely undisclosed YSP was not disclosed by Defendant in their broker contract, which contract was blank in the area as to fees to be paid to Defendant. This is an illegal kickback in violation of 12 USC sec. 2607 as well as State law which gives rise to all damages claims for all combined broker fees, costs, and attorneys' fees.

40.The Amount Financed within the TIL is also understated which is a material violation of 12 CFR sec. 226.17 and 18, in addition to 15 USC sec. 1602(u), as the Amount Financed must be completely accurate with no tolerance.

41.Defendants were under numerous legal obligations as fiduciaries and had the responsibility or overseeing the purported loan consummation to insure that the consummation was legal, proper, and that Plaintiff received all legally required disclosures pursuant to the Truth-In- Lending Act and RESPA both before and after the closing.

42.Plaintiff, not being in the consumer lending, mortgage broker, or residential loan business,

reasonably relied upon the Defendants to insure that the consumer credit transaction was

legal, proper, and complied with all applicable laws, rules, and Regulations.

43.At all times relevant hereto, Defendants regularly extended or offered to extend consumer credit for which a finance charge is or may be imposed or which, by written agreement, is payable in more than four (4) installments and was initially payable to the person the subject of the transaction, rendering Defendants "creditors" within the meaning of the Truth-In-Lending Act, 15 U.S.C. sec. 1602(f) and Regulation Z sec. 226.2 (a)(17).

44.At the closing of the subject "loan transaction", Plaintiff executed Promissory Notes and Security Agreements in favor of Defendants as aforesaid. These transactions, designated by Defendants as a Loan, extended consumer credit which was subject to a finance charge and

which was initially payable to the Defendants.

45.As part of the consumer credit transaction the subject of the closing, Defendants retained a

security interest in the subject property which was Plaintiff' principal residential dwelling.

46.Defendants engaged in a pattern and practice of defrauding Plaintiff in that, during the entire

life of the mortgage loan, Defendants failed to properly credit payments made; incorrectly

calculated interest on the accounts; and have failed to accurately debit fees. At all times

material,

47.Defendants had actual knowledge that the Plaintiff' accounts were not accurate but that

Plaintiff would make further payments based on Defendants' inaccurate accounts.

48.Plaintiff made payments based on the improper, inaccurate, and fraudulent representations as

to Plaintiff' accounts.

49.As a direct and proximate result of the actions of the Defendants set forth above, Plaintiff

overpaid in interest.

50.Defendants also utilized amounts known to the Defendants to be inaccurate to determine the

amount allegedly due and owing for purposes of foreclosure.

51.Defendants' violations were all material in nature under the Truth-In-Lending Act.

52.Said violations, in addition to the fact that Plaintiff did not properly receive Notices of Right

to Cancel, constitute violations of 15 USC sec. 1635(a) and (b) and 12 CFR sec. 226.23(b),

and are thus a legal basis for and legally extend Plaintiff' right to exercise the remedy of

rescission.

53.Defendants assigned or attempted to assign the Note and mortgage to parties who did not

take these instruments in good faith or without notice that the instruments were invalid or

that Plaintiff had a claim in recoupment. Pursuant to ORC sec. 1303.32(A)(2)(b)(c) and (f),

Defendants are not a holder indue course and is thus liable to Plaintiff, individually, jointly

and severally.

54. On information and belief and given that the consumer credit transaction was an inter-

temporal transaction with multiple assignments as part of an aggregation and the creation of a

REMIC tranche itself a part of a predetermined and identifiable CMO, all Defendants shared

in the illegal proceeds of the transaction; conspired with each other to defraud the Plaintiff out of the proceeds of the loan; acted in concert to wrongfully deprive the Plaintiff of their residence; acted in concert and conspiracy to essentially steal the Plaintiff' home and/or convert the Plaintiff' home without providing Plaintiff reasonably equivalent value in exchange; and conducted an illegal enterprise within the meaning of the RICO statute.

55. On information and belief and given the volume of residential loan transactions solicited and processed by the Defendants, the Defendants have engaged in two or more instances of racketeering activity involving different victims but utilizing the same method, means, mode, operation, and enterprise with the same intended result. Claims for Relief

COUNT I: VIOLATIONS OF HOME OWNERSHIP EQUITY PROTECTION ACT

56. Plaintiff reaffirm and reallege the above paragraphs 1-52 hereinabove as if set forth more

fully hereinbelow.

57. In 1994, Congress enacted the Home Ownership Equity Protection Act ("HOEPA") which is

codified at 15 USC sec. 1639 et seq. with the intention of protecting homeowners from

predatory lending practices targeted at vulnerable consumers. HOEPA requires lenders to

make certain defined disclosures and prohibits certain terms from being included in home

loans. In the event of noncompliance, HOEPA imposes civil liability for rescission and

statutory and actual damages.

58. Plaintiff are "consumers" and each Defendant is a "creditor" as defined by HOEPA. In the

mortgage loan transaction at issue here, Plaintiff were required to pay excessive fees,

expenses, and costs which exceeded more than 10% of the amount financed.

59. Pursuant to HOEPA and specifically 15 USC sec. 1639(a)(1), each Defendant is required to

make certain disclosures to the Plaintiff which are to be made conspicuously and in writing

no later than three (3) days prior to the closing.

60. In the transaction at issue, Defendants were required to make the following disclosure to Plaintiff by no later than three (3) days prior to said closing:

60.1. "You are not required to complete this agreement merely because you have received these disclosures or have signed a loan application. If you obtain this loan, the lender will have a mortgage on your home. You could lose your home and any money you have put into it, if you do not meet your obligation under the loan."

61.Defendants violated HOEPA by numerous acts and material omissions, including but not limited to:

61.1. (a) failing to make the foregoing disclosure in a conspicuous fashion;

61.2. (b) engaging in a pattern and practice of extending credit to Plaintiff without regard to their ability to repay in violation of 15 USC sec. 1639(h).

62.By virtue of the Defendants' multiple violations of HOEPA, Plaintiff have a legal right to rescind the consumer credit transaction the subject of this action pursuant to 15 USC sec.

1635. This Complaint is to be construed, for these purposes, as formal and public notice of Plaintiff's Notice of Rescission of the mortgage and note.

63.Defendants further violated HOEPA by failing to make additional disclosures, including but not limited to Plaintiff not receiving the required disclosure of the right to rescind the transaction;

64. the failure of Defendants to provide an accurate TIL disclosure; and the amount financed being understated.

65.As a direct consequence of and in connection with Plaintiff' legal and lawful exercise of their right of rescission, the true "lender" is required, within twenty (20) days of this Notice of Rescission, to:

65.1. (a) desist from making any claims for finance charges in the transaction;

65.2. (b) return all monies paid by Plaintiff in connection with the transaction to the Plaintiff; 65.3. (c) satisfy all security interests, including mortgages, which were acquired in the

transaction.

66.Upon the true "lenders" full performance of its obligations under HOEPA, Plaintiff shall

tender all sums to which the true lender is entitled.

67. Based on Defendants' HOEPA violations, each of the Defendants is liable to the Plaintiff for

the following, which Plaintiff demand as relief:

67.1. (a) rescission of the mortgage loan transactions;

67.2. (b) termination of the mortgage and security interest in the property the subject of the

mortgage loan documents created in the transaction;

67.3. (c) return of any money or property paid by the Plaintiff including all payments made

in connection with the transactions;

67.4. (d) an amount of money equal to twice the finance charge in connection with the

transactions;

67.5. (e) relinquishment of the right to retain any proceeds; and

67.6. (f) actual damages in an amount to be determined at trial, including

67.7. attorneys' fees.

COUNT II: VIOLATIONS OF REAL ESTATE SETTLEMENT PROCEDURES ACT

68. Plaintiff reaffirm and reallege paragraphs 1-52 above herein as if specifically set forth more

fully hereinbelow.

69. As mortgage lenders, Defendants are subject to the provisions of the Real Estate Settlement

Procedures Act ("RESPA"), 12 USC sec. 2601 et seq.

70. In violation of 12 USC sec. 2607 and in connection with the mortgage loan to Plaintiff,

Defendants accepted charges for the rendering of real estate services which were in fact

charges for other than services actually performed.

71. As a result of the Defendants' violations of RESPA, Defendants are liable to Plaintiff in an amount equal to three (3) times the amount of charges paid by Plaintiff for "settlement services" pursuant to 12 USC sec. 2607 (d)(2).


COUNT III: VIOLATIONS OF

FEDERAL TRUTH-IN-LENDING ACT

72. Plaintiff reaffirm and realleges paragraphs 1-52 above hereinabove as if set forth more fully herein below.

73. Defendants failed to include and disclose certain charges in the finance charge shown on the TIL statement, which charges were imposed on Plaintiff incident to the extension of credit to the Plaintiff and were required to be disclosed pursuant to 15 USC sec. 1605 and Regulation Z

74. sec. 226.4, thus resulting in an improper disclosure of finance charges in violation of 15 USC sec. 1601 et seq., Regulation Z sec. 226.18(d). Such undisclosed charges include a sum dentified on the Settlement Statement listing the amount financed which is different from the sum listed on the original Note.

75. By calculating the annual percentage rate ("APR") based upon improperly calculated and disclosed amounts, Defendants are in violation of 15 USC sec. 1601 et seq., Regulation Z sec. 226.18(c), 18(d), and 22. 76. Defendants' failure to provide the required disclosures provides Plaintiff with the right to

rescind the transaction, and Plaintiff, through this public Complaint which is intended to be

construed, for purposes of this claim, as a formal Notice of Rescission, hereby elect to

rescind the transaction.

COUNT IV: VIOLATION OF FAIR CREDIT REPORTING ACT

77. Plaintiff reaffirm and reallege paragraphs 1-52 above as if set forth more fully hereinbelow.

78. At all times material, Defendants qualified as a provider of information to the Credit

Reporting Agencies, including but not limited to Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion, under

the Federal Fair Credit Reporting Act. 65. Defendants wrongfully, improperly, and illegally

reported negative information as to the Plaintiff to one or more Credit Reporting Agencies,

resulting in Plaintiff having negative information on their credit reports and the lowering of

their FICO scores.

78.1. The negative information included but was not limited to an excessive amount of debt

into which Plaintiff was tricked and deceived into signing.

78.2. Notwithstanding the above, Plaintiff has paid each and every payment on time from

the time of the loan closing through the present.

79.Pursuant to 15 USC sec. 1681(s)(2)(b), Plaintiff are entitled to maintain a private cause of

action against Defendants for an award of damages in an amount to be proven at the time of

trial for all violations of the Fair Credit Reporting Act which caused actual damages to

Plaintiff, including emotional distress and humiliation.

80.Plaintiff are entitled to recover damages from Defendants for negligent non-compliance with

the Fair Credit Reporting Act pursuant to 15 USC sec. 1681(o).

81.Plaintiff are also entitled to an award of punitive damages against Defendants for their willful

noncompliance with the Fair Credit Reporting Act pursuant to 15 USC sec. 1681(n)(a)(2) in

an amount to be proven at time of trial.

COUNT VII: FRAUDULENT MISREPRESENTATION

82.Plaintiff reaffirm and reallege paragraphs 1-52 above as if set forth more fully hereinbelow.

83.Defendants knowingly and intentionally concealed material information from Plaintiff which is required by Federal Statutes and Regulations to be disclosed to the Plaintiff both before

and at the closing.

84.Defendants also materially misrepresented material information to the Plaintiff with full knowledge by Defendants that their affirmative representations were false, fraudulent, and misrepresented the truth at the time said representations were made.

85.Under the circumstances, the material omissions and material misrepresentations of the Defendants were malicious.

86.Plaintiff, not being an investment banker, securities dealer, mortgage lender, mortgage broker, or mortgage lender, reasonably relied upon the representations of the Defendants in agreeing to execute the mortgage loan documents.

87.Had Plaintiff known of the falsity of Defendants' representations, Plaintiff would not have entered into the transactions the subject of this action.

88.As a direct and proximate cause of the Defendants' material omissions and material misrepresentations, Plaintiff have suffered damages. COUNT VIII: BREACH OF FIDUCIARY DUTY

89. Plaintiff reaffirm and reallege paragraphs 1-52 above as if set forth more fully hereinbelow.

90. Defendants, by their actions in contracting to provide mortgage loan services and a loan

program to Plaintiff which was not only to be best suited to the Plaintiff given their income

and expenses but by which Plaintiff would also be able to satisfy their obligations without

risk of losing their home, were "fiduciaries" in which Plaintiff reposed trust and confidence,

especially given that Plaintiff were not and are not investment bankers, securities dealers,

mortgage lenders, mortgage brokers, or mortgage lenders.

91. Defendants breached their fiduciary duties to the Plaintiff by fraudulently inducing Plaintiff

to enter into a mortgage transaction which was contrary to the Plaintiff's stated intentions;

contrary to the Plaintiff's interests; and contrary to the Plaintiff's preservation of their home

92. As a direct and proximate result of the Defendants' breaches of their fiduciary duties,

Plaintiff have suffered damages.

93. Under the totality of the circumstances, the Defendants' actions were willful, wanton,

intentional, and with a callous and reckless disregard for the rights of the Plaintiff justifying

an award of not only actual compensatory but also exemplary punitive damages to serve as a

deterrent not only as to future conduct of the named Defendants herein, but also to other

persons or entities with similar inclinations.

COUNT IX: UNJUST ENRICHMENT

94. Plaintiff reallege and reaffirm paragraphs 1-52 above as if set forth more fully hereinbelow.

95. Defendants had an implied contract with the Plaintiff to ensure that Plaintiff understood all

fees which would be paid to the Defendants to obtain credit on Plaintiff' behalf and to not

charge any fees which were not related to the settlement of the loan and without full

disclosure to Plaintiff.

96.Defendants cannot, in good conscience and equity, retain the benefits from their actions of

charging a higher interest rate, fees. rebates, kickbacks, profits (including but not limited to

from resale of mortgages and notes using Plaintiff's identity, credit score and reputation

without consent, right, justification or excuse as part of an illegal enterprise scheme) and

gains and YSP fee unrelated to the settlement services provided at closing.

97. Defendants have been unjustly enriched at the expense of the Plaintiff, and maintenance of

the enrichment would be contrary to the rules and principles of equity.

97.1. Defendants have also been additionally enriched through the receipt of PAYMENT from third parties including but not limited to investors, insurers, and other borrowers, the United States Department of the Treasury, the United States Federal Reserve, and Bank of America, N.A.

98. Plaintiff thus demands restitution from the Defendants in the form of actual damages, exemplary damages, and attorneys' fees.


COUNT X: CIVIL CONSPIRACY

99.Plaintiff reaffirm and reallege paragraphs 1-52 above as if set forth more fully hereinbelow. 100.In connection with the application for and consummation of the mortgage loan the subject of this action, Defendants agreed, between and among themselves, to engage in actions and a

course of conduct designed to further an illegal act or accomplish a legal act by unlawful means, and to commit one or more overt acts in furtherance of the conspiracy to defraud the Plaintiff.

101.Defendants agreed between and among themselves to engage in the conspiracy to defraud

for the common purpose of accruing economic gains for themselves at the expense of and

detriment to the Plaintiff.

102. The actions of the Defendants were committed intentionally, willfully, wantonly, and with

reckless disregard for the rights of the Plaintiff.

103. As a direct and proximate result of the actions of the Defendants in combination resulting in

fraud and breaches of fiduciary duties, Plaintiff have suffered damages.

104. Plaintiff thus demand an award of actual, compensatory, and punitive damages.

COUNT XI: CIVIL RICO

105.Plaintiff reaffirm and reallege paragraphs 1-52 above as set forth more fully hereinbelow.

106.Defendants are "persons" as defined by ORC sec. 2923.31(G).

107.The conspiracy the subject of this action has existed from date of application to the present,

with the injuries and damages resulting therefrom being continuing.

108.Defendants' actions and use of multiple corporate entities, multiple parties, and concerted

and predetermined acts and conduct specifically designed to defraud Plaintiff constitutes an

"enterprise", with the aim and objective of the enterprise being to perpetrate a fraud upon the

Plaintiff through the use of intentional nondisclosure, material misrepresentation, and

creation of fraudulent loan documents.

109.Each of the Defendants is an "enterprise Defendant".

110.As a direct and proximate result of the actions of the Defendants, Plaintiff have and continue to suffer damages.



COMPLAINT TO QUIET TITLE TO REAL PROPERTY

111. Plaintiff reaffirm and reallege paragraphs 1-52 above as set forth more fully hereinbelow.

112. Plaintiff has sent or has caused to be sent authorized Qualified Written Requests to the only known Defendants which the said Defendants have failed and refused to answer despite acknowledging receipt thereof and despite demands from counsel, a copy of which is attached hereto and made a part hereof as specifically as if set forth at length hereat.

113. Plaintiff has sent or has caused to be sent notice of her intent to rescind the subject loan transaction but has only sent those notices to the only entities that have been disclosed.

Hence, without this action, neither the rescission nor the reconveyance which the Plaintiff is entitled to file (as attorney in fact for the originating lender) and will file contemporaneously

with this complaint, gives Plaintiff full and clear title to the property. 114.The real party in interest on the lender side may be the owner of the asset backed security

issued by the SPV, the insurer through some claim of equitable interest, or the Federal

government through the United States Department of the Treasury or the Federal Reserve.

The security is a "securitized" bond deriving its value from the underlying mortgages of

which the subject mortgage is one. Thus Plaintiff is entitled to quiet title against Defendants,

clearing title of the purported subject mortgage encumbrance.

115. Plaintiff is ignorant of the true names and capacities of defendants sued herein as DOES

inclusive, and therefore sues these defendants by such fictitious names. Plaintiff will amend

this complaint to allege their true names and capacities when ascertained.

116. Plaintiff is informed and believes and thereon alleges that, at all times herein mentioned,

each of the defendants sued herein was the agent and employee of each of the remaining

defendants and was at all times acting within the purpose and scope of such agency and

employment.

117. Plaintiff is informed and believes and thereupon alleges that and each of the Defendants

claim or might claim an interest in the property adverse to plaintiff herein. However, the

claim of said Defendants is without any right whatsoever, and said Defendant have no legal

or equitable right, claim, or interest in said property.

118. Plaintiff therefore seeks a declaration that the title to the subject property is vested in

plaintiff alone and that the defendants herein, and each of them, be declared to have no estate,

right, title or interest in the subject property and that said defendants and each of them, be

forever enjoined from asserting any estate, right, title or interest in the subject property

adverse to plaintiff herein.

119. WHEREFORE, in this Count, plaintiff prays this Court will enter judgment against defendants and each of them, as follows:

119.1. For an order compelling said Defendant, and each of them, to transfer or release legal title and alleged encumbrances thereon and possession of the subject property to Plaintiff herein;

119.2. For a declaration and determination that Plaintiff is the rightful holder of title to the property and that Defendant herein, and each of them, be declared to have no estate, right, title or interest in said property;

119.3. For a judgment forever enjoining said defendants, and each of them, from claiming any estate, right, title or interest in the subject property;

119.4. For costs of suit herein incurred;

119.5. For such other and further relief as the court may deem proper USURY and FRAUD

119.6. Plaintiff reaffirm and reallege the above paragraphs 1-52 hereinabove as if set forth

more fully hereinbelow. The subject loan, note, and mortgage was structured so as to

create the appearance of a higher value of the real property than the actual fair market

value.

119.7. Plaintiff is informed and believes and thereon alleges that, at all times herein

mentioned, each of the defendants sued herein was the agent and employee of each of

the remaining defendants and was at all times acting within the purpose and scope of such agency and employment.119.8. Defendants disguised the transaction to create the appearance of the lender being a properly chartered and registered financial institution authorized to do business and to enter into the subject transaction when in fact the real party in interest was not disclosed to Plaintiff, as aforesaid, and neither were the various fees, rebates, refunds,

kickbacks, profits and gains of the various parties who participated in this unlawful scheme.

119.9.Said real party in interest, i.e., the source of funding for the loan and the person to whom the note was transmitted or eventually "assigned" was neither a financial institution nor an entity or person authorized, chartered or registered to do business in

this State nor to act as banking, lending or other financial institution anywhere else.

119.10. As such, this fraudulent scheme, (which was in actuality a plan to trick the Plaintiff

into signing what would become a negotiable security used to sell unregulated

securities under fraudulent and changed terms from the original note) was in fact a

sham to use Plaintiff's interest in the real property to collect interest in excess of the

legal rate.

119.11. The transaction involved a loan of money pursuant to a written agreement, and as

such, subject to the rate limitation set forth under state and federal law. The "formula rate" referenced in those laws was exceeded by a factor in excess of 10 contrary to the applicable law and contrary to the requirements for disclosure under TILA and HOEPA.

119.12. Under Applicable law, the interest charged on this usurious mortgage prevents any collection or enforcement of principal or interest of the note, voids any security interest thereon, and entitles the Plaintiff to recovery of all money or value paid to

Defendants, plus treble damages, interest, and attorney fees.

119.13. Under Applicable Law Plaintiff are also entitled and demand a permanent injunction be entered against the Defendants (a) preventing them from taking any action or making any report in furtherance of collection on this alleged debt which was usurious, as aforesaid (b) requiring the records custodian of the county in which the alleged mortgage and other instruments are recorded to remove same from the record,

(c) allowing the filing of said order in the office of the clerk of the property records where the subject property, "Loan transaction" and any other documents relating to this transaction are located and (d) dissolving any lis pendens or notice of pendency relating to the Defendants purported claim. RELIEF SOUGHT WHEREFORE, having set forth numerous legally sufficient causes of actions against the Defendants, Plaintiff pray for the entry of Final Judgment against all Defendants jointly and severally in an amount not yet quantified but to be proven at trial and such other amounts to be proven at trial, and for costs and attorneys' fees; that the Court find that the ransactions the

subject of this action are illegal and are deemed void; that the foreclosure which was instituted be deemed and declared illegal and void and that further proceedings in connection with the foreclosure be enjoined; and for any other and further relief which is just and proper.

DEMAND FOR JURY TRIAL

Plaintiff demand trial by jury of all matters so triable as a matter of right.


Respectfully submitted,

_____________________________

Jasmina Subasic, Plaintiff

12027 N.110th St.

Scottsdale, AZ 85259

480-383-3966


_____________________________

ATTORNEY NAME

BAR NUMBER

Pro Hac Vice,

Counsel to Plaintiff

ATTORNEY ADDRESS

PHONE

Fax:

VERIFICATION


I, Jasmina Subasic am the Plaintiff in the above-entitled action. I have read the foregoing

and know the contents thereof. The same is true of my own knowledge, except as to those matters which are therein alleged on information and belief, and as to those matters, I believe it to be true.

I declare under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and correct and that this declaration was executed at Phoenix, Arizona.


DATED: _________________ ___________________________________








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TRUSTEES DEED UPON SALE 1) the grantee herein was the foreclosing beneficiary. 2) The amount of the unpaid debt was..... $2,020,589.63 3) The amount paid by the grantee was ....$1,096,500.00 4) The documentary transfer tax is .......... $0 Item 1) states the parties bringing the foreclosure are in possession of the rights of a holder in due course and selling to themselves the property. We will show this not to be the case. Item 2) can they verify the balance and how the breakdown of interest and fees are distributed? It is likely the numbers do not add and constitute grounds to rescind the sale. Item 3) how can the lender, who sold the loan into a bulk pooled asset and for due consideration upon which it has lost its rights to the asset, bring a foreclosure? It cannot! Only by first repurchasing the asset is the party foreclosing in a position first. Loans sold that were securitized into a closed end fund for which many layers of stock certificates were issued is an indication foreclosure is an impossible proposition. What stands out to me most of all is a claim of bid rigging and manipulation of a trustees sale for which a borrowers right to tender is removed. Where the trustee’s deed transfers by credit bid, the tender of the full debt is not appropriate. Credit bids are distinguished from purchase money bids. California Civil Code 2924h (b) provides: (b) At the trustee’s sale the trustee shall have the right (1) to require every bidder to show evidence of the bidder’s ability to deposit with the trustee the full amount of his or her final bid in cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code Stay tuned